Motion to Dismiss : CAFC Alert

Inventor declaration not related to what is claimed or discussed in the patent would not help the patent to survive from patent eligibility attack in the pleading stage

| March 8, 2024

INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORPORATION v. ZILLOW GROUP, INC., ZILLOW, INC.

Decided: January 9, 2024

Hughes (author), Prost, and Stoll

Summary:

The Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s decision holding that the claims of two IBM’s patents are directed to patent ineligible subject matter under §101, and properly granting Zillow’s motion to dismiss under FRCP 12(b)(6). 

Details:

            IBM appealed a decision from the Western District of Washington, where the district court granted Zillow’s motion to dismiss under FRCP 12(b)(6).  The district court held that all patent claims asserted against Zillow by IBM were directed to ineligible subject matter under 35 U.S.C. §101.

            At issue in this appeal were IBM’s two patents – U.S. Patent Nos. 6,778,193 and 6,785,676.

The ’193 patent

            The ’193 patent is directed to a “graphical user interface for a customer self-service system that performs resource search and selection.”

            This patent is directed to improving how search results are displayed to a user by providing three visual workspaces: (1) a user begins by entering their search query into a “Context Selection Workspace”; (2) a user can further specify the details of their search in a “Detail Specification Workspace”; and (3) a user can view the results of their search in a “Results Display Workspace.”

Independent claim 1 is a representative claim:

1.         A graphical user interface for a customer self service system that performs resource search and selection comprising:

a first visual workspace comprising entry field enabling entry of a query for a resource and, one or more selectable graphical user context elements, each element representing a context associated with the current user state and having context attributes and attribute values associated therewith;

a second visual workspace for visualizing the set of resources that the customer self service system has determined to match the user’s query, said system indicating a degree of fit of said determined resources with said query;

a third visual workspace for enabling said user to select and modify context attribute values to enable increased specificity and accuracy of a query’s search parameters, said third visual workspace further enabling said user to specify resource selection parameters and relevant resource evaluation criteria utilized by a search mechanism in said system, said degree of fit indication based on said user’s context, and said associated resource selection parameters and relevant resource evaluation criteria; and,

a mechanism enabling said user to navigate among said first, second and third visual workspaces to thereby identify and improve selection logic and response sets fitted to said query.

The ’676 patent

The ’676 patent is directed to enhancing how search results are displayed to users by disclosing a four-step process of annotating resource results obtained in a customer self service system that performs resource search and selection.”

Independent claim 14 is a representative claim:

14.       A method for annotating resource results obtained in a customer self service system that performs resource search and selection, said method comprising the steps of:

a) receiving a resource response set of results obtained in response to a current user query;

b) receiving a user context vector associated with said current user query, said user context vector comprising data associating an interaction state with said user and including context that is a function of the user;

c) applying an ordering and annotation function for mapping the user context vector with the resource response set to generate an annotated response set having one or more annotations; and,

d) controlling the presentation of the resource response set to the user according to said annotations, wherein the ordering and annotation function is executed interactively at the time of each user query.

The District Court

            Initially, IBM sued Zillow in the Western District of Washington for allegedly infringing five patents.  The claims for two patents were dismissed, and Zillow filed a motion to dismiss under FRCP 12(b)(6) for the remaining three patents.

            As for the ’676 patent, the district court found that the claims were merely directed to offering a user ‘the most beneficial and meaningful way’ to view the results of a query… and not advancing computer capabilities per se.”

            The district court noted that four steps could be performed with a pen and paper, and that the claims were merely result-oriented. 

Therefore, the district court found the asserted claims of the ’676 patent ineligible under §101.

As for the ’193 patent, the district court found that the claims were directed to the abstract idea of “more precisely tailoring the outcome of a query by guiding users (via icons, pull-down menus, dialogue boxes, and the like) to make choices about specific context variables, rather than requiring them to formulate and enter detailed search criteria.”

The district court did not find user context icons, separate workstations, and iterative navigation to be inventive concepts and held that they were well-understood, routine, or conventional at the time of the invention.

            Therefore, the district court similarly found the asserted claims of the ’193 patent ineligible under §101.

The CAFC

            The CAFC reviewed de novo.

            As for the ’193 patent, the CAFC agreed with the district court that the claims do nothing more than improving a user’s experience while using a computer application.

           Here, the CAFC noted that IBM failed to explain how the claims do anything more than identify, analyze, and present certain data to a user and that the claims did not disclose any technical improvement to how computer applications are used.

            Furthermore, the CAFC agreed with the district court that IBM’s allegations of inventiveness “do[] not . . . concern the computer’s or graphical user interface’s capability or functionality, [but] relate[] merely to the user’s experience and satisfaction with the search process and results.”

            Finally, the CAFC noted that the inventor declaration (“one of the key innovative aspects of the invention of the ’193 patent was not just the multiple visual workspaces alone, but how these various visual workspaces build upon each other and interact with each other,” as well as “the use of one visual workspace to affect the others in a closed-loop feedback system.”) did not cite the patent at all, and that neither the claims nor the specification include any such information.  Therefore, the CAFC held that simply including allegations of inventiveness in a complaint with the inventor declaration did not make the complaint survive at the pleading stage.

            Accordingly, the CAFC affirmed the district court’s decision holding that the ’193 patent is directed to ineligible subject matter under §101 and granting Zillow’s motion to dismiss as to the ’193 patent.

As for the ’676 patent, the CAFC agreed with the district court that the claims are directed to an abstract idea of displaying and organizing information because the representative claims use results-oriented language without mentioning any specific mechanism to perform the claimed steps.

In addition, the CAFC agreed with the district court that IBM failed to plausibly allege any inventive concept that would render the abstract claims patent-eligible.

IBM argued that the district court erred by failing to consider a supposed claim construction dispute regarding the term “user context vector”.

However, the CAFC noted that Zillow adapted IBM’s construction and did not propose an alternate construction.  Therefore, the CAFC found that there was no claim construction dispute for the district court to resolve.

Accordingly, the CAFC affirmed the district court’s decision holding that the ’676 patent claimed ineligible subject matter under §101 and granting Zillow’s motion to dismiss as to the ’676 patent.

Dissenting opinion by Stoll

            Stoll would vacate the district court’s holding of ineligibility of the claims of the ’676 patent because the majority, like the district court, did not meaningfully address IBM’s proposed construction of “user context vector.”

Takeaway:

  • Conclusionary allegations of inventiveness in the inventor declaration would not help the patent to survive from patent eligibility attack in the pleading stage.
  • The inventor declaration should be closely tied to the claims and the specification to help the patent to survive from patent eligibility attack.

Tangible Components in the Claims could not save from 12(b)(6)Dismissal for patent-ineligible subject matter after Alice

| June 6, 2016

TLI Communications LLC v. AV Automotive et al.

May 17, 2016

Before Dyk, Schall and Hughes.  Opinion by Hughes.

Summary

The East-District of Virginia dismissed the patent infringement suit under FRCP 12(B)(6) on the basis that the claims did not contain patent-eligible subject matter. TLI appealed to the CAFC.  The Court, relying heavily on the disclosures of the patent’s specification, affirmed the ruling noting that the tangible components in the claims were insufficient to survive the Alice test even without a finding of fact.


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