Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. v. Graco Children's Products, Inc

927 F.3d 1320
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 2019
Docket2018-1259, 2018-1260
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 927 F.3d 1320 (Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. v. Graco Children's Products, Inc) 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
Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. v. Graco Children's Products, Inc, 927 F.3d 1320 (Fed. Cir. 2019).

Opinion

Reyna, Circuit Judge.

Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. appeals the decision of the United States Patent Trial and Appeal Board finding U.S. Design Patent Nos. D604,970 and D616,231 unpatentable as obvious in light of the prior art. The primary issue on appeal is whether Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. antedated the prior art with evidence of its prior conception, diligence, and reduction to practice. The Board determined that Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. did not. We agree. Accordingly, we affirm.

BACKGROUND

Kolcraft Enterprises, Inc. ("Kolcraft") is the assignee of U.S. Design Patent No. D604,970 S ("the '970 patent") and U.S. Design Patent No. D616,231 S ("the '231 patent"). The '970 and '231 patents are both titled "Exposed Legs for a Play Yard" and have an effective filing date of November 5, 2004. Each patent has one claim.

The '970 patent contains seven figures. Figures 1 and 2 are depicted below.

*1322 ?

J.A. 48-49. Figure 1 is "a perspective view of exposed legs for a play yard," and Figure 2 is "a front view of the design of FIG. 1." J.A. 46, 48-49. The '970 patent also states that "[t]here is no fabric covering the exposed legs shown in any of FIGS. 1-7." J.A. 46. The dashed lines do not form part of the claimed design. See MPEP § 1503.02 (9th ed. 2018).

The '231 patent has five figures. Figures 1 and 2 are provided below. Figure 1 is "a perspective view of a playard with exposed legs." J.A. 52. Figure 2 is "a front view of the playard of FIG. 1." Id. "There is no fabric covering the exposed legs shown in any of FIGS. 1-5." Id .

?

On March 30, 2016, Graco Children's Products, Inc. ("Graco") filed a petition for inter partes review ("IPR") challenging the '970 patent. A day later, Graco filed a second IPR petition challenging the '231 patent. Graco proposed eleven grounds of unpatentability for each patent, including a ground for each patent that the claim is obvious in light of U.S. Design Patent No. D494,393 assigned to Chen ("Chen '393"). The United States Patent Trial and Appeal Board ("Board") instituted a single trial addressing both patents on the asserted grounds related to Chen '393.

Kolcraft did not submit a preliminary owner response to Graco's petitions, but it filed a six-page Patent Owner Response 1 after the Board instituted trial. In its Patent *1323 Owner Response, Kolcraft included a declaration signed by inventors Damon Oliver Casati Troutman and Edward B. Bretschger ("Inventor Declaration"), with Exhibits A-H appended to the declaration. The Patent Owner Response argued that at least one of Exhibits A-H depicted features of the claimed invention identified by the Board: (1) curved legs that bow outward; (2) no fabric covering the exposed legs; and (3) outward flaring at the top of the legs. Exhibits A-H are a collection of photos and sketches of play yards and instructions for assembling the prototype of the play yard that Troutman and Bretschger claim to have invented. Neither the Inventor Declaration discussing the exhibits nor the exhibits themselves included specific dates of conception. The Inventor Declaration redacted the dates when the exhibits were purportedly created, using blank spaces where relevant dates would have been to show that the inventions described in the '970 and '231 patents were conceived of and reduced to practice on "a date prior to January 7, 2004," the effective filing date of Chen '393. J.A. 1181-84.

In March 2017, Graco deposed inventors Troutman and Bretschger. Before the depositions took place, Kolcraft provided Graco with an unredacted version of the inventors' declaration, where the blank spaces were replaced with alleged dates of conception and reduction to practice. When questioned about the source of these dates, inventor Troutman testified that the dates were based on metadata associated with the computer files containing the exhibits. Graco filed under seal with its reply the transcripts of Bretschger's and Troutman's depositions. One day before the July 6, 2017 oral hearing, Kolcraft filed under seal an unredacted version of the Inventor Declaration attaching the exhibits in paper form. Kolcraft did not file with the Board the computer files of the exhibits containing the metadata showing the purported dates of conception. During the oral hearing before the Board, Kolcraft admitted that the unredacted version of the Inventor Declaration was "not in the record." J.A. 2006.

At trial, the Board addressed whether Chen '393 qualifies as prior art to the patents-in-suit and whether the patents-in-suit are obvious in view of Chen '393. The Board concluded that Chen '393 is prior art because Kolcraft failed to show that conception, diligence, and reduction to practice of the '970 and '231 patents occurred before Chen '393 was filed. The Board also found that the testimony of inventors Bretschger and Troutman-explaining that they conceived of the play yard invention before the effective filing date of Chen '393 -was not corroborated by non-inventor testimony, documents, or other evidence. Notably, the Board relied on the redacted version of the Inventor Declaration and did not take into account inventor deposition testimony of prior conception because the Board deemed Kolcraft's reliance on inventor deposition testimony to be waived as it was raised for the first time at oral hearing. The Board also determined that the patents-in-suit were obvious in view of Chen '393.

Kolcraft timely appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295 (a)(4)(A).

DISCUSSION

On appeal, Kolcraft does not contest that, if we agree that Chen '393 is prior art, then the '970 and '231 patents are obvious. Kolcraft instead challenges whether the Board erred in finding that Troutman and Bretschger did not conceive of the inventions of the '970 and '231 patents before the filing of Chen '393 and that they did not exercise reasonable diligence *1324 or reduce to practice the patented inventions before January 7, 2004.

This case turns on the corroboration of inventor testimony. Only if there is sufficient corroboration do we address whether Troutman and Bretschger conceived of the patented inventions prior to January 7, 2004, the date Chen '393 was filed.

Inventor testimony of conception must be corroborated by other, independent information. Apator Miitors ApS v. Kamstrup A/S , 887 F.3d 1293 , 1295 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (citing Mahurkar v. C.R. Bard, Inc. , 79 F.3d 1572

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
927 F.3d 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kolcraft-enterprises-inc-v-graco-childrens-products-inc-cafc-2019.