Motion Offense, LLC v. Google LLC

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 29, 2022
Docket6:21-cv-00514
StatusUnknown

This text of Motion Offense, LLC v. Google LLC (Motion Offense, LLC v. Google LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Motion Offense, LLC v. Google LLC, (W.D. Tex. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS WACO DIVISION

MOTION OFFENSE, LLC, § Plaintiff, § § v. § Civil No. 6:21-cv-00514-ADA § GOOGLE LLC, § Defendant. §

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Before the Court is Google LLC’s (“Google” or “Defendant”) Motion to Transfer Venue from the Western District of Texas (“WDTX”) to the Northern District of California (“NDCA”) under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a). ECF No. 34. The Court carefully considered the relevant facts, applicable law, and the parties’ briefs. ECF Nos. 34, 59, 64. The Court’s decision turns on whether it should apply traditional Fifth Circuit transfer law or apply the Federal Circuit’s interpretations of Fifth Circuit transfer law. This Court cannot ignore or overrule cases from the Federal Circuit. But-for those Federal Circuit cases, this Court GRANTS Defendant’s Motion to Transfer. All deadlines are VACATED. The Court will set a case management conference before transferring the case. I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Motion Offense LLC (“Motion Offense” or “Plaintiff”) filed its First Amended Complaint against Google and alleged infringement of U.S. Patent Nos. 10,303,353 (“’353 patent”); 10,613,737 (“’737 patent”); 10,803,140; 10,949,507; 10,904,178; and 11,044,215 (“’215 patent”) (collectively, “Asserted Patents”) on July 23, 2021. ECF No. 7. The Asserted Patents generally describe claims and methods which make data sharing more rapid and efficient. Id. ¶¶ 29, 40, 51, 62. For purposes of contesting venue, the parties agree that the “Accused Products” at issue include Google Drive, Backup and Sync, Drive File Stream, Google Drive for Desktop, Google Docs, Google Sheets, Google Slides, Good Docs Editors, Google One, Google Workspace, Android, Chrome, Chrome OS, Dialogflow, Google Cloud, App Links, and Google Play. ECF No. 64-2 at

1–2. Motion Offense is a licensing company with an office in Longview, Texas. ECF No. 56-1 ¶ 5. Motion Offense’s only manager is Mr. Andrew Gordon, and he resides in Frisco, Texas. Id. ¶¶ 2-5. Both locations are in the Eastern District of Texas. Id. Motion Offense is not an OSO-IP subsidiary. ECF No. 56-2 ¶¶ 3-4; ECF No. 4. Mr. Kevin Zilka has knowledge about the prosecution of the Asserted Patents but is unaffiliated with Motion Offense. ECF No. 56-2 ¶¶ 3-4, 9. At Google’s headquarters in Mountain View, California, Google employs about 45% or 39,914 of its U.S. employees. ECF No. 35-1 ¶ 2. Google employs 10,918 people in other offices in the NDCA. Id. Google also has an office in Austin, Texas, where it employs about 2% or 1,800 of its U.S. employees. Id. Google’s engineering teams worked on the Google Drive, Google Drive

for Desktop, Dialogflow, Site Isolation, and App Links products in Washington State; Ontario, California; the United Kingdom; New York; Colorado; the NDCA; and elsewhere in California. Id. ¶¶ 5-6. One Google engineer, Mr. Marlow, works in Austin, Texas on the Google Cloud Professional Services Team, which uses Dialogflow. Id. ¶ 7. Google also has an unknown quantity of engineers in Austin who work on Android, Google Play, Google Cloud, and other accused products in the G Suite. ECF No. 57-1 at 2. Google also has an unknown quantity of finance and marketing staff in Austin. Id. This case is one of three co-pending cases in this Court asserting three of the same patents: the ʼ353, ʼ737 and ʼ215 patents. Motion Offense has two consolidated cases against Dropbox, Inc. (“Dropbox Cases”) asserting those three overlapping patents before this Court in civil action 6:21- cv-00758-ADA. II. THE ROPE DECLARATION IS CREDIBLE BUT LIMITED Plaintiff challenges the reliability of Google’s venue declarant, Mr. Andrew Rope. ECF

No. 59 at 3. Plaintiff identifies four problems with Mr. Rope’s declaration: 1) it implies but omits cumulative employees or evidence in Texas, 2) it operates as a mouthpiece for information fed by Google’s counsel, 3) it contradicts other evidence, and 4) it provides an incomplete analysis by omitting many accused products. Id. at 2–3. In response, Google argues that Mr. Rope completed a comprehensive, multi-day investigation during which he interviewed every employee named in his declaration and individuals further identified by those employees (well-more than twenty individuals) to determine “who they are, what they work on, [] the folks that they work with,” and where they are located. ECF No. 64 at 2 (citing ECF No. 64-2 at 43:17-21, 6:11-20, 7:24-8:6; 10:3- 11:10, 11:15-19, 45:10-25, 100:5-16). Vague, attorney-driven venue declarations frequently accompany transfer motions filed in

this Court. See, e.g., Scramoge Tech. Ltd. v. Apple Inc., No. 6:21-CV-00579-ADA, 2022 WL 1667561, at *2–4 (W.D. Tex. May 25, 2022). These declarations offer conclusions derived from limited, attorney-supplied facts without ever explaining the investigation conducted to fully uncover the facts. The Court has grown weary of venue declarants who investigate only facts that support transfer and then, after failing to investigate adverse facts, simply declare that they have no personal knowledge of any facts that weigh against transfer. It especially concerns the Court when a party opposing transfer uncovers evidence favoring transfer that venue declarants should have uncovered in a diligent investigation. After reviewing the entirety of his deposition transcript, the Court finds that Mr. Rope completed a sufficient investigation for the products that he discusses. ECF No. 56-5. He conducted a multi-day investigation, interviewed more than twenty individuals, and attempted to answer his deposition questions directly rather than evasively. Id. Although Mr. Rope received

some information from counsel and routinely received warnings not to divulge information from counsel, he nonetheless conducted an independent investigation. Id. His investigation uncovered evidence that weighs against transfer, such as the witness Patrick Marlow in Austin. ECF No. 35- 1 ¶ 7. Mr. Rope is a Senior Legal Project Manager at Google and conducts these types of investigations as part of his full-time job. ECF No. 35-1 ¶ 1. Although Mr. Rope repeatedly provides declarations in support of Google’s transfer motions, the still-reasonable frequency of these declarations indicates that Mr. Rope dedicates a reasonable amount of time to investigating the facts. Thus, the Court declines to find that Mr. Rope failed to conduct a reasonable investigation into the facts. Mr. Rope understands the Plaintiff accused Google Drive, Google Drive for Desktop,

Dialogflow, Site Isolation, and App Links of patent infringement. ECF No. 35-1 ¶ 5. For purposes of venue discovery, the parties agreed that the accused products include Google Drive, Backup and Sync, Drive File Stream, Google Drive for Desktop, Google Docs, Google Sheets, Google Slides, Good Docs Editors, Google One, Google Workspace, Android, Chrome, Chrome OS, Dialogflow, Google Cloud, App Links, and Google Play. ECF No. 64-2 at 1–2. Because Mr. Rope did not investigate all accused products, he appropriately limited the scope of his declaration. In this case, Plaintiff’s evidence of Google employees in Texas does not contradict Mr. Rope’s declaration because Mr. Rope limited his declaration to just five of the many relevant products. Compare ECF No. 35 ¶¶ 5, 8, with ECF No. 57-1 at 2. As to whether there are individuals with “duplicative” knowledge here in Texas, Mr. Rope has made clear it is that Mr. Marlow in Austin who has duplicative knowledge. ECF No. 35 ¶ 7. Otherwise, Mr. Rope’s investigation left him with no awareness of any other Google engineers or engineering managers in Texas who work on the five accused products that Mr. Rope investigated.

ECF No. 35 ¶¶ 7-8. Finally, the Court recognizes that Mr. Rope’s declaration is limited.

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Motion Offense, LLC v. Google LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/motion-offense-llc-v-google-llc-txwd-2022.