Csp Technologies, Inc. v. Sud-Chemie Ag

643 F. App'x 953
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 2016
Docket2015-1124
StatusUnpublished

This text of 643 F. App'x 953 (Csp Technologies, Inc. v. Sud-Chemie Ag) 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
Csp Technologies, Inc. v. Sud-Chemie Ag, 643 F. App'x 953 (Fed. Cir. 2016).

Opinion

CHEN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal arises from a patent-infringement action CSP Technologies, Inc. (CSP) filed against Süd-Chemie AG, Süd-Chemie, Inc., Airsec S.A.S., Clariant Pro-dukte Deutschland GMBH, Clariant Corporation, and Clariant Production (France) S.A.S. (Süd Chemie). The dis *954 trict court construed the claim term “an upper housing portion of the container” in Süd Chemie’s favor, and Süd Chemie sought summary judgment of non-infringement both literally and by equivalents based on this construction.- The district court granted summary judgment. CSP appeals the district court’s claim construction (and consequently its summary judgment of non-infringement). Additionally, even if we affirm the district court’s claim construction, CSP appeals the grant of summary judgment of non-infringement by equivalents. We affirm the district court on both grounds.

Baokground

CSP and Süd Chemie are competitors in the business of watertight containers for packaging consumer goods. CSP sued Sud Chemie for infringement of its U.S. Patent No. 7,537,137 (the 137 patent), which claims a particular watertight container with an attached lid. Claim 1, representative for our purposes, reads in relevant part:

A substantially moisture tight container and lid assembly for storing and packaging moisture-sensitive items comprising:
an assembly with a container and a lid,
a) the lid is attached by a hinge to an upper housing portion of the container, the lid has an outer periphery that extends over at least a portion of the container, the lid is provided with a skirt that extends downwardly therefrom,
b) the container has a container base, and a sidewall extending upwardly from the container base,

The T37 patent’s specification describes two different types of containers. First, it describes a one-piece container. This container is formed as a single piece, with a lid attached by a hinge. It depicts this type of container in Figure 10:

[[Image here]]

Second, the patent describes a two-piece container. This container similarly has a lid attached by a hinge, but the top portion of the container to which the lid attaches is separable from the bottom portion of the container. The specification explains that this two-piece container design facilitates pre-loading the container’s contents: the contents are first loaded into the container’s bottom piece, and then the top piece is snap-fit onto the bottom piece with the contents already inside. The patent’s Figure 6 shows this two-piece type of container:

*955 [[Image here]]

The parties agree that Süd Chemie’s accused product is a one-piece container, not a two-piece one. The only question before us in this appeal is therefore whether a one-piece container infringes the asserted claims, either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents.

The only claim term relevant to the parties’ arguments.on appeal is the container’s “upper housing portion.” Below, CSP proposed an ordinary-meaning construction and Süd Chemie proposed the construction: “an upper housing portion of the container that is separate and distinct from the container base.” CSP Techs., Inc. v. Süd-Chemie AG, 2013 WL 2421943, at *8, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77441, *17 (S.D.Ind. June 3, 2013) (Claim-Construction Order). The parties agree that their claim-construction dispute on this. term boils down to a single issue: whether the term excludes one-piece containers from the asserted claims’ scope. Under CSP’s ordinary-meaning construction, the term refers generically to the top portion of the container, whether or not it is separable, and the claims would literally encompass both one-piece and two-piece containers. Under Süd Chemie’s construction the term refers to a separable top piece of the container, excluding one-piece containers from the claims’ literal reach.

’ The district court began its analysis of this term by determining that the specification did not explicitly define it. The court then turned to an extrinsic dictionary definition of the word “housing,” which defined it as “something that covers or protects” something else. Claim-Construction Order at *19 (quoting Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 603 (11th ed.2006)). It found this definition to support a construction where the “upper housing portion!’ is a separate piece that “covers or protects” the container’s bottom piece. It then turned to the claims themselves, noting that the relevant claim language is divided into two subparts, labeled “a)” and “b).” It found subpart a) to refer to the upper housing portion and subpart b) to refer to the remainder of the container. It therefore found this separation into subparts to imply a physical separation between the upper housing portion and the remainder of the container. Finally, it considered the specification, which uses the term “upper housing portion” consistently and exclusively in the context of the disclosed two-piece embodiment. It inferred from this consistent usage that the patentee intended the term to reference the two-piece embodiment. The .district *956 court therefore adopted Süd Chemie’s construction limiting the term to a detachable part found only in the two-piece embodiment. Id. at *8, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 77441, at *20.

Concurrent with its claim-construction briefing Süd Chemie had filed briefing requesting summary judgment of non-infringement should the district court grant any of its proposed constructions. The parties fully briefed this summary-judgment motion before the claim-construction order issued, and each party submitted a supplemental brief after the order. CSP Techs., Inc. v. Süd-Chemie AG, 2014 WL 496828, at *3-4, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14687, *8-*9 (S.D.Ind. Feb. 6, 2014). The district court considered this briefing and granted Süd Chemie summary judgment of non-infringement both literally and by equivalents. Id. at *6-7, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14687, at *18. CSP appeals on two grounds. First, it takes issue with the district court’s construction of “upper housing portion,” maintaining that the term’s ordinary meaning encompasses one-piece and two-piece containers. If we agree with CSP on this first issue, we must also reverse the district court’s summary-judgment order predicated on this construction. Second, even if we affirm the district court’s construction, CSP challenges its grant of summary judgment of no infringement under the doctrine of equivalents, arguing that the court improperly found its equivalents arguments barred by the disclosure-dedication and claim-vitiation doctrines.

Discussion

We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).

We affirm the district court’s claim construction. We also find that the district court appropriately applied the disclosure-dedication doctrine to conclude that a two-piece container cannot infringe under the doctrine of equivalents. We therefore need not reach the district court’s conclusion that claim vitiation additionally forecloses infringement under the doctrine of equivalents.

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Bluebook (online)
643 F. App'x 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/csp-technologies-inc-v-sud-chemie-ag-cafc-2016.