Hunting Titan, Inc. v. Dynaenergetics Europe Gmbh

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 24, 2022
Docket20-2163
StatusPublished

This text of Hunting Titan, Inc. v. Dynaenergetics Europe Gmbh (Hunting Titan, Inc. v. Dynaenergetics Europe Gmbh) 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
Hunting Titan, Inc. v. Dynaenergetics Europe Gmbh, (Fed. Cir. 2022).

Opinion

Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 1 Filed: 03/24/2022

United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________

HUNTING TITAN, INC., Appellant

v.

DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH, Cross-Appellant

ANDREW HIRSHFELD, PERFORMING THE FUNCTIONS AND DUTIES OF THE UNDER SECRETARY OF COMMERCE FOR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND DIRECTOR OF THE UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE, Intervenor ______________________

2020-2163, 2020-2191 ______________________

Appeals from the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Patent Trial and Appeal Board in No. IPR2018- 00600. ______________________

Decided: March 24, 2022 ______________________

JASON SAUNDERS, Arnold & Saunders, LLP, Houston, TX, argued for appellant. Also represented by GORDON ARNOLD, CHRISTOPHER MCKEON. Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 2 Filed: 03/24/2022

BARRY J. HERMAN, Womble Bond Dickinson (US) LLP, Baltimore, MD, argued for cross-appellant. Also repre- sented by WILLIAM R. HUBBARD; CHRISTINE H. DUPRIEST, PRESTON HAMILTON HEARD, Atlanta, GA; LISA MOYLES, JASON ROCKMAN, Moyles IP, LLC, Shelton, CT.

SARAH E. CRAVEN, Office of the Solicitor, United States Patent and Trademark Office, Alexandria, VA, argued for intervenor. Also represented by THOMAS W. KRAUSE, ROBERT J. MCMANUS, MAUREEN DONOVAN QUELER, FARHEENA YASMEEN RASHEED. ______________________

Before PROST, REYNA, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges. Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge HUGHES. Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge PROST. HUGHES, Circuit Judge. Hunting Titan, Inc. petitioned for inter partes review of claims 1–15 of U.S. Patent No. 9,581,422, asserting 16 grounds of unpatentability based on theories of anticipa- tion and obviousness, including allegations that the claims were anticipated by Schacherer, U.S. Patent No. 9,689,223. The Board instituted trial on all grounds and ultimately agreed with Hunting Titan, finding all of the original claims unpatentable. After the petition was instituted, DynaEnergetics Eu- rope GmbH, the patent owner, moved to amend the ’422 pa- tent to add proposed substitute claims 16–22. Hunting Titan opposed the motion to amend, advancing only obvi- ousness grounds. Although Hunting Titan did not assert that Schacherer anticipated the proposed substitute claims, the Board determined that the original and pro- posed substitute claims alike were unpatentable as antici- pated by Schacherer. DynaEnergetics requested rehearing and Precedential Opinion Panel review of the Board’s Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 3 Filed: 03/24/2022

HUNTING TITAN, INC. v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH 3

denial of the motion to amend. The Panel granted DynaEnergetics’s request for rehearing, vacated the Board’s decision denying DynaEnergetics’s motion to amend, and then—after concluding that Hunting Titan had not proven by a preponderance of the evidence that proposed substitute claims 16–22 are unpatentable— granted the motion to amend the ’422 patent to add the proposed substitute claims. Hunting Titan appeals the Precedential Opinion Panel’s vacatur of the Board’s decision denying the motion to amend, and DynaEnergetics cross-appeals the Board’s decision finding the original claims of the ’422 patent an- ticipated by Schacherer. We affirm on both grounds. I DynaEnergetics owns the ’422 patent, which is di- rected to a perforating gun used in an oil wellbore to pene- trate the well lining and surrounding rock formation in order to provide a flow path for oil into the wellbore from the surrounding rock formation. ’422 patent, 1:15–44. The perforating gun’s key feature is a “wireless” and “selective” detonator assembly for detonating an explosive projectile charge within the perforating gun “without the need to at- tach wires to the detonator.” Id. 2:24–34. Claim 1 is repre- sentative and is reproduced below. 1. A wireless detonator assembly configured for be- ing electrically contactably received within a perfo- rating gun assembly without using a wired electrical connection, comprising: a shell configured for housing components of the detonator assembly; more than one electrical contact compo- nent, wherein at least one of the electrical contact components extends from the shell and further wherein the electrical contact component comprises an electrically Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 4 Filed: 03/24/2022

contactable line-in portion, an electrically contactable line-out portion and an electri- cally contactable ground portion, the ground portion in combination with the line-in portion and the line-out portion be- ing configured to replace the wired electri- cal connection to complete an electrical connection merely by contact; an insulator positioned between the line-in portion and the line-out portion, wherein the insulator electrically isolates the line- in portion from the line-out portion; and means for selective detonation housed within the shell, wherein the detonator as- sembly is configured for electrically con- tactably forming the electrical connection merely by the contact. Id. 8:39–61. A Hunting Titan petitioned for inter partes review of claims 1–15 of the ’422 patent, asserting 16 grounds of un- patentability based on theories of anticipation and obvious- ness. The Board instituted on the petition. Appx246. DynaEnergetics opposed the petition. It also filed a contin- gent motion to amend the ’422 patent to add new claims 16–22, in the event the Board were to find original claims 5–11 unpatentable. 1 Relevant to this appeal is Hunting Titan’s first as- serted ground of unpatentability that Schacherer, U.S. Pa- tent No. 9,689,223, anticipates all of the ’422 patent’s original claims. DynaEnergetics maintained, in its Patent Owner Response, that Schacherer lacks several limitations of the claimed detonator assembly. Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 5 Filed: 03/24/2022

HUNTING TITAN, INC. v. DYNAENERGETICS EUROPE GMBH 5

DynaEnergetics asserted that Schacherer does not teach or disclose the claimed “wireless detonator assem- bly.” Appx320 (emphasis added). According to DynaEner- getics, Schacherer “incorporate[s] an electrically wired detonator (38) into a tandem sub or connector,” id., while the claimed detonator assembly “replace[s] [the] electri- cally wired detonator . . . with a wireless detonator 10 and house[s] the components of the detonator, including the means for selective detonation, within a shell (12).” Appx321. DynaEnergetics also argued that “Schacherer does not teach or suggest incorporating the selecting firing module (32) into the wired detonator (38),” but instead “de- scribes a [tandem] sub for housing such components.” Appx322–23. Thus, according to DynaEnergetics, “Schacherer does not teach or suggest a shell configured for housing components of the detonator assembly.” Appx323. Because these limitations, among others not relevant to this appeal, are allegedly not taught by Schacherer, DynaEnergetics argued that Hunting Titan failed to “show[] that Schacherer anticipates [any] of the challenged claims of the ’422 [p]atent.” Appx333. The Board disagreed with DynaEnergetics, concluding that each original claim is unpatentable as anticipated by Schacherer. Appx24. Significant to this appeal, the Board first considered claim 1’s uncontested limitations and found these limita- tions fully supported by the record and “effectively admit- ted” by DynaEnergetics. Appx9. The Board accordingly concluded that Hunting Titan had met its burden of prov- ing that Schacherer discloses a “detonator assembly” that is: (1) “received with a perforating gun,” (2) has “more than one electrical contact compo- nent, wherein at least one of the electrical contact components . . . comprises an electrically contacta- ble line-in portion, . . . line-out portion[,] and . . . ground portion,” and Case: 20-2163 Document: 59 Page: 6 Filed: 03/24/2022

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