Smarten LLC v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.
This text of 316 F. Supp. 3d 913 (Smarten LLC v. Samsung Elecs. Am., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Leonie M. Brinkema, United States District Judge
Before the Court is defendant's Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. No. 15] pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), in which defendant argues that this patent infringement action should be dismissed because none of the patents-in-issue are patent-eligible under
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff SmarTEN LLC ("plaintiff" or "SmarTEN") alleges that defendant Samsung *915Electronics America, Inc. ("defendant" or "Samsung") has infringed on four patents which SmarTEN owns: Patent Numbers 9,280,640 (" '640 patent") ; 9,378,657 (" '657 patent") ; 9,514,655 (" '655 patent") ; and 9,728,102 (" '102 patent"). Compl. [Dkt. No. 1] ¶ 4.
The four patents-in-suit, all of which are continuations of the same parent application, disclose a "mobile computing device executing weight, nutrition, health, behavior and exercise application software" that "serves as a simulated combination personal trainer and dietician/nutritionist for the user using comprehensive databases storing personalized health, nutrition and exercise information." '640 patent abs. The patents include 132 claims, each of which recites a "hand-held mobile weight and exercise management computing device," see '640 patent 88:65-67, or a "hand-held mobile nutrition and physical activity management computing device," see '102 patent 100:11-12. When the applications for these patents were filed, there were many "commercial programs," such as Weight Watchers, as well as "individual health care professionals" and "multidisciplinary medical weight management centers" that provided clients with "nutritional and exercise direction along with help to keep on track." '640 patent 2:6-16. In addition, these services had already been incorporated into applications for mobile devices and tablets such as iPhones and iPads designed "to assist dieters in successfully meeting their weight loss goals,"
At bottom, the invention claimed by the patents is a handheld device with software that processes, organizes, and displays nutrition and exercise data and provides feedback to the user. Although the patents claim a "device," they describe software which "may be implemented by any of a wide array of commercially available, conventional mobile computing devices, including, for example, conventional smart phones, such as Apple's iPhone 4s or 5, or Samsung's quad-core processor-based Galaxy S3, a tablet computing device such as Apple's iPad, or any of a number of laptop computers."
Plaintiff alleges that on February 8, 2017, it sent defendant a letter to advise it that its products were infringing the '640, '657, and '655 patents, and included a copy of the entire '640 patent and the claims of the '657 and '655 patents. Compl. ¶ 5. Using claim 1 of the '640 patent as an example, the letter explained that Samsung's smartphones with a built-in S Health App1 *916infringed plaintiff's patent.
In this litigation, plaintiff alleges that all Samsung Galaxy S7 and S8 Series smartphones, as well as all Note 8 Series smartphones, that had the built-in S Health App and were sold in the United States on or after the issue date of each patent literally and directly infringe claims 1-3, 5-7, 9-10, 13-20, 24, 26-28, 30, 32, 34, 41, 43-44, 46, 50, 54, and 56 of the '640 patent (issued on March 8, 2016); claims 1-8, 11, 13-15, 17, 19, and 21 of the '657 patent (issued on June 28, 2016); claims 1-9, 11, 13-17, 20, and 22-23 of the '655 patent (issued on December 6, 2016); and claims 26-30 of the '102 patent (issued on August 8, 2017).
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Leonie M. Brinkema, United States District Judge
Before the Court is defendant's Motion to Dismiss [Dkt. No. 15] pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), in which defendant argues that this patent infringement action should be dismissed because none of the patents-in-issue are patent-eligible under
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff SmarTEN LLC ("plaintiff" or "SmarTEN") alleges that defendant Samsung *915Electronics America, Inc. ("defendant" or "Samsung") has infringed on four patents which SmarTEN owns: Patent Numbers 9,280,640 (" '640 patent") ; 9,378,657 (" '657 patent") ; 9,514,655 (" '655 patent") ; and 9,728,102 (" '102 patent"). Compl. [Dkt. No. 1] ¶ 4.
The four patents-in-suit, all of which are continuations of the same parent application, disclose a "mobile computing device executing weight, nutrition, health, behavior and exercise application software" that "serves as a simulated combination personal trainer and dietician/nutritionist for the user using comprehensive databases storing personalized health, nutrition and exercise information." '640 patent abs. The patents include 132 claims, each of which recites a "hand-held mobile weight and exercise management computing device," see '640 patent 88:65-67, or a "hand-held mobile nutrition and physical activity management computing device," see '102 patent 100:11-12. When the applications for these patents were filed, there were many "commercial programs," such as Weight Watchers, as well as "individual health care professionals" and "multidisciplinary medical weight management centers" that provided clients with "nutritional and exercise direction along with help to keep on track." '640 patent 2:6-16. In addition, these services had already been incorporated into applications for mobile devices and tablets such as iPhones and iPads designed "to assist dieters in successfully meeting their weight loss goals,"
At bottom, the invention claimed by the patents is a handheld device with software that processes, organizes, and displays nutrition and exercise data and provides feedback to the user. Although the patents claim a "device," they describe software which "may be implemented by any of a wide array of commercially available, conventional mobile computing devices, including, for example, conventional smart phones, such as Apple's iPhone 4s or 5, or Samsung's quad-core processor-based Galaxy S3, a tablet computing device such as Apple's iPad, or any of a number of laptop computers."
Plaintiff alleges that on February 8, 2017, it sent defendant a letter to advise it that its products were infringing the '640, '657, and '655 patents, and included a copy of the entire '640 patent and the claims of the '657 and '655 patents. Compl. ¶ 5. Using claim 1 of the '640 patent as an example, the letter explained that Samsung's smartphones with a built-in S Health App1 *916infringed plaintiff's patent.
In this litigation, plaintiff alleges that all Samsung Galaxy S7 and S8 Series smartphones, as well as all Note 8 Series smartphones, that had the built-in S Health App and were sold in the United States on or after the issue date of each patent literally and directly infringe claims 1-3, 5-7, 9-10, 13-20, 24, 26-28, 30, 32, 34, 41, 43-44, 46, 50, 54, and 56 of the '640 patent (issued on March 8, 2016); claims 1-8, 11, 13-15, 17, 19, and 21 of the '657 patent (issued on June 28, 2016); claims 1-9, 11, 13-17, 20, and 22-23 of the '655 patent (issued on December 6, 2016); and claims 26-30 of the '102 patent (issued on August 8, 2017).
As a result, plaintiff seeks compensatory damages adequate to compensate it for Samsung's infringement, as well as treble damages and costs pursuant to
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Under Rule 12(b)(6), a civil action must be dismissed if the complaint does not "contain sufficient facts to state a claim that is 'plausible on its face.' " E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Kolon Indus., Inc.,
Under
*917Core Wireless Licensing S.A.R.L. v. LG Elecs., Inc.,
B. Analysis
Under the Patent Act, "[w]hoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor."
At the same time, because "all inventions," at some level, "embody, use, reflect, rest upon, or apply laws of nature, natural phenomena, or abstract ideas," courts must "tread carefully in construing this exclusionary principle lest it swallow all of patent law."
Before applying the Alice test, the Court must determine whether a single claim is representative of the asserted claims for purposes of Alice. Samsung argues that Claim 1 of the '640 patent is representative of each asserted claim. This claim recites, in full:
*918A hand-held mobile weight and exercise management computing device having a housing sized to be held in a user's hand comprising:
a storage subsystem for storing health information including a user profile, said storage subsystem being operable to store health information about a user, including body weight, pulse rate information, a calorie-related daily goal, and an exercise-related goal, said storage subsystem being further operable to store data relating to a plurality of user-selectable foods and to store data relating to a plurality of user-selectable exercises;
a touch screen display operable to display food-related and exercise-related information to said user;
a user interface operable to receive input from said user and to communicate output to said user, said user interface including a plurality of user interface displays displayable on said touch screen display; said user interface being operable to selectively initiate entry into said user profile or at least one food-related operation or at least one exercise-related operation, said user interface including a plurality of user-selectable symbols; said user-selectable symbols being operable to initiate entry into said user profile or at least one food-related operation or at least one exercise-related operation;
a GPS receiver in said housing operable to receive input GPS data;
a pedometer in said housing operable to generate step-related data;
said user interface being operable to display on said touch screen display in said housing: a food mode symbol, a first exercise mode symbol for initiating an exercise mode that uses position coordinate information based upon said input GPS data, and a second exercise mode symbol for entry of data regarding a plurality of exercise modes that do not use position coordinate information based upon said input GPS data;
a processing subsystem, operatively coupled to said user interface, said GPS receiver, said pedometer, said touch screen display, and said storage subsystem, said processing subsystem including:
a food monitoring subsystem being operatively coupled to said storage subsystem and being operable to receive food-related data from said user, via said user interface, including data identifying a first set of foods input by said user, and being operable to link said first set of foods to a specific user meal, said first set of foods including a first food and a quantity-related parameter identified by said user;
said food monitoring subsystem being operable to determine the calories expected to be consumed by said user upon eating said first food, and to store food-related information in said storage subsystem relating to said first food, including information relating to the nutritional content of said first food and the calories consumed by said user upon eating said first food, based in part on said food-related data from said user;
said food monitoring subsystem, in response to user selection of said food mode symbol, being further operable to generate a food selection display screen identifying a plurality of meal category symbols that allow the user to select a meal category including a breakfast category symbol, a lunch category symbol, a dinner category symbol, and a snack category symbol;
said food monitoring subsystem being further operable to generate a nutritional rating based at least in part on a combination of nutrient parameters in said first food of said first set of foods;
*919said nutritional rating being further based upon nutritional rating values ranging from low values, indicating a relatively undesirable combination of nutrient parameters, with respect to at least one health-related goal, to high values, indicating a relatively desirable combination of nutrient parameters, with respect to said at least one health-related goal; said food monitoring subsystem being further operable to generate a display of said nutritional rating to said user via said user interface on said touch screen display;
said food monitoring subsystem being further operable to generate a display of protein and fat content of at least said first food selected by said user, wherein said nutritional rating is based in part on the protein and fat content of said first food;
said food monitoring subsystem being further operable to generate a list of said user's favorite foods in response to food-related inputs by said user during food selection for said specific user meal; and
an exercise monitoring subsystem being operatively coupled to said storage subsystem and, in response to user selection of said first exercise mode symbol or said second exercise mode symbol, being operable to receive exercise-related data from said user, via said user interface, including data identifying a first exercise expected to be performed by said user;
said exercise monitoring subsystem being operable to determine the calories expected to be burned by said user upon performing said first exercise, and to store exercise-related information in said storage subsystem relating to said first exercise, including the calories burned by said user and an exercise quantity-related parameter upon said user performing said first exercise, based in part on data from said user;
said exercise monitoring subsystem being further operable to analyze data related to user performance of at least one exercise, and to generate exercise feedback for said user relating to said at least one exercise;
said exercise monitoring subsystem, in response to user selection of said first exercise mode symbol, being further operable to receive exercise data including user location data via signals received from said GPS receiver, to determine user distance traveled using location data from said GPS receiver, and to track user distance traveled and duration traveled;
said exercise monitoring subsystem, in response to user selection of said first exercise mode symbol, using said user location data received from said GPS receiver in said hand-held housing, being further operable to generate the current location of a motion-related exercise, and to generate a visual depiction in real time indicating the user traversing the path defined by said user location data;
said exercise monitoring subsystem being further operable to associate each of a set of exercise levels with at least one user-selectable exercise, said user-selectable exercise including an associated exercise parameter combination;
said exercise monitoring subsystem being further operable to allow said user to select a user-selectable exercise to be performed from any one of said exercise levels from said storage subsystem;
said set of exercise levels ranging from a low exercise level, linked to an exercise with an associated exercise parameter combination that may be performed by users having a relatively low fitness level, to a first high exercise level, linked to an exercise having an exercise parameter *920combination requiring a relatively high fitness level to perform; said set of exercise levels including a second high exercise level, linked to an exercise requiring a relatively high fitness level to perform, where said second high exercise level is at a lower exercise level than said first high exercise level, but at a higher exercise level than other exercise levels in said set of exercise levels, based upon a comparison of exercise parameter combinations associated with exercises of respective exercise levels being compared;
said exercise monitoring subsystem being further operable, to receive said step-related data from said pedometer, to determine the number of steps taken by said user during a step-related exercise, and to calculate the distance traveled during said step-related exercise;
said processing subsystem being operable to generate a prompt for said user to enter an exercise-related goal;
said processing subsystem being further operable to monitor said user's weight over time, and being operable to receive user weight data from said user interface and to store said user weight data in said storage subsystem, said processing subsystem being further operable to generate a weight-related display visually depicting a plurality of instances of said user's weight over time on said touch screen display;
said touch screen display being operatively coupled to said processing subsystem to provide feedback to said user relating to progress towards meeting said daily calorie-related goal, to display at least some of said user's favorite foods to aid in food data entry by said user, to display said nutritional rating to said user, and to display said protein and fat content of at least said first food selected by said user; and being further operatively coupled to display the current location of said motion-related exercise, to display said visual depiction of said motion-related exercise in real time indicating the user traversing the path defined by said user location data while the user is moving along said path, and to display to said user at least one current exercise parameter during the user's performance of an exercise.
'640 patent 88:65-91:36.
The various other asserted dependent claims are not meaningfully different from Claim 1, and even the other asserted independent claims make only insignificant tweaks to the device described in this claim.3 For example, dependent Claim 5 claims only the "device according to claim 1, further including a camera, wherein said food monitoring subsystem is operable to receive image data from said camera of a [sic ] least one food item," id. at 91:53-57, and dependent Claim 10 claims only the "device according to claim 1, wherein said processing subsystem is operable to store in said user profile data indicative of said user's age and height," id. at 92:29-32. As will be discussed below, the reason Claim 1 is directed at patent-ineligible subject matter is because it is primarily directed to collecting, analyzing, and displaying data, and the other asserted claims involve only slight adjustments or additions to the ways *921in which the device described in Claim 1 of the '640 patent collects, analyzes, and displays data. Accordingly, the Alice analysis applies similarly to all of the asserted claims.
Moreover, the patent prosecution history confirms this conclusion. All of the claims in the '657 patent and the '102 patent were rejected for being "not patentably distinct from" the claims of the '640 patent, leading the patentee to file a terminal disclaimer with respect to each patent rather than contest the rejection. See Def. Mem. Ex. G, at 4; id. Ex. I, at 3-4.4 For the '655 patent, SmarTEN preemptively filed a terminal disclaimer to avoid such a rejection. Id. Ex. H, at 3. Although SmarTEN argues without elaboration that there is no "relationship between obviousness type double patenting and patent eligible subject matter," the conclusion by both SmarTEN and the Patent Office that its later-filed patents are "not patentably distinct from" the claims of the '640 patent only reinforces the Court's conclusion that Claim 1 of the '640 patent is representative of plaintiff's invention.
1. Abstract Idea
The first Alice step addresses whether the asserted claims are "directed to a result or effect that itself is" a patent-ineligible abstract idea. Smart Sys. Innovations, LLC v. Chi. Transit Auth.,
Samsung argues that the asserted claims at issue in the present civil action *922fall directly within the lines drawn in Electric Power Group. The Court agrees. Like the claims in Electric Power Group, the claims here are primarily directed at collecting, analyzing, and displaying data. Specifically, Claim 1 of the '640 patent describes a set of subsystems that collect and store health, food, exercise, and weight data from the user and other sources; step-related data from a pedometer; and location data from a GPS receiver. '640 patent 89:1-52, 90:15-30, 91:14-21. The claim further describes how the subsystems can analyze the data to determine, for example, the calories contained in particular foods or burned by particular exercises, to evaluate user performance and the user's weight, and to provide feedback to the user about his progress toward his health goals. Id. at 89:38-45, 90:23-54, 81:14-36. Lastly, the claim describes how the device can display nutritional ratings, a number of different symbols, and "food-related and exercise-related information." as well as "generate a visual depiction" of the user moving in real time. Id. at 89:9-33, 89:54-90:15, 90:42-49. Taken together, these descriptions make clear that Claim 1 is directed at collecting, analyzing, and displaying data, which is a patent-ineligible abstract idea.
In response to this simple application of Electric Power Group, SmarTEN primarily argues that the claims are not directed to an abstract idea but instead are "directed to specific means for improving the claimed mobile weight and exercise management computing device." Pl. Opp. 13 (formatting altered). SmarTEN specifically cites as improvements the inclusion of a pedometer and GPS receiver, id. at 14-15; the display of the user's path in real time using GPS data, id. at 15; the ability to select GPS-based exercises directly from the initial user interface, id. at 16-17; and the generation of lists of a user's favorite foods, id. at 17-18. This argument is unpersuasive. As Federal Circuit precedent makes clear, a claim is directed to the improvement of a device when it is focused on "a specific improvement-[such as] a particular database technique-in how computers c[an] carry out" a function, rather than on "asserted advances in uses to which existing computer capabilities could be put." Electric Power Group,
This conclusion is reinforced by the Federal Circuit's determination that claims are also directed to abstract ideas if they "merely implement an old practice in a new environment." FairWarning IP, 839 F.3d at 1094. In FairWarning, the court confronted patent claims that were directed *923to a computerized "method of detecting improper access of a patient's protected health information" that involved "generating a rule for monitoring audit log data" based on "access in excess of a specific volume, accesses during a pre-determined time interval, [and] accesses by a specific user"; applying the rule to the data to determine whether any such access had been achieved; storing, "in a memory, a hit if the event has occurred"; and providing a notification of the event. Id. at 1092. The Federal Circuit held that these claims were directed to an abstract idea under Alice because the claimed rules reflected "the same questions" that "humans in analogous situations detecting fraud have asked for decades, if not centuries." Id. at 1095. Although the claims required a computer, "it is this incorporation of a computer, not the claimed rule, that purportedly improves the existing technological process by allowing the automation of further tasks," and although the claims "purport[ed] to accelerate the process of analyzing audit log data, the speed increase comes from the capabilities of a general-purpose computer, rather than the patented method itself." Id. (internal quotation marks omitted) (alterations omitted).
SmarTEN's asserted claims function similarly. They reflect a practice that humans have been engaging in for decades, if not centuries: monitoring and improving one's health by managing nutrition and exercise. Although the claims require a mobile computing device and purport to enhance the process of analyzing health-related data, the purported advances come from the capabilities of a conventional mobile computing device, rather than from anything specific to the asserted device itself. See also DietGoal Innovations LLC v. Bravo Media LLC,
2. Inventive Concept
Under the second Alice step, the Court must "consider the elements of the claim, both individually and as an ordered combination, to assess whether the additional elements transform the nature of the claim into a patent-eligible application of the abstract idea." Two-Way Media Ltd. v. Comcast Cable Comms., LLC,
*924Here, again, a comparison to Electric Power Group is useful. In that case, the Federal Circuit held that the claims were not sufficiently inventive: they "d[id] not require a new source of type of information, or new techniques for analyzing it," nor did they "require any nonconventional computer, network or display components, or even a non-conventional and non-generic arrangement of known, conventional pieces." Electric Power Group,
Rather than responding directly to this argument, SmarTEN argues that there is an inventive concept underlying the claims because the '640 patent contains "detailed statements of advantages" showing the inventiveness of the patent and because the "large combination of features in the [']640 patent claims ensure that any abstract ideas ... are not broadly covered, but rather are tied down to ensure that the patent claims are not directed to any abstract idea by itself." Pl. Opp. 18-21. As discussed above, that the claimed device might have some advantages over prior health management applications is not sufficient to show an inventive concept. Instead, SmarTEN must identify something more that transforms the nature of the claim-for example, use of a new source of data or new techniques for analyzing that data, or use of nonconventional components or nonconventional arrangements of conventional components. For the reasons described above, SmarTEN is unable to identify any such inventive concept. In addition, the narrowing limitations in the claim do not demonstrate an inventive concept. The Federal Circuit has made clear, in post- Alice decisions,6 that even narrow applications of non-inventive concepts are not patent eligible. See, e.g., *925Smart Sys. Innovations,
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the Motion to Dismiss will be granted and the Complaint will be dismissed by an appropriate Order to be issued with this Memorandum Opinion.
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316 F. Supp. 3d 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smarten-llc-v-samsung-elecs-am-inc-vaed-2018.