Atm Shafiqul Khalid And Xencare Software, Inc. v. Citrix Systems, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 7, 2020
Docket79145-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Atm Shafiqul Khalid And Xencare Software, Inc. v. Citrix Systems, Inc. (Atm Shafiqul Khalid And Xencare Software, Inc. v. Citrix Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Atm Shafiqul Khalid And Xencare Software, Inc. v. Citrix Systems, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

ATM SHAFIQUL KHALID, an No. 79143-5-I individual, and XENCARE consolidated with No. 79405-1-I SOFTWARE, INC., a Washington corporation, No. 79145-1-I consolidated with No. 79305-5-I Appellants, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION CITRIX SYSTEMS, INC., a Delaware corporation,

Respondent.

CITRIX SYSTEMS, INC.,

Appellant,

v.

ATM SHAFIQUL KHALID, and XENCARE SOFTWARE, INC.,

Respondents.

ANDRUS, A.C.J. — Software engineer ATM Shafiqul Khalid 1 sued his former

employer, Citrix Systems, Inc., raising numerous claims, including breach of an

employment agreement relating to the ownership of intellectual property Khalid

1“ATM” does not stand for any specific name and, according to Khalid, in Bangladesh, where Khalid was born, the letters are commonly used as part of people's names.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material. No. 79143-5-I/2 (consolidated with 79405-1-I), and No. 79145-1-I (consolidated with 79305-5-I)

developed during his employment. Citrix countersued Khalid for breaching the same

agreement and for trademark infringement under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. §1114

et seq. based on Khalid’s use of Citrix’s “Xen” trademarks for his startup businesses.

On summary judgment, the trial court dismissed several of Khalid’s claims and

also found Khalid had infringed Citrix’s trademarks. A jury subsequently found Citrix

breached Khalid’s employment agreement and severance agreement and awarded

him over $3 million in damages. The jury found Khalid had not breached his

employment agreement and awarded Citrix no damages on its trademark

infringement claim.

In post-trial motions, the trial court awarded Khalid over $2.6 million in attorney

fees and costs. It awarded Citrix $117,816 in legal fees and costs for prevailing in

part on summary judgment on its trademark infringement counterclaim. The trial

court also concluded, based on the jury’s verdicts, that Citrix has no ownership

interest in two of Khalid’s patents and entered a declaratory judgment to that effect

in Khalid’s favor.

On appeal, Citrix and Khalid challenge a number of pretrial, trial, and post-

trial decisions. 2 We conclude that the trial court erred in denying Khalid’s request

for prejudgment interest on the jury’s $3 million damages award and erred in

awarding attorney fees to Citrix on its trademark infringement claim. We remand

with instructions to vacate the attorney fee award in favor of Citrix, to award

prejudgment interest to Khalid as set out in this opinion, and to adjust Khalid’s

2 Although Xencare Software, Inc. was identified as an appellant in the notice of appeal, only Khalid assigned errors for our review in this appeal.

-2- No. 79143-5-I/3 (consolidated with 79405-1-I), and No. 79145-1-I (consolidated with 79305-5-I)

attorney fee award to eliminate compensation for work that does not relate to a

common core of facts. In all other regards, we affirm the decisions of the trial court

and the judgment entered on the jury's verdicts.

FACTS

Khalid’s Education and Employment History

Khalid completed his undergraduate studies in computer science and

engineering in Bangladesh, his country of origin, in 1995. After publishing multiple

research papers in computer science journals and winning a national computer

programming competition from the Bangladesh Computer Council, Khalid began

graduate studies in the United States, completing a master’s degree in computer

engineering in 1998. That same year, he began working at Microsoft as a software

design engineer, in its “kernel and architecture group,” working on the nucleus of its

Windows operating system.

In 2006, Khalid left Microsoft to join Citrix, an international technology

company that provides desktop virtualization and networking services. Citrix hired

Khalid to work in “Citrix Labs,” the company’s research and development group that

functioned as a think tank responsible for the creation and development of new

products.

Khalid’s Inventions

Khalid has a lengthy history of developing patentable inventions, both for his

employers and for his own, separate, business endeavors. The litigation with Citrix

involves two such inventions.

-3- No. 79143-5-I/4 (consolidated with 79405-1-I), and No. 79145-1-I (consolidated with 79305-5-I)

The ‘637 Patent for the Mini-Cloud System

On July 15, 2014, the United States Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO)

issued patent number 8,782,637 (the ‘637 Patent). This patent, entitled “Mini-

Cloud System for Enabling User Subscription to Cloud Service in Residential

Environment,” is described as a system “to enable subscription or service model

for computing infrastructure, software, and digital content.”

Khalid described the ‘637 Patent as a system comprised of multiple

components, including what Khalid called a “thin terminal” device, which is a small

piece of computer hardware, similar to a Roku or an Apple TV USB device, paired

with a software system to manage digital content subscription services. Khalid

began developing the software subscription component of this system as early as in

1996 while still a graduate student. This component involved compressing software

to allow users to download it from an online source, so the software seller could

eliminate retail in-store sales. He filed a provisional patent application for the system

to support a software subscription service in 2001. 3

In 2007, he broadened the provisional patent application to include a

framework and platform for incorporating a digital content subscription. In November

2009, Khalid filed yet another provisional patent application for a system and process

to consolidate a DSL modem and small computer into an “access gateway,” which

3 Since 1995, the USPTO has offered inventors the option of filing a “provisional” patent application, designed as a lower-cost first patent filing. The application has a pendency lasting 12 months and an applicant must file a corresponding nonprovisional application or convert the provisional into a nonprovisional application during the 12-month pendency period to benefit from the earlier filing date. See USPTO, Provisional Application For Patent, https://www.uspto.gov/patents-getting-started/patent-basics/types-patent-applications/provisional- application-patent (last visited Nov. 5, 2020).

-4- No. 79143-5-I/5 (consolidated with 79405-1-I), and No. 79145-1-I (consolidated with 79305-5-I)

could connect to services to host a remote desktop. This home gateway system was,

as Khalid described it, a method of combining and centrally managing one’s cell

phone, movie rentals, and internet services.

In January 2010, Khalid filed his next provisional patent application for “thin

devices to deliver computing power.” The thin device, described as like a Roku stick,

was the hardware needed to control his prior software system inventions.

On November 22, 2010, he filed a nonprovisional patent application

combining each of the components for which he had previously filed provisional

applications. This application is what culminated in the issuance of the ‘637 Patent.

Khalid initially formed a company he called KrisanTech in 2000 to develop

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