First-Class Monitoring, LLC v. United Parcel Serv. of Am., Inc.
This text of 389 F. Supp. 3d 456 (First-Class Monitoring, LLC v. United Parcel Serv. of Am., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WILLIAM C. BRYSON, UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
This is a patent infringement action brought by plaintiff First-Class Monitoring, LLC ("FCM") against defendant United Parcel Service of America, Inc. ("UPS"). Before the Court is UPS's motion to dismiss the complaint based on patent ineligibility under
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff FCM is the assignee and owner of
I. The '089 Patent
The '089 patent relates to "an apparatus and associated method for transmitting, receiving, storing, processing and digitally re-transmitting ... information" from a data collection device to a remote receiving device via any personal communication system that employs a digital control channel. '089 patent, col. 1, ll. 12-22. The specification of the '089 patent discusses two general embodiments of the invention. The first embodiment "describes the use of the digital control channel to transmit data from one device to another using a drop and add packet technique." The second embodiment describes "the use of the short message portion of the personal communications system transmission protocol to transmit data from one device to another."
1. First Embodiment: the Drop and Add Packet Technique
The specification explains that under existing wireless network technologies, such as Global Standards for Mobile Communications (GSM), Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) Technology, Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA), Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA), and Personal Access Communications System (PACS), "there are 8 logical channels per radio frequency channel which are available for communication" between devices.
Data transmission during periods of non-use is accomplished using the "drop and add packet" technique. That technique repurposes the mechanism by which data is transmitted over the control channel. The '089 specification explains that because the control channel is generally underutilized, many of the transmission packets sent over the control channel contain no wireless network transmission information. Those packets are known as "dummy packets." The invention described in the first embodiment entails removing dummy packets that contain no transmission information and replacing them with "diverted transmission" packets. The diverted transmission packets contain data and instructions that can be used to enable the remote device to control individual data collection devices. In addition, the *460diverted transmission packets can contain data that the data collection devices collect and then transmit back to the remote device.
2. Second Embodiment: the Short Message Portion of the Personal Communication System Transmission Protocol
Beginning with column 11, the '089 specification describes an alternative embodiment for transmitting, receiving, storing, processing, and digitally re-transmitting information directly to a remote receiving device. That embodiment "employs the use of the short message portion of a personal communications system transmission protocol."
In that embodiment, when a request for data is made, a remote device "encodes the request in the short message service portion of the control channel."
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WILLIAM C. BRYSON, UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
This is a patent infringement action brought by plaintiff First-Class Monitoring, LLC ("FCM") against defendant United Parcel Service of America, Inc. ("UPS"). Before the Court is UPS's motion to dismiss the complaint based on patent ineligibility under
BACKGROUND
Plaintiff FCM is the assignee and owner of
I. The '089 Patent
The '089 patent relates to "an apparatus and associated method for transmitting, receiving, storing, processing and digitally re-transmitting ... information" from a data collection device to a remote receiving device via any personal communication system that employs a digital control channel. '089 patent, col. 1, ll. 12-22. The specification of the '089 patent discusses two general embodiments of the invention. The first embodiment "describes the use of the digital control channel to transmit data from one device to another using a drop and add packet technique." The second embodiment describes "the use of the short message portion of the personal communications system transmission protocol to transmit data from one device to another."
1. First Embodiment: the Drop and Add Packet Technique
The specification explains that under existing wireless network technologies, such as Global Standards for Mobile Communications (GSM), Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA) Technology, Code Division Multiple Access (CDMA), Frequency Division Multiple Access (FDMA), and Personal Access Communications System (PACS), "there are 8 logical channels per radio frequency channel which are available for communication" between devices.
Data transmission during periods of non-use is accomplished using the "drop and add packet" technique. That technique repurposes the mechanism by which data is transmitted over the control channel. The '089 specification explains that because the control channel is generally underutilized, many of the transmission packets sent over the control channel contain no wireless network transmission information. Those packets are known as "dummy packets." The invention described in the first embodiment entails removing dummy packets that contain no transmission information and replacing them with "diverted transmission" packets. The diverted transmission packets contain data and instructions that can be used to enable the remote device to control individual data collection devices. In addition, the *460diverted transmission packets can contain data that the data collection devices collect and then transmit back to the remote device.
2. Second Embodiment: the Short Message Portion of the Personal Communication System Transmission Protocol
Beginning with column 11, the '089 specification describes an alternative embodiment for transmitting, receiving, storing, processing, and digitally re-transmitting information directly to a remote receiving device. That embodiment "employs the use of the short message portion of a personal communications system transmission protocol."
In that embodiment, when a request for data is made, a remote device "encodes the request in the short message service portion of the control channel."
3. The Asserted Claims
The asserted claims of the '089 patent recite methods for transmitting a data sequence via the short message portion of a control channel. See
1. A method for transmitting a data sequence via a personal communications system transmission protocol comprising the steps of:
composing at least one data packet including a request for data said at least one data packet including said request for data being in a form which conforms to conventional short message data packets;
transmitting said at least one data packet including said request for data from an access point to a data collection unit via a short message service portion of a control channel of the personal communications system transmission protocol as one or more short messages, wherein said step of transmitting said at least one data packet including said request for data includes the step of inserting said at least one data packet including said request for data into the control channel;
receiving said at least one data packet including said request for data at said data collection unit;
interpreting said request or data from said access point by said data collection unit;
compiling data from said data collection unit, said compiled data being requested in said request for data;
composing at least one data packet including, said compiled data, said at least one data packet including compiled data being in a form which conforms conventional short message data packets;
transmitting said at least one data packet including said compiled data from said data collection unit to said access point via said short message service portion of the control channel of the personal communications system transmission protocol as one or more short messages, wherein said step of transmitting said at least one data packet including said compiled data includes the step of *461inserting said at least one data packet including said compiled data into the control channel; and
receiving said at least one data packet including said compiled data at said access point.
Claim 6 adds the steps of "collecting data at said data collection unit; electronically stamping said collected data with a date and time...; and storing said processed and electronically stamped data."
Claim 7, from which asserted claim 8 depends, differs from claim 1 in that it recites the automatic collection of data at the data collection unit, compared with data collection initiated by a data request. Claim 7 states the following:
7. A method for transmitting a data sequence via a personal communications system transmission protocol comprising the steps of:
automatically collecting data at a data collection unit;
composing at least one data packet including said collected data, said at least one data packet including said collected data being in a form which conforms to conventional short message data packets;
inserting said at least one data packet including said collected data in a short message service portion of a control channel of the personal communications system transmission protocol as one or more short messages; and
transmitting said at least one data packet including said collected data to an access point via said short message service portion of the control channel of the personal communications system transmission protocol as one or more short messages.
Claim 8, which is generally similar to claim 6, adds the step of "stamping [the] collected data with a date and time that said data was collected by said collecting step."
II. UPS's Motion to Dismiss
UPS filed a motion under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss FCM's complaint. Dkt. No. 19. In that motion, UPS argues that the asserted claims of the '089 patent are patent-ineligible under
DISCUSSION
I. The Alice Two-Step Test
The framework for analyzing the issue of patentable subject matter under
The first step of the two-step Alice analysis requires the court to examine the "focus" of the claim, i.e., its "character as a whole," in order to determine whether the claim is directed to an abstract idea. Trading Techs. Int'l, Inc. v. IBG LLC ,
1. Step 1: Abstract Idea
Defining an "abstract idea," as that term is used in section 101 jurisprudence, has not proved to be a simple task. Neither the Supreme Court nor the Federal Circuit has ventured a single, comprehensive definition. See Alice ,
First, the courts have characterized "method[s] of organizing human activity" as abstract. See Alice ,
*463FairWarning IP, LLC v. Iatric Sys., Inc. ,
Second, with regard to computer applications, the courts have looked to whether the claim in question is directed to an improvement in computer technology as opposed to simply providing for the use of a computer to perform "economic or other tasks for which a computer is used in its ordinary capacity." Enfish,
Numerous Federal Circuit decisions have drawn a distinction between patent-eligible claims that "are directed to a specific improvement in the capabilities of computing devices," as opposed to " 'a process that qualifies as an "abstract idea" for which computers are invoked merely as a tool.' " Core Wireless ,
Third, in determining whether claims of a patent are directed to an abstract idea, we "look[ ] at the 'focus' of the claims." Elec. Power Grp. ,
Fourth, the Supreme Court has identified the risk of preemption as an important consideration in the analysis of patent eligibility. See Alice ,
Fifth, in determining whether a particular claim is directed to an abstract idea, courts have focused on whether the claim is purely functional in nature rather than reciting how the claimed function is achieved. The Federal Circuit has identified functional claiming as an indicator of abstractness in a number of recent section 101 decisions. In those cases, the Federal Circuit, treating the term "abstract" as an antonym of "concrete" or "specific," has analyzed whether the claims before it are sufficiently concrete or specific to be directed to a patent-eligible process rather than a patent-ineligible result. For example, in SAP America ,
Applying that analysis, the Federal Circuit in Interval Licensing LLC v. AOL, Inc. ,
Other cases from the Federal Circuit have employed the same analysis and applied it to hold claims ineligible under section 101. See Clarilogic, Inc. v. FormFree Holdings Corp. ,
2. Step Two: Inventive Concept
The "inventive concept" step requires the court to determine whether the claims recite an element or combination of elements that is sufficient to ensure that the patent claims "significantly more" than the ineligible abstract idea itself. Alice ,
Step two of the Alice test " 'looks more precisely at what the claim elements add' to determine if 'they identify an inventive concept in the application of the ineligible matter to which ... the claim is directed.'... The abstract idea itself cannot supply the inventive concept, 'no matter how groundbreaking the advance.' " Trading Techs. Int'l, Inc. v. IBG LLC ,
II. Applying Those Principles to This Case
1. Step One: Whether the asserted claims of the '089 patent are directed to an abstract idea
UPS argues that claims 1 and 7, from which asserted claims 6 and 8 depend, "fail step one of the Alice inquiry because they are directed to the abstract idea of requesting, collecting, analyzing, and transmitting information." Dkt. No. 19, at 10. Dependent claims 6 and 8, UPS asserts, simply add a time and date stamp, "which does not render the idea any less abstract."
In response, FCM argues that the asserted claims of the '089 patent "describe an approach to accomplishing a specific, practical, and useful improvement to the existing processes used for monitoring utility usage and other information that increases the efficiency of the system and reduces traffic on the SMS [ (Short Message Service) ] control channel." Dkt. No. 23, at 12.
Contrary to FCM's argument, the claims are not based on an improvement in computer or communications technology. The specification makes clear that the technology on which the claims rely is conventional and well known. The claims are not directed to a technological solution to a technological problem, but merely look to the use of known technology to communicate information of a type that, according to FCM, has not previously been transmitted using that technology. Thus, the claims are directed to "a result or effect that ... merely invoke[s] generic processes and machinery." McRO,
*467see
The process of requesting, collecting, analyzing, and transmitting information, without more, is directed to an abstract idea. See Elec. Power Grp. ,
The risk of preemption, which the Supreme Court has identified as a marker of an abstract idea, is significant in this case. Claim 1 of the '089 patent reaches any method of requesting and receiving information that uses the short message service protocol-an extremely common method of personal communication that includes, for example, text messaging. Claim 7 likewise covers any method of automatically collecting data and transmitting that data using the short message service protocol-also a broad claim that would encompass many uses of the known short message service technology. While the limitations of claims 6 and 8 narrow the scope of claims 1 and 7 somewhat by restricting them to transmissions of data that are date and time stamped, date- and time-stamping are sufficiently common practices that the potential preemptive effect of the '089 patent would be broad, raising the types of concerns that the Supreme Court alluded to in Alice and Bilski .
For the reasons given, the Court concludes that asserted claims of the '089 patent are directed to abstract ideas.
2. Step Two: Whether the asserted claims of the '089 patent recite an inventive concept
Applying step two of the two-step test from Alice , the Court must determine what, if any, inventive concepts are described and claimed in the '089 patent.
As noted above, the specification describes two separate embodiments. The first uses the "drop and add packet technique" and is described in columns 4 through 10 of the specification. The second, which is disclosed in columns 11 through 13 of the specification, uses the short message portion of a communications control channel to transmit data between a *468mobile subscriber (for example, where a utility meter is located) and a remote device, from which data collection instructions are sent and to which the collected data is returned. See
The first embodiment-the "drop and add packet" embodiment-is not recited in the claims of the '089 patent. Instead, the '089 claims are directed solely to the second embodiment. They expressly refer to data packets that are "in a form which conforms to conventional short message data packets," and transmissions of data "via a short message service portion of a control channel of [a] personal communications system transmission protocol."
Rather than being covered by the claims of the '089 patent, the "drop and add packet" embodiment is described and claimed in the '955 patent, the parent of the '089 patent. The specification of the '955 patent is nearly identical to the first 10 columns of the '089 patent, and the claims of the '955 patent specifically call for the use of the "drop and add packet" technique, providing for the replacement of the information in the dummy packets with messages that are used to transmit instructions and data between the meter reader and the remote device that collects the meter readings. The short message service embodiment was disclosed and claimed for the first time in the '089 patent.
Although much of FCM's argument is based on the detail set forth in the specification, and in particular in portions of the specification that are not directed to the short message service embodiment, that material has no bearing on the issue of the patentability of claims 6 and 8, for two reasons: First, that portion of the specification is not directed to the short message service claims. Second, it is the claims, not the specification, that must contain the inventive concept necessary to render the claims patentable. See Two-Way Media ,
The functions recited in independent claims 1 and 7 amount to nothing more than conventional communications system components operating according to their ordinary functions. See Two-Way Media ,
*469Additionally, the personal communications system transmission protocol, of which the short message service is a part, includes "any wire or wireless transmission system that employs a digital or analog transmission protocol system."
Beyond that, the steps of receiving, interpreting, and composing data "fall squarely within [Federal Circuit] precedent finding generic computer components insufficient to add an inventive concept to an otherwise abstract idea." In re TLI Commc'ns LLC Patent Litig. ,
As for the added limitations in dependent claims 6 and 8 regarding the date and time stamping of the collected data, FCM argues in its opposition to the motion to dismiss that the date and time stamping rendered the claimed inventions not abstract. See Dkt. No. 23, at 14. That argument is addressed above. FCM, however, did not argue in its opposition that the date and time stamping limitations constituted or contributed to an "inventive concept" sufficient to satisfy the second step of the two-step Alice test for patentability. See id. at 22-24. FCM refers to the time-stamping limitation as bearing on the inventive concept issue in a single sentence in its surreply brief. But not having raised the issue in its opening brief, FCM has waived that argument.
Even if FCM had preserved the argument that stamping the data with the time it was collected constitutes an inventive concept, that argument would fail. The Federal Circuit in TLI Communications held that attaching classification data, such as dates and times, to images for the purpose of storing the images in an organized manner was an abstract idea and did not constitute an inventive concept. See
Similarly, the Federal Circuit in Electric Power Group held that merely "gathering, sending, and presenting" information, including time-synchronization of information, does not constitute an inventive concept absent some suggestion that the recited function is performed by some nonconventional technology.
A case closely analogous to this one is the Federal Circuit's recent decision in Bridge & Post, Inc. v. Verizon Commc'ns, Inc. , No. 2018-1697, --- Fed.Appx. ----,
That analysis applies directly to this case. Like the process of embedding data in an HTTP header field, the process of transmitting data by the short message service protocol was well known. The asserted inventive concept in Bridge & Post was to use the underutilized HTTP header to transmit information about a user, a use to which the HTTP header had purportedly not been put before. Yet the fact that the patent claimed the transmission of a different type of data by a recognized mode of data transmission was not sufficient to constitute an inventive concept. Similarly, the fact that the well-known short message system protocol was being used to transmit a different type of data-in the case of the '089 patent, sending requests for data and returning the collected data-is not enough to constitute an inventive concept.
It is well recognized that the use of conventional information transmission technology that differs from the prior art only in that it is being used to transmit different information is not patentable subject matter. See Praxair Distribution, Inc. v. Mallinckrodt Hosp. Prods. IP Ltd. ,
*471within the meaning of step two of Alice .
Relying on the Federal Circuit's decisions in Aatrix Software, Inc. v. Green Shades Software, Inc. ,
In this case, FCM's general position with respect to the "inventive concept" step of the Alice / Mayo inquiry is that the combination of elements recited in each of the asserted claims amounts to an inventive concept. That is, the assertedly "inventive concept" is the abstract idea itself. As noted, however, the "inventive concept" element of the section 101 analysis requires "significantly more" than the abstract idea itself. FCM asserts that the factual issues with respect to claims 6 and 8 of the '089 patent are whether the limitations of each of those claims would be well-understood, routine, or conventional to a skilled artisan. But that is merely asking whether the claim as a whole is the inventive concept. Because FCM has not suggested that there is a factual issue as to whether the asserted claims are directed to something significantly more than the abstract idea itself, FCM has failed to point to a discrete factual issue on which the presence of an "inventive concept" in claims 6 and 8 would turn.
The Berkheimer and Aatrix cases do not stand for the proposition that a plaintiff can avoid dismissal simply by reciting in the complaint that the invention at issue is novel and that the inventive concept resides in the abstract idea itself. As Judge Moore explained in her opinion concurring in the orders denying rehearing en banc in the Aatrix and Berkheimer cases,
District courts have frequently decided section 101 issues on motions to dismiss, and the Federal Circuit has approved of that procedure on numerous occasions, including in cases post-dating the decisions in Aatrix and Berkheimer . See, e.g., *472Bridge & Post , supra ; SAP Am., Inc. ,
Finally, FCM argues that claims 6 and 8 of the '089 patent should be deemed to be directed to an inventive concept because those claims survived a prior attack in an inter partes review proceeding. In that proceeding, IPR2017-09132, the Patent Trial and Appeal Board ("PTAB") held that claims 6 and 8 (unlike the other claims of the '089 patent ) would not have been obvious, because no prior art reference that was before the Board disclosed the use of time and date stamping with the technology recited in the patent. In FCM's view, the Board's ruling on the issue of obviousness "confirm[s]" that the claims "are neither routine nor conventional." Dkt. No. 23, at 9.
That argument is unpersuasive. The fact that the PTAB found that claims 6 and 8 were not invalid for obviousness does not resolve the issue of patent eligibility. It is well established that patent eligibility within the meaning of section 101 of the Patent Act and novelty within the meaning of sections 102, 103, and 112 of the Patent Act are discrete issues. See Diamond v. Diehr ,
The Court therefore holds that the '089 patent claims are directed to abstract ideas and that they do not recite an inventive concept. The motion to dismiss based on patent ineligibility under
IT IS SO ORDERED.
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