Cloud Farm Associates LP v. Volkswagen Group of America, Inc.

674 F. App'x 1000
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 2017
Docket2016-1448
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 674 F. App'x 1000 (Cloud Farm Associates LP v. Volkswagen Group of America, 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
Cloud Farm Associates LP v. Volkswagen Group of America, Inc., 674 F. App'x 1000 (Fed. Cir. 2017).

Opinion

Clevenger, Circuit Judge.

Cloud Farm Associates LP (“Cloud Farm”) sued Volkswagen Group of America (“Volkswagen”) and ZF Sachs AG (“ZF”) (collectively, “defendants”) in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware alleging infringement. Specifically, Cloud Farm alleged that Volkswagen had infringed four patents directed towards vehicular tilt control apparatuses, and that ZF had infringed three of those patents. Following two rounds of claim construction, the parties stipulated that, if the district court’s constructions were not reversed or modified on appeal, Cloud Farm could not prove infringement of any asserted claims. Joint Stipulation 4-5, ECF 349-1. Cloud Farm and Volkswagen further stipulated that under the district court’s constructions, two asserted claims are invalid as indefinite under 35 U.S.C. § 112. Id. at 5-6. The district court adopted the joint stipulation and entered a final judgment of non-infringement and invalidity. Final Judgment 1-2, ECF 350. Cloud Farm appeals the district court’s construction of several claim terms. Because we agree with the district court’s construction of those terms, we affirm.

I

Cloud Farm is the owner of the four patents at issue: U.S. Patent Nos. 5,437,-354 (“the ’354 Patent”), 5,529,153 (“the ’153 Patent”), 5,971,115 (“the ’115 Patent”), and 5,979,616 (“the ’616 Patent”), each of which is titled “Tilt Control Apparatus for Vehicles.” Cloud Farm asserted all patents against Volkswagen, and all but the ’616 patent against ZF. The patents are directed towards devices that limit body roll or tilt in a car while it is going around a turn or curve by limiting flow of hydraulic fluid between chambers within the apparatus. In addition to working as a tilt control apparatus, the patented device can also be used as a suspension shock absorber or be used in conjunction with a vehicle’s conventional shock absorbers. The patented products include a sensing component that activates the flow-limiting component at a pre-set level of body roll, or in response to certain vehicle, inputs such as speed or steering angle. Claim 1 of the ’354 patent is representative of the asserted claims of the ’354, ’153, and ’115 patents, all of which contain the “seal” and “prevent” terms at issue on appeal:

1. In a vehicle having an interior and an exterior, a transverse axle and a body, and being subject to swaying and tilting when the vehicle turns a corner or is driven around a curve, the improvement which comprises an apparatus for limiting the swaying and tilting movement of said vehicle comprising, on at least one side of the vehicle, a chamber partially filled with hydraulic fluid and having an upper end and a lower end; a moveable piston sealing the lower end of said chamber, attached to said transverse axle; the upper end of the chamber being closed and attached to said body of the vehicle; a plate within said chamber having a substantially central opening separating said fluid within the chamber into a lower portion and an upper portion; movable sealing means within said chamber and when activated seals said central opening; means for moving the sealing means to seal said *1003 opening; means for sensing the tilting movement of said vehicle, electrically combined with means for moving the sealing means to seal said opening when the sensing means is activated at a predetermined tilt position of the body to prevent flow of said fluid from the lower portion of the chamber into the upper portion of the chamber and thus prevent tilting of the frame or body of the vehicle.
’354 patent col.6 11.12-35 (filed Feb. 10, 1994).

The ’616 patent is a continuation of the ’153 patent, and describes additional sensing devices for use in the tilt-controller system. Cloud Farm asserted claims 1 and 5 of the ’616 patent against Volkswagen only. Those claims are reproduced in full below:

1. Apparatus for a vehicle having at least the following two structural elements, a transverse axle and a body comprising, on each side of the vehicle, a chamber partially filled with hydraulic fluid, a movable piston at one end of and within said chamber and attached to one of said structural elements; the other end of said chamber being attached to the other end of said structural elements of the vehicle; a fixed plate within said chamber having a sealable opening to separate fluid within said chamber into two portions above and below said fixed plate; sealing means within said chamber adapted to seal said sealable opening; a steering wheel disposed between the two sides of the vehicle within a steering column rotatable through an angle from 0 to 180 degrees; sensing means within said steering column to sense rotation of said steering wheel and a pre-set minimum speed of said vehicle, such that when rotation of said steering wheel is below about 20 degrees or beyond about 160 degrees, at or above said pre-set minimum speed, said sensing means will send a signal to said sealing means; thereby, when activated by said sensing means, said sealing means will seal said sealable opening in said plate to prevent flow of said fluid from one portion to the other portion of said chamber, whereby tilting of one of said structural elements toward said other structural element is prevented.
5. A vehicle having a suspension system disposed between a transverse axle and a body of said vehicle wherein the vehicle is equipped with means for controlling the suspension system, the improvement comprises means for continuously sensing angular or steering movement of said vehicle and means for activating said means for controlling said suspension system at a pre-set angle of movement of said vehicle depending upon the speed of the vehicle in accordance with the Table set forth below:

*1004 [[Image here]]

to convert. the normally fast rate of movement of the body toward said axle to a slower rate of movement of said body toward said axle.
’616 patent col.13 11.25-88, col.15 1.1-col.161.16 (filed Feb. 6,1998).

II

The district .court conducted two Mark-man hearings and construed multiple claim terms. Cloud Farm Assocs., L.P. v. Volkswagen Grp. of Am., Inc., No. 10-cv-502, 2012 WL 3069405 (D. Del. July 27, 2012) (“Markman I”); Cloud Farm Assocs., L.P. v. Volkswagen Grp. of Am., Inc., No. 10-cv-502, 2015 WL 4730898 (D. Del. Aug. 10, 2015) (“Markman II”). Five of those claim terms are at issue here. The first terms, “seal” and “prevent,” are found in all asserted claims of the ’354, ’153, and ’115 patents and in claim 1 of the ’616 patent. 1 The district court construed both of these terms to mean “stop.” Markman I at *4-6, *8, *13-14; Markman II at *6. As examples, the district court construed “seal,” “seals,” and “sealing” to mean “stopping the flow of hydraulic fluid,” and construed “prevent flow of said fluid” to mean “to stop flow of said hydraulic fluid.” Id. at *4.

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