Webzero, LLC v. Clicvu, Inc.

392 F. App'x 863
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 3, 2010
Docket2009-1483
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 392 F. App'x 863 (Webzero, LLC v. Clicvu, Inc.) 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
Webzero, LLC v. Clicvu, Inc., 392 F. App'x 863 (Fed. Cir. 2010).

Opinion

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff WebZero, LLC, appeals from an order granting summary judgment that defendant ClicVU, Inc., did not infringe WebZero’s U.S. Patent No. 6,973,481 (“the '481 patent”). WebZero also challenges the dismissal of its unfair competition claim brought under section 17200 of the California Business and Professions Code. We affirm.

I

The '481 patent is directed to a method and system for creating an email forwarding address during an Internet session in which a user is prompted to provide an email address. The purpose of the invention is to help users control unsolicited email (“spam”) and to change email accounts easily. If a user does not wish to provide a personal email address when prompted to do so by a web page, the invention enables the user to create an email forwarding address that can be provided instead. Email from the entity affiliated with the prompting web page is received at the new email address and then redirected to the user’s personal, or “target,” email address. In the described embodiments, the address-creation process is initiated when the user activates a web control that generates an “email forwarding address request,” which “includes the web page address (URL) of the web page” that prompted the user for information. Upon receipt of the request, the system, without further user interaction, creates an email forwarding address that is associated with that web page. The email forwarding address is also stored for future use with the same web page. If a user begins receiving spam through the email forwarding address, the user can simply disable the new address without affecting the user’s own target email address.

WebZero asserted independent claims 1, 11, 18, and 30 of the '481 patent, as well as a number of dependent claims. Representative claim 1 of the '481 patent is reproduced below:

During an Internet session where a user is viewing a web page that includes a prompt for an email address, a method of creating and forwarding an email forwarding address to said user comprising the steps of:
creating and storing a unique email forwarding address for the user that is automatically associated with said web page, said email forwarding address being dedicated for use by an entity associated with said web .page to enable said entity to send email messages to said user, email messages directed to said email forwarding address being redirected to a target email address associated with said user; and
.sending said email forwarding address to said user to enable said user to use said email forwarding address to satisfy the email address prompt.

Addressing several of the disputed claim terms used in claim 1 as well as other claims, the district court construed “web page” to mean “a single web page, which may be part of a larger body known as a ‘website’ ”; it construed “dedicated for use” to mean “solely - and exclusively for use”; it construed “unique email forwarding address” to mean “unique forwarding address only for this particular user”; and it construed “automatically associated with” to mean associated “without any additional user input or interaction.” Based *865 on the court’s construction of those four terms, ClicVU moved for summary judgment of noninfringement, asserting that its accused product did not meet any of the disputed limitations as construed by the trial court.

ClicVU’s accused product, the SPAMEX disposable email service, is a web-based system that creates email forwarding addresses in response to user requests. "When a user on the Internet is prompted by a web page to provide an email address, the user may request an email forwarding address by launching the SPAMEX program and clicking the “Create Address” button. The program then displays a window containing an “Address Style” field and a “Site Domain (optional)” field that is prepopulated with the domain name of the web page that prompted the user for information. For the “Address Style” field, the user is given the option to input a custom email forwarding address in place of the default “Random” email forwarding address. For the “Site Domain (optional)” field, the user is given the option to input additional domain names to be associated with the custom email forwarding address. After either exercising those options or declining to do so, the user clicks the “Submit” button, which causes the system to create an email forwarding address associated with the designated domain name or names.

The trial court held that ClicVU’s SPA-MEX system does not satisfy the “automatically associated with” and “dedicated for use” limitations in the claims of the '481 patent. See WebZero, LLC v. ClicVU, Inc., No. CV-08-0504, slip op. at 6-9 (C.D.Cal. May 1, 2009). Specifically, in light of its construction of the phrase “automatically associated with” to preclude “any additional user input or interaction,” the court concluded that SPAMEX’s “association can not be considered automatic, because the user must perform at least two actions”: (1) clicking the “Create Address” button and verifying the contents of the fields; and (2) then clicking the “Submit” button. Moreover, the court ruled that- SPAMEX does not create an email forwarding address that is “dedicated for use” by an entity, because a SPAMEX-generated address may be shared by multiple entities and thus is not, as the court’s claim construction required, “solely and exclusively for use” by a single entity. The court declined to determine whether SPAMEX satisfied the “web page” limitation of the '481 patent. Based on its claim construction, the court held that the undisputed facts warranted judgment in ClicVU’s favor.

The district court dismissed WebZero’s unfair competition claim on the ground that “the Complaint offer[ed] only conclu-sory allegations ... and lack[ed] any specificity or concrete facts” sufficient to meet the requisite pleading standard of “reasonable particularity.” WebZero, LLC v. ClicVU, Inc., No. CV-08-0504, slip op. at 9, 2008 WL 1734702 (C.D.Cal. Apr. 4, 2008). Although the court granted WebZero’s request for “leave to amend the Complaint to adequately support the Second Count,” WebZero never amended the complaint. Id. WebZero now appeals from the judgment as to both claims.

II

With respect to summary judgment of noninfringement, we agree with the district court that ClicVU’s product does not infringe the '481 patent as a matter of law, although our analysis differs in some respects from that of the district court. The district court ruled that the SPAMEX system does not infringe either the “automatically associated with” limitation or the “dedicated for use” limitation. As to the first, the court found that because the *866 SPAMEX system uses a two-step process (first clicking on “Create Address” and then, after reviewing the options presented, clicking on “Submit”), it cannot be considered “automatic” as that term is used in the patent. We believe there is force to WebZero’s argument that SPA-MEX’s association of the new email address with the designated domain name is “automatic,” even though the user is given the option to input a custom email address and even though the user is required to click a second button in order to confirm the selected options.

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Bluebook (online)
392 F. App'x 863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webzero-llc-v-clicvu-inc-cafc-2010.