Google LLC v. Conversant Wireless Licensing

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 2018
Docket17-2456
StatusUnpublished

This text of Google LLC v. Conversant Wireless Licensing (Google LLC v. Conversant Wireless Licensing) 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
Google LLC v. Conversant Wireless Licensing, (Fed. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

GOOGLE LLC, LG ELECTRONICS, INC., Appellants

v.

CONVERSANT WIRELESS LICENSING S.A.R.L., Appellee ______________________

2017-2456 ______________________

Appeal from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2015- 01715. ______________________

Decided: November 20, 2018 ______________________

NAVEEN MODI, Paul Hastings LLP, Washington, DC, argued for appellants. Also represented by STEPHEN BLAKE KINNAIRD, JOSEPH PALYS, DANIEL ZEILBERGER.

TAREK N. FAHMI, Ascenda Law Group, PC, San Jose, CA, argued for appellee. Also represented by HOLLY J. ATKINSON. ______________________

Before O’MALLEY, CHEN, and STOLL, Circuit Judges. 2 GOOGLE LLC v. CONVERSANT WIRELESS LICENSING

CHEN, Circuit Judge. Google LLC and LG Electronics, Inc. (Petitioners) ap- peal from the final written decision of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board (Board) in an inter partes review (IPR) proceeding finding that Appellants did not show claims 1–15 of U.S. Patent No. 7,072,667 (the ’667 patent), assigned to Conversant Wire- less Licensing S.A.R.L. (Patent Owner), to be unpatenta- ble as anticipated or obvious. Because the Board’s final written decision failed to consider Petitioners’ primary argument, we vacate and remand. BACKGROUND The ’667 patent, entitled “Location Information Ser- vice for a Cellular Telecommunications Network,” was filed on December 31, 2001. According to the ’667 patent, prior art mobile devices used commercial location finding services, such as Finder™. J.A. 28 at 1:31–34. A user could find the location of other members of a group of subscribers by defining a list of friends that they wanted to be able to locate. Id. at 1:34–37. This system involved pre-registration with the vendor of the Finder™ service. Id. at 1:37–39. When a user wanted to know the location of a friend, the user initiated a request and selected the name of the friend. Id. at 1:39–42. The Finder™ service then located both the user and the friend and calculated the distance and direction between them, which was communicated back to the user. Id. at 1:42–45. The ’667 patent states that a disadvantage of the pri- or art system is that the user needed to pre-register with the system. Id. at 1:46–48. The ’667 patent describes the invention as providing location service information “inde- pendently of aforesaid vendor.” Id. at 1:52–54. The patent claims capture this feature by reciting that the GOOGLE LLC v. CONVERSANT WIRELESS LICENSING 3

method is performed without pre-registering the mobile station for the location finding service. Claim 1 recites: 1. A method of providing a location finding ser- vice to mobile stations in a cellular telecommuni- cations network, comprising: sending a request for location finding information from a mobile station as a message through the network to a location message server; retrieving data from a data store corresponding to the location finding information based on the cell occupied by at least one mobile station; and sending the data through the network from the lo- cation message server as a message to the mobile station that requested the location finding infor- mation; and wherein the method is performed without pre-registering the mobile station for the location finding service. J.A. 30 (emphasis added). In their IPR petition, Petitioners argued that PCT Publication No. WO 00/36430 (Staack) discloses every limitation of claim 1. As to the claim limitation “without pre-registering the mobile station for the location finding service,” Petitioners contended it was a negative limita- tion that Staack satisfies because “Staack nowhere dis- closes that pre-registration is required to access the location-based services.” J.A. 61. Petitioners cited two PTAB decisions as supporting this conclusion. See CLIO USA, Inc. v. The Procter and Gamble Company, IPR2013- 00448, Paper No. 15 at 3 (Feb. 4, 2014) (stating that “[n]egative limitations may be satisfied by silence in the prior art”); Palo Alto Networks, Inc. v. Juniper Networks, Inc., IPR2013-00466, Paper No. 17 at 18 (Jan. 28, 2014) (stating that, “[a]lthough a negative limitation is permis- sible, it merely recites what a claim lacks and, therefore, 4 GOOGLE LLC v. CONVERSANT WIRELESS LICENSING

is likely to be broad by its very nature. Consequently, a negative limitation requiring the absence of an element may be adequately described by a cited prior art reference if that reference does not otherwise require the presence of the element recited in the negative limitation.”); see also J.A. 61. Petitioners also cited a declaration by their expert to support their argument. J.A.61; see also J.A. 723–24. To further support its position that Staack meets the “without pre-registering” limitation, the petition next went on to explain, preemptively, why a particular pas- sage in Staack does not teach a pre-registering require- ment: “to the extent Patent Owner proposes that maintaining and using a list of entities that are permitted to receive location finding information is considered registering, Staack makes clear that such features are optional.” J.A. 62 (emphasis in original). Staack discloses that, for confidentiality reasons, the second (target user) mobile station may store a list of entities, which may include the first (requesting user) mobile station, that are allowed to view the second mobile station’s location. See J.A. 533. Staack describes this list as “preferred.” Ac- cordingly, Petitioners argued, Staack discloses that the list is optional, and under the case law explaining that a prior art reference that discloses “optional inclusion” of a feature encompasses a disclosure of embodiments that “both do and do not contain” the feature, Staack discloses a method “without pre-registering.” J.A. 62 (citing Upshur-Smith Labs., Inc. v. Pamlab, 412 F.3d 1319, 1322 (Fed. Cir. 2005)). The Patent Owner’s preliminary response argued that Staack does explicitly disclose pre-registration through the use of a “mobile subscriber’s home location data from a billing center or subscriber database.” J.A. 129. The Board found this argument unpersuasive, noting in its institution decision that registration of mobile users, including identifying users’ phone numbers or subscrip- GOOGLE LLC v. CONVERSANT WIRELESS LICENSING 5

tion information, “is not commensurate with registration for a location finding service, as recited in claim 1.” J.A. 156 (emphasis in original). The Patent Owner also ar- gued that Staack’s second mobile station list—the list Petitioners referred to in their preemptive argument—is “not germane” to pre-registration because “[t]hese consid- erations of confidentiality exist whether or not the MS1 user is pre-registered for the mobile location service or not.” J.A. 132. In its institution decision, the Board clearly under- stood that Petitioners raised two arguments in their petition (the second one being conditional): (1) that Staack’s silence as to pre-registration constitutes disclo- sure of the negative limitation (the “negative-limitation argument”); and (2) if the Patent Owner argues that the second mobile station’s list constitutes pre-registration, then the pre-registration is optional and therefore Staack still meets the “without pre-registering” limitation under Upshur-Smith (the “optional-feature” argument). J.A. 154–58. The Board used the language “argue” to describe Petitioners’ first argument and “further argue” to describe Petitioner’s second argument. J.A. 154. The Board concluded that it was persuaded based on the record before it that Staack does satisfy the “without pre- registering” limitation. J.A.

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Google LLC v. Conversant Wireless Licensing, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/google-llc-v-conversant-wireless-licensing-cafc-2018.