GTE Wireless, Inc. v. Qualcomm, Inc.

188 F. Supp. 2d 1201, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3955, 2002 WL 269211
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedFebruary 14, 2002
DocketCIV. 99CV2173-B(CGA)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 188 F. Supp. 2d 1201 (GTE Wireless, Inc. v. Qualcomm, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GTE Wireless, Inc. v. Qualcomm, Inc., 188 F. Supp. 2d 1201, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3955, 2002 WL 269211 (S.D. Cal. 2002).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING GTE’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT ON INFRINGEMENT; GRANTING QUALCOMM’S MOTION ON SUMMARY JUDGMENT OF NO INFRINGEMENT; DENYING ALL OTHER PENDING MOTIONS AS MOOT

BREWSTER, Senior District Judge.

The plaintiff, GTE, filed an action against Qualcomm, Inc., asserting the Qualcomm phones that incorporate the Preferred Roaming List software 1 infringed the 4,916,728 patent (“728 patent”). Qualcomm counterclaimed seeking a declaratory judgment that its phones do not infringe the patent.

GTE now moves for summary judgment asking the Court to hold that (1) the Qual-comm phones literally infringe claims 2, 6, *1204 and 7 of the 728 patent; (2) that Qual-comm has actively induced infringement; (3) that Qualcomm has engaged in contributory infringement; (4) that the claims of the patent are not anticipated; (5) that the claims are not obvious; (6) that the claims are not indefinite; (7) that GTE has not engaged in inequitable conduct; (8) that Qualcomm will not succeed on its laches defense; (9) and that Qualcomm will not succeed on its equitable estoppel defense.

Qualcomm seeks summary judgment that (1) its phones do not literally infringe the 728 patent; (2) that its phones do not infringe the 728 patent under the doctrine of equivalents; (3) that Qualcomm has not actively induced infringement; (4) that Qualcomm has not engaged in contributory infringement; and (5) that claim 2 of the 728 patent is anticipated.

The Court bifurcated the summary judgment motions to first consider the issues of literal infringement and infringement under the doctrine of equivalents and then, if necessary, to adjudicate the other claims in separate proceedings. After reading the briefs, meeting with attorneys and experts on various occasions, and hearing oral arguments from both sides, the Court finds that the Qualcomm phones, as a matter of law, do not infringe the 728 patent. 2

1. Background

A. 728 Patent

The 728 patent deals with technology that allows a cellular telephone to choose the best system on which to provide service. Cellular telephones are wireless telephones that transmit signals over radio frequencies to engage in two-way communication through a central radio station often referred to as a cell site or “base station.” In any given geographical area, one or more companies, called service providers or carriers (e.g., AT & T, Sprint, Cingular, Verizon), maintain a cellular system, which includes many base stations, on which it provides cellular service to its customers. The Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) assigns a specific set of radio frequencies, called a frequency set, to a service provider for use in an assigned geographical location, referred to as a geographical region. The same frequency set may be assigned to different carriers in different geographical regions. For example, where the FCC may assign Verizon the A frequency Set, Cingular the B frequency set, and Sprint the C frequency set in the San Diego geographical region, the FCC may give Sprint the A frequency set, Verizon the B frequency set, and Cingular the C frequency set in the Los Angeles geographical region. As a result, in border areas (called overlapping coverage areas), a San Diego Sprint customer may search the “A” frequency set and find the Verizon system, which is transmitting on the same frequencies in the Los Angeles area.

On each frequency, the service provider broadcasts a unique system identification code (“SID”) that allows the cellular telephone to determine which carrier is providing service on that frequency. The service provider’s SID is called a “home SID;” a different carrier’s SID is called a “nonhome SID;” and a SID that the phone has been programmed to exclude is called a “negative SID.” A SID that is neither home nor negative is called a “nonhome, nonnegative SID.”

*1205 A carrier will maximize its earnings when its customers use its system to make a phone call because it will incur a fee if its subscribers use another’s system. For example, if a Sprint user uses the AT & T system to make a call, Sprint has to pay a fee to AT & T. As a result, system selection is an important problem in cellular telephone technology.

In July 1988, Kevin Blair filed the 728 patent as an attempt to solve this system selection problem by cellular telephones. The primary function of the patent is that a phone will scan frequencies and choose the frequency on which its home SID is broadcast, and if one is not available, choose a frequency that corresponds to a nonhome, nonnegative SID. The phone can provide service on a frequency that corresponds to a negative SID only if (1) frequencies corresponding to a home SID and a nonhome, nonnegative SID are unavailable and (2) the user dials a predetermined number (i.e., 911). This patent becomes particularly important in overlapping coverage areas when the phone can detect a competing carrier’s system while searching its own frequency set. The patent teaches that even if the telephone of a San Diego Sprint customer finds a Verizon system while searching the A frequency set, the phone will reject the corresponding frequency until it has determined that no Sprint system is available.

Claims 2, 6 and & 7 of the patent are the only ones in dispute. Claim 2 states:

A cellular telephone unit including:
scanning means for sequentially monitoring a plurality of frequencies;
detection means for detecting any SID that is present on any said frequency that is monitored by said scanning means;
frequency selection means for selecting as a working frequency the frequency corresponding to a home SID if said home SID is detected by said detection means, and for selecting as a working frequency the frequency corresponding to a nonhome, nonnegative SID if such an SID is detected by said detection means and a home SID is not detected by said detection means.

Claim 6 states:

A cellular telephone unit comprising: scanning means for sequentially monitoring a plurality of frequencies and for detecting any SID corresponding to any frequency;
frequency selection means for selecting a working frequency from among said plurality of frequencies;
frequency control means for controlling the selection by said frequency selection means of a working frequency;
said working frequency being a frequency corresponding to a home SID if said home SID is detected by said scanning means, and said working frequency being a frequency corresponding to a nonnegative SID if such an SID is detected by said scanning means and a home SID is not detected by said scanning means, and said working frequency being a frequency corresponding to a negative SID if:
(i) no home SID is detected by said scanning means, and
(ii) no nonnegative SID is detected by said scanning means, and
(iii) a user dials a predetermined number.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 F. Supp. 2d 1201, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3955, 2002 WL 269211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gte-wireless-inc-v-qualcomm-inc-casd-2002.