Facebook, Inc. v. Pragmatus Av, LLC

582 F. App'x 864
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedSeptember 11, 2014
Docket2013-1350, 2013-1351
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 582 F. App'x 864 (Facebook, Inc. v. Pragmatus Av, LLC) 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
Facebook, Inc. v. Pragmatus Av, LLC, 582 F. App'x 864 (Fed. Cir. 2014).

Opinion

MOORE, Circuit Judge.

Facebook, Inc. appeals from the Patent Trial and Appeal Board’s decisions in two related inter partes reexaminations affirming the examiner’s confirmation of all claims of Pragmatus AV, LLC’s U.S. Patent Nos. 7,421,470 and 7,433,921. Because the Board erred in construing the relevant claim limitation, we vacate and remand.

Background

Facebook requested, and the Patent Office initiated, inter partes reexaminations of the '470 and '921 patents. The patents share the same parent, nearly identical specifications, and similar claims (the '470 patent recites method claims and the '921 patent recites system claims). The patents are directed to facilitating real-time communications between users over computer networks. E.g., '470 patent, Abstract. All of the independent claims are directed to providing a first user with a list of identifiers of other users, allowing the first user to select an identifier of a second user from the list, and establishing communications between the two users using the addressing information of the second user’s communication device. Id. claims 1, 16, 29, 43; 921 patent claims 1, 13, 25. Relevant to this appeal, each claim requires maintaining associations between users and the addressing information of the devices used by those users. For example, claim 1 of the '470 patent, which is representative, recites:

A method comprising:
maintaining a first association between a first user and corresponding addressing information of a first communication device used by the first user to log in; maintaining a second association between a second user and corresponding addressing information of a second communication device used by the second user to log in....

This appeal centers on the construction of the phrase “addressing information of [the] device” that is common to the two *866 “maintaining” limitations reproduced above.

Facebook’s requests for inter partes reexamination proposed various anticipation and obviousness rejections of the claims, each relying on at least one of three prior art references — Bowen, Bowen II, and Liehty — as the primary reference. 1 Bowen and Bowen II are CompuServe user guides and Liehty is an America Online user guide. The examiner determined that all claims were patentable because Bowen, Bowen II, and Liehty do not disclose the “maintaining a first association” limitation. In particular, the examiner determined that the references do not disclose the claimed “addressing information of a first communication device” that is a part of the first association.

The Board affirmed the examiner’s confirmation of all claims. Facebook, Inc. v. Pragmatus AV, LLC, No. 2012-010460, 2013 WL 5402217 (Patent Tr. & App. Bd. Jan. 11, 2013) (’470 patent); Facebook, Inc. v. Pragmatus AV, LLC, No. 2012-010461, 2013 WL 5402218 (Patent Tr. & App. Bd. Jan. 11, 2013) (’921 patent). 2 The Board construed the phrase “addressing information of [the] device” as “the physical location of a communication device.... ” Bd. Op. at *5. Based on this construction, it found that none of the three references disclosed the “maintaining a first association” limitation because it determined that the alleged “addressing information” in each of the cited references was not a “physical location” of the first communication device. Bd. Op. at *6-11. Facebook appeals. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(4)(A).

Discussion

I. Claim Construction

When the Board reexamines an unexpired patent, it construes the claims under the broadest reasonable interpretation consistent with the specification. In re ICON Health and Fitness, Inc., 496 F.3d 1374, 1379 (Fed.Cir.2007). When the Board reexamines an expired patent, it construes the claims in accordance with the claim construction standard set forth in Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303 (Fed.Cir.2005). In re Rambus, Inc., 753 F.3d 1253, 1256 (Fed.Cir.2014).

These reexamination appeals come to us in an interesting procedural posture. The '470 and '921 patents had not expired at the time of the Board’s decisions, but are both expired now. Because the patents were then unexpired, the Board construed the claims in accordance with the broadest reasonable interpretation standard. Bd. Op. at *5. We review the Board’s claim construction de novo. Rambus Inc. v. Rea, 731 F.3d 1248, 1252 (Fed.Cir.2013).

We hold that the Board erred by unduly limiting the broadest reasonable interpretation of “addressing information of [the] device” to the “physical location” of the device. As an initial matter, it is not clear what the Board meant by a “physical location.” It is not clear whether this requirement in the Board’s construction refers to a geographical location, a location on the network, or some other location. We hold, however, that “physical location” unduly narrows the claim term “addressing information of [the] device,” because nothing in the plain language of the claims or in the *867 specification or prosecution history requires such a limitation.

We start with the language of the claims themselves. Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1314. The plain meaning of “addressing information of [the] device” is “information specific to the device that enables communication with the device.” The parties generally agree that the plain meaning of the first half of the limitation at issue— “addressing information” — is information that enables communication with the device. Pragmatus argued to the Board that “addressing information can be expressed in many forms. And really need only allow the system to direct information to the destination computer. That is what the phrase, addressing information means.” J.A. 6905. Similarly, Facebook argues on appeal that “ ‘addressing information’ as used in the claims simply means information that the system uses to send data to the communications device used to log in.” Appellant’s Br. at 14-15. Moreover, the claims require that the “addressing information” enables communication with the device because each independent claim recites “using the addressing information of the second communication device to allow communication between the first and second users.” E.g., '470 patent claim 1.

The remaining portion the claim term, “of [the] device,” does not require the claimed “addressing information” to be a physical location. The plain meaning of “of [the] device” is that the “addressing information” is specific to the device.

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582 F. App'x 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/facebook-inc-v-pragmatus-av-llc-cafc-2014.