Koninklijke Philips N v. v. Zoll Medical Corporation

656 F. App'x 504
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2016
Docket2014-1764, 2014-1791
StatusUnpublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 656 F. App'x 504 (Koninklijke Philips N v. v. Zoll Medical Corporation) 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
Koninklijke Philips N v. v. Zoll Medical Corporation, 656 F. App'x 504 (Fed. Cir. 2016).

Opinion

Hughes, Circuit Judge.

Philips sued Zoll for infringement of numerous patents related to external defibrillators. Zoll counterclaimed for infringement of its own patents covering related technology. The parties presented their cases to a jury, which found, among other things, that both parties’ patents are not invalid, both parties directly infringe the asserted patents, but Zoll does not contrib-utorily infringe the asserted Philips patents. The district court denied all motions for judgment as a matter of law, and both parties appeal these denials. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm-in-part, reverse-in-part, and vaeate-in-part the district court’s judgment. We remand the case for further proceedings.

I. Background

Philips and Zoll both manufacture and sell external defibrillators. Defibrillators are electronic devices that apply an electrical shock to a person’s heart for therapeutic purposes. Defibrillators are commonly used to treat ventricular fibrillation, which occurs when the muscle fibers of a per *508 son’s heart contract without coordination. Application of an electrical shock interrupts the irregular contractions, allowing the heart to return to its normal rhythm of contraction.

“External” defibrillators are defibrillators that are not implanted in a person’s body. Because they are provided outside of the person’s body, external defibrillators must deliver the electrical shock indirectly, as applied to the surface of the person’s skin. In addition, because the electrical shock must pass through the person’s skin and thorax before reaching the person’s heart, external defibrillators generally need to operate at higher voltages and/or currents than implanted defibrillators.

This application of high levels of electricity to the surface of a person’s skin to treat a time-sensitive medical condition introduces numerous challenges, which the patents-in-suit address.

A. Waveform Patents

Philips asserted a first group of patents that we will refer to as the “waveform” patents. These are: U.S. Patent 5,607,454; U.S. Patent 5,749,905; and U.S. Patent 6,047,212.

In the most general sense, the waveform patents are directed to controlling the waveform of the electrical shock that is delivered to a subject person’s body. The waveform patents explain that one challenge with external defibrillators is that of subject variability. With implanted defibrillators, only a single person is ever the subject of the device, so the device can be precisely tuned to deliver the ideal electrical shock to that subject. But an external defibrillator may be used on multiple subjects, each with a distinct body composition. The differences between different subjects’ hearts, the differences between the electrical impedance created by different subjects’ thoraxes, and other body composition differences mean that an ideal external defibrillator would be capable of providing different electrical shocks. But configuring the various parameters of the electrical shock, e.g., the initial voltage and duration of the initial voltage phase, can be a complicated technique that typically can only be executed by a trained professional.

The waveform patents aim to address this challenge by providing an external defibrillator that can automatically vary the electrical shock based on the body composition of the subject, eliminating the need for a trained operator. See ’454 patent, col. 3 11. 37-40. The waveform patents disclose that an external defibrillator can be configured to detect an “electrical parameter” of the subject, such as the electrical impedance of the subject’s thorax, and then adjust the electrical shock based on this monitored electrical parameter. See id. at col. 311. 44-53.

Philips asserted the following claims of the waveform patents against Zoll: ’454 patent claim 51; ’905 patent claims 4 and 8; and ’212 patent claims 1 and 5. See J.A. 108-11.

B. Self-Test Patents

Philips asserted a second group of patents that we will refer to as the “self-test” patents. These are: U.S. Patent 5,800,460 and U.S. Patent 5,879,374.

The self-test patents are directed- to an external defibrillator’s capability to test its own functional status without human intervention. External defibrillators prior to the self-test patents tended to be deployed in high-usage environments, such as a hospital emergency room, where they could be tested regularly to ensure their operability. But in low-usage environments, such as an emergency medical vehicle or in a stationary deployment in an office building, regular testing was inconvenient.

*509 The self-test patents aim to address this challenge by providing a self-testing capability within an external defibrillator. See ’460 patent, col. 1 11. 44-48. The self-testing capability allows the external defibrillator to periodically, e.g., once per day, test the functionality of its components, e.g., that its battery is sufficiently charged. See id. at col. 1 11. 38-48. The external defibrillator provides a visual and/or audible indicator of the self-test results. See id. at Abstract.

Philips asserted the following claims of the self-test patents against Zoll: ’460 patent claim 7; and ’374 patent claims 42-43 and 67-68. See J.A. 105-06.

C. Electrode Patent

Zoll asserted U.S. Patent 5,330,526, which is directed to an electrode for use with an external defibrillator.

Prior to the ’526 patent, it was common practice to provide an electrolytic gel on the surface of the electrodes of an external defibrillator. After soaking into the subject’s skin, the electrolytes in the gel would provide a conducting path from the electrodes through the outer surface of the subject’s skin. This allowed the electrical shock to easily pass into the subject’s body instead of dissipating on the surface of the subject’s skin. It was common to provide the electrodes and electrolytic gel to have an electrical resistance of less than 1 ohm,thereby heightening this conductivity factor.

The ’526 patent discloses that this very low resistance characteristic of the electrode and electrolytic gel can actually be disadvantageous. In particular, use of very low resistance electrodes and electrolytic gel demonstrated that some burning occurs on the subject’s skin at the outer edge of the electrolytic gel. See ’526 patent, col. 1 1. 57-col. 2 1. 7. As a result, the ’526 patent discloses various configurations of the electrode and electrolytic gel, each configuration having an electrical resistance of at least 1 ohm. See id. at col. 2 11. 16-49.

Zoll asserted claims 1, 8-9, 11-12, 19, and 24-25 of the ’526 patent against Philips. See J.A. 115.

D. District Court Proceedings

The district court submitted various issues of infringement and validity to a jury, but bifurcated all damages issues for a later trial. The jury made the following determinations. 1

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656 F. App'x 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koninklijke-philips-n-v-v-zoll-medical-corporation-cafc-2016.