Shuffle Master, Inc. v. Vendingdata Corp.

163 F. App'x 864
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 2005
Docket2005-1203
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 163 F. App'x 864 (Shuffle Master, Inc. v. Vendingdata Corp.) 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
Shuffle Master, Inc. v. Vendingdata Corp., 163 F. App'x 864 (Fed. Cir. 2005).

Opinions

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the grant of a preliminary injunction in a patent case. The United States District Court for the District of Nevada ruled for the patentee, Shuffle Master, Inc., and entered a preliminary injunction barring the appellant VendingData Corporation from selling its accused product, a playing card shuffling machine. Shuffle Master, Inc. v. Vending-Data Corp., No. CV-S-04-1373-JCM (LRL) (D.Nev. Dec. 7, 2004). Although the scope of our review of orders granting or denying motions for preliminary injunctions is narrow, we conclude that, in light of the critical importance of claim construction to the outcome here, the district court should have provided an explicit claim construction before entering its injunctive order. We therefore vacate the order enjoining VendingData from selling its accused product and remand to the district court for further proceedings.

I

Shuffle Master owns U.S. Pat. No. 6,655,684 (“the ’684 patent”), which is entitled “Device and Method for Forming and Delivering Hands from Randomly Arranged Decks of Playing Cards.” Only claim 20 of the ’684 patent is at issue here. Shuffle Master alleges that one of VendingData’s automatic shufflers, the Poker-One, infringes that claim. VendingData contends that the PokerOne does not fall within the scope of the claim, as properly construed.

Automatic card shufflers, which have been available for some time, deliver hands of randomly mixed playing cards. Claim 20 of the ’684 patent recites a particular method for delivering shuffled hands, which comprises:

providing at least one deck of playing cards;
forming at least one set of cards within the apparatus from the at least one deck of playing cards;
delivering to a delivery tray from the at least one set of cards within the apparatus a first individual set of randomly mixed playing cards for a game;
delivering the first individual set of randomly mixed playing cards from the delivery tray of the apparatus, with all cards in the first individual set delivered at the same time, and then providing a second individual set of randomly mixed playing cards into the delivery tray.

For present purposes, the critical claim limitation is the one that recites “forming at least one set of cards within the apparatus from the at least one deck of playing cards.” Before the district court, VendingData contended that the PokerOne does not form a “set of cards within the apparatus” within the meaning of that phrase in the asserted claim.

VendingData offered evidence that the PokerOne operates by randomly ejecting cards from an unshuffled deck to form an “internal stack” within the apparatus. The random ejection process continues until the internal stack contains at least 21 cards. When the number of cards required for at least two hands of the game that is being played have been collected in the internal stack, the device begins the dealing process. The PokerOne deals by delivering cards to the output tray, one-by-one from the bottom of the internal stack, until a complete hand is formed in the output tray. When that first hand of cards is removed from the output tray, the dealing process begins again, and new cards are delivered, one-by-one from the bottom of the internal stack, to the output [866]*866tray to form a second hand. After each hand of cards is removed from the output tray, additional cards are ejected from the unshuffled deck into the internal stack, while at the same time new cards are delivered to the output tray to form another hand.

Shuffle Master argued to the district court that the internal stack formed in the PokerOne falls within the limitation requiring that “at least one set of cards [be formed] within the apparatus.” In its papers opposing the motion for a preliminary injunction, VendingData argued that the specification and the prosecution history make clear that the internal stack formed within the PokerOne device does not read on that limitation, because the “set of cards” limitation covers only a set of cards constituting a single hand or a part of a hand. Consequently, according to VendingData, the internal stack is not a “set of cards,” because no hands or portions of hands are formed there. Instead, cards simply accumulate in the internal stack until the stack contains at least 21 cards, and the dealing process does not begin until the number of cards in the internal stack is equal to at least two hands of cards. The hands, according to Vending-Data, are formed for the first time when cards are delivered, one-by-one, to the output tray.

In making its claim construction argument in the district court, VendingData referred to the portion of the specification in which the patentee described the operation of the claimed shuffler. According to the specification, the device described in Shuffle Master’s patent randomly places cards into slots or compartments. Each of those slots or compartments, according to the specification, “may therefore be identified and treated to receive individual hands of defined numbers of randomly selected cards or the slots may be later directed to deliver individual cards into a separate hand forming slot or tray.” ’684 patent, col. 4, 11. 62-65. In the first case, “a hand of cards is removed as a group from an individual slot.” Id. col. 4, 11. 66-67. In the second case, “each card defining a hand is removed from more than one compartment (where one or more cards are removed from a slot), and the individual cards are combined in a hand-receiving tray to form a randomized hand of cards.” Id. col. 4, line 67 through col. 5, line 4.

VendingData also relied on the prosecution history to support its proposed construction of the “set of cards” limitation. VendingData argued that the patentee restricted the method to “forming hands inside the unit.” In particular, VendingData noted that in response to a rejection by the patent examiner, the patentee stated that claim 20 requires sets of cards to be formed within the apparatus and requires individual hands to be formed from those sets, “either with one set of cards being a complete hand or by sets of cards being combined to form a complete hand.”

Following arguments by counsel regarding the request for a preliminary injunction, the district court issued an injunction barring the sale of the Poker One. Although the question of the proper construction of claim 20 was clearly in dispute, the court did not address the claim construction arguments made by VendingData and did not provide an explicit construction of the critical claim language. Rather, the court simply concluded that Shuffle Master was likely to succeed on the merits in proving that the operation of the Poker-One infringes Shuffle Master’s rights under claim 20 of the ’684 patent. The district court also found that Shuffle Master was likely to succeed on the merits in proving that the ’684 patent is valid, that Shuffle Master showed that the effect of sales of the PokerOne would result in ir[867]*867reparable harm to Shuffle Master, and that the public interest in protecting patent rights supported the issuance of a preliminary injunction.

VendingData subsequently made requests for modification and clarification of the preliminary injunction order. VendingData also requested a stay of the injunction pending appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
163 F. App'x 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shuffle-master-inc-v-vendingdata-corp-cafc-2005.