2010-1139 Nilssen TN Decision

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    IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTFOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE

    NASHVILLE DIVISION

    OLE K. NILSSEN and )GEO FOUNDATION, LTD., )

    )Plaintiffs, )

    )v. ) Case No. 3:04cv0080

    )UNIVERSAL LIGHTING TECHNOLOGIES, INC., ) Judge Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr.

    )Defendant. )

    MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

    Before the Court are two motions filed by defendant Universal Lighting Technologies, Inc.

    (ULT): a Motion for Attorneys Fees (Doc. No. 186) and (2) a Supplemental Motion for Attorneys Fees

    (Doc. No. 191).

    I. LEGAL STANDARDS

    ULT seeks attorneys fees in this action pursuant to 35 U.S.C. 285, which permits courts to

    award fees to the prevailing party in a patent action, but only in exceptional cases. The statute states in

    full: The court in exceptional cases may award reasonable attorney fees to the prevailing party. Id.

    Plaintiffs oppose the motion, contending both that this case lacks the requisite exceptionality and that,

    even if it does qualify as an exceptional case, this Court should exercise its discretion to deny the motion.

    A trial court is to undertake a two-step inquiry when adjudicating a request for attorney fees under

    285. First, the court determines whether there is clear and convincing evidence that the case is

    exceptional; if so, the court then considers whether, in the exercise of its discretion, an award of attorney

    fees to the prevailing party is warranted. Cybor Corp. v. FAS Techs., Inc., 138 F.3d 1448, 1460 (Fed. Cir.

    1998) (en banc); J.P. Stevens Co. v. Lex Tex Ltd., 822 F.2d 1047, 1050 (Fed. Cir. 1987). The trial courts

    finding that a case is exceptional is a factual determination reviewed for clear error. The subsequent

    determination of whether attorneys fees are warranted lies within the district courts sound discretion.

    See, e.g., Nilssen v. Osram Sylvania, Inc., 528 F.3d 1352, 1357 (Fed. Cir. 2008); nCube Corp. v.

    Seachange Intl, Inc., 436 F.3d 1317, 1319 (Fed. Cir. 2006); Cybor Corp., 138 F.3d at 1460. Factors that

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    may demonstrate that a case is exceptional include willful infringement, bad faith, litigation misconduct,

    and unprofessional behavior. Sensonics, Inc. v. Aerosonic Corp., 81 F.3d 1566, 1674 (Fed. Cir. 1996).

    In addition, inequitable conduct may constitute a basis for an award of attorney fees under 35

    U.S.C. 285. Osram, 528 F.3d at 138 (quoting A.B. Chance Co. v. RTE Corp., 854 F.2d 1307, 1312

    (Fed. Cir. 1988)). As the Federal Circuit noted in its recent Osramholding, however, there is no per se

    rule of exceptionality in cases involving inequitable conduct. Osram, 528 F.3d at 138. The court further

    recognized that it had on many occasions affirmed a district courts denial of attorney fees in cases

    involving inequitable conduct, and had likewise affirmed the courts decisions to award attorney fees on

    the basis of inequitable conduct. Id. (collecting cases and stating, In short, our case law provides wide

    discretion to district courts; courts may award attorney fees in inequitable conduct cases, but are not

    required to do so.).

    The Federal Circuit has also made it clear that a prior finding of inequitable conduct by a different

    court in an action involving the same plaintiff and the same patents will have a preclusive effect in

    subsequent proceedings. In Upjohn Co. v. Mova Pharm. Corp., 31 F. Supp. 2d 211 (D.P.R. 1998), a jury

    determined that the defendant had proved by clear and convincing evidence that the subject patent was

    invalid as obvious under 35 U.S.C. 103, and unenforceable due to the plaintiffs inequitable conduct.

    Upjohn subsequently filed a motion for judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) or, alternatively, for a new

    trial. While that motion was pending, a different district court in a different case involving the same

    plaintiff granted summary judgment for the defendant, based in part upon its collateral application of the

    Mova judgments of invalidity and unenforceability. The Federal Circuit affirmed. Pharmacia & Upjohn

    Co. v. Mylan Pharm., Inc., 170 F.3d 1373 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (Mylan I). After the Movadistrict court denied

    the JMOL motion, the Mylan district court denied the defendants motion for attorney fees, expressly

    finding that the plaintiffs litigation tactics were in good faith and raised genuine issues of patent

    infringement. It therefore found that the case was not an exceptional one meriting a fee award.

    Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. v. Mylan Pharm., Inc., No. 1:97-CV-41 (N.D. W. Va. Aug. 17, 1998). The

    defendant appealed the district courts denial of its motion for attorney fees, arguing that the district court

    had erred in failing to consider the outcome of Mova.

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    The Federal Circuit agreed, and reversed and remanded for reconsideration of whether the case

    was exceptional in light of the Movacourts finding that the plaintiff had engaged in inequitable conduct.

    Pharmacia & Upjohn Co. v. Mylan Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 182 F.3d 1356 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (Mylan II). The

    court specifically noted that its precedent in patent cases establishes that inequitable conduct is a

    substantive patent issue that must be taken into consideration in determinations under 35 U.S.C. 285.

    Mylan II, 182 F.3d at 1359. It continued:

    Here, a judgment of inequitable conduct has already been made by a court of competent jurisdiction. As a matter of law, we hold that such a judgment must be considered inascertaining whether a case is exceptional under 35 U.S.C. 285. Accordingly, wevacate and remand for consideration of whether this is an exceptional case in view of the

    judgment in Mova.

    Id. at 1360 (footnote omitted). Notably, the appellate court did not hold that the district court mustreach

    a finding of exceptionality based upon the prior judgment that the plaintiff had engaged in inequitable

    conduct; rather, the district court was simply required to take that factor into consideration in determining

    whether the case qualified as exceptional.

    II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

    In a prior unrelated opinion issued in a different district in a case brought by the same plaintiff,

    Ole K. Nilssen, and based in part upon the same patents at issue here, the court found that Nilssen had

    engaged in inequitable conduct and, as a result that the patents in suit were unenforceable. Nilssen v.

    Osram Sylvania, Inc., 440 F. Supp. 2d 884 (N.D. Ill. 2006), affd, 504 F.3d 1223 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (Osram

    I). Based on Mylan II, it is clear that the district courts holding in that case has preclusive effect here,

    such that this Court must acknowledge that Nilssen engaged in inequitable conduct in prosecuting the

    patents that were also at issue in this case. In a subsequent opinion, the Northern District of Illinois also

    granted the defendants motion for attorneys fees on the grounds that the case before it was exceptional

    for purposes of 35 U.S.C. 285. Nilssen v. Osram Sylvania, Inc., No. 01 C 3585, 2007 WL 257711 (N.D.

    Ill. Jan. 23, 2007), affd, 528 F.3d 1352 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (Osram II). In granting the motion for fees, the

    district court noted that Nilssen had been found to have engaged in five types of inequitable conduct,

    including (1) misclaiming small entity status and improperly paying small entity fees; (2) failing to disclose

    ongoing, related litigation; (3) misclaiming priority to earlier filing dates; (4) withholding material prior art;

    and (5) submitting misleading affidavits to the PTO during patent prosecutions. Id. at *8. In addition, the

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    court had found ten of the eleven patents in suit to be unenforceable on multiple grounds of inequitable

    conduct, which repeated over a long period of time. Id. As the Federal Circuit observed after Nilssen

    appealed the award of fees, the lower courts exceptionality finding was supported not only by the

    finding of inequitable conduct but also by the frivolous nature of the lawsuit and Nilssens litigation

    misconduct. Osram II, 528 F.3d at 1356. The court found that the lawsuit was frivolous because Nilssen

    knew or should have known that the suit was baseless. In support of the finding of litigation misconduct,

    the court noted appellants refusal to allow [a foreign witnesss] deposition in the United States, the late

    withdrawal of fifteen of the patents in suit, the belatedly-produced documents, and Nilssens last minute

    waiver of the attorney-client privilege. Id. (citation omitted).

    In the present case, defendant ULT argues that exceptional circumstances likewise exist given

    Nilssens inequitable conduct as previously found by the Illinois court. In addition, ULT argues that this

    lawsuit was likewise frivolous insofar as Plaintiffs in this case, including Nilssen, knew or should have

    known that their claims were meritless, and that Nilssen again engaged in litigation misconduct. More

    specifically, ULT contends that Plaintiffs engaged in bad faith litigation tactics designed to increase the

    costs of litigation by asserting infringement of Claim 21 of the 067 Patent even though that Claim had

    been held invalid in the case of Nilssen v. Motorola, Inc., 2002 WL 206007, at *11 (N.D. Ill. 2002), before

    the Complaint in this action was filed. ULT also complains that Plaintiffs failed to disclaim the invalid

    claim until after expert discovery was conducted, the PTO expressly recognized that Claim 21 of the 067

    Patent was invalid in light of the Motoroladecision, and ULT gave notice of intent to file a Rule 11 motion

    if the claim was not withdrawn. ULT also asserts that Plaintiffs engaged in ambush tactics, in that they

    initially claimed infringement of twenty-nine patents; narrowed that to eleven when they filed claim charts

    nearly a year into litigation; and then on July 11, 2005, the day opening expert reports were due, informed

    ULT that they were only pursuing infringement of four of the eleven Asserted Patents. ULT claims this

    belated notice of the reduction in scope of the Plaintiffs claims was in bad faith given that Plaintiffs

    apparently knew as early as May 2005, two months before the expert report deadline, that it did not

    intend to pursue those seven patents. ULT asserts that Plaintiffs failure to give earlier notice of the

    narrowing in scope resulted in the defendants wasting a substantial amount of time and effort in

    preparing expert reports addressing the seven other Asserted Patents.

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    In response, Plaintiffs argue that this Court is not bound by the Osramcourts decision to award

    fees, that the equities and circumstances in this case are far different from those in Osramthat prompted

    the court to award fees, that no litigation misconduct occurred in this case; the volume of inequitable

    conduct is smaller; and Plaintiffs have already been adequately punished for Nilssens inequitable

    behavior by the fee award in Osram. In support of their assertion that the fundamental circumstances of

    this case are quite different from those presented in Osram, Plaintiffs have filed the Declarations of two of

    their attorneys, Raymond N. Nimrod and John E. Titus, attesting to the reasonableness of their belief that

    ULT had infringed all twenty-nine patents originally asserted in the complaint. Specifically, counsel point

    out that they brought suit against ULT on the heels of a February 8, 2002 summary judgment decision

    that ULTs predecessor company, Magnetek, infringed two of the patents named in this case (the 409

    and 795 Patents). The same decision denied Magneteks motion for summary judgment of invalidity as

    to the 690 Patent. That decision, argue Plaintiffs attorneys here, confirmed the reasonableness of the

    Plaintiffs belief in the validity of those patents as well as three others originally asserted here. Nilssen v.

    Magnetekwas ultimately settled by arbitration over one patent, the 409 Patent, and Nilssen was awarded

    over $23 million in damages by the arbitrator. The district court confirmed the award, and the parties

    ultimately settled for over $18 million. After that case was finally resolved, ULT acquired most of the

    assets of Magneteks lighting business and continued to sell the same products that had already been

    held to infringe the 409 Patent. According to the attorneys declarations, they, on behalf of the Plaintiffs,

    undertook thorough pre-suit investigation of ULTs potentially infringing products and concluded that at

    least one product sold by ULT infringed each of the twenty-nine patents identified in the complaint filed in

    this action in February 2003.

    Plaintiffs attorneys have also attested to the reasons for the subsequent narrowing of the case

    and the timing thereof. According to their declarations, the decision to narrow the claims set forth in the

    claim chart from twenty-nine to eleven was essentially a business decision, made before ULT had

    invested much time or effort into defending against any of the claims but after and as result of a review of

    the schematics, analysis of samples and the sales information provided by Universal in discovery. (Titus

    Decl. (Doc. No. 210) at 29.) Titus also points out that the parties had spent most of their energy by that

    time in disputing whether the case should be litigated in the Middle District of Tennessee or the Northern

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    District of Illinois. (Titus Decl. 30.) Plaintiffs counsel defends the belated narrowing of claims from

    eleven to four on the date on which opening expert reports were due to the health issues experienced by

    Nilssens long-standing technical expert, John MacCrisken, coupled with the inability of the substitute

    technical expert to provide infringement opinions on all eleven patents within the allotted time. Counsel

    maintains that [i]t was not clear until the weekend before expert reports were filed that we would not file a

    report from an expert on any of the remaining seven patents. (Nimrod Decl. (Doc. No. 209) at 13: see

    alsoTitus Decl. 3447 (providing detailed account of the time line of events leading up to the decision

    that MacCrisken would not be able to testify and that Kesan, the other expert, would not have time to get

    up to speed on the other seven patents).)

    Further, according to both Titus and Nimrod, the continued assertion of the validity of Claim 21 of

    the 067 Patent was due to counsels own honest oversight. (Nimrod Decl. 17; Titus Decl. 48.) Titus

    attests specifically that he had simply forgotten that Claim 21 had been ruled invalid, as the Motorola

    courts analysis was focused on Claim 32. In any event, according to Titus, he had no reason

    intentionally to assert an invalid claim given that other patent claims (namely, claims 6 and 34 of the 067

    patent) covered the same products as claim 21 and there would have been no hope of prevailing on claim

    21 given the prior invalidity finding. (Titus Decl. 53.) Titus also points out that it appears that ULTs

    counsel had also forgotten about the invalidity ruling as to claim 21, since ULT raised no objection

    regarding claim 21 until nearly a year after Plaintiffs filed their April 2004 infringement claim chart.

    Finally, Plaintiffs point out that this matter was stayed effective January 5, 2006, pursuant to

    ULTs unopposed motion, pending reexamination proceedings concerning three of the remaining patents

    in suit by the USPTO, as well as the bench trial scheduled in Osram v. Nilssen. Essentially nothing else

    substantive happened in this matter once it was stayed. The Osramcourt issued its findings of fact and

    conclusions of law in June 2006. ULT sought to file a supplemental motion for summary judgment on

    collateral estoppel grounds in September 2006, but the stay continued in effect pending the Federal

    Circuits review of the Illinois District Courts ruling. The Federal Circuit affirmed the prior decision and

    issued its mandate on January 23, 2008. Shortly thereafter, Plaintiffs counsel contacted ULTs counsel

    regarding the possibility of a stipulated dismissal. ULT declined, instead choosing to file its supplemental

    motion for summary judgment in order, apparently, to preserve its right to claim attorneys fees. Within a

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    few weeks of the filing of the supplemental motion for summary judgment, plaintiffs counsel

    communicated a willingness to agree to a consent judgment. The proposed consent judgment was

    presented to and ultimately entered by this Court in April 2008.

    III. FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

    ULTs argument to the contrary notwithstanding, while this Court is bound by the Osramcourts

    finding of inequitable conduct, it is not bound by the finding of exceptionality. This case is procedurally

    quite different from Osram: It did not go to trial; this Court made no substantive legal or factual

    conclusions; and the parties drafted their own stipulation of dismissal. From the Courts perspective, this

    case distinguished itself only by the amount of time during which it was stayed. ULT has not established

    that this case was frivolous at its inception nor that Plaintiffs engaged in bad-faith litigation tactics.

    Instead, Plaintiffs never opposed the stays sought by ULT and moved promptly to dispose of this case

    once it was clear that the holding in Osramwas binding here. The declarations of counsel, which this

    Court has no reason not to accept, indicate that Plaintiffs had a reasonable basis (or a reasonable

    excuse) for their various litigation decisions and did not act in bad faith. In sum, notwithstanding the

    Osramcourts finding, by which this Court is bound, that Nilssen engaged in inequitable conduct, the

    Court finds that ULT has not presented clear and convincing evidence of exceptionality. On that basis, an

    award of attorneys fees is not warranted by the statute. Moreover, even if the matter could be

    characterized as exceptional, the Court would nonetheless exercise its discretion to deny the motion for

    attorneys fees, based largely, again, upon this cases unusual procedural posture and the fact that most

    of the substantive work was performed in the context of the Osram proceedings and the USPTOs

    reexamination.

    Accordingly, defendant ULTs Motion for Attorneys Fees (Doc. No. 186) and Amended Motion for

    Attorneys Fees (Doc. No. 191) are hereby DENIED.

    It is so ORDERED.

    Thomas A. Wiseman, Jr.Senior U.S. District Judge

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