Tonal Systems, Inc. v. iFIT Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedApril 26, 2023
Docket1:20-cv-01197
StatusUnknown

This text of Tonal Systems, Inc. v. iFIT Inc. (Tonal Systems, Inc. v. iFIT Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tonal Systems, Inc. v. iFIT Inc., (D. Del. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE

TONAL SYSTEMS, INC., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 20-1197-GBW-CJB ) CONSOLIDATED ) IFIT INC., ) ) Defendant. )

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION In this consolidated patent action filed by Plaintiff Tonal Systems, Inc. (“Tonal” or “Plaintiff”) against Defendant iFIT Inc. (“iFIT” or “Defendant”), iFIT alleges that Tonal infringes United States Patent Nos. 10,709,925 (the “'925 patent”), 10,953,268 (the “'268 patent”), 10,758,767 (the “'767 patent”), and 10,967,214 (the “'214 patent” and collectively with the other patents, “the asserted patents” or the “patents-in-suit”). Presently before the Court is the matter of claim construction. (D.I. 191; D.I. 192) The Court recommends that the District Court adopt the constructions set forth below. I. BACKGROUND Tonal commenced Civil Action No. 20-1197 against iFIT on September 8, 2020, seeking a declaratory judgment of non-infringement as to the '925 patent and the '767 patent. (D.I. 1) On May 5, 2021, iFIT1 brought Civil Action No. 21-652, asserting that Tonal infringes the '268

1 In both cases, Tonal’s original adversary was ICON Health & Fitness, Inc. (“ICON”), but ICON later changed its name to iFIT Inc. in August 2021, and the case captions were then amended accordingly. (D.I. 25; Civil Action No. 21-652-GBW-CJB, D.I. 16) patent and the '214 patent. (Civil Action No. 21-652-GBW-CJB, D.I. 1)2 Both cases were thereafter referred to the Court by then-District Judge Leonard P. Stark to hear and resolve all pretrial matters up to and including expert discovery matters, (D.I. 29; Civil Action No. 21-652- GBW-CJB, D.I. 20), and were later again referred to the Court for those purposes by now-

presiding District Judge Gregory B. Williams, (D.I. 118; Civil Action No. 21-652-GBW-CJB, D.I. 54). The cases were consolidated into the instant action on February 14, 2022. (D.I. 58) The cases were stayed for a time at the parties’ joint request. (D.I. 140) But after that stay expired, (D.I. 142), and after the Court denied Tonal’s request for an additional stay, (D.I. 188), the previously-delayed claim construction process moved forward. The Court conducted a Markman hearing on February 14, 2023. (D.I. 212 (hereinafter, “Tr.”)) The patents-in-suit relate to exercise machines that have various claimed aspects, including electromagnetic or magnetic components. To the extent that particular facts regarding these claimed devices and the patents-in-suit are relevant to claim construction, the Court will set those out in Section III.

II. STANDARD OF REVIEW The Court has previously set out the law regarding claim construction in many opinions, including in Virco Mfg. Corp. v. SSI Liquidating, Inc., Civil Action No. 20-906-LPS-CJB, 2022 WL 1184060, at *1-2 (D. Del. Apr. 21, 2022). The Court hereby incorporates by reference its discussion in Virco of these legal standards and will follow them herein. To the extent that consideration of the disputed terms necessitates discussion of other, related legal principles, the Court will discuss those principles in Section III below.

2 The '925 patent and the '268 patent share a specification and belong to the same patent family; similarly, the '767 patent and the '214 patent share a specification and belong to the same patent family. (D.I. 119 at 1) III. DISCUSSION By the time of the claim construction hearing, the parties had disputes over five claim terms found in one or more of the patents-in-suit. The Court considers the disputes over four of those terms to be live and ready for decision here. It will take up the four terms in the order in which they were argued.3

A. “electromagnetic unit” ('767 patent and '214 patent) and “magnetic mechanism” ('925 patent and '268 patent)

The parties agree that first two disputed terms, “electromagnetic unit” and “magnetic mechanism[,]” should be taken up together. “Electromagnetic unit” is found in various claims of the '767 patent and '214 patent, including independent claim 1 of the '767 patent, which is representative for our purposes here. Claim 1 of the '767 patent is a claim to a cable exercise machine, and it states that the machine has “an electromagnetic unit linked to the first pull cable and to the second pull cable, the electromagnetic unit configured to apply one or more levels of resistance to a user pulling on the first pull cable and/or the second pull cable[.]” ('767 patent, col. 13:8-12 (emphasis added)) “Magnetic mechanism” is found in various claims of the '925 patent and '268 patent, including representative independent claim 1 of the '925 patent. There the claimed strength

3 For the reasons expressed by the Court at the Markman hearing, with regard to the fifth term—“force exerted by the user”—the parties did not sufficiently identify and meaningfully address their true disputes during the claim construction briefing process. (Tr. at 129-31, 136, 142-45, 173-74) The Court therefore concludes that any disputes regarding this term are not ripe; for that reason, it will not address the term herein. After further meeting and conferring, if the parties believe that a material dispute still remains as to this term in the future, then by no later than 21 days prior to the summary judgment motion filing deadline, the parties should advise the Court of this. The parties should also then let the Court know whether this term is expected to be relevant to any issues that will be raised in the forthcoming summary judgment briefing. Thereafter, if needed, the Court will set out a further process for resolving any remaining claim construction disputes regarding the term. training apparatus comprises, inter alia, a “magnetic mechanism coupled to the first cable and the second cable and configured to provide multiple levels of resistance to a user pulling on the first cable and/or the second cable[.]” ('925 patent, col. 14:29-32 (emphasis added)) The parties’ competing proposed constructions for “electromagnetic unit” and “magnetic

mechanism” are set out in the chart below: Term iFIT’s Proposed Tonal’s Proposed Construction Construction “electromagnetic unit” Not subject to 35 U.S.C. § A means-plus-function term 112(f) (“Section 112”). under Section 112.

To the extent a plain and Function: applying one or ordinary meaning is needed, more levels of resistance to a “a unit having at least one user pulling on the [] cable. electromagnet.” Corresponding structure: a flywheel with an electromagnetic eddy current brake. “magnetic mechanism” Not subject to Section 112. A means-plus-function term under Section 112. To the extent a plain and ordinary meaning is needed, Function: providing multiple “a mechanism having at least levels of resistance to the user one magnetic element.” pulling on the [] cable.

Corresponding structure: a flywheel with an eddy current brake.

(D.I. 119 at 18, 36) As the parties did during the Markman hearing, the Court will use the “electromagnetic unit” term as the primary driver for the arguments here, since the issues and disputes relating to that term and the “magnetic mechanism” term are very similar. (Tr. at 42) The key threshold disputed issue as to “electromagnetic unit” (just as it is with “magnetic mechanism”) is whether the term is a means-plus-function term subject to 35 U.S.C. § 112(f).4 (Id. at 6) Given that the claims do not use the traditional “means” language often found in means- plus-function claims, “there is a rebuttable presumption that [Section 112(f)] does not apply” as

to both terms at issue. Diebold Nixdorf, Inc. v.

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Tonal Systems, Inc. v. iFIT Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tonal-systems-inc-v-ifit-inc-ded-2023.