ESIP Series 1 v. doTerra International

CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedApril 16, 2021
Docket2:15-cv-00779
StatusUnknown

This text of ESIP Series 1 v. doTerra International (ESIP Series 1 v. doTerra International) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ESIP Series 1 v. doTerra International, (D. Utah 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH

ESIP SERIES 1, LLC, a Utah Limited Liability Company, and ESIP SERIES 2, LLC MEMORANDUM DECISION AND a Utah Limited Liability Company, ORDER CONSTRUING CLAIMS

Plaintiffs, Case No. 2:15-cv-00779-RJS-DBP v. Chief District Judge Robert J. Shelby DOTERRA INTERNATIONAL, LLC, a Utah Limited Liability Company, PUZHEN LIFE Chief Magistrate Judge Dustin B. Pead USA, LLC, a New York Limited Liability Company, PUZHEN, LLC, a New York Limited Liability Company, and DOE COMPANIES 1-9,

Defendants.

ESIP Series 1, LLC and ESIP Series 2, LLC (collectively, Plaintiff) manufacturer, market, and sell atomizing diffusers for use with essential oils and aroma therapy through authorized licensees. Plaintiff filed this patent infringement action against Defendants doTerra International, LLC; Puzhen Life USA, LLC; Puzhen, LLC; and Doe Companies 1-9 (collectively, Defendants), alleging they make, use, sell, offer to sell, and/or import into the United States a nebulizing diffuser device that infringes Plaintiff’s patent for improved diffusion of essential oils.1

1 Plaintiff originally filed this action in 2015, complaining Defendants infringed on U.S. Patent No. 7,878,418. Dkt. 5 (Amended Complaint against doTerra and Puzhen, LLC) and Dkt. 9 (Second Amended Complaint against Puzhen Life USA, LLC and Puzhen, LLC). In 2016, Plaintiff filed another suit in this District against Defendants, Case No. 2:16-cv-01011, concerning both Patent 7,878,418 and another patent, U.S. Patent No. 9,415,130. See Dkt. 2 in Case No. 2:16-cv-01011 (Complaint). The 2016 case was consolidated into this one for all purposes, with the Complaint in the 2016 case operating as the governing Complaint. See Dkt. 43, Order Consolidating Cases. In June 2020, the parties stipulated to dismiss with prejudice all claims and counterclaims relating to Patent No. 9,415,130, following the Federal Circuit’s decision in ESIP Series 2, LLC v. Puzhen Life USA, LLC, 958 F.3d 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2020), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 557, 208 L. Ed. 2d 178 (2020). Now before the court are the parties’ Cross-Motions for Claim Construction.2 After receiving argument during a Markman hearing3, and for the reasons explained below, the court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the parties’ respective Motions.4

BACKGROUND

I. Patented Technology Plaintiff owns the patent at issue in the parties’ Cross-Motions, U.S. Patent No. 7,878,418 (the Patent), for an Integrated, Essential-Oil Atomizer.5 An essential oil atomizer (or diffuser) is a device that breaks down essential oils into smaller particles, dispersing them into the air.6 The patented device is shown below in Figure A.7 In its most basic form, this device consists of an atomizer (16), a housing (12), a reservoir (18), and a pump (14). The Patent describes one embodiment as a “system having a housing for a pump driven by an oscillating motor to draw liquids from a reservoir and distribute them through an eductor into the atmosphere.”8

2 Dkts. 84 (Defendants’ Cross Motion for Claim Construction), 86 (Plaintiff’s Cross Motion for Claim Construction); see also Dkts. 88 (Plaintiff’s Response), 89 (Defendants’ Joint Response). 3 See Dkt. 100 (Minute Entry for hearing held February 18, 2021). 4 Dkts. 84 (Defs.’ Cross-Motion for Claim Construction) and 86 (Pl.’s Cross Motion for Claim Construction). 5 Dkt. 2-1 (Patent) (attached as Exh. A to original 2015 Complaint). 6 Id. at 1:6-15. 7 Id., Fig. 1. 8 Id. at 2:10-13. Figure A

J4 13 ee f Sf A SB i= 4’ ; LC) Qe a) Dt = | ALS! ¢ 7 | ) Wa ~) ) % Z ss oe | 12

The Patent’s Background section describes various mechanisms used for dispersing liquid particles into the air, including devices used to apply paint onto surfaces.’ The Patent recites problems related to these spray-paint devices. First, the pumps are “typically very heavy on the order of several pounds or tens of pounds.”!° Second, the “systems are typically not integrated,” leaving large paint reservoirs separate from spray handles and pumps.!! The Patent claims to improve upon these shortcomings with a smaller, integrated device allowing a safer, simpler application and a better atomization or a smaller average droplet size.”

° Id. at 1:10-13. 10 Td. at 1:24-27. "Td. at 1:23-32. 2 Td. at 1:33-67; 2:1-3.

Consistent with our Local Patent Rules, the parties presented to the court six phrases for claim construction.13 These phrases focus on four different features of the patented invention: (1) the spacing between a nozzle and an aperture, (2) the type of connection between the atomizer and the pump, (3) the amount of anchoring employed by the pump, and (4) the size of oil droplets that either become atomized into the airflow or drop back down into the reservoir.

Before construing the language in dispute, the court provides some context relating to each of the four features identified. 1. Nozzle-Aperture Spacing

The Patent applies to a device containing a nozzle between a pump and an atomizer that discharges particles into an aperture. The “nozzle [has] a minimum effective diameter discharging the flow therethrough and into an aperture spaced therefrom a distance of from about one to about 10 times the minimum effective diameter of the aperture of the nozzle.”14 The specification does not explicitly go beyond this description of the nozzle-to-aperture spacing, nor does it describe the spacing with reference to other parts. Figure B below illustrates how the nozzle (114) is positioned to discharge airflow into an “exit orifice” (119).15

13 Dkts. 84 (Defs.’ Cross-Motion for Claim Construction) and 86 (Pl.’s Cross Motion for Claim Construction); see also Dkts. 88 (Pl.’s Response), 89 (Defs.’ Joint Response). 14 Patent at 3:14-18. 15 Id. at 10:37-56. Figure B'°

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2. Atomizer-Pump Connection The Patent points to connections between the atomizer, the reservoir, and the pump, explaining that the “atomizer may be connected directly to a reservoir” and also the “atomizer may be connected directly to a pump[.]”!” The Patent describes these connections with reference to Figure 1 of the Patent (Figure A above): “An outlet 11 from the pump may protrude into or through a housing connector 15b mated to secure to a connector 15b as part of an atomizer 16.”'®

16 Fig. 9. "7 Td. at 2:22-25. 18 See id. at 5:22-24; see also id. at 8:16-19 (“the actual outlet 11 of the pump 14 stands away from the connector 15a and near the center thereof. The atomizer 16 may connect directly to the outlet 11.”).

This engagement between the pump outlet 11 and the atomizer 16 is “sealed” using an o-ring seal (94) with a nozzle (92) fitting within a cavity of the atomizer, as shown in Figure C below.!?

Figure C”°

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a _ “4 = eather = □ >

3. Pump Anchoring The Patent explains the atomizer can be “anchored” to a support surface to prevent the device from tipping over and spilling. In one embodiment, the Patent states that “[t]he atomizer may be connected directly to the pump anchoring the atomizer to a supporting surface by weight, stability, base, or the like.”?! In other embodiments, the function of “[a]nchoring the atomizer” can be accomplished by “both of the pump and housing assembly” to “reduce[] the chance of breakage or spilling of an atomizer system sitting on a supporting surface.”

19 Td. at 8:28-44. 20 Fig. 7. 21 Td. at 2:20-26. 22 See id. at 3:37-40 (emphasis added); see also id. at 6:47-49 (“. . .

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ESIP Series 1 v. doTerra International, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esip-series-1-v-doterra-international-utd-2021.