Iris Corporation Berhad v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedFebruary 10, 2020
Docket15-175
StatusPublished

This text of Iris Corporation Berhad v. United States (Iris Corporation Berhad v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iris Corporation Berhad v. United States, (uscfc 2020).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 15-175C (Filed: January 22, 2020) (Re-Filed: February 10, 2020) 1

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IRIS CORPORATION BERHAD, Patents; claim construction; Plaintiff, Markman hearing; plain and ordinary meaning; extrinsic v. evidence; sequence. THE UNITED STATES,

Defendant.

Stephen Norman Weiss, New York, NY, for plaintiff.

Philip Charles Sternhell, United States Department of Justice, Civil Division, Commercial Litigation Branch, Washington, DC, with whom were Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General, and Gary L. Hausken, Director, for defendant. Conrad J. DeWitte, Jr., United States Department of Justice, of counsel.

CLAIM CONSTRUCTION ORDER AND OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

This is a patent infringement case brought under 28 U.S.C. § 1498 (2018). Plaintiff IRIS Corporation Berhad (“IRIS”) alleges that the United States Department of State has infringed several claims of U.S. Patent No. 6,111,506 (“the ’506 Patent”) by its manufacture of electronic passports. Before the court are the parties’ briefs regarding construction of claim terms used in the ’506 Patent.

1 This opinion was originally issued under seal to permit the parties an opportunity to propose redactions on or before February 5, 2020. The parties did not propose redactions and, thus, we reissue this opinion unredacted. BACKGROUND

IRIS is suing the United States for the State Department’s unauthorized use of IRIS’s invention described in the ’506 Patent. The ’506 Patent concerns a method of making an improved security identification document including a contactless communication insert. The ’506 Patent is comprised of one independent claim and six dependent claims.

Claim 1, the independent claim, describes:

1. A method of making an identification document comprising the steps of:

forming a contactless communication insert unit by electrically connecting an integrated circuit including a microprocessor, a controller, a memory unit, a radio frequency input/output device and an antenna, and disposing a metal ring to surround the integrated circuit;

disposing the contactless communication insert unit on a substrate and laminating it to form a laminated substrate;

supplying a first sheet of base material;

supplying a second sheet of base material;

disposing the second sheet of base material on top of the first sheet of base material and inserting the laminated substrate including the contactless communication insert unit between the first and second sheets of base material; and

joining a third sheet of base material to the first and second sheets of base material having the laminated substrate disposed therebetween, the third sheet of base material containing printed text data located so as to be readable by humans.

’506 Patent, col. 20, ll. 10–34.

Claims 2-7, the dependent claims, continue:

2 2. A method of making an identification document according to claim 1, further comprising the step of attaching a cover page to the third sheet of base material.

3. A method of making an identification document according to claim 2, wherein the third sheet of base material containing the printed text data is joined to the cover page and the second sheet of base material via tamper-proof stitching.

4. A method of making a security document according to claim 1, further comprising the step of supplying a cover comprising a relatively rigid material compared to the first, second and third sheets of base material and joining the cover to the first, second and third sheets of base material for supporting the integrated circuit.

5. A method of making a identification document according to claim 1, wherein the memory unit includes memory for storing biometrics data and memory for storing non-biometrics data, the memory for storing biometrics data including a plurality of memory locations which can only be written to once and prevent the stored data from ever being altered, the memory for storing non-biometrics data including memory locations which are capable of being altered.

6. A method of making an identification document according to claim 5, wherein the biometrics data includes at least one of a still photograph, moving video images, a palm print, fingerprints, a retina scan, a voice print, a two-dimensional facial image and a three-dimensional facial image.

7. A method of making a security document according to claim 6, wherein data stored in the memory unit is encrypted.

Id. at ll. 35–65.

The parties presented their positions on terms for construction, which evolved through the course of briefing. They agree that “encrypted” should be construed as “information that has been transformed from plain text to coded text or ciphertext.” Joint Claim Construction Statement 1. The parties’ positions, as presented in the Joint Claim Construction Statement, on disputed terms are: 3 Term Plaintiff’s Construction Defendant’s Construction Order of steps in which the The claim does not specify an Plain and ordinary meaning, method must be performed order in which the steps are to subject to the other be performed. constructions defendant Claim 1 proposes, with the understanding that the limitations be performed as ordered steps in the order recited in the claims. integrated circuit “An integrated circuit means “a microprocessor, a electronic component(s) controller, a memory unit, a Claim 1 designed to perform radio frequency input/output processing and/or memory device and an antenna, and the functions” connections thereto” Plaintiff: “metal” and “ring” Metal: “Comprised of metal Plain and ordinary meaning. are two claim terms that along with other material.” Each word of the limitation should be construed must, however, be given separately. Ring: “A perimetric protective effect. First, the metal ring enclosure.” must be “disposed” on and Defendant: the entire phrase separate from any substrate or “disposing a metal ring to base material. Second, the surround the integrated metal ring must be metal as circuit” should be construed as opposed to a non-metallic a whole. substance or comprised of metal along with another material. Third, the metal ring Claim 1 must be a ring that encircles or surrounds the integrated circuit (including the antenna) and the interconnections thereto and provides mechanical strength for protecting the integrated circuit. Defendant: “laminating it to No construction is necessary “uniting the contactless form a laminated substrate.” since plain and ordinary communication insert and the meaning. substrate with one or more Claim 1 layers of polyester or similar

4 “laminating” means coating; material” “laminated” means coated or covered with a coating; “substrate” is any material which provides the surface upon which something is deposited or inscribed base material “A sheet of paper, plastic or “material separate from the similar material capable of claimed ‘cover’” Claims 1-4 having thin films of ink and/or other coatings applied thereto” tamper-proof stitching “Stitching that is at least “stitching that cannot be partially protected from altered or tampered with” Claim 3 unintended removal or unraveling” Id. at 2-6. The claim construction hearing was held on January 16, 2020. We conclude that the following constructions are appropriate.

DISCUSSION

Claim construction is the first step in a patent infringement action, because the court must understand what the invention is before it determines whether the United States has used the invention without permission. The scope and meaning of the patent is a question of law. Markman v.

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Iris Corporation Berhad v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iris-corporation-berhad-v-united-states-uscfc-2020.