Court Opinion

ID: 9372003
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-17 16:00:47.473276+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:31.765567
License: Public Domain

Case: 23-1146    Document: 37     Page: 1   Filed: 02/17/2023

   United States Court of Appeals
       for the Federal Circuit
                  ______________________

                   LITE-NETICS, LLC,
                    Plaintiff-Appellant

                             v.

  NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC, DBA HOLIDAY BRIGHT
                   LIGHTS,
               Defendant-Appellee
             ______________________

                        2023-1146
                  ______________________

     Appeal from the United States District Court for the
 District of Nebraska in No. 8:22-cv-00314-BCB-CRZ, Judge
 Brian C. Buescher.
                   ______________________

                Decided: February 17, 2023
                 ______________________

     VINCENT J. ALLEN, Carstens, Allen, & Gourley, LLP,
 Plano, TX, argued for plaintiff-appellant. Also represented
 by JORGE MIGUEL HERNANDEZ.

     ROBERT GREENSPOON, Dunlap Bennett & Ludwig
 PLLC, Chicago, IL, argued for defendant-appellee. Also
 represented by WILLIAM W. FLACHSBART; THUAN TRAN,
 Leesburg, VA.
                ______________________

    Before LOURIE, TARANTO, and STARK, Circuit Judges.
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 2                      LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 TARANTO, Circuit Judge.
     Lite-Netics, LLC competes with Nu Tsai Capital, LLC
 d/b/a Holiday Bright Lights (HBL) in the market for holi-
 day string lights. Lite-Netics brought a patent-infringe-
 ment action against HBL in the United States District
 Court for the District of Nebraska. It also sent two notices,
 one before filing suit and one after, to its customers (in par-
 ticular, stores that sell the lights), some of which were also
 HBL customers, informing them of allegedly infringing
 competitors in the market and stating Lite-Netics’s intent
 to enforce its patent rights. Lite-Netics did not name such
 competitors in the first notice, but in the second notice, it
 identified HBL as an allegedly infringing competitor. After
 the second notice was sent, HBL, in the infringement ac-
 tion, simultaneously filed counterclaims, including for
 state-law torts, and moved for a temporary restraining or-
 der and a preliminary injunction, based on two of the state-
 law counterclaims, against certain speech by Lite-Netics
 about its patents. The district court issued a preliminary
 injunction that bars Lite-Netics from suggesting that HBL
 is a patent infringer, that HBL has copied Lite-Netics’s
 lights, or that HBL customers might be sued. Lite-Netics,
 LLC v. Nu Tsai Capital LLC, 2022 WL 15523245 (D. Neb.
 Oct. 27, 2022).
     Lite-Netics appeals the district court’s preliminary in-
 junction against its patent-related speech. We hold that
 the district court abused its discretion in issuing the pre-
 liminary injunction because the applicable speech-protec-
 tive legal standards are not met.           We vacate the
 preliminary injunction and remand.
                               I
                               A
     Lite-Netics sells string lights for illuminating homes
 and businesses during the winter holiday season—specifi-
 cally, string lights held by magnets to a surface such as
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                    3

 metal at a roof edge. Lite-Netics is the assignee of U.S.
 Patent Nos. 7,549,779 and 8,128,264, both of which are en-
 titled “Magnetic Light Fixture” and describe and claim
 magnetic decorative lights.       Lite-Netics, 2022 WL
 15523245, at *1. The ’779 patent issued in 2009, and the
 ’264 patent issued in 2012 from a continuation in part of
 the application that became the ’779 patent.
      The patents describe light-fixture assemblies (to be
 strung together), each assembly having a magnetic base of
 the light socket for easy mounting of the assembly to a
 metal surface. ’779 patent, col. 1, lines 5–9; ’264 patent,
 col. 1, lines 14–18. Figures 1 and 9A (the same in both pa-
 tents) depict an embodiment of the claimed assembly,
 showing one disk magnet:

 ’779 patent, Fig. 1; id., Fig. 9A (light socket base magnet
 labelled “1”); ’264 patent, Fig. 1; id., Fig. 9A.
     Independent claim 1 of the ’779 patent is representa-
 tive for that patent. It recites:
     1. A light fixture assembly, comprising:
        (a) a light bulb socket with an opening at the
            first end for accommodating a light bulb and
            at least one opening at the second end,
            wherein the socket includes a conductor that
            places a light bulb inserted into the first end
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 4                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

            in electrical contact with electrical wires in-
            serted through the socket;
        (b) a base attached to the second end of the light
            bulb socket; and
        (c) a neodymium magnet embedded in the base
            wherein said magnet had a pull strength of
            at least five pounds.
 ’779 patent, col. 4, lines 51–63. Independent claim 1 of the
 ’264 patent is representative for that patent. It recites:
     1. A light fixture assembly, comprising:
        (a) a light bulb socket with an opening at a first
            end for accommodating a light bulb and a
            second opening for insertion of electrical
            wires, wherein the socket includes two con-
            ductors that places a light bulb inserted into
            the first end in electrical contact with said
            electrical wires;
        (b) a base integrally attached to the second end
            of the light bulb socket; and
        (c) a magnet embedded in the base such that
            said magnet does not protrude outside of
            said base, wherein said magnet has suffi-
            cient pull force to hold said light fixture as-
            sembly to a ferrous object while said light
            fixture assembly is connected to a string of
            other light fixture assemblies.
 ’264 patent, col. 5, lines 19–32 (lettered indexing added).
     HBL, which for a time was a customer of Lite-Netics,
 also sells holiday string lights. See Lite-Netics, 2022 WL
 15523245, at *2. HBL sells a magnetic holiday string light
 that it calls the “Magnetic Cord,” one of the two products
 on which Lite-Netics’s infringement allegations focus. It is
 undisputed for present purposes that the Magnetic Cord is
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                      5

 described (and claimed) in HBL’s U.S. Patent No.
 11,333,309, issued in 2022 based on a 2021 application.
 HBL’s Magnetic Cord uses two half-disk magnets, rather
 than the single, full-disk magnet shown in Lite-Netics’s fig-
 ures, at the socket base. In distinguishing its claimed in-
 vention from prior art, including Lite-Netics’s ’779 patent,
 HBL’s ’309 patent relies on its inclusion of drain holes in
 its socket base and of at least two magnets protruding be-
 low the socket base, with a channel between them to help
 drain moisture—features that assertedly reduce the risk of
 corrosion and short circuiting. ’309 patent, col. 1, lines 33–
 45, 53–60; see also id. col. 1, lines 16–17; id. col. 4, lines 1–
 4. Figure 4 of the ’309 patent illustrates its socket base,
 one half-disk magnet shown as “20,” the other half-disk
 magnet removed:

     HBL sells a second product at issue here, the “Magnetic
 Clip” (introduced a few years before the Magnetic Cord),
 which, when mounted on the socket, converts a non-mag-
 netic light string to a magnetic one.
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 6                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 J.A. 5 (images of mounted and unmounted Magnetic Clips);
 J.A. 525 (black-and-white image of a mounted Magnetic
 Clip included in a cease-and-desist letter sent from Lite-
 Netics to HBL).
                               B
     On June 14, 2017, Lite-Netics, through counsel, sent
 HBL a cease-and-desist letter that referred to “U.S. Utility
 Patent No[s]. 7,549,779 and 8,128,264.” J.A. 525–26. The
 letter included a picture of the Magnetic Clip and re-
 quested that HBL stop “selling these products or any other
 products that infringe” Lite-Netics’s patents. J.A. 525–26.
 No further communication between the two companies oc-
 curred for almost five years.
     On April 12, 2022, Lite-Netics sent HBL another cease-
 and-desist letter. This letter, referring to “U.S. Utility Pa-
 tent Nos. 7,549,779 and 8,128,264,” included a picture of
 the Magnetic Cord and “demand[ed]” that HBL respond,
 either explaining why it was not infringing Lite-Netics’s
 patents through the sale of the Magnetic Cord and Mag-
 netic Clip or indicating that HBL will stop selling these and
 any other allegedly infringing products. J.A. 528–29. HBL
 responded to Lite-Netics on April 19, 2022, asking Lite-
 Netics to explain how HBL infringed its patents when the
 Magnetic Cord has no single magnet with a pull strength
 of at least five pounds or that does not protrude outside the
 socket base. J.A. 531. On May 27, 2022, Lite-Netics replied
 to HBL with evidence that it said showed (a) that the com-
 bined pull strength of the pair of (half-disk) magnets in the
 Magnetic Cord exceeds five pounds and (b) that the Mag-
 netic Cord’s magnets did not protrude from the perimeter
 of the base. J.A. 536–37. HBL wrote back on June 21,
 2022, reasserting its one-versus-two position and insisting
 that the non-protrusion requirement of the ’264 patent pre-
 cludes not just protrusion from the perimeter of the base
 but also protrusion below the base.                J.A. 539.
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   7

 Communications between Lite-Netics and HBL ceased af-
 ter this response.
      On August 31, 2022, Lite-Netics sued HBL in the Dis-
 trict of Nebraska for infringement of the ’779 and ’264 pa-
 tents by HBL’s making, selling, and other actions involving
 the Magnetic Cord and the Magnetic Clip. Lite-Netics as-
 serted direct infringement, induced infringement, and con-
 tributory infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a), (b), and
 (c). And it alleged that the infringement was willful.
      Both before and after filing suit against HBL, Lite-
 Netics communicated with its customers, some of which
 were also HBL customers, about allegedly infringing com-
 petitors in the market. Before filing suit, in May 2022,
 Lite-Netics notified its customers “of recent attempts by
 other companies to make and sell similar products” to those
 “protected by U.S. [P]atent Nos. 7,549,779 and 8,128,264”
 and of its intent to explore “all legal rights and remedies to
 stop” these companies (May Notice). J.A. 533; Lite-Netics,
 2022 WL 15523245, at *5. Lite-Netics did not accuse any
 particular competitor of infringement in the May Notice.
 J.A. 533; Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *5. In Septem-
 ber 2022, however, after filing suit, Lite-Netics sent an-
 other letter to its customers (September Notice). J.A. 542–
 43; Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *6. The September
 Notice stated that Lite-Netics’s magnetic string lights were
 protected by the ’779 and ’264 patents; that other compa-
 nies were attempting to “copy” Lite-Netics’s patented prod-
 ucts; that Lite-Netics had filed a “patent infringement
 lawsuit against [HBL]” to stop it from “making and selling
 infringing products”; and that Lite-Netics was “also consid-
 ering including any known company using or reselling the
 HBL products as co-defendants in this lawsuit.” J.A. 542;
 Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *11. The September No-
 tice included the first page of Lite-Netics’s complaint from
 its patent-infringement suit against HBL. J.A. 542; Lite-
 Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *12.
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 8                      LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

      On September 30, 2022, after Lite-Netics sent the Sep-
 tember Notice, HBL filed a motion to dismiss Lite-Netics’s
 action for failure to state a claim and also asserted six coun-
 terclaims against Lite-Netics: (1) unfair competition and
 false advertising under federal law; (2) unfair competition
 under Nebraska law; (3) deceptive trade practices under
 Nebraska law; (4) tortious interference with business rela-
 tions and prospective business relations under Nebraska
 law; (5) defamation under Nebraska law; and (6) bad faith
 patent-infringement communications under Colorado law.
 Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *3. The same day, HBL
 filed a combined motion for a temporary restraining order
 and preliminary injunction, based on its tortious-interfer-
 ence and defamation claims, to bar Lite-Netics from mak-
 ing statements accusing HBL of copying Lite-Netics’s
 patented products and from suggesting to HBL customers
 that they may be subject to an infringement suit too. On
 October 7, 2022, the district court granted HBL’s motion
 for a fourteen-day temporary restraining order, which the
 court extended for an additional fourteen days on October
 12, 2022.
     On October 16, 2022, Lite-Netics filed an amended
 complaint. The amended complaint made explicit that its
 assertions of direct infringement (of both patents) were al-
 legations of “literal infringement, the doctrine of equiva-
 lents, or both.” J.A. 688, 690.
     On October 27, 2022, after an evidentiary hearing
 three days earlier, the court issued an extensive opinion
 granting a preliminary injunction. Lite-Netics, 2022 WL
 15523245. As amended on November 8, 2022, the order
 enjoins Lite-Netics and “its officers, directors, sharehold-
 ers, and other agents”
     from making statements via letters, emails, Face-
     book, Twitter, or any other social media, mass me-
     dia, direct marketing, robocalls, press releases,
     blogs, websites or otherwise suggesting “copying”
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   9

     by HBL, suggesting HBL customers will be bur-
     dened as additional defendants in this or any law-
     suit, or suggesting that HBL is a patent infringer.
 J.A. 73; see Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *36. 1 In its
 opinion, the district court addressed (1) the likelihood of
 HBL’s success on the merits of its tortious-interference and
 defamation claims; (2) the likelihood of irreparable injury
 to HBL without the injunction; (3) the balance of equities;
 and (4) the public interest. Id. at *9 (citing Tumey v. My-
 croft AI, Inc., 27 F.4th 657, 664 (8th Cir. 2022)). In consid-
 ering the first factor, the court recognized that state-law
 tort claims based on the communication of patent rights,
 such as HBL’s tortious-interference and defamation
 claims, “are preempted by federal patent laws, unless the
 claimant can show that the patent holder acted in bad
 faith.” Id. at *11 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quot-
 ing Energy Heating, LLC v. Heat On-The-Fly, LLC, 889
 F.3d 1291, 1304 (Fed. Cir. 2018)). The district court con-
 cluded that HBL’s state-law tort claims were not
 preempted here, centrally because it held that Lite-Netics’s
 infringement allegations were so clearly meritless that
 their assertion was in bad faith. Id. at *15, *21, *24, *25,
 *28. On that basis, the court ruled that HBL would likely
 succeed on its tortious-interference and defamation claims
 and that the preliminary injunction should issue, because
 the non-merits preliminary-injunction considerations fa-
 vored issuance. Id. at *10–34.
     Lite-Netics timely appealed. We have jurisdiction un-
 der 28 U.S.C. § 1292(c)(1). On November 14, 2022, Lite-

     1   Initially, the preliminary injunction also required
 Lite-Netics to send the preliminary injunction order to eve-
 ryone that had received the September Notice, but the dis-
 trict court deleted that requirement on November 8, 2022,
 and explained two days later that its inclusion was a cleri-
 cal error. J.A. 76–77.
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 10                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 Netics sought an emergency stay or dissolution of the pre-
 liminary injunction, a request we denied on November 30,
 2022.
                               II
      Regional circuit law—here, Eighth Circuit law—gov-
 erns our standard of review of the district court’s grant of
 the preliminary injunction. Macom Technology Solutions
 Holdings, Inc. v. Infineon Technologies, 881 F.3d 1323,
 1328 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Under Eighth Circuit law, a grant
 of a preliminary injunction is reviewed for “an abuse of dis-
 cretion or misplaced reliance on an erroneous legal princi-
 ple.” Pediatric Specialty Care, Inc. v. Arkansas Department
 of Human Services, 444 F.3d 991, 994 (8th Cir. 2004) (cita-
 tion omitted); see Highmark Inc. v. Allcare Health Manage-
 ment System, Inc., 572 U.S. 559, 563 n.2 (2014) (stating
 that an abuse of discretion may be found where, e.g., a
 court relies on an erroneous view of the law or commits a
 factual error). When reviewing the grant of an injunction
 that enjoins a patentee from giving notice of patent rights,
 “[w]e apply federal patent law and precedent relating to the
 giving of notice of patent rights.” Mikohn Gaming Corp. v.
 Acres Gaming, Inc., 165 F.3d 891, 898 (Fed. Cir. 1998).
     HBL asserts that, with respect to the merits compo-
 nent of a preliminary-injunction analysis, its burden under
 Eighth Circuit law is only to show a “fair chance” of pre-
 vailing. HBL Br. 14 (quoting Rodgers v. Bryant, 942 F.3d
 451, 455 (8th Cir. 2019)); see also Planned Parenthood Min-
 nesota, North Dakota, South Dakota v. Rounds, 530 F.3d
 724, 732-33 (8th Cir. 2008). But when the requested in-
 junction restricts speech, at least in the context of enjoining
 implementation of state and federal statutes, the Eighth
 Circuit has characterized the movant’s burden as more
 challenging, stating it as “likely to prevail on the merits.”
 See Rodgers, 942 F.3d at 455; Planned Parenthood Minne-
 sota, 530 F.3d at 732 n.6. And in any event, even under the
 “fair chance” standard, it is Federal Circuit law that
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                  11

 determines what is required to meet that standard as to a
 patent-related claim, including, here, that HBL has
 demonstrated a “fair chance” of prevailing on its contention
 that Lite-Netics’s patent-infringement claims are objec-
 tively baseless. As we explain, HBL has not made such a
 showing.
                                 A
     The district court granted the preliminary injunction
 restricting Lite-Netics’s speech about its patent rights, bas-
 ing the injunction on HBL’s tortious-interference and defa-
 mation claims, both of which stemmed from the September
 Notice that Lite-Netics sent to customers describing its pa-
 tents, its related rights, and its intent to enforce them.
 Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *10, *27. The question
 of whether Lite-Netics may be so enjoined, like the ques-
 tion of whether it may be liable under state law for the Sep-
 tember Notice, “raises considerations of federal law
 governing the giving of notice of patent rights.” Mikohn
 Gaming, 165 F.3d at 896. “National uniformity, in conflu-
 ence with the national scope of the patent grant and the
 general federal exclusivity in patent causes, require that
 determination of the propriety of . . . giving notice of . . .
 patent rights is governed by federal statute and precedent
 and is not a matter of state tort law.” Id.
     “We have held that federal patent law preempts state-
 law tort liability for a patentholder’s good faith conduct in
 communications asserting infringement of its patent and
 warning about potential litigation.” Globetrotter Software,
 Inc. v. Elan Computer Group, Inc., 362 F.3d 1367, 1374
 (Fed. Cir. 2004); see also Mallinckrodt, Inc. v. Medipart,
 Inc., 976 F.2d 700, 709 (Fed. Cir. 1992), abrogated on other
 grounds by Impression Products, Inc. v. Lexmark Interna-
 tional, Inc., 581 U.S. 360 (2017). HBL’s state-law claims
 here thus “can survive federal preemption only to the ex-
 tent that those claims are based on a showing of ‘bad faith’
 action in asserting infringement.” Globetrotter, 362 F.3d at
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 12                    LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 1374; see also Energy Heating, 889 F.3d at 1304 (“State tort
 claims based on enforcing a patent, including for tortious
 interference, are preempted by federal patent laws, unless
 the claimant can show that the patent holder acted in bad
 faith.”); Mikohn Gaming, 165 F.3d at 898 (“[F]ederal law
 requires a showing of bad faith in order to bar such com-
 munications.”); GP Industries, Inc. v. Eran Industries, Inc.,
 500 F.3d 1369, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2007); Myco Industries, Inc.
 v. BlephEx, LLC, 955 F.3d 1, 10 (Fed. Cir. 2020); SSI Tech-
 nologies, LLC v. Dongguan Zhengyang Electronic Mechan-
 ical, Ltd., --- F.4th ----, 2023 WL 1944133, at *7 (Fed. Cir.
 Feb. 13, 2023).
     This requirement of a showing of bad faith as prereq-
 uisite to applying state tort law to speech about infringe-
 ment rests partly on First Amendment principles. See
 Globetrotter, 362 F.3d at 1375–77. The First Amendment
 principles are particularly significant when an injunction
 against speech is at issue. See GP Industries, 500 F.3d at
 1373–74 (“[W]e wish to note the rarity of an injunction be-
 ing granted against communicating with others concerning
 one’s patent rights. This is not a grant or denial of an in-
 junction against infringement, but an injunction against
 communication, a much more serious matter. . . . [A]n in-
 junction against communication is strong medicine that
 must be used with care and only in exceptional circum-
 stances.”); BlephEx, 955 F.3d at 3 (noting that preliminary
 injunctions implicating “free speech” and restricting a pa-
 tent holder’s communication of its rights requires particu-
 lar consideration of “a district court’s authority to place
 prior restraints on that speech”); Mikohn Gaming, 165 F.3d
 at 895 (“When judicial discretion is exercised to restrain
 commercial communications, it is subject to special scru-
 tiny.”).
     Elaborating on the bad-faith requirement and its com-
 ponents, we have held: “Although bad faith in this context
 has both objective and subjective elements, the former is a
 threshold requirement.” Judkins v. HT Window Fashion
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   13

 Corp., 529 F.3d 1334, 1338 (Fed. Cir. 2008). Thus, “a bad
 faith standard cannot be satisfied in the absence of a show-
 ing that the claims asserted were objectively baseless.” GP
 Industries, 500 F.3d at 1374; see Globetrotter, 362 F.3d at
 1377. A patent-infringement allegation is objectively base-
 less only if “no reasonable litigant could realistically expect
 success on the merits.” GP Industries, 500 F.3d at 1374
 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Professional
 Real Estate Investors, Inc. v. Columbia Pictures Industries,
 Inc., 508 U.S. 49, 60 (1993)). Subjective bad faith must be
 addressed if allegations are determined to be objectively
 baseless, but not otherwise. See Judkins, 529 F.3d at 1338.
      HBL suggests that, if the preliminary injunction at is-
 sue here is proper in its application to any speech, then it
 must be upheld in full. See Oral Arg. at 19:11–27; HBL’s
 Br. at 14–16. HBL cites no precedent for such a rule of law,
 which would be contrary to the First Amendment princi-
 ples that underlie the demanding requirements for a valid
 injunction against speech declaring the speaker’s view of
 its patent rights. Under the First Amendment, restrictions
 on protected speech, including injunctions (where allowed
 at all), must meet tailoring requirements aimed at ensur-
 ing that they do not burden speech more than necessary.
 See, e.g., Tory v. Cochran, 544 U.S. 734, 738 (2005); Doug-
 las v. Brownell, 88 F.3d 1511, 1520 (8th Cir. 1996); Sindi
 v. El-Moslimani, 896 F.3d 1, 32–34 (1st Cir. 2018); United
 States v. Local 560 (I.B.T.), 974 F.2d 315, 342–46 (3d Cir.
 1992). Given the First Amendment principles that are part
 of the patent-preemption doctrine at issue here, we see no
 basis for a weaker tailoring requirement in the present con-
 text. We therefore reject HBL’s all-or-nothing defense of
 the preliminary injunction.
     HBL has not argued that we should uphold some por-
 tions of the preliminary injunction even if we find other
 portions to be an abuse of discretion. In this case, with no
 such argument, we will not do so, but instead will vacate
 the injunction if it is based on an abuse of discretion. We
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 14                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 conclude that it is. For the reasons set forth next, we hold
 that the district court abused its discretion at least in find-
 ing that Lite-Netics’s infringement allegations with respect
 to the ’779 patent are objectively baseless—a determina-
 tion at the core of the rationale for granting the prelimi-
 nary injunction, with its prohibition on Lite-Netics
 communicating its view that HBL is infringing in its mak-
 ing and marketing of the Magnetic Cord and Magnetic
 Clip. We need not and do not address other issues. 2
                               B
     Lite-Netics argues on appeal, among other things, that
 the district court erred in finding its infringement allega-
 tions concerning the ’779 patent, and its application to both
 accused products, to be objectively baseless. We agree. An
 incorrect allegation of patent infringement is not neces-
 sarily objectively baseless. “Indeed, a patentee, acting in
 good faith on its belief as to the nature and scope of its
 rights, is fully permitted to press those rights ‘even though

      2For example, we do not address infringement of the
 ’264 patent, with its requirement that the magnet “does not
 protrude outside of said base.” ’264 patent, col. 5, lines 28–
 29. A claim-construction dispute exists over whether “pro-
 trude outside of” refers, in context, only to the base perim-
 eter or also to the central long axis of the socket. As
 another example, we also do not rule on the issues (con-
 cerning direct or indirect infringement) raised by Lite-
 Netics’s statement about suing HBL customers, and by the
 injunction provision addressing such speech, in light of our
 precedent about the sequencing of certain adjudications in-
 volving manufacturers and their customers. See In re Nin-
 tendo of America, Inc., 756 F.3d 1363, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2014)
 (“When a patent owner files an infringement suit against a
 manufacturer’s customer and the manufacturer then files
 an action of noninfringement or patent invalidity, the suit
 by the manufacturer generally take precedence.”).
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   15

 he may misconceive what those rights are.’” Mikohn Gam-
 ing, 165 F.3d at 897 (quoting Kaplan v. Helenhart Novelty
 Corp., 182 F.2d 311, 314 (2d Cir. 1950)). Because there was
 an objectively reasonable basis for many of Lite-Netics’s in-
 fringement allegations, the district court abused its discre-
 tion in finding that Lite-Netics could not have “realistically
 expect[ed] success on the merits” and, therefore, acted in
 bad faith. GP Industries, 500 F.3d at 1374 (internal quota-
 tion marks omitted) (quoting Professional Real Estate, 508
 U.S. at 60).
      Specifically, the preliminary injunction is to a large ex-
 tent based on three legal conclusions with respect to Lite-
 Netics’s assertion of the ’779 patent: (i) that the claimed
 “magnet” is limited to a single magnet with a unitary struc-
 ture; (ii) that Lite-Netics is estopped from asserting in-
 fringement under the doctrine of equivalents; and (iii) that
 the claim terms “attached” and “integrally attached” must
 be “something more than touching.” For reasons we will
 set out, we conclude that Lite-Netics’s position on all three
 of those disputes has not been shown, at this stage of the
 litigation (before, e.g., full claim-construction proceedings
 or possible expert reports on infringement), to be objec-
 tively baseless. That conclusion requires vacatur of the
 preliminary injunction, without finally resolving the un-
 derlying disputes about claim construction, prosecution
 history estoppel, or other issues.
                                 1
      For the Magnetic Cord, the district court deemed Lite-
 Netics’s allegations of direct infringement, including both
 literal infringement and infringement under the doctrine
 of equivalents, objectively baseless. In both respects, we
 conclude, the district court abused its discretion.
     Regarding literal infringement, the court ruled that
 Lite-Netics could not reasonably have believed that the
 Magnetic Cord infringed the ’779 patent because “the Mag-
 netic Cord has two magnets, each with a pull strength less
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 16                    LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 than five pounds.” Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *15.
 Lite-Netics argued that the ’779 patent’s references to “a
 magnet” in both its specification and its claims properly en-
 compassed an arrangement of two magnetic pieces that to-
 gether had the five-pound pull strength. Id. at *15–16.
 That argument is at least reasonable.
      On the record before us, we see no basis for deeming
 objectively unreasonable an assertion that two such pieces
 would be understood by a relevant artisan as a single “mag-
 net,” whether as a matter of claim construction or as a mat-
 ter of application. See Microprocessor Enhancement Corp.
 v. Texas Instruments Inc., 520 F.3d 1367, 1377 (Fed. Cir.
 2008) (“Claim terms must be given ‘the meaning that the
 term would have to a person of ordinary skill in the art in
 question at the time of the invention.’” (quoting Phillips v.
 AWH Corp., 415 F.3d 1303, 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en
 banc))); cf. Cross Medical Products, Inc. v. Medtronic So-
 famor Danek, Inc., 424 F.3d 1293, 1309 (Fed. Cir. 2005)
 (discussing related issue of whether a particular claimed
 structure had to be unitary). Independently of that possi-
 bility, decisions of this court lend strong support to the
 proposition that, “in patent parlance,” at least in an open-
 ended “comprising” claim, use of “a” or “an” before a noun
 naming an object is understood to mean to “one or more”
 unless the context sufficiently indicates otherwise. Con-
 volve, Inc. v. Compaq Computer Corp., 812 F.3d 1313, 1321
 (Fed. Cir. 2016); see, e.g., TiVo, Inc. v. EchoStar Communi-
 cations Corp., 516 F.3d 1290, 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2008); Bald-
 win Graphic Systems, Inc. v. Siebert, Inc., 512 F.3d 1338,
 1342 (Fed. Cir. 2008); KCJ Corp. v. Kinetic Concepts, Inc.,
 223 F.3d 1351, 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Here, none of the
 features of the claims or specification relied on by the dis-
 trict court, see Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *15–20,
 sufficiently indicate otherwise, at least for purposes of the
 inquiry into whether Lite-Netics’s position was objectively
 baseless.
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                  17

     The patent uses “the” or “said” when referring back to
 an antecedent “a” phrase, but that usage does not itself suf-
 fice to demand the singular meaning because if the “a”
 phrase means “one or more,” so would the subsequent ref-
 erence-back phrases. Baldwin, 512 F.3d at 1342. The pa-
 tent never shows embodiments with more than one
 magnet, but we have generally rejected an inference of
 claim limitation on such a basis, where the embodiments
 are merely illustrative. See, e.g., Cross Medical, 424 F.3d
 at 1309; Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1319–20. There is no “present
 invention” or other specification language that restricts the
 invention to a single (or single-piece) magnet, and there are
 no structural limitations in the claims that implicitly de-
 mand such a configuration. See SciMed Life Systems, Inc.
 v. Advanced Cardiovascular Systems, Inc., 242 F.3d 1337,
 1343 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“[T]he characterization of the . . .
 configuration as part of the ‘present invention’ is strong ev-
 idence that the claims should not be read to encompass the
 opposite structure.”). Importantly, and more generally,
 nothing in the ’779 patent indicates that the evident pur-
 pose of the magnet on the socket base (to attach the light
 string to a metal surface) can be achieved only, or with
 specified effectiveness, through a single (or single-piece)
 magnet, rather than a plurality of magnets collectively
 having the specified pull force. See Corning Glass Works v.
 Sumitomo Electric U.S.A., Inc., 868 F.2d 1251, 1257 (Fed.
 Cir. 1989) (interpreting a patent to include “additional
 structural limitations . . . defined in the specification”
 based on restrictive specification language describing the
 purpose of the claimed invention).
     In these circumstances, we conclude that the district
 court’s determination of objective baselessness of the asser-
 tion of literal infringement rests on incorrect legal princi-
 ples and cannot stand.
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 18                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

                                2
       The district court’s application of the doctrine of equiv-
 alents to the Magnetic Cord is also flawed. Under the doc-
 trine of equivalents, it generally suffices for an element of
 an accused device to be found to meet a claim limitation “if
 it performs substantially the same function in substan-
 tially the same way to obtain the same result” as the claim
 limitation, properly construed. Warner-Jenkinson Co., Inc.
 v. Hilton Davis Chemical Co., 520 U.S. 17, 38–39 (1997)
 (cleaned up); see Dolly, Inc. v. Spalding & Evenflo Cos., 16
 F.3d 394, 400 (Fed. Cir. 1994). “To be a ‘substantial equiv-
 alent,’ the element substituted in the accused device for the
 element set forth in the claim must not be such as would
 substantially change the way in which the function of the
 claimed invention is performed.” Perkin–Elmer Corp. v.
 Westinghouse Electric Corp., 822 F.2d 1528, 1533 (Fed. Cir.
 1987). But where a particular structure has been “specifi-
 cally identified, criticized, and disclaimed” in the patent’s
 specification or prosecution history, “the patentee cannot
 . . . invoke the doctrine of equivalents to ‘embrace a struc-
 ture that was specifically excluded from the claims.’”
 SciMed, 242 F.3d at 1345; see Dolly, 16 F.3d at 400 (“[T]he
 concept of equivalency cannot embrace a structure that is
 specifically excluded from the scope of the claims.”); Augme
 Technologies, Inc. v. Yahoo! Inc., 755 F.3d 1326, 1335 (Fed.
 Cir. 2014) (“While we have recognized that literal failure to
 meet a claim limitation does not necessarily constitute a
 ‘specific exclusion,’ we have found ‘specific exclusion’ where
 the patentee seeks to encompass a structural feature that
 is the opposite of, or inconsistent with, the recited limita-
 tion.” (internal citations omitted)).
      Before the district court, Lite-Netics argued that, even
 if “a magnet” in the claims meant a single (unitary-struc-
 ture) magnet, “the two semicircular magnets in the Mag-
 netic Cord light-fixture bases are equivalent to the one
 magnet” recited in its asserted patents. Lite-Netics, 2022
 WL 15523245, at *24. The court found this argument to be
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   19

 objectively baseless, without addressing the merits of
 whether the two magnets in the Magnetic Cord “per-
 form[ed] substantially the same overall function or work,
 in substantially the same way, to produce substantially the
 same overall result,” Dolly, 16 F.3d at 400, as (by assump-
 tion now) the claimed single magnet. See Lite-Netics, 2022
 WL 15523245, at *22. Rather, the court extended its find-
 ing that there was a clear intention to limit “a magnet” to
 one singular magnet to be a surrendering and foreclosure
 of claim scope, such that considering if two magnets were
 substantially equivalent to one magnet in this case would
 impermissibly allow for the “recapture of surrendered
 claim scope . . . contrary to the clear intent of the patent
 holder at the time of patenting.” Id. at *25.
      There is nothing unreasonable about the allegation
 that HBL’s two half-disk magnets satisfy the function-way-
 result formulation for equivalence with what we now as-
 sume, for purposes of this doctrine-of-equivalents analysis,
 to be the single (single-piece) magnet claimed by the ’779
 patent. Moreover, as set out above, the specification lacks
 language—whether a statement of purpose, a raising and
 rejection of the possibility of more than one magnet, or
 other language—that would make it clear that use of two
 or more magnets together having the required pull is “the
 opposite of, or inconsistent with,” Augme, 755 F.3d at 1335,
 the ’779 patent’s limitations. In particular, HBL has not
 shown a counterpart in this case of the facts in Augme,
 where the language of the claims and specification itself
 recognized a distinction between the claim limitation at is-
 sue (“embedded code”) and what was asserted as equiva-
 lent (downloaded or retrieved code through links), making
 the latter the “opposite” of the former. See id. at 1335. The
 district court’s discussion of the specification does not iden-
 tify anything sufficient to make Lite-Netics’s equivalence
 assertion baseless.
     HBL argues that the prosecution history of the ’779 pa-
 tent estops Lite-Netics from urging that the two half-disk
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 20                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 magnets of the Magnetic Cord meet the claim limitation
 under the doctrine of equivalents. HBL made this argu-
 ment to the district court, but the district court did not rule
 on it. We go no further here than to say that HBL has not
 shown in this court that, during prosecution, Lite-Netics
 made amendments or statements concerning the number
 of magnets (as opposed to the pull strength required, see
 J.A. 238) that make prosecution history estoppel so clearly
 applicable that it is objectively baseless for Lite-Netics to
 assert infringement under the doctrine of equivalents.
     In these circumstances, we conclude that the district
 court’s determination of objective baselessness of the asser-
 tion of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents rests
 on incorrect legal principles and cannot stand.
                               3
     For the Magnetic Clip, as for the Magnetic Cord, the
 district court held that Lite-Netics’s infringement allega-
 tions are objectively baseless, considering the direct in-
 fringement (by end users) needed for indirect infringement
 (by HBL) under both a literal-infringement theory and a
 doctrine-of-equivalents theory. This conclusion, like the
 district court’s conclusions regarding the Magnetic Cord,
 rests on incorrect legal principles.
      The Magnetic Clip itself is not a light-fixture assembly,
 but a dual-clip unit containing a (single) magnet that is de-
 signed to be put on the bottom of a light socket by clipping
 the unit to the wires coming out of the socket (which lead
 to adjacent sockets in the string), thus making the socket a
 magnetic one for adhering to an eave or other metal sur-
 face. Lite-Netics argued that when the Magnetic Clip is
 put on the bottom of the light socket, the Magnetic Clip
 forms the base within the claim requirement of a magnet-
 containing base attached to the light socket, so that HBL’s
 selling of the Magnetic Clip induces and contributes to end
 users’ infringement of the ’779 patent. Lite-Netics, 2022
 WL 15523245, at *12–13. The district court rejected Lite-
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   21

 Netics’s argument, ruling that the Magnetic Clip does not
 “attach” to the light fixture (so that a base with a magnet
 is not “attached” to the fixture); rather, in the district
 court’s view, it “pockets” the bottom of the socket because
 the arms of the Magnetic Clip attach to the wires on either
 side of the base. Id. at *13.
      There is no dispute that the Magnetic Clip, when
 mounted, touches the bottom of the light socket with some
 amount of pressure, as HBL’s counsel agreed at oral argu-
 ment. Oral Arg. at 26:34–27:10 (Q: “How snugly [does] the
 clip fit to the base of the bulb-carrying unit?”; A: “[Mr.
 Genenbacher, in a declaration,] says correctly that the end
 of the preexisting socket presses against the bottom of the
 [clip].”); id. at 27:15–18 (Q: “But [the Magnetic Clip]
 presses against [the socket]?”; A: “Presses against.”). Lite-
 Netics argued that, because of the “external ‘pressure,’” the
 Magnetic Clip was “attached” to the bottom of the socket.
 Lite-Netics, 2022 WL 15523245, at *13. The district court
 rejected this contention because it understood “attached” to
 mean “something more than ‘touching’”—something along
 the lines of fixed or fastened. Id. (citing Seabed Geosolu-
 tions (US) Inc. v. Magseis FF LLC, 8 F.4th 1285, 1287 (Fed.
 Cir. 2021)).
     Even if a claim-construction analysis may ultimately
 support this interpretation, Lite-Netics’s view is not objec-
 tively baseless. Decisions of this court offer support to Lite-
 Netics’s construction of “attach” as broad enough to cover
 connecting without fastening. See Tinnus Enterprises,
 LLC v. Telebrands Corp., 846 F.3d 1190, 1197, 1204 (Fed.
 Cir. 2017) (determining that the construction of “attached,”
 under its plain and ordinary meaning, to mean “connected
 or joined to something” was reasonable); In re Cuozzo
 Speed Technologies, LLC, 793 F.3d 1268, 1279–80 (Fed.
 Cir. 2015) (determining that, under the “broadest reasona-
 ble interpretation standard,” the construction of the term
 “integrally attached” as “discrete parts physically joined to-
 gether as a unit without each part losing its own separate
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 22                     LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC

 identity” was reasonable). And here the pressing-against
 connection on its face serves the evident purpose of allow-
 ing the socket to hold its position pointing out from the
 magnet when joined to a metal surface. Lite-Netics’s posi-
 tion on the linguistic issue is far from objectively baseless.
     The district court also deemed Lite-Netics’s allegation
 of infringement regarding the Magnetic Clip to be objec-
 tively baseless because it concluded that, in the ’779 patent
 specification, Lite-Netics had disclaimed “clips” and “exter-
 nal ‘clips’ that attach to the electrical cord.” Lite-Netics,
 2022 WL 15523245, at *14–15. This too was error. It is, at
 the least, reasonable not to find a disclaimer in the specifi-
 cation that would exclude the Magnetic Clip.
      The specification of the ’779 patent (shared by the ’264
 patent) differentiates two pieces of prior art—U.S. Patent
 No. 5,388,802 (Dougan) and U.S. Patent Application Ser.
 No. 2006/0138293 (Clement)—that, according to the speci-
 fication, required the installation of additional items to a
 light string. ’779 patent, col. 1, line 34 to col. 2, line 4; see
 ’264 patent, col. 1, line 39 to col. 2, line 2. The shared spec-
 ification does not disclaim clips in the manner found by the
 district court; indeed, it recites clips in various embodi-
 ments. See, e.g., ’779 patent, col. 2, lines 15–27, 46–48, 54–
 57. And both the ’779 patent and the ’264 patent expressly
 claim clips. See, e.g., ’779 patent, col. 6, lines 6–7; ’264 pa-
 tent, col. 6, lines 16–17.
      The district court interpreted the specification’s discus-
 sion of Dougan and Clement as a broad disclaimer of all
 “clips,” but the specification makes no such statement. The
 distinguished “clips” are reasonably seen to be different
 from the Magnetic Clip, for the reasons just noted. Accord-
 ingly, Lite-Netics’s contention that it did not disclaim the
 Magnetic Clip is reasonable. In this circumstance, we con-
 clude that the district court’s determination of objective
 baselessness of the assertion of infringement rests on in-
 correct legal principles and cannot stand.
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 LITE-NETICS, LLC   v. NU TSAI CAPITAL LLC                   23

                                III
     For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the district court’s
 order granting a preliminary injunction and remand the
 case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
     The parties shall bear their own costs.
                VACATED AND REMANDED