Court Opinion

ID: 8484159
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-16 16:00:46.032478+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:49:51.247471
License: Public Domain

Case: 22-1033    Document: 42     Page: 1   Filed: 11/16/2022

        NOTE: This disposition is nonprecedential.

   United States Court of Appeals
       for the Federal Circuit
                  ______________________

  BRIAN ROBERT BLAZER, DBA CARPENTER BEE
                SOLUTIONS,
              Plaintiff-Appellant

                             v.

        BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC, RSP INC.,
                Defendants-Appellees
               ______________________

                        2022-1033
                  ______________________

    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
 Eastern District of Wisconsin in No. 2:20-cv-00480-BHL,
 Judge Brett H. Ludwig.
                  ______________________

                Decided: November 16, 2022
                  ______________________

    JOSEPH J. JACOBI, Hansen Reynolds LLC, Chicago, IL,
 argued for plaintiff-appellant. Also represented by JEREMY
 ADELSON, Milwaukee, WI.

    JAMES F. BOYLE, Boyle Fredrickson, S.C., Milwaukee,
 WI, argued for defendants-appellees.
                  ______________________

    Before DYK, TARANTO, and HUGHES, Circuit Judges.
Case: 22-1033     Document: 42      Page: 2     Filed: 11/16/2022

 2                            BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

 TARANTO, Circuit Judge.
     Brian Robert Blazer owns U.S. Patent No. RE46,421
 and runs a business called Carpenter Bee Solutions. In
 2020, he sued Best Bee Brothers LLC and RSP, Inc., in the
 Eastern District of Wisconsin, alleging willful infringe-
 ment of the ’421 patent. In October 2021, the district court
 issued an order construing the claim phrase “receptacle
 adapter,” which appears in the patent’s two independent
 claims, and granting the defendants’ motion for summary
 judgment of noninfringement based on the “receptacle
 adapter” construction. Blazer v. Best Bee Brothers LLC,
 No. 20-cv-00480, 2021 WL 4552784 (E.D. Wis. Oct. 5,
 2021). Mr. Blazer appeals. We reject the district court’s
 construction of “receptacle adapter” as unduly narrow and
 instead construe the phrase to mean “a structure config-
 ured to receive and help retain a receptacle.” That holding
 requires vacatur of the district court’s judgment of nonin-
 fringement and remand of the case for application of the
 correct construction.
                                I
                                A
     Mr. Blazer, together with his brother, sought patent
 protection for purportedly improved traps for carpenter
 bees. On February 19, 2013, the U.S. Patent and Trade-
 mark Office issued them U.S. Patent No. 8,375,624 for such
 traps. On June, 6, 2017, the patent was reissued pursuant
 to 35 U.S.C. § 251 as the ’421 patent.
     The ’421 patent describes traps designed to better cap-
 ture carpenter bees and thus protect wooden structures
 from infestation. See ’421 patent, abstract; id., col. 2, lines
 34–37; id., col. 7, line 40, through col. 9, line 2. It explains
 that carpenter bees bore into wood to create tunnels in
 which they store their eggs and pollen, id., col. 1, lines 18–
 39, and the holes and stains resulting from this tunneling
 are unsightly and can cause structural damage, which can
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 BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC                             3

 be exacerbated by the woodpeckers that often feed on car-
 penter bee larvae, id., col. 1, lines 40–62. According to the
 patent, although many insect traps exist, few specifically
 target carpenter bees, and those that do often are expen-
 sive and inconvenient to use or fail to take full advantage
 of the use of ambient light to lure and disorient the bees.
 Id., col. 1, line 66, through col. 2, line 30.
      The claimed bee traps include at least one attachable
 and disposable receptacle, a trap entrance unit, and a “re-
 ceptacle adapter” for attaching the receptacle to the trap
 entrance unit. Id., abstract; id., col. 2, lines 42–45. The
 trap entrance unit features at least one upward-sloping bee
 entrance hole—designed to mimic the entrances typically
 found in natural bee nests and to reduce the amount of am-
 bient light entering the hole—and an overhanging roof that
 helps further shelter the hole from light. Id., col. 2, lines
 45–51. The interior of the trap entrance unit is designed
 to form a plenum that encourages the bees to continue trav-
 eling deeper into the trap, ultimately passing through a re-
 ceptacle adapter and ending up in a removable receptacle.
 Id., col. 2, lines 51–54; id., col. 6, lines 4–16. The area
 around the receptacle adapter is sloped to enable gravity to
 aid in the movement of the bees into the receptacle. Id.,
 col. 2, lines 56–58.
     The patent, broadly speaking, discloses three different
 types of receptacle adapters that can connect the trap en-
 trance unit to the receptacle: (1) a separate coupling device
 distinct from, but connecting, the trap and receptacle, (2) a
 hole into which the receptacle is inserted and then retained
 by friction (“a friction fit”), and (3) a hole with threads into
 which the receptacle is screwed. See id., Figs. 2A–C, col. 5,
 lines 62–65 (discussing and showing “adapter coupling
 24”); id., col. 8, lines 52–55 (“The carpenter bee trap of
 claim 13, wherein the receptacle adapter comprises: a re-
 ducer section; and an adapter coupling attached to the re-
 ducer section . . . .”); id., col. 6, lines 42–45 (“A receptacle
 adapter 44 at the bottom of vertical bore 43 is a friction fit
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 4                            BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

 similar to bore 34 in trap entrance unit 3 and allows con-
 venient insertion and removal of clear receptacle 48.”); id.,
 col. 8, lines 1–3 (“wherein the receptacle is configured to
 provide a friction fit with said bottom of said plenum”); id.,
 col. 5, lines 8–12 (“Receptacle adapter coupling 5 is a screw
 type bottle cap with a hole bored through it [that] . . . is
 connected to reducer section 4 with a heat shrink tube to
 form a permanently attached female threaded coupling for
 the receptacle.”); id., col. 8, lines 64–67 (“wherein the re-
 ceptacle adapter comprises a female threaded coupling
 that is configured to receive a receptacle with a correspond-
 ing male threaded coupling”).
      The receptacle and (optionally) the area surrounding
 the receptacle adapter are partially transparent, so that
 more light is admitted there than within the plenum, trick-
 ing the bees into identifying the brightly lit adapter and
 receptacle as an exit route. Id., col. 2, line 58, through col.
 3, line 6. As a result, the bees move through the adapter
 into the receptacle and attempt to escape through the re-
 ceptacle’s transparent walls, rather than turn back and try
 to exit through the dimly lit plenum. Id. The trapped bees,
 the patent states, make noises that lure additional bees,
 causing a cascading effect as more and more enter and be-
 come stuck; once the trap is full of dead bees, the receptacle
 can be removed, sealed, and discarded. Id., col. 3, lines 5–
 9. The receptacle can even be a repurposed standard bev-
 erage bottle, the transparent walls of which facilitate using
 ambient light to lure the bees away from the dimly lit ple-
 num and to trap them within the bottle, as well as enabling
 a user to monitor how full the bottle is and how effectively
 the trap is working. Id., col. 3, lines 9–14; id., col. 5, lines
 15–47.
    The ’421 patent features two independent claims,
 which are:
     1. A carpenter bee trap comprising:
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 BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC                           5

       a trap entrance unit forming a plenum being made
       of wood or a wood substitute;
       said trap entrance unit having at least one hole
       drilled there-through and sized to mimic a natural
       carpenter bee nest tunnel so as to provide a primary
       attractant;
       said hole extending from the outside of the trap unit
       to a plenum interior; said hole being configured to
       extend substantially horizontally or at an upward
       angle; a means to shelter an entrance to said hole is
       provided to reduce the admittance of ambient light;
       said trap unit further comprising a receptacle
       adapter being substantially located at the bottom of
       said trap unit and being configured to receive a clear
       or translucent receptacle;
       a receptacle received by said adapter situated to al-
       low ambient light to enter through said bottom into
       said plenum interior, thereby providing a secondary
       attractant; said receptacle further being provided to
       receive trapped bees.
    13. A carpenter bee trap, comprising:
       a trap entrance unit formed of wood or a wood sub-
       stitute, wherein at least one side of the trap entrance
       unit has at least one entrance hole that extends from
       outside the trap entrance unit to an interior of the
       trap entrance unit, wherein the at least one entrance
       hole extends substantially horizontally or at an up-
       ward angle with a size and shape configured to pro-
       vide a primary attractant for carpenter bees, and
       wherein the trap entrance unit further comprises an
       exit opening for providing an exit path from the in-
       terior of the trap entrance unit; and
       a receptacle adapter located at the exit opening of the
       trap entrance unit, wherein the receptacle adapter is
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 6                           BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

       adapted to receive at least one receptacle and is
       adapted so as to allow at least some ambient light to
       enter the interior of the trap entrance unit via the exit
       opening, thereby providing a secondary attractant
       for carpenter bees.
 Id., col. 7, lines 41–60 (emphases added); id., col. 8, lines
 24–41 (emphasis added).
                               B
     RSP is owned by two brothers, and Best Bee Brothers
 LLC, created by the RSP brothers, sells carpenter bee
 traps. We hereafter refer to RSP and Best Bee Brothers as
 “BBB.” For two years, Mr. Blazer worked with BBB to put
 the patented invention into practice, but they were unable
 to negotiate an extended licensing agreement. Blazer,
 2021 WL 4552784, at *1; J.A. 53–60; J.A. 565–66. In 2020,
 Mr. Blazer sued BBB, alleging that BBB, by its marketing
 of carpenter bee traps, was willfully infringing the ’421 pa-
 tent. J.A. 49–76.
     After discovery, BBB moved for summary judgment of
 noninfringement of the two independent claims (1 and 13)
 and hence of all asserted claims. J.A. 46. In October 2021,
 the district court issued an order construing “receptacle
 adapter,” which appears in both independent claims, and
 granting BBB summary judgment. The court concluded
 that, under its construction, a reasonable finder of fact
 could not find that the accused traps contain such an
 adapter or (under the legal standards governing the doc-
 trine of equivalents) its equivalent. Blazer, 2021 WL
 4552784, at *1–6.
     The district court started by construing “receptacle
 adapter.” Id. at *3–5. The court concluded that Mr.
 Blazer’s proposed construction—“the term ‘receptacle
 adapter,’ when properly construed in view of the explicit
 teachings of the specification, includes an opening in the
 trap entrance unit that receives the receptacle”—was too
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 BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC                            7

 broad. Id. at *3–4 (citation omitted). The court also con-
 cluded that BBB’s construction—“a separate device for con-
 necting a receptacle or container to the bottom of the wood
 plenum”—was too narrow, explaining that it would im-
 properly exclude the specification’s embodiments lacking
 “a separate device” for attaching the receptacle to the
 wooden plenum, e.g., “the ‘friction fit’ version of ‘receptacle
 adapter.’” Id. (citation omitted).
     Instead, the court determined that a “receptacle
 adapter” must be (1) “substantially located at the bottom of
 the carpenter bee trap, at the exit opening of the trap en-
 trance unit”; (2) “configured to receive a clear or translu-
 cent receptacle”; (3) “adapted so as to allow at least some
 ambient light to enter the interior of the trap entrance unit
 via the exit opening, thereby providing a secondary attract-
 ant for carpenter bees”; and (4) either (a) “a coupling,” (b)
 “a vertical bore sized to allow the insertion of a receptacle
 which is retained by friction,” or (c) “a vertical bore
 threaded or fitted with a threaded insert to positively re-
 tain the receptacle.” Id. at *5. Based on that construction,
 the court found that the accused traps do not infringe liter-
 ally or under the doctrine of equivalents, and it granted
 BBB’s motion for summary judgment. Id.
     The court entered final judgment of noninfringement
 on October 5, 2021. J.A. 10. Mr. Blazer filed a notice of
 appeal on October 7, 2021, J.A. 47, within the thirty days
 permitted by 28 U.S.C. § 2107(a). We have jurisdiction un-
 der 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
                               II
     The district court here construed a single phrase, “re-
 ceptacle adapter,” and granted summary judgment of non-
 infringement based on that construction. Blazer, 2021 WL
 4552784, at *3–5. Although we agree with the district
 court that both parties’ claim constructions were legally in-
 correct, we conclude that the district court’s own construc-
 tion is also legally incorrect. We reject that construction
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 8                           BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

 and adopt our own: “a structure configured to receive and
 help retain a receptacle.” We vacate the judgment of non-
 infringement and remand.
                              A
     Claim construction is ultimately a legal issue, which
 we decide de novo, and we also assess the intrinsic-evi-
 dence aspects of a claim-construction analysis de novo.
 Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. v. Sandoz, Inc., 574 U.S.
 318, 331–32 (2015); see Data Engine Technologies LLC v.
 Google LLC, 10 F.4th 1375, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2021). We re-
 view for clear error any district court factual determina-
 tions that underly a claim construction. Teva, 574 U.S. at
 322, 332; SpeedTrack, Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., 998 F.3d
 1373, 1377–78 (Fed. Cir. 2021).
      Although “the words of a claim ‘are generally given
 their ordinary and customary meaning,’” as understood by
 a relevant artisan at the time of the invention, such an ar-
 tisan “is deemed to read the claim term . . . in the context
 of the particular claim in which the disputed term appears”
 and “in the context of the entire patent, including the spec-
 ification.” Phillips v. AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1312–13
 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc) (citations omitted). Thus, how a
 potential claim construction fits the claims themselves and
 the specification is commonly key to its soundness. The
 specification is especially significant when a claim term
 possesses “a range of possible ordinary meanings in con-
 text” or otherwise features “genuine uncertainties.”
 Straight Path IP Group, Inc. v. Sipnet EU S.R.O., 806 F.3d
 1356, 1361 (Fed. Cir. 2015). Those principles resolve this
 case, which involves a phrase, “receptacle adapter,” that
 leaves uncertainty on its face (adapted in what respect?).
 See World Class Technology Corp. v. Ormco Corp., 769 F.3d
 1120, 1124 (Fed. Cir. 2014) (“Rather than providing an un-
 ambiguous, clear meaning, therefore, the claim language
 leaves uncertainty . . . . In such circumstances, we turn to
 the specification to resolve the uncertainty.” (citing
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 BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC                             9

 Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1315–16 (quoting Bates v. Coe, 98 U.S.
 31, 38 (1878) (“in case of doubt or ambiguity it is proper in
 all cases to refer back to the descriptive portions of the
 specification to aid in solving the doubt or in ascertaining
 the true intent and meaning of the language employed in
 the claims”))) (other citations omitted)).
                                1
      The district court’s construction of “receptacle adapter”
 is incorrect. That construction erroneously imports limita-
 tions into “receptacle adapter” based on particular embod-
 iments described in the specification. The construction
 “require[s] four elements,” including that the adapter
 “must be” one of the three embodiments. Blazer, 2021 WL
 4552784, at *5 (emphasis added). Although courts must
 read a patent’s claims in light of the specification, see, e.g.,
 Comark Communications, Inc. v. Harris Corp., 156 F.3d
 1182, 1186 (Fed. Cir. 1998), that obligation does not au-
 thorize “reading a limitation from the written description
 into the claims,” which we have described as “one of the
 cardinal sins of patent law,” SciMed Life Systems, Inc. v.
 Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc., 242 F.3d 1337,
 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2001). The district court, in confining the
 scope of “receptacle adapter” to three particular embodi-
 ments, crossed that important line. See, e.g., E.I. du Pont
 de Nemours & Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 849 F.2d 1430,
 1432–34 (Fed. Cir. 1988).
     The district court’s error is confirmed by the patent’s
 dependent claims. Certain dependent claims recite specific
 “receptacle adapter” embodiments, see ’421 patent, col. 8,
 lines 1–3 (“friction fit”); id., col. 8, lines 52–60 (“adapter
 coupling”); id., col. 8, lines 64–67 (“female threaded cou-
 pling”), and claim 19 broadly recites: “The carpenter bee
 trap of claim 13, wherein the exit opening is shaped so as to
 function as the receptacle adapter,” id., col. 8, lines 61–63
 (emphasis added). The phrase “receptacle adapter,” then,
 must encompass not only the three specific types of
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 10                            BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

 adapters identified by the district court but also holes and
 other structures with the property common to the full
 range of specification embodiments. We therefore reject
 the district court’s construction. 1
                                 2
      We also reject BBB’s proposed construction, as the dis-
 trict court did. BBB urges that “‘receptacle adapter’ means
 a separate device for connecting a receptacle or container
 to the bottom of the wood plenum.” BBB’s Response Br. 4.
 That construction is contrary to the specification, which
 clearly indicates that the phrase covers not only the sepa-
 rate-device “coupling” embodiment but also non-separate-
 device embodiments such as friction-fit and screw-fit holes.
      The best construction is one that accommodates the
 range of plainly stated embodiments and identifies a com-
 mon property that gives a fair answer to the question:
 adapted in what respect? The claims and written descrip-
 tion clearly establish that a “receptacle adapter” may be a
 hole, see ’421 patent, col. 8, lines 61–63 (“wherein the exit
 opening is shaped so as to function as the receptacle
 adapter”); id., col. 5, lines 8–12; id., col. 8, lines 64–67; id.,
 col. 6, lines 42–45; id., col. 8, lines 1–3, and that it functions
 to receive a receptacle, see id., col. 5, lines 2–5 (“At the bot-
 tom of trap entrance unit 1 is reducer section [4] 15 made
 of clear plastic with adapter coupling [5] 14 at the bottom

      1   Mr. Blazer objects to other components of the dis-
 trict court’s claim construction as disregarding distinctions
 between claim 1 and claim 13. See Mr. Blazer’s Opening
 Br. 19–24. Because those elements of the district court’s
 claim construction did not affect its infringement analysis,
 we do not address them. The district court should revisit
 those challenged elements of its claim construction if they
 become material on remand.
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 BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC                             11

 which accepts a clear plastic removable receptacle [6] 18.”
 (alterations in original)); id., col. 7, lines 52–55 (“a recepta-
 cle adapter . . . being configured to receive a clear or trans-
 lucent receptacle”); id., col. 7, line 56 (“a receptacle received
 by said adapter”); id., col. 8, lines 36–37 (“the receptacle
 adapter is adapted to receive at least one receptacle”); id.,
 col. 8, lines 64–67 (“the receptacle adapter comprises a fe-
 male threaded coupling that is configured to receive a re-
 ceptacle with a corresponding male threaded coupling”).
 All the embodiments perform some retention function. See
 id., abstract (“[at] least one removable receptacle attached
 to at least one receptacle adapter coupling”); id., col. 2, lines
 54–56 (“The at least one receptacle adapter allows conven-
 ient attachment, removal, and replacement of recepta-
 cles.”); id., col. 3, lines 42–44 (“passage of bees from the at
 least one entrance hole to the at least one receptacle
 adapter coupling and into an attached receptacle”); id., col.
 5, lines 9–12 (“In prototype form, adapter coupling 5 is con-
 nected to reducer section 4 with a heat shrink tube to form
 a permanently attached female threaded coupling for the
 receptacle.”); id., col. 6, lines 42–45 (“A receptacle adapter
 44 at the bottom of vertical bore 43 is a friction fit similar
 to bore 34 in trap entrance unit 3 and allows convenient
 insertion and removal of clear receptacle 48.”); id., col. 8,
 lines 43–44 (“a receptacle removably attached to the recep-
 tacle adapter”).
      As a result, we construe “receptacle adapter” to mean
 “a structure configured to receive and help retain a recep-
 tacle.” Unlike the district court’s and BBB’s constructions,
 this construction does not improperly exclude any embodi-
 ments. And in contrast to Mr. Blazer’s construction, see,
 e.g., Mr. Blazer’s Reply Br. 3 (“a structure—which includes
 an opening in the trap entrance unit—that is configured or
 adapted to receive a receptacle”), our construction incorpo-
 rates both the reception and retention functions that, ac-
 cording to the patent, must be performed by a “receptacle
 adapter.”
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 12                         BLAZER   v. BEST BEE BROTHERS LLC

                             B
     The district court’s judgment of no infringement—both
 no literal infringement and no infringement under the doc-
 trine of equivalents—depended on a flawed construction
 that improperly limited “receptacle adapter” to three em-
 bodiments from the specification. See Blazer, 2021 WL
 4552784, at *5. Because we reject the court’s construction,
 we vacate its judgment of noninfringement. See, e.g., Pit-
 ney Bowes, Inc. v. Hewlett-Packard Co., 182 F.3d 1298,
 1305, 1314 (Fed. Cir. 1999). We leave to the district court
 on remand the task of applying the correct construction in
 the first instance upon appropriate factual development,
 including to issues of literal infringement and infringe-
 ment under the doctrine of equivalents. We do not decide
 whether summary judgment would be appropriate under
 our new construction.
                             III
     For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the judgment of
 the district court and remand the case for further proceed-
 ings consistent with this opinion.
      Costs awarded to appellant.
                VACATED AND REMANDED