Aerotel, Ltd. v. Telco Group, Inc.

433 F. App'x 903
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 26, 2011
Docket2010-1515
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 433 F. App'x 903 (Aerotel, Ltd. v. Telco Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aerotel, Ltd. v. Telco Group, Inc., 433 F. App'x 903 (Fed. Cir. 2011).

Opinion

O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.

In this patent case, Aerotel, Ltd. (“Aerotel”) appeals from a Consent Judgment in which the parties agreed that, based on the district court’s claim construction order, Claim 9 of U.S. Patent No. 4,706,275 (“the '275 Patent”) is invalid and not in *905 fringed by any Defendant. 1 The district court signed the Consent Judgment, thereby entering a final, appealable judgment of invalidity and noninfringement of Claim 9 of the '275 Patent. For the reasons explained below, the Consent Judgment is affirmed in part, and vacated in part.

Background

A. Factual Background

1. The '275 Patent

The '275 Patent, which issued on November 10, 1987, is directed to “[a] telephone system enabling prepayment for telephone calls.” It was invented by an Israeli citizen, Zvi Kamil, and was assigned to Aerotel. The patent expired on November 10, 2005.

The “Background of the Invention” explains that, at the time the application was filed, it was “extremely difficult to make long distance calls from public payphones since it requires large amounts of [ ] coins — not ordinarily carried about — especially when touring or on a business trip.” '275 Patent col. 1 11. 39-42. The background concludes with the statement that “there is a long felt need for a system which enables making telephone calls including local or toll calls conveniently, inexpensively and from any telephone.” Id. at col. 1 11. 54-57.

Generally speaking, the system described in the '275 Patent allows a customer to deposit a prepayment amount, either by cash or credit card payment, with a prepaid service provider. The prepaid amount is stored as a credit in the “special exchange,” which is the equipment that processes the prepaid calls. The customer is given: (1) a “special code” to access the stored balance; and (2) a number to dial into the “special exchange.”

a. The Embodiments

The '275 Patent’s specification discloses two embodiments. The first embodiment, which is illustrated in Figures 1 and 3, is a telephone system where the special exchange processes prepaid telephone calls from any available telephone. The second embodiment, which is illustrated in Figure 2, is a telephone system in which the special exchange processes prepaid telephone calls from dedicated public telephones.

Figure 1 is a flow chart depicting a customer’s use of the prepaid telephone system from any private telephone:

*906 [[Image here]]

In this embodiment, a customer can use any available telephone to dial the “special central office” which accesses the “special exchange” (Blocks 13 & 14). When the customer is connected to the special central office or exchange, “a special dial tone is sent from the special exchange to the calling station.” '275 Patent col. 3 11. 23-26. The customer then inputs: (1) the “special code” which provides access to that caller’s prepaid amount; and (2) the telephone number of the party to be called (Block 17). When the code and credit are verified (Block 18), a normal dial tone is sent to the caller (Block 19) and the system dials the called party (Block 21). 2 At Block 22, the “special exchange equipment provides an artificial or prerecorded voice announcement stating the amount of credit available and that the amount of credit is equivalent to so many minutes of talking *907 time on the call being connected.” '275 Patent col. 311. 43-47.

After the call is connected, a “time and distance computing circuit [which] is shown as a peg counter, is put into service to provide information for timing the call against the available credit.” '275 Patent col. 4 11. 3-6. Information from the peg counter (Block 28) is sent to a comparator (Block 29) “to continuously determine whether the calling party’s credit is sufficient to pay for the call.” Id. at col 4 11. 6-9. The call is disconnected if the balance is insufficient to continue the call or if the user terminates the call (Blocks 31 & 34). If there is credit remaining when the call is terminated, the updated prepaid balance is stored in the special exchange for future use.

The embodiment in Figure 2 is a telephone system in which the special exchange processes calls made from dedicated public phones. In this embodiment, the dedicated phone automatically connects directly to the special exchange without any dialing. Once connected to the special exchange, the caller inputs the special code and the telephone number of the called party. The special exchange validates the code and the credit, and then connects the caller to the party associated with the inputted number.

b. Claim 9 of the '275 Patent

The '275 Patent has three independent claims: two method claims (Claims 1 and 23) 3 and one apparatus claim (Claim 9). Although Aerotel initially asserted all three claims against Defendants, after the district court’s claim construction, Aerotel abandoned Claims 1 and 23. As such, the only claim at issue in this appeal is Claim 9, which deals with a system for making telephone calls from “a ny available telephone station for prepaid customers.”

Claim 9 provides as follows:

A telephone system for facilitating telephone calls including toll calls from any available telephone station for prepaid customers, said system comprising:
(a) means for coupling a calling party station to a special exchange;
(b) memory means in said special exchange for storing special customer codes and credit information individual to each prepaid customer;
(c) means for verifying said calling party responsive to a code transmitted from the calling party’s station to the special exchange when one of the codes matches the code in the memory means and the calling party has unused credit and;
(d) means for completing a call from said calling party station to a called station responsive to said verification, said means for verifying including means for monitoring the credit of the calling party during a completed call.

'275 Patent col. 711. 26-44. The only claim terms at issue in this appeal appear in bold: (1) the “means for coupling;” and (2) the “means for monitoring the credit.”

2. The Prosecution History

a. Original Prosecution

The '275 Patent application was filed on November 13, 1985. In an Office Action dated October 2, 1986, the PTO rejected Claims 1-23 under 35 U.S.C. § 112

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Bluebook (online)
433 F. App'x 903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aerotel-ltd-v-telco-group-inc-cafc-2011.