Checkpoint Systems, Inc. v. All-Tag Security S.A.

711 F.3d 1341, 106 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1234, 2013 WL 1188940, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6082
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 2013
Docket2012-1085
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 711 F.3d 1341 (Checkpoint Systems, Inc. v. All-Tag Security S.A.) 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
Checkpoint Systems, Inc. v. All-Tag Security S.A., 711 F.3d 1341, 106 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1234, 2013 WL 1188940, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6082 (Fed. Cir. 2013).

Opinion

NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Checkpoint Systems, Inc. (“Checkpoint”) sued All-Tag Security S.A., All-Tag Security Americas, Inc., and an All-Tag customer Sensormatic Electronics Corporation (collectively, “All-Tag”) for infringement of U.S. Patent No. 4,876,555 (“the '555 patent”), entitled “Resonance Label and Method for its Fabrication.” A jury found the '555 patent not infringed, *1343 invalid, and unenforceable. The district court entered judgment on the verdict, held the case “exceptional” in terms of 35 U.S.C. § 285, and awarded the defendants approximately $6.6 million in attorney fees, costs, and interest. The patent term has expired, and only the award of attorney fees is appealed. We reverse the award, for the requirements of § 285 were not met.

BackgRound

Checkpoint and All-Tag are competitors in the manufacture and sale of “resonance tags.” Resonance tags are electronic anti-shoplifting devices that are attached to merchandise whereby if the attached tag is not deactivated, for example by a cashier at check-out, the tag triggers an alarm when the tagged goods move past detectors located at the store’s exit.

The patented resonance tag is constructed of three layers: a middle dielectric layer sandwiched between two conducting layers. The tag is deactivated in the check-out procedure by passing a strong current through the tag, which creates a short circuit between the conducting layers whereby no alarm is given to the detectors. Checkpoint’s '555 patent is for a resonance tag that can be deactivated “at a lower current and with greater reliability.” '555 patent Abstract. This property is achieved by placing a “throughhole” or “continuous hole” in the middle dielectric layer. Id. Claim 1 is representative:

1. A deactivatable resonance label, comprising:
a dielectric layer having first and second opposed faces;
a first conducting layer on the first face of the dielectric layer, the first conducting layer being shaped to form an inductor and a first capacitor plate;
a second conducting layer on the second face of the dielectric layer, the second conducting layer being shaped to form a second capacitor plate, the first and second conducting layers being at least partially superimposed, said first and second conducting layers and said dielectric layer forming together an oscillating circuit; and
shorting means for enabling creation of a short-circuit between the first and second conducting layers when it is desired to deactivate the oscillating circuit, the shorting means being comprised of at least one throughhole passing through the dielectric layer to provide a short circuit path between the first and second conducting layers.

The issue of infringement was focused on whether All-Tag’s resonance tags have such a throughhole in the dielectric layer. The attorney fee award was based on Checkpoint’s presentation of expert testimony analyzing the All-Tag tags, for the district court found that the tags that were examined by the Checkpoint expert were not the accused tags manufactured by All-Tag in Belgium, but earlier tags manufactured by All-Tag in Switzerland.

Checkpoint’s expert was Dr. Markus Zahn, professor of electrical engineering at MIT. Checkpoint furnished Dr. Zahn with a roll of All-Tag tags to test for the infringing throughhole. To expose the critical dielectric layer, Dr. Zahn dissolved the conductive aluminum layer that covered the dielectric material. Dr. Zahn then examined the tags using a high-powered microscope; he observed that they had a throughhole in the dielectric layer, and he passed colored water through the hole to confirm this observation. Dr. Zahn’s expert report, deposition, and testimony at trial described his procedures and results, including photographs.

Upon reviewing Dr. Zahn’s deposition exhibits a few days before trial, All-Tag Security S.A.’s President and CEO Olivier Boels stated his belief that Dr. Zahn had *1344 tested tags that were not the current accused products. Mr. Boels stated that the tags that were tested were made by All-Tag Security A.G. in Switzerland, and were not the current tags which are made by All-Tag Security S.A. in Belgium. The record states that the roll of tested tags was acquired from an All-Tag customer “in the marketplace.” Dr. Zahn testified that the serial number of the tags he tested was listed on All-Tag’s website at the time of trial.

All-Tag moved to exclude Dr. Zahn from testifying, arguing that his infringement opinion was fatally flawed because the tags he examined were not the tags accused of infringement. The district court denied All-Tag’s motion and permitted Dr. Zahn to testify.

Dr. Zahn testified that All-Tag’s resonance tags contained a throughhole, and met all the terms of the asserted claims of Checkpoint’s '555 patent. Dr. Zahn based his infringement opinion on his examination of the All-Tag tags, and on two All-Tag patents, U.S. Patent No. 5,187,466 (“the '466 patent”) and No. 7,023,343 (“the '343 patent”). All-Tag stated that these patents generally describe the process that All-Tag Security S.A. was using in Belgium to produce the resonance tags that are charged with infringement, the '343 patent describing improvements over the process described in the '466 patent. Dr. Zahn explained that both of the All-Tag patents describe products having a hole in the dielectric layer, as required by the claims of the Checkpoint patent in suit. Dr. Zahn concluded that tags produced in accordance with the process in the All-Tag patents would infringe the Checkpoint '555 patent.

The record states that in 1994 All-Tag moved its manufacture of resonance tags from Switzerland to Belgium, and transferred its machinery and equipment to a newly formed Belgian company. The Belgian company resumed making resonance tags on the same equipment within about a week of the move.

Checkpoint filed this infringement suit in May 2001 against the All-Tag Belgian manufacturer and its United States company, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. During pre-trial procedures, Checkpoint asked All-Tag to admit that its resonance tags contained a throughhole. All-Tag responded that its tags were made “generally in accordance with” All-Tag’s '466 patent and the then-pending application for the '343 patent. All-Tag stated that it used the manufacturing process described in the '466 patent until April 2001, and that it thereafter modified the process as described in the '343 application. Both patents describe methods of producing at least one “hole” or “crater” or “material free” area in the dielectric layer of a three-layer resonance tag.

The '466 patent describes making a resonance tag by burning “at least one hole” in the dielectric material using a heated rod. '466 patent col.2 11.65-66. A “complete melting of the material” forms the “holes (craters).” Id. col.3 11.18-22. The heated rod melts the dielectric material, which is “displaced completely” and “removed completely.” Id. col.4 11.6-22. This leaves a “hole 6” and an “air gap S.” Id. Fig. 4. Checkpoint’s expert Dr.

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711 F.3d 1341, 106 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1234, 2013 WL 1188940, 2013 U.S. App. LEXIS 6082, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/checkpoint-systems-inc-v-all-tag-security-sa-cafc-2013.