Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc.

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc.

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC, a Utah   No. 20-cv-2497 (KMM/ECW)       
Company,                                                                  

    Plaintiff,                                                           

v.                                           ORDER                        

Tricam Industries, Inc., a Minnesota                                      
corporation,                                                              

    Defendant.                                                           


    Plaintiff  Little  Giant  Ladder  Systems,  LLC  designs  and  builds  multi-position 
ladders and holds several patents related to ladders and their components. Among them is 
United States Patent No. 10,767,416 (“the ’416 patent”), which generally relates to a 
multi-position ladder system with an innovative locking mechanism. In this action, Little 
Giant alleges that certain multi-position ladders sold by Defendant Tricam Industries, Inc. 
infringe  the  ’416 patent. This matter  is now before  the  Court on the  parties’  cross-
motions for summary judgment and Tricam’s motion to exclude certain expert witness 
evidence offered by Little Giant. Pl.’s Summ. J. Mot. (Doc. 164); Def.’s Summ. J. Mot. 
(Doc. 167); Def.’s Mot. to Exclude (Doc. 171). Although the Court has already issued a 
Claim  Construction  Order,  the  plaintiff  has  asked  the  Court  to  engage  in  further 
construction  of  the  “cavity”  limitation  in  the  ’416  patent.  The  Court  addresses  the 
ongoing  battle  over  construction  of  that  term  prior  to  considering  the  parties’ 
infringement  positions.  Ultimately  the  Court  concludes  that  Tricam  is  entitled  to 
summary judgment because the accused products do not literally infringe the “cavity” 
limitation and prosecution history estoppel bars Little Giant from relying on the doctrine 
of equivalents.                                                           

                         BACKGROUND                                      
I.   Multi-Position Ladders and Locking Mechanisms                        
    Little Giant and Tricam compete in the market for multi-position ladders. Multi-
position ladders generally include two pairs of rails connected by rungs. The pairs of rails 
are further connected by a pair of adjustable central hinges. Each pair of rails is slidably 

coupled together, with an inner set of rails nesting inside the outer set of rails. The inner 
rails can then slide in relationship to the outer rails, extending the overall length or height 
of the ladder. The inner rails can be fixed in place by locking mechanisms that are 
mounted on the outer rails. The ’416 patent relates to such a ladder system that, among 
other things, claims a novel system for a locking mechanism. Compl. ¶¶ 7, 13 (Doc. 1). 

The focus of this case is on the ’416 patent’s claimed locking mechanism and whether 
Tricam’s ladders infringe Little Giant’s patent.                          
    Prior to the innovation claimed in the ’416 patent, multi-position ladders used 
“lock tabs” or “J-locks,” and Little Giant manufactured and sold ladders using lock tabs 
like those depicted below.                                                
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Compl.   9.  The  lock tabs  used internal  springs  that keep  them pressed  inward  when 
engaged, toward the rails, and the locking mechanism included an engagement pin that 
passes through openings in the inner and outer rails that are aligned to secure the ladder 
in a particular configuration. However, the lock-tab design presented difficulties for the 
end user. They tended to pinch the user’s fingers, could be difficult to use, and required 
significant  effort,  especially  from  smaller  users,  given  that  “actuating  such  locking 
members usually requires lateral displacement of the locking members outward, or away 
from, the side rails of the ladders.” ’416 patent Col. 1:57-2:38 (Doc. 1-1).

     Little  Giant  developed  other  locking  mechanisms  for  its  multi-position  ladders 
over  the  years  that  represent  certain  improvements  over  the  lock  tabs.  These  include 
designs  commercialized  by  Little  Giant  as  its  “Rock  Lock”  and  “Rapid  Lock” 
mechanisms, pictured below. 
                     rel 

                      ! 

                     Rock Locks               Rapid Locks 
Compl. § 10. These designs, “use . . . rotational movement and mechanical engagement to 
pull out and push in the locking pins and to retain the locking pins in each position until a 
new  pivoting  force  is  applied.”  /d.  § 11.  Starting  in  2008,  Little  Giant  filed  patent 
applications, including for its locking mechanisms, that led to the issuance of a family of 
patents that includes the ’416 patent.! 
II.    Tricam’s Accused Ladders and Little Giant’s Claims 
     Tricam  manufactures  and  sells  multi-position  ladders  in  competition  with  Little 
Giant.  Little  Giant  claims  that  Tricam’s  “MPX”  or  “Gorilla  Ladders”  (“Accused 

     '  The  °416 Patent is a “[c]ontinuation of application No.  14/886,566, filed on Oct.  19, 
2015, now Pat. No. 9,784,033, which is a continuation of application No.  13/480,897, filed on 
May 25, 2012, now Pat. No. 9,163,455, which is a continuation of application No.  12/399,815, 
filed on Mar. 6, 2009, now Pat. No. 8,186,481.” ’416 Patent at 1-2.

Ladders”)?  use  locking  mechanisms  that  infringe  the  ’416  patent.  Compl.  417.  An 
example  of  Tricam’s  locking  mechanism,  which  Tricam  commercialized  as  “Speed 
Locks,”> is depicted below. 

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                       a.       v\ 

Compl. § 20. Tricam’s Speed Locks attach to the outer rails of their Accused Ladders and 
use a rotating handle that displaces a pin through aligned opening in the inner and outer 
rails. 
      The Speed Locks of Tricam’s ladders have a handle that sits atop a ramp-and-boss 
wedge affixed to the outer rail. When in the locked position, the handle is parallel to the 
rails,  a pin is  extended through openings  in both  sets  of rails,  and the handle  stays in 
place  as  two  wings  sit  on  either  side  of the  wedge.  The  boss  extends  into  a  central, 
circular cavity, where a rivet slot is used to attach the knob to the pin. To remove the 
pin,  unlock the rails,  and allow the ladder to be  extended  or contracted,  the handle is 

      >  The Accused Ladders  include  Tricam’s  ladders with the  following  model numbers: 
GLA-MPX13;  GLMPX-13;  GLMPXA-14;  GLMPX-14W-2;  GLMPX-17;  GLA-MPX17; 
GLMPXA-18; GLMPX-22; GLA-MPX22; GLMPXA-22; GLMPX-22W-2; GLMPX-26; GLA- 
MPX26; GLMPX-26W-2; GLMPXT-15; and GLMPXT-23. 
      3  As  explained  in  Tricam’s  briefing,  it  markets  some  of its  locking  mechanisms  as 
“Gorilla Grip Locks,” but refers to all such locks as “Speed Locks” for purposes of the summary 
judgment motions. 
      * There is no dispute that this central,  circular notch constitutes a “cavity” within the 
meaning of the language of Claim 1 of the’416 patent.

rotated 90 degrees, and opposing notches on each wing then allow the Speed Lock handle 
to remain in place while the user moves the ladder into the desired position. Turning the 
handle 90 degrees back to parallel with the rails disengages the notches from the ramp, 
allows the pin to extend back through the  aligned openings  in the rails,  and locks the 
ladder into the new configuration selected by the user. See Ver Halen Rebuttal 4] 45-51 
(describing  design  and  operation  of the  Tricam  Speed  Lock)  (Doc. 180-6).  A  labeled 
image of the underside of the Speed Lock is depicted below. 

                                              a . 

                      Center Cavity 

Id. {§ 48, 96. 
     Little Giant alleges that the Accused Ladders infringe every claim limitation of the 
°416 patent. See Omnibus Armstrong Decl. (Doc. 173), Ex. 21  (P1.’s Infringement Claim 
Charts);  id., Ex. 22  (Pl.’s  Suppl.  Infringement Claim Charts).  In Claim  1, which is the 
sole independent claim of the °416 patent, Little Giant claims the following: 
           1. A ladder comprising: 
           a first assembly having a  first pair of rails including a  first rail 
             and  a  second rail,  and  a  second pair  of rails  including  a 
             third  rail  and  a  fourth  rail,  the  first  pair  of  rails  being 
             slidably coupled with the second pair rails; and 
           a first locking mechanism comprising: 
             a first bracket coupled with the first rail, 
             a first component rotatable about a defined axis,

           a first engagement pin coupled with the first component,      
             wherein the first locking mechanism is configured so        
             that  the  first  component  is  rotatable  from  a  first  
             rotational position to a second rotational position;        
           wherein, when the first component is in the first rotational  
             position,  a  substantial  amount  of  the  first  bracket  is 
             disposed within a cavity defined by the first component     
             and the first engagement pin extends through a pair of      
             aligned openings including a first opening formed in the    
             first rail and a second opening formed in third rail, and   
           wherein,  when  the  first  component  is  in  the  second    
             rotational  position,  the  first  engagement  pin  is      
             withdrawn from at least one of the first opening and the    
             second opening,                                             
           at least one retaining mechanism configured to maintain       
             the first component in the first rotational position until  
             application  of  a  first  force  is  applied  to  the  first 
             component to displace it towards the second rotational      
             position, and                                               
           wherein  the  at  least  one  retaining  mechanism  is  further 
             configured to maintain the first component in the second    
             rotational position until application of a second force is  
             applied to the first component.                             

’416 patent Col. 10:30–63. The remaining Claims 2 through 5 are dependent claims of 
Claim 1.                                                                  
III.  Claim Construction Order                                            
    The parties’ infringement dispute centers around three limitations5 in Claim 1—
(a) the “first component”; (b) the “cavity”; and (c) the “retaining mechanism.” Following 

    5 Little Giant’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of infringement originally 
argued that the parties disputed whether the Accused Ladders infringed the “bracket” limitation. 
However, Tricam did not meaningfully respond to Little Giant’s arguments in the briefing, and at 
the summary-judgment hearing, Tricam confirmed that it was not disputing that its Accused 
Ladders satisfy the “bracket” limitation. See Pl.’s Mem. in Supp. of Summ. J. of Infringement 
(“Pl.’s Infringement Mem.”) at 1 (Doc. 166); Summ. J. Hr’g Tr. 61 (Doc. 207). Tricam also does 
not dispute that its ladders satisfy the other elements of the ’416 patent aside from the “first 
component,” the “cavity,” and the “retaining mechanism.”                  
receipt of claim-construction briefing and a lengthy hearing, on June 24, 2022 the Court 
issued an Order concerning Claim Construction, which included a construction of each of 
these terms. See Claim Construction Order (Doc. 107). Because this Order focuses on the 

cavity term, a review of the relevant portions of the Claim Construction Order will be 
helpful.6                                                                 
    The cavity limitation appears within a longer phrase in Claim 1 of the ’416 patent: 
“a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity defined by the first 
component.”  Id.  at  11.  Ultimately,  considering  both  the  agreed  upon  constructions 

offered by the parties and those terms that were disputed, the Court found that the proper 
construction of this phrase is: “more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of 
a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined by the first component.” 
Id. at 25–26. The parties agreed that “substantial amount” should be construed to mean 
“more than a majority,” and the Court found this agreed-upon construction was supported 

by the intrinsic record. Id. at 14–15.                                    
    As for the “disposed within” term, Little Giant proposed a construction of the 
broader phrase in which the term is situated. This proposal suggested that the “disposed 
within” term should be construed to mean “hidden or covered by.” However, the Court 
rejected  that  proposal  and  construed  “disposed  within”  to  mean  “placed  inside  of” 


    6 As discussed below, the Court finds that there is no genuine issue of material fact and 
Tricam is entitled to judgment of non-infringement of the cavity limitation as a matter of law. As 
a result, the Court need not address the parties’ arguments in their cross-motions for summary 
judgment  concerning  infringement  of  the  “first  component”  or  the  “retaining  mechanism” 
limitations. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 4, 11, 15, 22; Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of Summ. J. (“Def.’s 
SJ Mem.”) at 9, 18–19 (Doc. 169).                                         
because such a construction was consistent with the term’s plain and ordinary meaning 
and the intrinsic evidence in the specification. Id. at 15. In addition, the Court explained 
that when Little Giant originally applied for the ’416 patent, it claimed a bracket that was 

“concealed” between the rail and the first component, but the examiner rejected Little 
Giant’s  application  as  anticipated  by  U.S.  Patent  Publication  No.  2006/0169539 
(“Grebinoski”). Id. at 15–16 (citing Doc. 73-1 at 7, 10). To overcome the rejection, Little 
Giant amended its claim to cover a bracket that is “disposed within a cavity defined by 
the first component.” Id. at 16. The Court found that under the doctrine of prosecution 

disclaimer, Little Giant could not reclaim, through its proposed construction of “hidden 
or covered by,” scope that it had surrendered during prosecution to secure issuance of the 
patent. Id. at 15–21.                                                     
    The Court therefore construed the term “cavity” to be a “hollowed-out space (not 
passing all the way through).” Id. at 25–26. Little Giant had provided two different 

constructions of the term in its efforts to have the Court construe the entire phrase in 
which the cavity limitation appears: (1) “a hollowed out space (not passing all the way 
through),” and (2) “a hollowed out space (not passing all the way through) . . . so as to 
hide or cover more than a majority of the first bracket.” Id. at 21. The Court rejected the 
second reading because adopting it would result in redundancy and would allow Little 

Giant to use a construction of the cavity term to reintroduce the very same claim scope it 
had surrendered to overcome Grebinoski. Id. at 23–24. With respect to Little Giant’s 
initial proposal, the Court noted that Tricam’s proposed construction also referred to a 
cavity as a “hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through),” and the Court found 
that this apparent agreement between the parties was supported by the plain and ordinary 
meaning  of  cavity  as  well  as  evidence  within  the  specification  itself.  Jd.  at  22-23. 
Specifically, the Court pointed to Figures  13A,  13B, and  15 through  17, each of which 
“features a hollowed-out space defined by the first component, inside of which one finds 
more than a majority of the first bracket.” Jd. These figures are pictured below. 

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     Finally,  the  Court explained the basis  for its  construction  of the  cavity term  as 
follows: 
                 The intrinsic evidence also suggests that the hollowed- 
           out space in the handle does not pass all the way through that 
           handle, and both parties suggest inclusion of language to that 
           effect.  Conversely,  the  notion  that  a  component  includes  a 
           “hollowed-out  space”  does  not  easily  lend  itself  to  an 
           interpretation in which the described cavity passes all the way 
           through first component.  One might more naturally describe 
           such a component as containing an “opening” or a “tunnel,” 
           rather  than  a  “cavity.”  The  specification  and  the  figures 
           referenced above also support that a person of ordinary skill 
           in the art would understand that the claimed cavity “does not 

                                     10 

         pass all the way through” the first component. For example,     
         the lever-style handle depicted in Figure 13A has a hollowed-   
         out space in its mass that does not pass all the way through.   
         Accordingly, the Court finds that a construction consistent     
         with  these  essentially  agreed-upon  meanings  is  strongly   
         supported  by  the  intrinsic  evidence,  and  overall,  Tricam’s 
         proposal represents the better reading of the term “cavity.”    

Id. at 23.                                                                
IV.  Expert Reports                                                       
    In support of their positions, the parties point to evidence submitted by their expert 
witnesses, Fred Smith for Little Giant and Jon Ver Halen for Tricam. Smith provided an 
initial report on October 21, 2022; a rebuttal report on April 7, 2023, and a report in reply 
on April 28, 2023. Smith Report (Doc. 173-18); Smith Rebuttal (Doc. 173-19);7 Smith 
Reply  (Doc. 173-20).  Ver  Halen  provided  an  initial  report  on  October  10,  2022;  a 
supplemental report on October 27, 2022; and a rebuttal report on April 6, 2023. Ver 
Halen Report (Doc. 180-4); Ver Halen Supplement (Doc. 180-5); Ver Halen Rebuttal 
(Doc. 180-6).                                                             
    A. Smith’s Cavity Opinions                                           
    In his initial report Smith states his opinion that Tricam’s Accused Ladders have 
the cavity element. Smith Report 17–19. Smith acknowledges the Court’s construction of 
the cavity limitation and then discusses how that construction, in his view, applies to the 
Accused ladders in a chart. Id. ¶¶ 35–37. He begins by excerpting a picture of the Tricam 
locking mechanism and stating his conclusion that when Tricam’s handle “is in the first 

    7 Smith’s Rebuttal Report addresses issues of invalidity, which the Court has determined 
it need not resolve.                                                      
rotational position, more than a majority of the first bracket . . . is placed inside of a 
hollowed-out  space  (that  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through)  defined  by  the  first 
component. . . .”  Id.  at  17.  Smith  does  not  affirmatively  explain,  at  the  outset,  how 

Tricam’s handle does not pass all the way through; instead, he approaches the concept by 
responding to Tricam’s non-infringement contentions set forth in its responsive claim 
chart.                                                                    
    Smith  states  that  Tricam  believes  that  “the  phrase  ‘not  passing  all  the  way 
through’ necessarily means it is bounded on all sides but one and excludes spaces that are 

‘not bounded on the ends.’” Id. at 18. According to Smith, Tricam’s reading “adds an 
additional limitation to the Court’s construction, such that a cavity is a space that doesn’t 
pass all the way through in all directions.” Id. (emphasis in original). He further opines, 
that “[a] cavity need not be bounded on all sides but one, as Tricam contends, for it to be 
a space that doesn’t pass all the way through such that it is capable of having something 

placed inside of it. One would have no difficulty in determining where to put [the fillings] 
if told to put them inside a taco shell—one would understand to place them inside the 
hollow space defined by the raised sides and bottom of the shell.” Id.    
    In addition, Smith states that adopting Tricam’s interpretation that the claimed 
cavity must be bounded on all sides but one would mean that the preferred embodiment 

in Figures 13 and 14 of the ’416 patent would not contain the cavity limitation. Id. Smith 
excerpts an image (included below) from the ’416 patent to illustrate his interpretation of 
the claimed cavity, suggesting that the line he superimposed on the image passes all the 
way through the hollowed out space in one direction, but does not pass through in others. 
                        Lay 

Td.  In addition,  Smith opines that because the cavity’s function is to house more than a 
majority of the bracket, the entire hollowed-out space, including the portion that is not 
bounded on all sides but one, must be considered part of the cavity; otherwise, the portion 
that is bounded on all sides but one contains less than a majority of the bracket. Jd. at 19. 
     Smith also states that although a  line can be drawn to pass through the open space 
beneath the black handle of Tricam’s locks which sit atop Tricam’s bracket, Tricam and 
its expert do not dispute “that this hollowed out space does not go all the way through in 
every other direction, literally satisfying the Court’s claim construction and allowing the 
bracket to be placed inside of that space.” Smith Reply § 29. He observes that the lever- 
style handle depicted in the *416 patent’s figures forms “wings” similar to those seen in 
Tricam’s locks;  a line can be drawn passing through the space beneath that lever-style 
handle  and  between  its  “wings”;  and  a  majority  of the  bracket  sits  within  the  entire 
hollowed-out space. See id. J 30-34. 
     B.  Smith and the Tidyman Reference 
     In  offering  this  interpretation  of  the  term  cavity,  Smith  further  relies  on  a 
September  16,  2019  office  action  in  which  the  examiner  cited  U.S.  patent  1,303,416 
(“Tidyman”’) in rejecting Little Giant’s claims.  Smith Report at 20. Neither Little Giant 

                                     13 

nor  Smith  referred  to  Tidyman  in  Little  Giant’s  submissions  when  the  parties  sought 
claim construction.  Tidyman is  a patent addressed to a sawhorse with extendable legs, 
which can be locked in place by an L-shaped lever that extends through aligned openings 
in the legs. Id.; Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex.  I (Tidyman) (Doc. 180). 
     In  the  September  16,  2019  office  action,  the  examiner  rejected  Little  Giant’s 
claims as anticipated by Tidyman. In particular, the examiner referenced Figure 3 of the 
Tidyman  specification,  which  depicts  the  locking  mechanism  that  holds  the  claimed 
sawhorse’s legs in place. 
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Tidyman at 1; Miller Decl. July 26, 2023), Ex. M, Office Action (Sept.  16, 2019), at 5. 
In Tidyman,  14 is the longer arm of the lever,  16 is the outer ear on either side of the 
bracket  15,  which is  also  an  apertured  ear.  Tidyman  Col.  2:65—77.  In rejecting  Little 
Giant’s claim for “a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity 
defined by the first component,” the examiner provided the following explanation: 
           the cavity is formed by  16 and  14 such that the a substantial 
           amount of the bracket 15 is with the cavity as can be seen via 
           fig.’s  1-3 — emphasis  is noted on the term  ‘substantial’  and 
           the phrase ‘substantial amount’ as it is being interpreted with 
           the  broadest  reasonable  interpretation  as  claimed  —  further 

                                     14 

         note that even if only 1 ear 16 is part of the first component  
         14,  the  bracket  15  would  still  be  within  a  cavity  formed 
         between the ‘L-shape’ of 14 and 16 as can be seen between       
         fig.’s 1-3 such that the limitation is met whether there are two 
         ears 16 flanking bracket 15 or merely one ear 16.               

Office Action (Sept. 16, 2019) at 4.8                                     
    Smith states that “[t]he cavity of the Tidyman locks is identically the situation 
with the taco shaped Tricam Speed Locks and the examiner understood, as did the Court, 
that the cavity need not be bounded in all directions.” Smith Report at 21. As a result, he 
concludes that “Tricam’s proposed application of the concept of ‘not passing all the way 
through’  is  contrary  to  the  examiner’s  view,  which  was  the  source  of  the  Court’s 
construction, because the Tidyman handle would not have a cavity under Tricam’s view.” 
Id.                                                                       
    C. Ver Halen’s Opinions                                              
    In his April 6, 2023 Rebuttal Report, after excerpting portions of the Court’s 
Claim Construction Order, Ver Halen states that the “knob of the Tricam products when 
in a first rotational position does not result in a ‘substantial’ amount of Tricam’s ramp 
being ‘disposed within a cavity defined by the first component’ as construed by the 
Court.” Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶ 7(d). Ver Halen explains that “Tricam’s knob includes a 
pair of wings that form a space open on three sides, including both ends so that the wedge 

portion of the Tricam wedge cam passes all the way through and beyond this space at 
each end.” Id. ¶ 92. Because this space passes all the way through, Ver Halen concludes 

    8 When Little Giant responded to the examiner’s rejections, it amended claim language 
regarding a two-position retaining mechanism, but it made no changes to the cavity language. 
Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex. N, 12/16/19 Response.                   
that it is not a cavity as construed by the Court. Id. The Accused Ladders also have a 
“boss” atop the wedge that sits inside a hollowed-out space within the knob that does not 
pass all the way through, but they are much smaller than the wedge/bracket of Tricam’s 

locking mechanism. Id. ¶¶ 91, 93. Other hollowed-out spaces set into the underside of the 
Tricam handle that do not pass all the way through enclose no portion of the Tricam ramp 
and “are only present to reduce the amount of plastic required and aid in molding the 
knob.” Id. ¶ 93. By Ver Halen’s calculation, the portion of the boss that sits inside the 
cavity of the Tricam handle constitutes approximately 20% of the ramp-and-boss/bracket. 

Id.                                                                       
    Ver Halen finds it significant that the “wings of the [Tricam] knob define a space 
that is open on three sides” and it “passes all the way through” because “it is not bounded 
on the ends.” Id. ¶ 97. In further reference to the Claim Construction Order, Ver Halen 
likens open space created by the wings to an “opening” or a “tunnel.” Id. Ver Halen 

disagrees  with  Smith’s  assessment  that  the  portions  of  the  ramp  that  the  wings  of 
Tricam’s knob sit atop are disposed within a cavity because Smith’s report erroneously 
suggests that portions of the ramp that are merely concealed by the knob are placed inside 
a hollowed-out space. See id. ¶ 98. Not only does he take issue with Smith’s calculations, 
but Ver Halen also notes that Smith does not address the effect of prosecution history 

estoppel and Little Giant’s amendments of its original claim language to overcome the 
examiner’s objections based on Grebinoski. See id. ¶¶ 39, 98, 100, 105.   
    Ver Halen also disagrees with Smith regarding the significance of the Tidyman 
reference and the examiner’s observations about the Tidyman handle containing a cavity. 
Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶ 113. He points out that in the February 19, 2020 office action, the 
examiner focused on a defining a cavity as a “‘hollowed out space [not passing all the 
way through].’” Id. (quoting 2/19/20 Office Action). According to Ver Halen, both he 

and Smith agree that the Tidyman space passes all the way through, and the subsequent 
reasons for allowance reflected in the February 2020 office action suggest that “Tidyman 
had an opening or a tunnel not a cavity.” Id. Ver Halen also noted that having the bracket 
“[d]isposed within a cavity was required to gain allowance,” which the Court construed 
to mean “‘placed inside of’ a cavity[, which in turn] differs substantially from something 

in a tunnel or opening that passes all the way through.” Id. ¶ 114.       
    In addition, Ver Halen disagrees with Smith’s assessment that the Speed Locks 
have a cavity that is similar to the lever-style handle in the preferred embodiment of the 
’416 patent. Id. ¶ 110. According to Ver Halen, the Tricam knob is not “bounded in 
enough  directions  that  the  hollowed-out  area  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through  the 

handle. This space passes all the way through and out opposite sides.” Id. Further, Ver 
Halen finds it significant that “[o]ne end of the Little Giant lever is closed, [and] there is 
no closed end on the Tricam handle.” Id. Ver Halen suggests that Smith has misconstrued 
Tricam’s argument and that Tricam has not taken the position that “a cavity has to be 
bounded on all sides but one”; rather, Ver Halen contends that the portion of the Speed 

Lock that Little Giant says is a cavity is not because it is not bounded on the ends. Id. 
¶ 112. VerHalen suggests that the analogy Smith draws of knowing where to put the 
fillings in a taco is irrelevant and ignores the Claim Construction Order. Id. 
                          DISCUSSION                                     
I.   Legal Standard                                                       
    A. Summary Judgment                                                  

    Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact 
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); 
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
477 U.S. 317
, 322–23 (1986); Dowden v. Cornerstone Nat’l Ins. 
Co., 
11 F.4th 866, 872
 (8th Cir. 2021). The moving party must demonstrate that the 
material facts are undisputed. Celotex, 
477 U.S. at 322
. A fact is “material” only if its 

resolution could affect the outcome of the suit under the governing substantive law. 
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
477 U.S. 242, 248
 (1986). When the moving party 
properly  supports  a  motion  for  summary  judgment,  the  party  opposing  summary 
judgment  may  not  rest  on  mere  allegations  or  denials,  but  must  show,  through  the 
presentation of admissible evidence, that specific facts exist creating a genuine issue for 

trial. 
Id. at 256
; McGowen, Hurst, Clark & Smith, P.C. v. Com. Bank, 
11 F.4th 702, 710
 
(8th Cir. 2021). A dispute of fact is “genuine” only if “the evidence is such that a 
reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson, 
477 U.S. at 248
.  Courts  must  view  the  inferences  to  be  drawn  from  the  facts  in  the  light  most 
favorable to the nonmoving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio 

Corp., 
475 U.S. 574
, 587–88 (1986); Irvin v. Richardson, 
20 F.4th 1199, 1204
 (8th Cir. 
2021).                                                                    
    B. Patent Infringement and Summary Judgment                          
    A patent is infringed when a person “without authority makes, uses, offers to sell, 
or sells any patented invention, within the United States . . . during the term of the patent 

. . . .” 
35 U.S.C. § 271
(a). “Literal infringement of a claim exists when every limitation 
recited in the claim is found in the accused device.” Kahn v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
135 F.3d 1472, 1477
 (Fed. Cir. 1998). “If any claim limitation is absent from the accused device, 
there is no literal infringement as a matter of law.” Bayer AG v. Elan Pharm. Research 
Corp., 
212 F.3d 1241, 1247
 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Even if a product does not literally infringe 

a patent, it may still infringe under the doctrine of equivalents. Warner-Jenkinson Co., 
Inc. v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co., 
520 U.S. 17, 21
 (1997). The most common framework 
for evaluating equivalence is whether the accused product performs substantially the 
same function in substantially the same way to obtain substantially the same result. See 
Mylan Institutional LLC v. Aurobindo Pharma Ltd., 
857 F.3d 858
, 866–67 (Fed. Cir. 

2017) (citing Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Prod. Co., 
339 U.S. 605, 608, 609
 
(1950)). “[T]he doctrine of equivalents must be applied to individual elements of the 
claim, not to the invention as a whole. It is important to ensure that the application of the 
doctrine,  even  as  to  an  individual  element,  is  not  allowed  such  broad  play  as  to 
effectively eliminate that element in its entirety.” Warner-Jenkinson Co., 
520 U.S. at 29
. 

    Where, as here, a patent’s claims have already been construed, summary judgment 
as to non-infringement requires the court to determine “whether the properly construed 
claims read on the accused device.” Pitney Bowes, Inc. v. Hewlett–Packard Co., 
182 F.3d 1298, 1304
 (Fed. Cir. 1999). An accused infringer may prevail at the summary judgment 
phase either by producing evidence that would preclude a finding of infringement, or by 
showing that the evidence on file fails to create a material factual dispute as to any 
essential element of the patentee’s case. See Novartis Corp. v. Ben Venue Labs., Inc., 
271 F.3d 1043, 1046
 (Fed. Cir. 2001). “Whether a claim is infringed under the doctrine of 
equivalents may be decided on summary judgment if no reasonable jury could determine 
that the limitation and the element at issue are equivalent.” Zelinski v. Brunswick Corp., 
185 F.3d 1311, 1317
 (Fed. Cir. 1999).                                     
II.  Proper Construction of the Cavity Limitation                         

    As discussed, the cavity limitation appears in the following phrase of Claim 1 of 
the ’416 patent: “a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity 
defined by the first component.” After construing several terms within this phrase, the 
Court adopted the following construction:                                 
         more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of a 
         hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined    
         by the first component.                                         

Claim Construction Order 25–26.                                           
    Both Little Giant and Tricam argue that they are entitled to summary judgment on 
the issue of infringement of the cavity limitation. However, Little Giant argues that even 
though the Court has already issued a construction of this limitation, we cannot yet 
proceed to the second step in an infringement analysis. Little Giant suggests that the 
parties disagree about what the Court’s construction means, so the infringement dispute 
on this issue “collapses to a legal claim construction dispute.” Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 
16 & n.12. In essence, Little Giant argues that the Court’s construction leaves open the 
question of what “not passing all the way through” means in the context of the ’416 
patent. It contends that “the parties’ dispute here warrants a clarifying construction from 
the Court for ‘cavity’ to ensure that the jury is not improperly tasked with resolving the 

legal question of claim construction.” Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. 
(“Pl.’s SJ Opp’n”) at 4 n.2 (Doc. 194). Accordingly, Little Giant proposes that the cavity 
term must be construed in the following manner:                           
         [T]he proper understanding of the Court’s construction must     
         be that a “cavity” is  a hollowed-out space in a mass that      
         doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to allow  
         more than a majority of the bracket to be placed inside even if 
         the space passes all the way through in some directions.        

Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 21.9 The Court rejects Little Giant’s request to rewrite its 
claim construction in this manner for several reasons.                    
    A. Unsupported Request for Reconsideration                           
    For starters, though Little Giant does not call it one, it has essentially made an 
unsupported  request  for  reconsideration  of  the  Claim  Construction  Order.  At  the 
summary  judgment  hearing,  Little  Giant  suggested  that  courts  regularly  revisit  their 
constructions  or  engage  in  rolling  construction  throughout  the  course  of  litigation. 
Although it is “true that a court’s prior claim construction can be altered, alteration 
generally requires the parties to present new evidence.” Snyders Heart Valve LLC v. St. 
Jude Med., No. 18-cv-2030 (JRT/DTS), 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 (D. Minn. Mar. 25, 

    9 Having previously offered two different proposals for how to construe this term at the 
claim-construction phase, this marks Little Giant’s third suggestion for how to understand the 
scope of the claimed “cavity” and the broader phrase in which it appears. Claim Construction 
Order at 21 (citing Doc. 70 at 16; Doc. 81 at 9).                         
2020) (citing Pfizer, Inc. v. Teva Pharms., USA, Inc. 
429 F.3d 1364, 1377
 (Fed. Cir. 
2005)). Here, Little Giant has not presented any new evidence in support of its latest 
proposed construction of the cavity term. Instead, it seeks only to “relitigate old issues.” 

Id.,
 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 n.7 (quoting Caddy Prods., Inc. v. Am. Seating Co., No. 05-
cv-800 (JRT/FLN), 
2008 WL 2447294
, at *1 (D. Minn. June 13, 2008)).       
    This is also not a situation in which, over the course of the litigation, the Court’s 
“understanding of the technology [has] evolve[d].” See Pfizer, Inc., 
429 F.3d at 1377
. As 
a result, a “rolling claim construction” is out of place in this case. 
Id.
 (discussing how 

“district courts may engage in a rolling claim construction, in which the court revisits and 
alters  its  interpretation  of  the  claim  terms  as  its  understanding  of  the  technology 
evolves”).                                                                
    Little Giant appears to be seeking reconsideration of the Claim Construction Order 
by a different name. In suggesting that the Court should issue a clarifying construction, 

Little Giant largely repeats arguments previously raised and presents arguments it could 
have but did not raise before. These are not grounds for reconsideration. See Corning Inc. 
v. Wilson Wolf Mfg. Corp., No. 20-cv-700 (DWF/TNL), 
2023 WL 3306506
, at *4–5 (D. 
Minn.  May  8,  2023)  (denying  defendants  request  for  reconsideration  of  claim 
construction order where the defendants had not presented “any new, material evidence 

that could not have been presented at the Markman stage of this litigation”). And the 
Court finds that Little Giant has failed to show that its prior construction of the cavity 
term is clearly erroneous. Snyders Heart Valve, 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 (indicating that 
the court would not revisit its prior claim constructions unless they were shown to be 
“‘clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice’”) (quoting Christianson v. Colt 
Indus. Operating Corp., 
486 U.S. 800
, 817–18 (1988)).                     
    Moreover, this is not a case where the Court must provide further clarification of 

its construction to avoid the kind of error Little Giant warns about. Little Giant asserts 
that under Sound View Innovations, LLC v. Hulu, LLC, 
33 F.4th 1326
 (Fed. Cir. 2022) 
and O2 Micro Int’l Ltd. v. Beyond Innovation Tech. Co., 
521 F.3d 1351
 (Fed. Cir. 2008), 
if the Court declines to engage in further construction of the cavity term, it would err by 
leaving the legal issue of claim construction to the jury to resolve. In both Sound View 

and O2 Micro, the district courts’ claim constructions were deemed inadequate for the 
second step of an infringement analysis because they failed to resolve a dispute about the 
meaning of a claim term by issuing no construction at all. Sound View, 33 F.4th at 1336–
37  (finding  error  because  the  district  court  treated  the  claim  term  “buffer”  and  the 
“caches” in the accused edge servers as completely distinct based solely on the fact they 

had a different name); O2 Micro, 
521 F.3d at 1361
 (district court failed to construe claim 
term “only if” where “the parties disputed not the meaning of the words themselves, but 
the  scope  that  should  be  encompassed  by  this  claim  language,”  namely  whether  it 
allowed  exceptions  to  claim  language  “only  if  said  feedback  signal  is  above  a 
predetermined threshold”). Unlike Sound View and O2 Micro, the Court has not failed to 

or declined to issue a construction of the cavity term. To the contrary, after reviewing 
significant briefing and the intrinsic and extrinsic evidence and holding a lengthy claim-
construction hearing, the Court issued a construction of the cavity limitation. Indeed, the 
construction adopted was, in many respects, one of the two previously advocated by 
Little Giant. What is happening now is that Little Giant finds that construction less than 
supportive of its infringement position. Finjan, Inc. v. Secure Computing Corp., 
626 F.3d 1197, 1207
 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (“Restating a previously settled argument does not create an 

‘actual dispute regarding the proper scope of the claims’ within the meaning of O2 
Micro.”).                                                                 
    Little Giant also cites Power-One, Inc. v. Artesyn Tech., Inc., 
599 F.3d 1343
 (Fed. 
Cir. 2010), which discusses the district court’s obligation to issue a construction that is 
sufficiently precise to ensure a jury fully understands the court’s rulings and what is 

covered by the claims. 
Id. at 1348
. But Little Giant does not explain why, if this case 
were to go to a jury, they could not fully understand an instruction based on the existing 
construction of the cavity limitation—a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way 
through).  If  there  were  disputed  issues  of  material  fact,  it  seems  quite  likely  that  a 
hypothetical jury could draw its own conclusions about whether Tricam’s handle has a 

space that does or does not pass all the way through. And because the Court grants 
summary judgment to Tricam, no jury will be asked to grapple with this issue. 
    Accordingly, Little Giant has not persuaded the Court that reconsideration of its 
previous construction or clarification is necessary to avoid error.       
    B. Not Passing All the Way Through                                   

    Not only does the Court finds that reconsideration of its construction of the cavity 
limitation  is  unnecessary,  but  the  Court  also  finds  Little  Giant’s  third  proposed 
construction unsupported and unpersuasive on its merits.                  
         1.  Drawings and Preferred Embodiment                           
    As noted above, in arguing for the clarifying construction it seeks, Little Giant 
repeats several arguments that it previously raised during the claim-construction phase of 

the litigation. Relying on drawings of the  lever-style handle, Little Giant previously 
asserted that “the handle shown in the drawings of the ’416 patent show [sic] a hollowed 
out space that passes all the way through in one direction (shown with [a] blue line . . .) 
yet doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to hide most of the bracket.” 
Pl.’s Opening Claim Construction Br. (“Pl. Markman Br.”) at 14–15 (Doc. 70). Little 

Giant  relies  on  similar  drawings  and  arguments  now  to  make  virtually  identical 
arguments. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 5 (including drawings of lever-style handle from 
Smith Report at 17–19). Further, in both the claim-construction and summary-judgment 
briefing, Little Giant argued that the cavity limitation’s concept of “not passing all the 
way through” must be understood to allow the space to pass all the way through in at 

least one direction—otherwise, the construction would improperly exclude a preferred 
embodiment. Pl.’s Markman Br. at 15; Pl.’s Infringement Mem. 15–16 n.11.  
    The  Court  is  not  persuaded  that  Little  Giant’s  drawings  support  its  proposed 
construction  nor  that  rejecting  its  latest  proposed  construction  excludes  a  preferred 
embodiment.  The  drawings  Little  Giant  emphasizes  in  their  claim-construction  and 

summary-judgment briefing, like those depicted below, are not based upon any specific 
language in the claims themselves, and they are not taken from the specification or the 
file history.                                                             
               (oi,                   B= miner 

                                             NOT all the way through 
Consequently,  these  diagrammatic  depictions  of the  lever-style  handle  do  not  reflect 
statements by the inventor or the examiner that would lead a person of ordinary skill in 
the art to understand the scope of the claimed cavity. 
     In  addition,  Little  Giant’s  requested clarification  and its  drawings  purporting to 
show that the preferred embodiment does pass  all the way through in  some  directions 
ignore both the context of the claim language and the actual illustrations that are found in 
the specification.  When Claim  1  of the  ’416 patent introduces the phrase in which the 
cavity term  appears,  it refers  to  the  “first  component”  (the  handle)  being  in  “the  first 
rotational  position.”  °416  patent,  col.  10:44-45.  The  specification,  through  certain 
illustrations, offers only one real hint as to what the scope of the claimed cavity might be. 
When the lever-style handle is depicted in the first rotational position in the drawings in 
the specification, most notably Figure 13A, the hollowed-out space defined by the handle 
sits parallel to the outer rails of the ladder. One end of the handle is flush with the rail. 
Therefore, it is bounded on one end by the rounded, upper portion of the handle, open on 
the other end of the handle, and blocked off on the underside by the plane of the rail. In 
that  configuration,  the  hollowed-out  space  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through  in  any 
direction. 
     Additional  context  for  the  cavity  in  the  surrounding  language  of  Claim  1 
undermines Little Giant’s third proposed construction. The cavity is a hollowed-out space 

                                     26 

that that has more than a majority of the bracket “disposed within it.” The Court has 
construed “disposed within” to mean that the bracket is “placed inside of” the opened 
space  in the handle.  The most natural understanding of  the bracket being “disposed 

within” the open space of the handle is that the cavity surrounds or encloses the bracket 
so that the open space does not pass all the way through. To conclude that Little Giant’s 
interpretation  is  correct,  and  that  any  other  construction  excludes  a  preferred 
embodiment, one must ignore both this surrounding claim language and the existence of 
the rails. As a result, the Court rejects Little Giant’s argument that “not passing all the 

way through” actually means something akin to—passing all the way through in some 
directions, but not in every direction.10 Rather, the cavity claimed by Little Giant is an 
hollowed-out space that is not unbounded on two ends when it is in the first rotational 
position and that is sufficiently closed off that it surrounds or encloses the bracket. 
         2.  Grebinoski and Tidyman                                      

    Little Giant further argues that the Court should rethink its construction based on a 
couple of additional arguments premised on the file history that it could have raised 
earlier  but  did  not.  First,  Little  Giant  points  to  the  handle  depicted  in  Grebinoski, 
suggesting that it shows a cavity that is consistent with its current proposal. Second, Little 
Giant refers to the examiner’s rejection due to the Tidyman prior art, arguing that the file 

history strongly supports its concept of a cavity that passes all the way through in some 

    10 The Court also notes that to the extent the handles depicted in Figures 15, 16, and 17 in 
the specification illustrate the claimed cavity at all, they similarly reveal that there is no space 
passing all the way through such a cavity and the open space of the handle surrounds or encloses 
the bracket while a rail or rung blocks off the opening underneath the handle. 
directions. As an initial matter the Court is troubled by the litigation strategy Little Giant 
seems to be employing, trying for a second (or third) bite at the claim construction apple 
with new arguments when its earlier efforts were unsuccessful. But as explained below, 

the Court finds neither argument compelling aside from their timing.      
    Start with Little Giant’s reliance on Grebinoski. Little Giant says that Grebinoski 
“defines a cavity . . . which passes all the way through in some directions” and points to 
its March 8, 2019 response to the examiner’s rejection. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 6. 
However, in response to the initial rejection based on Grebinoski, Little Giant merely 

stated that “Grebinoski does not disclose any portion of the bracket . . . ever being within 
a cavity of the lever.” Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex. L, 3/8/19 Response to Office 
Action.  Nothing  about  this  statement  clearly  indicates  Little  Giant’s  belief  that  the 
Grebinoski handle, in fact, contains the cavity at all. Nor does Little Giant’s effort to 
distinguish the Grebinoski prior art provide support for the interpretation of “not passing 

all  the  way  through”  that  Little  Giant  now  wants  the  Court  to  adopt.  In  short,  the 
communications with the examiner regarding Grebinoski say nothing about what does 
and does not constitute the claimed cavity.                               
    Turning to Tidyman, Little Giant conceded that it presented no argument based on 
Tidyman in its claim-construction briefing.  At  the summary-judgment hearing, Little 

Giant asserted that Tidyman first came up when the parties’ experts submitted their 
reports after the Court issued its Claim Construction Order, but it also contends that 
Tidyman  contains  the  most  explicit  statement  concerning  a  cavity  in  the  entire  file 
history. Summ. J. Hr’g Tr. at 31–32. This explanation is unconvincing.    
    If Tidyman were as consequential to the proper understanding of the scope of the 
claimed  cavity  as  Little  Giant  asserts,  the  Court  has  no  doubt,  given  the  enormous 
resources that both parties have poured into this case, that the litigants would have relied 

upon it at the claim-construction phase. Little Giant certainly has presented no argument 
explaining why this aspect of the file history could not have been raised earlier—it 
plainly could have been presented before but wasn’t. See Niazi Licensing Corp. v. Bos. 
Sci. Corp., No. 17-cv-5094 (WMW/BRT), 
2019 WL 6827588
, at *1 (D. Minn. Dec. 13, 
2019) (“A motion for reconsideration cannot be employed to . . . introduce . . . evidence 

or arguments that could have been made. . . .”). As such, the Court is skeptical that the 
discussion of Tidyman from the file history informs the proper construction of cavity. 
    Moreover, in considering the merits of Little Giant’s Tidyman argument, the Court 
finds that the discussion in the file history and the examiner’s comments are entitled to 
little weight in construing the scope of the claimed cavity. The examiner initially rejected 

the language in Claim 1 in light of the Tidyman prior art, and in relevant part, the 
examiner stated that Tidyman teaches a cavity. The examiner posited that the Tidyman 
handle depicted in one of the Tidyman drawings would constitute a cavity even if it 
merely sat atop the bracket in an L-shaped configuration with one of the handle’s two 
protruding ears removed. But the Court finds these statements fail to define the scope of 

the claim.                                                                
    As an initial matter, patent examiners apply very broad standards of construction, 
whereas district courts are required to arrive at the “proper construction; that is, the court 
construes the patent claims in a manner that most naturally aligns with the patent’s 
description of the invention” in light of “the specification, prosecution history, prior art, 
and other claims.” Geospan Corp. v. Pctometry Int’l Corp., No. 08-cv-816 (ADM/JSM), 
2012 WL 5942005
, at *5 (D. Minn. Nov. 28, 2012) (internal quotations omitted). The 

examiner’s discussion of the cavity concept in the September 16, 2019 Office Action 
applied  an  extraordinarily  broad  interpretation  of  what  constitutes  a  cavity.  That 
interpretation  ignores  and  conflicts  with  language  that  the  parties  agreed  should  be 
included in the proper construction of the cavity limitation—“not passing all the way 
through.”                                                                 

    There are several other problems with the argument Little Giant makes in reliance 
on Tidyman. First, removing one of the ears from the Tidyman handle eliminates the 
possibility that one could actually conceive of a hollowed-out space within the mass of a 
handle  at  all.  Second,  the  examiner’s  discussion  of  the  Tidyman  structure  does  not 
indicate any appreciation for whether the space between the Tidyman ears passes all the 

way through, which is a feature Little Giant concedes is claimed by the ’416 patent. 
Third, Little Giant never responded to this aspect of the examiner’s rejection and the 
examiner allowed the claims without any amendment of the cavity language. It was not 
central to the ultimate conclusion or the dialog between the inventor and examiner. As a 
result, the public looking at this file history would have no way of knowing the inventor’s 

own position on whether the cavity of Claim 1 is broader or narrower than the examiner’s 
assessment of Tidyman. Fourth, the examiner’s assessment of Tidyman as possessing the 
claimed cavity does not consider the greater context of the claim in which more than a 
majority of the bracket is “disposed within” the open space. In either configuration of the 
Tidyman handle (with both ears or with one ear removed) the bracket is not significantly 
surrounded or enclosed by the sides and the rails such that the bracket is placed inside of 
the  open  space  inside  the  handle.  And  finally,  the  examiner’s  interpretation  of  the 

Tidyman handle as possessing a cavity even with one ear removed conflicts with the 
prosecution history in which Little Giant surrendered claim scope for a first component 
that merely hides or conceals a substantial amount of the first bracket when in the first 
rotational position.                                                      
    For all the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that Little Giant’s efforts to obtain a 

new construction of the cavity term are unsupported, whether they are characterized as 
seeking reconsideration, clarification, a new construction, or given some other label. The 
Court rejects Little Giant’s proposed construction that the cavity is “a hollowed-out space 
in a mass that doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to allow more than a 
majority of the bracket to be placed inside even if the space passes all the way through in 

some directions.”                                                         
    Instead,  the  Court’s  original  construction—“more  than  a  majority  of  the  first 
bracket is placed inside of a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined 
by the first component”—stands.                                           
III.  Tricam’s Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony                         

    One additional detour is required before addressing the issue of infringement of 
the cavity limitation. Tricam argues that the Court should exclude the testimony of Little 
Giant’s expert, Fred Smith, concerning infringement of the cavity limitation. Tricam does 
not argue that Mr. Smith is unqualified to offer such an opinion. Instead, it argues that the 
Court should exclude Mr. Smith’s infringement opinions because he failed to apply the 
Court’s construction of that term.11 The Court agrees.                    
    “The admissibility of expert testimony is an issue of law for the district court to 

decide and is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and Daubert v. Merrell Dow 
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
509 U.S. 579
 (1993).” CellTrust Corp. v. ionLake, LLC, 
625 F. Supp. 3d 810
, 851 (D. Minn. 2022). The party seeking to introduce expert testimony has 
the burden to show it is admissible by a preponderance of the evidence, and district courts 
have considerable discretion in ruling on issues of admissibility. 
Id. at 852
. 

    “Expert  testimony  that  conflicts  with  a  district  court’s  claim  construction  is 
inadmissible.”  Niazi  Licensing  Corp.  v.  St.  Jude  Med.  S.C.,  Inc.,  No.  17-cv-5096 
(WMW/BRT), 
2020 WL 5512507
, at *6 (D. Minn. Sept. 14, 2020) (citing Finjan, Inc., 
626 F.3d at 1207
).  A  party  may  not  use  expert  testimony  to  “resurrect  a  claim 
construction that the district court already rejected.” Finjan, 
626 F.3d at 1207
. District 

courts hearing patent-infringement suits may exclude expert testimony when it is “based 
on a claim construction that is materially different from the construction adopted by the 
parties and the court.” Treehouse Avatar LLC v. Valve Corp., 
54 F.4th 709, 715
 (Fed. Cir. 
2022) (affirming district court’s decision to exclude portions of patentee’s expert’s report 

    11 Tricam also argues that the Court should exclude several other aspects of Mr. Smith’s 
testimony. For example, it argues that Smith’s opinion that the ’416 patent is not anticipated by 
Krause should be excluded because it contradicts concessions that Little Giant made in response 
to Tricam’s invalidity contentions. Tricam also argues that the Court should exclude Smith’s 
opinions concerning the infringement of the “first component” limitation because Smith (1) fails 
to apply the Court’s claim construction, (2) substitutes a new theory of the “way” the term 
performs its function in applying the function-way-result test, and (3) provides only a conclusory 
analysis of the doctrine of equivalents. Because the Court decides this case on narrower grounds, 
it does not reach these issues and denies Tricam’s motion without prejudice in regard to these 
arguments.                                                                
where the expert applied the plain and ordinary meaning of a claim limitation and not the 
construction that the parties had agreed upon and the court had adopted). 
    Based on the Court’s review of Smith’s initial and rebuttal reports, it is apparent 

that he reviewed and seriously considered the Claim Construction Order, including the 
construction the Court gave to the cavity limitation. However, in doing so, the Court 
finds that Smith engaged in further construction of the Court’s construction, based his 
opinions  about  infringement  on  an  understanding  of  the  cavity  limitation  that  is 
materially  different  from  the  Court’s  construction,  and  ultimately  seeks  to  revive  a 

construction of the limitation that the Court already rejected.           
    Smith reached the conclusion that the space between the wings on either side of 
the Tricam knob constitutes the cavity claimed in the ’416 patent because, even though 
that space passes all the way through in at least one direction—the space indisputably 
passes all the way through parallel to the rails when the handle is in the first, i.e. locked, 

position—it “does not go all the way through in every other direction, literally satisfying 
the  Court’s  claim  construction.”  Smith  Reply  ¶ 29  (underlining  in  original).  But  as 
explored above, that is not the construction that the Court adopted. Smith essentially 
reconstrues the cavity limitation to mean any hollowed-out space that does not pass 
through  in every  direction.  See  EZ Dock,  Inc. v. Schafer Sys., Inc., No. 98-cv-2364 

(RHK/AJB), 
2003 WL 1610781
, at *12 (D. Minn. Mar. 8, 2003) (“[P]arties are not 
entitled to ‘construe’ the Court’s claim construction.”).                 
    Smith’s infringement analysis also depends on an understanding of the cavity 
limitation that is materially different from the Court’s construction because it would 
encompass hollowed-out spaces, like a tunnel, that do pass all the way through. His 
interpretation is that a hollowed-out space defined by the first component does not pass 
all the way through even if a person could draw an arrow through the open space of the 

first component in any direction. Smith Report at 18 (“Tricam’s basis for disputing the 
presence  of this element is  Tricam’s belief that the phrase ‘not passing all the way 
through’ necessarily means it is bounded on all sides but one and excludes spaces that are 
‘not bounded on the ends.’”). His reports reference drawings in which he depicts arrows 
passing all the way through opening on the underside of the lever-style handle depicted in 

the ’416 patent’s illustrations, but his drawings disregard the presence of the rails. 
Id.
 at 
18–19. Smith also based his infringement analysis and understanding of what is and is 
not a cavity on a prolonged discussion on the references to Tidyman in the file history, 
going so far as to suggest that the “examiner’s view” of a cavity was the basis for the 
Court’s construction.12 
Id.
 at 20–22.                                     

    This  analysis  contradicts  the  Court’s  construction  because  Smith  essentially 
determined that “not passing all the way through” means that a hollowed-out space in a 
handle would literally have the claimed cavity even if it passed all the way through two 
unbounded ends. This would mean that a tunnel, which the Court expressly distinguished 


    12 The Court has found in this Order that the Tidyman reference in the file history does 
not inform the scope of the claimed cavity. It is entirely incorrect to say that the examiner’s view 
of whether Tidyman has a cavity formed the basis for the Court’s construction of the cavity 
limitation because, as noted, Little Giant did not rely on this portion of the file history in its 
claim-construction briefing. The Claim Construction Order noted that both parties had agreed the 
cavity limitation should be construed to include the phrase “not passing all the way through,” and 
it is true that language was drawn from statements made in the Notice of Allowance. But the 
Notice of Allowance did not, in any way, refer to Tidyman.                
from a cavity in its Claim Construction Order, would fall within the scope of the claim. It 
also runs afoul of the Court’s further discussion of the cavity limitation in this Order, 
where the Court has even more explicitly stated that the claimed cavity does not include 

hollowed-out spaces that are unbounded on both ends. In addition, Mr. Smith’s analysis 
differs  from  the  Court’s  assessment  that  the  “disposed  within”  language  invokes  a 
structure having an open space that at least partially surrounds or encloses the bracket 
that is placed inside it. His taco shell example, Smith Report at 18, does not account for 
that reality. Consequently, allowing Mr. Smith to testify concerning  his infringement 

opinions would permit him to testify to an understanding of the cavity limitation that is at 
odds with the Court’s own construction. Treehouse Avatar, 
54 F.4th at 715
 (affirming 
district court’s decision to strike portions of an expert report based on a “on a claim 
construction that is materially different from the construction adopted by the . . . court” 
and  citing  cases);  CellTrust  Corp.,  625  F.  Supp.  at  855  (excluding  expert’s 

noninfringement opinions because they were “contrary to the Court’s claim construction” 
and, therefore, were not relevant).                                       
    For  these  reasons,  the  Court  excludes  Mr. Smith’s  testimony  to  the  extent  he 
opines that the Speed Locks literally contain the cavity limitation because he failed to 
apply the Court’s construction.                                           

IV.  Infringement of the Cavity Limitation                                
    A. Literal Infringement                                              
    Both parties seek summary judgment on the issue of literal infringement of the 
cavity limitation. In assessing literal infringement, the “properly construed claims are 
compared to the allegedly infringing device” and the Court asks whether, taking the 
evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there is sufficient evidence 
to allow a reasonable jury to find in that party’s favor. Having viewed the evidence 

through this lens, and in light of its decision not to adopt Little Giant’s latest proposed 
claim construction, the Court finds that no reasonable jury could find the Speed Locks on 
the Accused Ladders literally infringe the cavity limitation.             
    Tricam admits that there are five hollowed-out spaces on the underside of the 
Speed  Lock  handles.13  Among  these  is  the  deepest  central,  cylindrical  hollow  that 

receives the boss of the ramp-and-boss structure. In addition, there are  four smaller 
hollows, which Mr. Ver Halen explained were removed for manufacturing purposes. It is 
undisputed that these five hollowed-out spaces in the Tricam handle do not pass all the 
way through. It is also undisputed that no portion of the Tricam bracket sits within the 
four smaller hollows. Tricam admits that approximately 20% of the volume of the ramp-

and-boss structure—essentially all of the boss itself—is placed inside of the central, 
cylindrical hollow. Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶¶ 78, 93. But no reasonable jury could find that 
20% is “more than a majority of the first bracket.” Absent some other hollowed-out space 
in the Tricam handle that does not pass all the way through yet does have substantially 
more of the bracket placed inside of it, the evidence does not show that the Accused 

Ladders have the cavity limitation.                                       


    13 Tricam concedes that each of these hollowed-out spaces is a cavity. Def.’s Summ. J. 
Br. at 14.                                                                
    Of course, Little Giant argues that the cavity limitation is satisfied by the full 
space between the two wings of the Tricam handle, not just by the five smaller cavities 
acknowledged  by  Tricam.  It  asserts  that  the  evidence  shows  a  hollowed-out  space 

between those wings. Further, Little Giant notes that the portion of the ramp-and-boss 
structure that sits between the wings of the Tricam handle, when combined with the boss 
that inserts into the handle’s central, cylindrical hollow, constitutes more than a majority 
of the first bracket placed inside of a hollowed-out space. Finally, Little Giant argues that 
the hollowed-out space does not pass all the way through because, in at least some 

directions, the space between the wings does not pass all the way through, though it does 
pass all the way through in others.                                       
    In opposing Tricam’s motion for summary judgment (and in support of its own) 
Little  Giant  relies  on  the  opinions  of  Smith.  Smith  used  3D  scans  of  the  Accused 
Ladders’ locking mechanisms to determine that, in terms of both the percentages of 

surface area and volume of the Tricam bracket, more than 50% of the ramp-and-boss is 
inside the central recess that receives the boss and the open space between the wings. 
Smith Report at 17–18 & Ex. 5. Although Tricam disagrees that the space between the 
wings constitutes a cavity within the meaning of the ’416 patent, it does not dispute 
Smith’s assessment of the amount of the bracket that is within spaces Little Giant defines 

as cavities. Indeed, Little Giant points to testimony in Ver Halen’s deposition in which he 
acknowledges that portions of the ramp are inside the space between the wings. Ver 
Halen Dep. 32–33 (Doc. 180-3); see id. at 34–35 (acknowledging that Ver Halen did not 
perform contradictory measurements). So, the question of infringement boils down to 
whether  that  space  between  the  wings  of  Tricam’s  Speed  Lock  handle  is  properly 
considered a cavity within the meaning of the Court’s construction.       
    Smith reaches the conclusion that the space between the wings is a cavity because, 

even though it passes all the way through in at least one direction (parallel to the rails 
when the handle is in the first, i.e. locked, position) it “does not go all the way through in 
every other direction, literally satisfying the Court’s claim construction.” Smith Reply 
¶ 29 (underlining in original). But the Court has already found that Smith fails to properly 
apply its construction, and the Court has rejected Little Giant’s request to revise—either 

expressly or implicitly—that construction.                                
    Aside from Smith’s disregarded opinion about the space between the wings of the 
Tricam handle constituting a cavity, Little Giant identifies no other evidence that could 
allow  a  reasonable  jury  to  conclude  that  the  Tricam  handle  literally  practices  the 
following claim limitation: “when the first component is in the first rotational position, 

more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of a hollowed out space (not 
passing all the way through) defined by the first component.” Therefore, with respect to 
literal infringement of the cavity limitation, Little Giant’s motion for summary judgment 
is denied and Tricam’s motion for summary judgment is granted.            
    B. Doctrine of Equivalents                                           

    Both parties also seek summary judgment on the issue of infringement of the 
cavity limitation under the doctrine of equivalents. According to Little Giant, even if the 
Court’s  construction  excludes  spaces  that  are  unbounded  on  both  ends,  there  is  no 
genuine dispute of material fact that the space between the wings is essentially the same 
as the claimed cavity. Little Giant asserts that the wing space in the Speed Lock handle 
“performs the same function as the claimed cavity by encompassing more than a majority 
of the bracket when in the first rotational position, and does this in substantially the same 

way to achieve substantially the same result.” Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 9–10. 
    Tricam  argues  that  Little  Giant  is  prohibited  from  relying  on  the  doctrine  of 
equivalents for the cavity limitation due to prosecution history estoppel. According to 
Tricam, because Little Giant amended the cavity limitation in response to the examiner’s 
rejection based on the Grebinoski prior art, Little Giant surrendered claim scope that 

cannot now be recaptured through application of the doctrine of equivalents. Tricam 
argues that Little Giant has failed to overcome the presumption that estoppel applies 
under Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co. Ltd., 
535 U.S. 722, 740
 
(2002) (Festo I) and Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co. Ltd., 
344 F.3d 1359, 1367
 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (Festo II).                              

         1.  Estoppel and the Festo Presumption                          
    As discussed above, the doctrine of equivalents allows a patentee to “lay claim to 
‘those insubstantial alterations that were not captured in drafting the original patent claim 
but which could be created through trivial changes.’” Conoco, Inc. v. Energy & Env’t 
Int’l, L.C., 
460 F.3d 1349, 1363
 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (quoting Festo I, 536 U.S. at 733). 

Under  the  rule  of  prosecution  history  estoppel,  however,  a  patentee  cannot  use  the 
doctrine of equivalents “‘to recapture subject matter surrendered from the literal scope of 
a claim during prosecution.’” Pharma Tech Sols., Inc. v. LifeScan, Inc., 
942 F.3d 1372, 1380
 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Open E Cry, LLC, 
778 F.3d 1309, 1322
 (Fed. Cir. 2013)). “Prosecution history estoppel can  occur  in two ways: 
‘either (1) by making a narrowing amendment to the claim (‘amendment-based estoppel’) 
or (2) by surrendering claim scope through argument to the patent examiner (‘argument-

based estoppel’).’” 
Id.
 (quoting Conoco, 
460 F.3d at 1363
). This case implicates the first 
scenario, that of amendment-based estoppel.                               
    When  dealing  with  amendment-based  estoppel,  courts  may  presume  that  the 
“‘patentee’s decision to narrow . . . through amendment [acts as] a general disclaimer of 
the territory between the original claim and the amended claim.’” 
Id.
 (quoting Festo I, 

535 U.S. at 740
).14 The presumption is rebuttable, however, if the patentee shows that the 
amendment fits within one of three exceptions. Pharma Tech, 
942 F.3d at 1380
. These 
exceptions require the patentee to show                                   
         (1)  the  equivalent  was  “unforeseeable  at  the  time  of  the 
         application”;  (2)  “the  rationale  underlying  the  amendment 
         may bear no more than a tangential relation to the equivalent   
         in  question”;  or  (3)  “there  may  be  some  other  reason   
         suggesting that the patentee could not reasonably be expected   
         to have de-scribed the insubstantial substitute in question.”   




    14 No such presumption arises when the patentee narrows claims through argument, and 
argument-based estoppel will prevent a patentee’s reliance on the doctrine of equivalents only 
where “‘the prosecution history . . . evince[s] a clear and unmistakable surrender of subject 
matter.’” Conoco, 
460 F.3d at 1364
 (quoiting Deering Precision Instruments, LLC v. Vector 
Distrib. Sys., Inc., 
347 F.3d 1314
, 1326 (Fed. Cir. 2003)). This case does not implicate argument-
based estoppel.                                                           
Id. (quoting Festo I, 535 U.S. at 740–41). The focus in this case is on the second of these 
exceptions.15                                                             
    For a patentee to rely on the second exception, the patentee must show that “the 

reason  for the narrowing amendment was peripheral,  or not directly relevant,  to the 
alleged equivalent.” Festo II, 
344 F.3d at 1369
. “[A]n amendment made to avoid prior art 
that contains the equivalent in question is not tangential; it is central to allowance of the 
claim.”  
Id.
  Courts  asking  whether  the  amendment  is  “tangential”  to  the  particular 
equivalent at issue “focus on the patentee’s objectively apparent reason for the narrowing 

amendment” and “that reason should be discernible from the prosecution history record” 
to fulfill the purpose of notifying the public of the scope of the claimed invention. 
Id.
 at 
1369–70.  The  court  should  reach  this  conclusion  on  the  “prosecution  history  record 
without the introduction of additional evidence, except when necessary, testimony from 
those skilled in the art as to the interpretation of that record.” 
Id. at 1370
. “The tangential 

relation exception is ‘very narrow.’” Integrated Tech. Corp. v. Rudolph Techs., Inc., 
734 F.3d 1352, 1358
 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (quoting Cross Med. Prods., Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor 
Danek, Inc., 
480 F.3d 1335, 1342
 (Fed. Cir. 2007)).                       

    15 Under the first exception, amendment-based estoppel will not bar application of 
the doctrine of equivalents if the patentee can show that the particular equivalent alleged 
to infringe “would have been unforeseeable to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time 
of the amendment.” Festo II, 
344 F.3d at 1369
. This showing depends on the underlying 
facts, including expert testimony or other extrinsic evidence. 
Id.
 The third exception is 
“narrow,” and “may be satisfied when there was some reason, such as the shortcomings 
of language, why the patentee was prevented from describing the alleged equivalent 
when it narrowed the claim.” 
Id.
 In determining whether the patentee has shown that this 
exception applies, the focus “should also be limited to the prosecution history record.” 
Id.
 
Little Giant does not invoke either of these exceptions, focusing solely on whether the 
amendment is tangential to the alleged equivalent at issue here.          
         2.  Analysis                                                    
    Little  Giant  seems  to  raise  two  distinct  challenges  to  the  application  of 
amendment-based estoppel here. First, it argues that the amendments at issue did not 

surrender the territory into which the equivalent at issue falls at all. Second, Little Giant 
invokes the second exception to amendment-based estoppel, claiming that the portions of 
the subject matter surrendered here were tangential to the equivalent implicated by the 
Speed Lock.16 The Court disagrees on both counts and finds that prosecution-history 
estoppel applies.                                                         

           (a) The Grebinoski Amendments                                 
    When Little Giant originally submitted its claims to the PTO, on October 6, 2017, 
the  relevant  language  claimed:  “when  the  first  component  is  in  the  first  rotational 
position, the engagement pin extends through a pair of aligned openings, including a first 
opening in the first rail and a second opening formed in the third rail. . . .” Armstrong 

Decl., Ex. 7, 10/6/17 Application at 16. The examiner rejected this aspect of Claim 1 
because Grebinoski already teaches an engagement extending through aligned openings 
in the rails when the first component of the locking mechanism is in the first rotational 

    16 Whether Little Giant, in fact, raises these as two separate arguments is not entirely 
clear from its briefing. Little Giant argues that “[i]t is clear from the prosecution history that the 
amendment adding ‘cavity’ to the claims did not surrender territory encompassing the Speed 
Lock.” Pl.’s SJ Opp’n at 5; 
id.
 at 5–7. Then, without raising any real distinction between that 
argument  and  the  next,  Little  Giant  asserts  that  “[t]he  ‘tangential  rebuttal  to  the  Festo 
presumption of estoppel applies in exactly these circumstances.” Id. at 8. In other words, Little 
Giant’s discussion of this issue collapses the question of the scope of claim territory surrendered 
with the question of whether the purpose of the amendment was tangential to the equivalent at 
issue. But in candor, much of the relevant caselaw does the same thing. And in this case, the 
analysis of whether the amendment surrendered the equivalent is very similar to the question of 
whether the rationale behind that amendment is tangential to the equivalent. 
position. Id., Ex. 8, 12/21/17 Office Action. On June 20, 2018, Little Giant amended the 
claim language to read: “when the first component is in the first rotational position, a 
substantial portion of the first bracket is concealed between the first rail and the first 

component and the first engagement pin extends through a pair of aligned openings.” Id., 
Ex. 9, 6/20/18 Response at 2.                                             
    The examiner again rejected the claim as anticipated by Grebinoski. The examiner 
explained that the newly added phrase “substantial portion of the first bracket” could be 
interpreted  in  numerous  ways,  including:  that  the  “substantial  portion”  could  be 

considered “important”; it could be any portion “which has substance”; or it could be “a 
considerable  amount.”  Id.,  Ex. 10,  9/10/18  Office  Action  at  12.  The  examiner  also 
suggested that other meanings not specifically articulated were contemplated. Id. The 
examiner further stated:                                                  
              Note that the claims as currently recited do not require   
         an entirety of the first bracket to be substantially concealed  
         when the first component is in the first rotational position    
         which seems to be what the applicant may be intending to        
         encompass in scope, but does not provide the claim with the     
         language to encompass the scope to require it [sic] be limited  
         so  that  an  entirety  of  the  first  bracket  is  substantially 
         concealed when the first component is in the first rotational   
         position.                                                       

Id. at 13.                                                                
    On  March  8,  2019,  Little  Giant  amended  the  claim  language  again,  reciting: 
“when the first component is in the first rotational position a substantial portion amount 
of the first bracket is concealed between the first rail and the fir component disposed 
within a cavity defined by the first component and the first engagement pin extends 
through a pair of aligned openings. . . .” Id., Ex. 11, 3/8/19 Response at 2 (underlining 
and strikethroughs in original). Little Giant stated that it disagreed with the examiner’s 
rejection. However, it further described the amendment of the claim language: 

         In an effort to further prosecution, [Little Giant] has amended 
         claim 1 to recite that when the first component is in the first 
         rotational position, a substantial amount of the first bracket is 
         disposed within a cavity defined by the first component. Such   
         subject matter is clearly disclosed by the as-filed application 
         (see, e.g., FIGS. 12-14) and Grebinoski does not disclose any   
         portion of the bracket ever being within a cavity of the lever. 

Id. at 9.                                                                 
           (b) Scope of the Territory Surrendered                        
    Little Giant argues that this prosecution history shows that it never surrendered 
any claim scope where the bracket is inside the handle of the first component. Little Giant 
contends  that  “the  scope  of  the  original  ‘concealed  between’  version  of  the  claim 
encompassed designs that could conceal part of the bracket both inside and outside the 
handle  space.”  Pl.’s  SJ  Opp’n  at  7.  Because  Grebinoski  only  dealt  with  concealed 
portions of the bracket falling outside the handle, Little Giant argues that its narrowing 
amendment, made to avoid Grebinoski, did not surrender any designs where concealed 
portions of the bracket fall inside the handle. Id. Instead, Little Giant essentially argues 
that it gave up only the scope necessary to avoid the specific category of designs that 
would be encompassed by Grebinoski.                                       
    The Court disagrees. Contrary to Little Giant’s position, it has not shown that the 
only territory it surrendered was a design where the bracket is concealed outside handle 
space. The territory between designs where the bracket is concealed between the handle 
and the rails and where it is disposed within a cavity of the handle is broad, and it 
includes not only designs where that concealment occurs outside any handle space, but 
also designs where the bracket is inside handle space that doesn’t constitute a cavity.  

    Little Giant’s original claim  was expansive, and included  all designs where a 
substantial portion of the bracket was concealed between the first component and the rail. 
The patent examiner rejected that claim because Grebinoski already taught a bracket that 
was  concealed  between  the  rail  and  the  first  component.  In  response,  Little  Giant 
amended  its  claim  using  narrower  language  and  abandoning  designs  where  the  first 

component is merely concealed between the handle and the rails. But in doing so, Little 
Giant affirmatively chose to claim only those designs where a majority of the bracket was 
placed inside of a cavity defined by the first component. It introduced not only the 
placement inside of space in the handle, but through its reference to the first bracket 
being “disposed within a cavity,” it limited its claim to designs where the bracket was at 

least  partially  encapsulated  or  surrounded.  It  did  not,  as  it  now  argues,  hang  on  to 
equivalents where the bracket’s concealment occurs inside open handle space that passes 
all the way through.17 In other words, Little Giant could have offered claim language that 
fell between the broad concealment it started with and what it ultimately chose, but 
instead it amended its claim language to encompass a far narrower scope than it now 

attempts to assert through the doctrine of equivalents. See Norian Corp. v. Stryker Corp., 
432 F.3d 1356
,  1361–62  (Fed.  Cir.  2005)  (“[I]t  frequently  happens  that  patentees 
surrender more through amendment than may have been absolutely necessary to avoid 
particular prior art. In such cases, we have held the patentees to the scope of what they 
ultimately  claim,  and  we  have  not  allowed  them  to  assert  that  claims  should  be 

interpreted as if they had surrendered only what they had to.”); see also Ely Lilly & Co. v. 
Hospira, Inc., 
933 F.3d 1320, 1332
 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (“Amendments are not construed to 
cede only that which is necessary to overcome the prior art.”). Having chosen to narrow 
its claims by use of this language, Little Giant cannot recapture claim scope through the 
doctrine of equivalents where the majority of the bracket is concealed between the handle 

    17 In light of this broader surrender of claim scope, the Court is unpersuaded by Little 
Giant’s reliance on Primos, Inc. v. Hunter’s Specialties, Inc., 
451 F.3d 841
 (Fed. Cir. 2006). In 
Primos the invention at issue was an animal call that employed a plate “differentially spaced” 
above a membrane, which emitted an animal sound when a hunter blew into the device. 
Id.
 at 
843–44. During prosecution, the patentee added the “differentially spaced” limitation to avoid 
prior art that “consisted of a shelf-like structure positioned on top of the membrane without any 
spacing.” 
Id. at 849
. The defendant’s accused device used a dome structure that the patentee 
argued infringed the patent under the doctrine of equivalents because the dome was spaced above 
the membrane.  
Id.
 The  Primos  court held  that the narrowing amendment surrendered only 
“plates that are not differentially spaced above the membrane” and the ceded territory was only 
tangentially related “to the contested element in the accused device.” 
Id.
 Thus, in Primos, the 
patentee only surrendered the plates that were attached to the membrane, so even though its 
amendment narrowed its original claims, it retained claims for plates differentially spaced above 
the membrane—though the dome in the accused device was not a plate, it was an equivalent that 
was tangential to the reason for the amendment. In contrast, because Little Giant gave up both 
more and more relevant territory in its March 2019 amendment, allowing Little Giant to assert 
that Tricam’s handles infringe through the doctrine of equivalents would permit it to regain claim 
scope that was surrendered to avoid prior art.                            
and the rail simply because that concealment occurs by placing substantial portions of the 
bracket inside a space that is not a cavity.                              
           (c) Tangential-Relation Exception                             

    Little Giant invokes an exception to the Festo presumption, arguing that even if 
the equivalent at issue falls within the surrendered territory, it was so tangential to the 
amendment that estoppel doesn’t apply. Again the Court disagrees. Here, the difference 
between concealment (or something being hidden between the handle and the rail) and 
being disposed within a cavity, was at the heart of the amendments to avoid Grebinoski. 

And the cases relied on by Little Giant are readily distinguishable on this point. For 
instance, in Insituform Technologies, Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc., the patentee amended 
its claims to avoid a prior-art reference that taught a single vacuum source placed far 
away from a resin source. 
385 F.3d 1360, 1368
 (Fed. Cir. 2004). The amended claim 
language applied to a single vacuum source near the resin source. The alleged equivalent 

used multiple vacuum sources, and the  Federal Circuit found that tangential-relation 
exception applied because the purpose for the amendment was to avoid the prior art 
regarding placement of the vacuum source in relation to the resin source, not to specify 
how many vacuum sources would be employed. 
Id.
 at 1368–70. Here the situation is 
otherwise. The reason for the March 8, 2019 amendment—avoiding a prior art locking 

mechanism that conceals the bracket between the handle and the rail—directly relates to 
the  accused  equivalent,  Tricam’s  locking  mechanism  that  also  conceals  the  bracket 
between the handle and the rail.18                                        
    For these reasons, the Court finds that Little Giant may not rely on the doctrine of 

equivalents  to  assert  infringement  of  the  cavity  limitation  and  Tricam  is  entitled  to 
summary judgment on this issue.                                           
V.   The Remaining Summary Judgment Issues                                
    In Little Giant’s motion, it seeks a determination that it is entitled to summary 
judgment on the issues of infringement and on Tricam’s invalidity defenses. Little Giant 

argues that based on the undisputed evidence, the Accused Ladders satisfy the “bracket,” 
“first component,” “cavity,” and “retaining mechanism” limitations in the ’416 patent as 
a matter of law. Pl.’s Infringement Mem., passim. Little Giant also argues that Tricam’s 
invalidity defenses fail as a matter of law because the ’416 patent is not anticipated by 
any prior art reference, the patent’s claims are not obvious in light of prior art, and 

Tricam cannot show by clear and convincing evidence that the patent’s claims are invalid 
for lack of a written description, indefiniteness, or lack of enablement. Pl.’s Mem. in 
Supp. of Summ. J. on Invalidity (Doc. 178). In addition to seeking summary judgment on 
the  issue  of  non-infringement  of  the  cavity  limitation,  Tricam  also  argues  that  it  is 


    18 The Court is also not persuaded by Little Giant’s reliance on Ajinomoto Co. v. 
International Trade Commission, 
932 F.3d 1342, 1355
 (Fed. Cir. 2019). There the court 
found the tangential-relation exception applied because the rationale for the patentee’s 
amendment, which narrowed claimed DNA sequences to avoid a particular prior art 
protein, was unrelated to the asserted equivalent which selected from codon-randomized 
sequences that corresponded to a different protein. 
Id.
 Beyond a broad statement of the 
tangential-relation  exception  rule,  Little  Giant  does  not  explain  how  the  decision  in 
Ajinomoto informs the analysis in this case.                              
entitled to summary judgment because the Accused Products do not infringe the “first 
component” limitation and because the ’416 patent is invalid as anticipated by prior art. 
Def.’s SJ Mem. at 18–27.                                                  

    Because the Court has found that no reasonable jury could conclude that Tricam’s 
Accused Ladders infringe the cavity limitation of the ’416 patent, it is unnecessary for the 
Court to reach these remaining issues. Accordingly, to the extent they raise issues beyond 
the infringement of the cavity limitation, the Court denies the parties’ cross-motions for 
summary judgment as moot and declines to address their merits.            

VI.  Order                                                                
    For the reasons discussed above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:          
    1.  Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 164) is DENIED. The Court 
      denies Plaintiff’s motion on the merits to the extent Plaintiff argues that it is 
      entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the issues of whether the Accused 
      Ladders infringe the cavity limitation in the ’416 patent literally or under the 
      doctrine of equivalents. In all other respects, the Court finds Plaintiff’s motion 
      is moot.                                                           

    2.  Defendant’s  Motion  for  Summary  Judgment  (Doc. 167)  is  GRANTED 
      because no reasonable jury could conclude that the Accused Ladders literally 
      infringe the cavity limitation in the ’416 patent and amendment-based estoppel 
      precludes  Plaintiff  from  relying  on  the  doctrine  of  equivalents  to  prove 
      infringement  of  this  limitation.  In  all  other  respects,  the  Court  finds 
      Defendant’s motion is moot.                                        

    3.  Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony of Fred Smith (Doc. 171) is 
      GRANTED IN PART. The Court excludes Mr. Smith’s opinions concerning 
      infringement of the cavity limitation because Mr. Smith failed to apply the 
      Court’s claim construction. In all other respects, the Court finds Defendant’s 
      motion is moot.                                                    

    4.  This action is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.                         

    Let Judgment be entered accordingly.                                 
Date: March 28, 2024             s/Katherine Menendez                     
                                Katherine Menendez                       
                                United States District Judge             

Trial Court Opinion

                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                             
                    DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC, a Utah   No. 20-cv-2497 (KMM/ECW)       
Company,                                                                  

    Plaintiff,                                                           

v.                                           ORDER                        

Tricam Industries, Inc., a Minnesota                                      
corporation,                                                              

    Defendant.                                                           


    Plaintiff  Little  Giant  Ladder  Systems,  LLC  designs  and  builds  multi-position 
ladders and holds several patents related to ladders and their components. Among them is 
United States Patent No. 10,767,416 (“the ’416 patent”), which generally relates to a 
multi-position ladder system with an innovative locking mechanism. In this action, Little 
Giant alleges that certain multi-position ladders sold by Defendant Tricam Industries, Inc. 
infringe  the  ’416 patent. This matter  is now before  the  Court on the  parties’  cross-
motions for summary judgment and Tricam’s motion to exclude certain expert witness 
evidence offered by Little Giant. Pl.’s Summ. J. Mot. (Doc. 164); Def.’s Summ. J. Mot. 
(Doc. 167); Def.’s Mot. to Exclude (Doc. 171). Although the Court has already issued a 
Claim  Construction  Order,  the  plaintiff  has  asked  the  Court  to  engage  in  further 
construction  of  the  “cavity”  limitation  in  the  ’416  patent.  The  Court  addresses  the 
ongoing  battle  over  construction  of  that  term  prior  to  considering  the  parties’ 
infringement  positions.  Ultimately  the  Court  concludes  that  Tricam  is  entitled  to 
summary judgment because the accused products do not literally infringe the “cavity” 
limitation and prosecution history estoppel bars Little Giant from relying on the doctrine 
of equivalents.                                                           

                         BACKGROUND                                      
I.   Multi-Position Ladders and Locking Mechanisms                        
    Little Giant and Tricam compete in the market for multi-position ladders. Multi-
position ladders generally include two pairs of rails connected by rungs. The pairs of rails 
are further connected by a pair of adjustable central hinges. Each pair of rails is slidably 

coupled together, with an inner set of rails nesting inside the outer set of rails. The inner 
rails can then slide in relationship to the outer rails, extending the overall length or height 
of the ladder. The inner rails can be fixed in place by locking mechanisms that are 
mounted on the outer rails. The ’416 patent relates to such a ladder system that, among 
other things, claims a novel system for a locking mechanism. Compl. ¶¶ 7, 13 (Doc. 1). 

The focus of this case is on the ’416 patent’s claimed locking mechanism and whether 
Tricam’s ladders infringe Little Giant’s patent.                          
    Prior to the innovation claimed in the ’416 patent, multi-position ladders used 
“lock tabs” or “J-locks,” and Little Giant manufactured and sold ladders using lock tabs 
like those depicted below.                                                
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                             4         i     \   { 
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Compl.   9.  The  lock tabs  used internal  springs  that keep  them pressed  inward  when 
engaged, toward the rails, and the locking mechanism included an engagement pin that 
passes through openings in the inner and outer rails that are aligned to secure the ladder 
in a particular configuration. However, the lock-tab design presented difficulties for the 
end user. They tended to pinch the user’s fingers, could be difficult to use, and required 
significant  effort,  especially  from  smaller  users,  given  that  “actuating  such  locking 
members usually requires lateral displacement of the locking members outward, or away 
from, the side rails of the ladders.” ’416 patent Col. 1:57-2:38 (Doc. 1-1).

     Little  Giant  developed  other  locking  mechanisms  for  its  multi-position  ladders 
over  the  years  that  represent  certain  improvements  over  the  lock  tabs.  These  include 
designs  commercialized  by  Little  Giant  as  its  “Rock  Lock”  and  “Rapid  Lock” 
mechanisms, pictured below. 
                     rel 

                      ! 

                     Rock Locks               Rapid Locks 
Compl. § 10. These designs, “use . . . rotational movement and mechanical engagement to 
pull out and push in the locking pins and to retain the locking pins in each position until a 
new  pivoting  force  is  applied.”  /d.  § 11.  Starting  in  2008,  Little  Giant  filed  patent 
applications, including for its locking mechanisms, that led to the issuance of a family of 
patents that includes the ’416 patent.! 
II.    Tricam’s Accused Ladders and Little Giant’s Claims 
     Tricam  manufactures  and  sells  multi-position  ladders  in  competition  with  Little 
Giant.  Little  Giant  claims  that  Tricam’s  “MPX”  or  “Gorilla  Ladders”  (“Accused 

     '  The  °416 Patent is a “[c]ontinuation of application No.  14/886,566, filed on Oct.  19, 
2015, now Pat. No. 9,784,033, which is a continuation of application No.  13/480,897, filed on 
May 25, 2012, now Pat. No. 9,163,455, which is a continuation of application No.  12/399,815, 
filed on Mar. 6, 2009, now Pat. No. 8,186,481.” ’416 Patent at 1-2.

Ladders”)?  use  locking  mechanisms  that  infringe  the  ’416  patent.  Compl.  417.  An 
example  of  Tricam’s  locking  mechanism,  which  Tricam  commercialized  as  “Speed 
Locks,”> is depicted below. 

                           Lao           ‘ 
                       a.       v\ 

Compl. § 20. Tricam’s Speed Locks attach to the outer rails of their Accused Ladders and 
use a rotating handle that displaces a pin through aligned opening in the inner and outer 
rails. 
      The Speed Locks of Tricam’s ladders have a handle that sits atop a ramp-and-boss 
wedge affixed to the outer rail. When in the locked position, the handle is parallel to the 
rails,  a pin is  extended through openings  in both  sets  of rails,  and the handle  stays in 
place  as  two  wings  sit  on  either  side  of the  wedge.  The  boss  extends  into  a  central, 
circular cavity, where a rivet slot is used to attach the knob to the pin. To remove the 
pin,  unlock the rails,  and allow the ladder to be  extended  or contracted,  the handle is 

      >  The Accused Ladders  include  Tricam’s  ladders with the  following  model numbers: 
GLA-MPX13;  GLMPX-13;  GLMPXA-14;  GLMPX-14W-2;  GLMPX-17;  GLA-MPX17; 
GLMPXA-18; GLMPX-22; GLA-MPX22; GLMPXA-22; GLMPX-22W-2; GLMPX-26; GLA- 
MPX26; GLMPX-26W-2; GLMPXT-15; and GLMPXT-23. 
      3  As  explained  in  Tricam’s  briefing,  it  markets  some  of its  locking  mechanisms  as 
“Gorilla Grip Locks,” but refers to all such locks as “Speed Locks” for purposes of the summary 
judgment motions. 
      * There is no dispute that this central,  circular notch constitutes a “cavity” within the 
meaning of the language of Claim 1 of the’416 patent.

rotated 90 degrees, and opposing notches on each wing then allow the Speed Lock handle 
to remain in place while the user moves the ladder into the desired position. Turning the 
handle 90 degrees back to parallel with the rails disengages the notches from the ramp, 
allows the pin to extend back through the  aligned openings  in the rails,  and locks the 
ladder into the new configuration selected by the user. See Ver Halen Rebuttal 4] 45-51 
(describing  design  and  operation  of the  Tricam  Speed  Lock)  (Doc. 180-6).  A  labeled 
image of the underside of the Speed Lock is depicted below. 

                                              a . 

                      Center Cavity 

Id. {§ 48, 96. 
     Little Giant alleges that the Accused Ladders infringe every claim limitation of the 
°416 patent. See Omnibus Armstrong Decl. (Doc. 173), Ex. 21  (P1.’s Infringement Claim 
Charts);  id., Ex. 22  (Pl.’s  Suppl.  Infringement Claim Charts).  In Claim  1, which is the 
sole independent claim of the °416 patent, Little Giant claims the following: 
           1. A ladder comprising: 
           a first assembly having a  first pair of rails including a  first rail 
             and  a  second rail,  and  a  second pair  of rails  including  a 
             third  rail  and  a  fourth  rail,  the  first  pair  of  rails  being 
             slidably coupled with the second pair rails; and 
           a first locking mechanism comprising: 
             a first bracket coupled with the first rail, 
             a first component rotatable about a defined axis,

           a first engagement pin coupled with the first component,      
             wherein the first locking mechanism is configured so        
             that  the  first  component  is  rotatable  from  a  first  
             rotational position to a second rotational position;        
           wherein, when the first component is in the first rotational  
             position,  a  substantial  amount  of  the  first  bracket  is 
             disposed within a cavity defined by the first component     
             and the first engagement pin extends through a pair of      
             aligned openings including a first opening formed in the    
             first rail and a second opening formed in third rail, and   
           wherein,  when  the  first  component  is  in  the  second    
             rotational  position,  the  first  engagement  pin  is      
             withdrawn from at least one of the first opening and the    
             second opening,                                             
           at least one retaining mechanism configured to maintain       
             the first component in the first rotational position until  
             application  of  a  first  force  is  applied  to  the  first 
             component to displace it towards the second rotational      
             position, and                                               
           wherein  the  at  least  one  retaining  mechanism  is  further 
             configured to maintain the first component in the second    
             rotational position until application of a second force is  
             applied to the first component.                             

’416 patent Col. 10:30–63. The remaining Claims 2 through 5 are dependent claims of 
Claim 1.                                                                  
III.  Claim Construction Order                                            
    The parties’ infringement dispute centers around three limitations5 in Claim 1—
(a) the “first component”; (b) the “cavity”; and (c) the “retaining mechanism.” Following 

    5 Little Giant’s motion for summary judgment on the issue of infringement originally 
argued that the parties disputed whether the Accused Ladders infringed the “bracket” limitation. 
However, Tricam did not meaningfully respond to Little Giant’s arguments in the briefing, and at 
the summary-judgment hearing, Tricam confirmed that it was not disputing that its Accused 
Ladders satisfy the “bracket” limitation. See Pl.’s Mem. in Supp. of Summ. J. of Infringement 
(“Pl.’s Infringement Mem.”) at 1 (Doc. 166); Summ. J. Hr’g Tr. 61 (Doc. 207). Tricam also does 
not dispute that its ladders satisfy the other elements of the ’416 patent aside from the “first 
component,” the “cavity,” and the “retaining mechanism.”                  
receipt of claim-construction briefing and a lengthy hearing, on June 24, 2022 the Court 
issued an Order concerning Claim Construction, which included a construction of each of 
these terms. See Claim Construction Order (Doc. 107). Because this Order focuses on the 

cavity term, a review of the relevant portions of the Claim Construction Order will be 
helpful.6                                                                 
    The cavity limitation appears within a longer phrase in Claim 1 of the ’416 patent: 
“a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity defined by the first 
component.”  Id.  at  11.  Ultimately,  considering  both  the  agreed  upon  constructions 

offered by the parties and those terms that were disputed, the Court found that the proper 
construction of this phrase is: “more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of 
a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined by the first component.” 
Id. at 25–26. The parties agreed that “substantial amount” should be construed to mean 
“more than a majority,” and the Court found this agreed-upon construction was supported 

by the intrinsic record. Id. at 14–15.                                    
    As for the “disposed within” term, Little Giant proposed a construction of the 
broader phrase in which the term is situated. This proposal suggested that the “disposed 
within” term should be construed to mean “hidden or covered by.” However, the Court 
rejected  that  proposal  and  construed  “disposed  within”  to  mean  “placed  inside  of” 


    6 As discussed below, the Court finds that there is no genuine issue of material fact and 
Tricam is entitled to judgment of non-infringement of the cavity limitation as a matter of law. As 
a result, the Court need not address the parties’ arguments in their cross-motions for summary 
judgment  concerning  infringement  of  the  “first  component”  or  the  “retaining  mechanism” 
limitations. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 4, 11, 15, 22; Def.’s Mem. in Supp. of Summ. J. (“Def.’s 
SJ Mem.”) at 9, 18–19 (Doc. 169).                                         
because such a construction was consistent with the term’s plain and ordinary meaning 
and the intrinsic evidence in the specification. Id. at 15. In addition, the Court explained 
that when Little Giant originally applied for the ’416 patent, it claimed a bracket that was 

“concealed” between the rail and the first component, but the examiner rejected Little 
Giant’s  application  as  anticipated  by  U.S.  Patent  Publication  No.  2006/0169539 
(“Grebinoski”). Id. at 15–16 (citing Doc. 73-1 at 7, 10). To overcome the rejection, Little 
Giant amended its claim to cover a bracket that is “disposed within a cavity defined by 
the first component.” Id. at 16. The Court found that under the doctrine of prosecution 

disclaimer, Little Giant could not reclaim, through its proposed construction of “hidden 
or covered by,” scope that it had surrendered during prosecution to secure issuance of the 
patent. Id. at 15–21.                                                     
    The Court therefore construed the term “cavity” to be a “hollowed-out space (not 
passing all the way through).” Id. at 25–26. Little Giant had provided two different 

constructions of the term in its efforts to have the Court construe the entire phrase in 
which the cavity limitation appears: (1) “a hollowed out space (not passing all the way 
through),” and (2) “a hollowed out space (not passing all the way through) . . . so as to 
hide or cover more than a majority of the first bracket.” Id. at 21. The Court rejected the 
second reading because adopting it would result in redundancy and would allow Little 

Giant to use a construction of the cavity term to reintroduce the very same claim scope it 
had surrendered to overcome Grebinoski. Id. at 23–24. With respect to Little Giant’s 
initial proposal, the Court noted that Tricam’s proposed construction also referred to a 
cavity as a “hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through),” and the Court found 
that this apparent agreement between the parties was supported by the plain and ordinary 
meaning  of  cavity  as  well  as  evidence  within  the  specification  itself.  Jd.  at  22-23. 
Specifically, the Court pointed to Figures  13A,  13B, and  15 through  17, each of which 
“features a hollowed-out space defined by the first component, inside of which one finds 
more than a majority of the first bracket.” Jd. These figures are pictured below. 

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     Finally,  the  Court explained the basis  for its  construction  of the  cavity term  as 
follows: 
                 The intrinsic evidence also suggests that the hollowed- 
           out space in the handle does not pass all the way through that 
           handle, and both parties suggest inclusion of language to that 
           effect.  Conversely,  the  notion  that  a  component  includes  a 
           “hollowed-out  space”  does  not  easily  lend  itself  to  an 
           interpretation in which the described cavity passes all the way 
           through first component.  One might more naturally describe 
           such a component as containing an “opening” or a “tunnel,” 
           rather  than  a  “cavity.”  The  specification  and  the  figures 
           referenced above also support that a person of ordinary skill 
           in the art would understand that the claimed cavity “does not 

                                     10 

         pass all the way through” the first component. For example,     
         the lever-style handle depicted in Figure 13A has a hollowed-   
         out space in its mass that does not pass all the way through.   
         Accordingly, the Court finds that a construction consistent     
         with  these  essentially  agreed-upon  meanings  is  strongly   
         supported  by  the  intrinsic  evidence,  and  overall,  Tricam’s 
         proposal represents the better reading of the term “cavity.”    

Id. at 23.                                                                
IV.  Expert Reports                                                       
    In support of their positions, the parties point to evidence submitted by their expert 
witnesses, Fred Smith for Little Giant and Jon Ver Halen for Tricam. Smith provided an 
initial report on October 21, 2022; a rebuttal report on April 7, 2023, and a report in reply 
on April 28, 2023. Smith Report (Doc. 173-18); Smith Rebuttal (Doc. 173-19);7 Smith 
Reply  (Doc. 173-20).  Ver  Halen  provided  an  initial  report  on  October  10,  2022;  a 
supplemental report on October 27, 2022; and a rebuttal report on April 6, 2023. Ver 
Halen Report (Doc. 180-4); Ver Halen Supplement (Doc. 180-5); Ver Halen Rebuttal 
(Doc. 180-6).                                                             
    A. Smith’s Cavity Opinions                                           
    In his initial report Smith states his opinion that Tricam’s Accused Ladders have 
the cavity element. Smith Report 17–19. Smith acknowledges the Court’s construction of 
the cavity limitation and then discusses how that construction, in his view, applies to the 
Accused ladders in a chart. Id. ¶¶ 35–37. He begins by excerpting a picture of the Tricam 
locking mechanism and stating his conclusion that when Tricam’s handle “is in the first 

    7 Smith’s Rebuttal Report addresses issues of invalidity, which the Court has determined 
it need not resolve.                                                      
rotational position, more than a majority of the first bracket . . . is placed inside of a 
hollowed-out  space  (that  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through)  defined  by  the  first 
component. . . .”  Id.  at  17.  Smith  does  not  affirmatively  explain,  at  the  outset,  how 

Tricam’s handle does not pass all the way through; instead, he approaches the concept by 
responding to Tricam’s non-infringement contentions set forth in its responsive claim 
chart.                                                                    
    Smith  states  that  Tricam  believes  that  “the  phrase  ‘not  passing  all  the  way 
through’ necessarily means it is bounded on all sides but one and excludes spaces that are 

‘not bounded on the ends.’” Id. at 18. According to Smith, Tricam’s reading “adds an 
additional limitation to the Court’s construction, such that a cavity is a space that doesn’t 
pass all the way through in all directions.” Id. (emphasis in original). He further opines, 
that “[a] cavity need not be bounded on all sides but one, as Tricam contends, for it to be 
a space that doesn’t pass all the way through such that it is capable of having something 

placed inside of it. One would have no difficulty in determining where to put [the fillings] 
if told to put them inside a taco shell—one would understand to place them inside the 
hollow space defined by the raised sides and bottom of the shell.” Id.    
    In addition, Smith states that adopting Tricam’s interpretation that the claimed 
cavity must be bounded on all sides but one would mean that the preferred embodiment 

in Figures 13 and 14 of the ’416 patent would not contain the cavity limitation. Id. Smith 
excerpts an image (included below) from the ’416 patent to illustrate his interpretation of 
the claimed cavity, suggesting that the line he superimposed on the image passes all the 
way through the hollowed out space in one direction, but does not pass through in others. 
                        Lay 

Td.  In addition,  Smith opines that because the cavity’s function is to house more than a 
majority of the bracket, the entire hollowed-out space, including the portion that is not 
bounded on all sides but one, must be considered part of the cavity; otherwise, the portion 
that is bounded on all sides but one contains less than a majority of the bracket. Jd. at 19. 
     Smith also states that although a  line can be drawn to pass through the open space 
beneath the black handle of Tricam’s locks which sit atop Tricam’s bracket, Tricam and 
its expert do not dispute “that this hollowed out space does not go all the way through in 
every other direction, literally satisfying the Court’s claim construction and allowing the 
bracket to be placed inside of that space.” Smith Reply § 29. He observes that the lever- 
style handle depicted in the *416 patent’s figures forms “wings” similar to those seen in 
Tricam’s locks;  a line can be drawn passing through the space beneath that lever-style 
handle  and  between  its  “wings”;  and  a  majority  of the  bracket  sits  within  the  entire 
hollowed-out space. See id. J 30-34. 
     B.  Smith and the Tidyman Reference 
     In  offering  this  interpretation  of  the  term  cavity,  Smith  further  relies  on  a 
September  16,  2019  office  action  in  which  the  examiner  cited  U.S.  patent  1,303,416 
(“Tidyman”’) in rejecting Little Giant’s claims.  Smith Report at 20. Neither Little Giant 

                                     13 

nor  Smith  referred  to  Tidyman  in  Little  Giant’s  submissions  when  the  parties  sought 
claim construction.  Tidyman is  a patent addressed to a sawhorse with extendable legs, 
which can be locked in place by an L-shaped lever that extends through aligned openings 
in the legs. Id.; Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex.  I (Tidyman) (Doc. 180). 
     In  the  September  16,  2019  office  action,  the  examiner  rejected  Little  Giant’s 
claims as anticipated by Tidyman. In particular, the examiner referenced Figure 3 of the 
Tidyman  specification,  which  depicts  the  locking  mechanism  that  holds  the  claimed 
sawhorse’s legs in place. 
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Tidyman at 1; Miller Decl. July 26, 2023), Ex. M, Office Action (Sept.  16, 2019), at 5. 
In Tidyman,  14 is the longer arm of the lever,  16 is the outer ear on either side of the 
bracket  15,  which is  also  an  apertured  ear.  Tidyman  Col.  2:65—77.  In rejecting  Little 
Giant’s claim for “a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity 
defined by the first component,” the examiner provided the following explanation: 
           the cavity is formed by  16 and  14 such that the a substantial 
           amount of the bracket 15 is with the cavity as can be seen via 
           fig.’s  1-3 — emphasis  is noted on the term  ‘substantial’  and 
           the phrase ‘substantial amount’ as it is being interpreted with 
           the  broadest  reasonable  interpretation  as  claimed  —  further 

                                     14 

         note that even if only 1 ear 16 is part of the first component  
         14,  the  bracket  15  would  still  be  within  a  cavity  formed 
         between the ‘L-shape’ of 14 and 16 as can be seen between       
         fig.’s 1-3 such that the limitation is met whether there are two 
         ears 16 flanking bracket 15 or merely one ear 16.               

Office Action (Sept. 16, 2019) at 4.8                                     
    Smith states that “[t]he cavity of the Tidyman locks is identically the situation 
with the taco shaped Tricam Speed Locks and the examiner understood, as did the Court, 
that the cavity need not be bounded in all directions.” Smith Report at 21. As a result, he 
concludes that “Tricam’s proposed application of the concept of ‘not passing all the way 
through’  is  contrary  to  the  examiner’s  view,  which  was  the  source  of  the  Court’s 
construction, because the Tidyman handle would not have a cavity under Tricam’s view.” 
Id.                                                                       
    C. Ver Halen’s Opinions                                              
    In his April 6, 2023 Rebuttal Report, after excerpting portions of the Court’s 
Claim Construction Order, Ver Halen states that the “knob of the Tricam products when 
in a first rotational position does not result in a ‘substantial’ amount of Tricam’s ramp 
being ‘disposed within a cavity defined by the first component’ as construed by the 
Court.” Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶ 7(d). Ver Halen explains that “Tricam’s knob includes a 
pair of wings that form a space open on three sides, including both ends so that the wedge 

portion of the Tricam wedge cam passes all the way through and beyond this space at 
each end.” Id. ¶ 92. Because this space passes all the way through, Ver Halen concludes 

    8 When Little Giant responded to the examiner’s rejections, it amended claim language 
regarding a two-position retaining mechanism, but it made no changes to the cavity language. 
Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex. N, 12/16/19 Response.                   
that it is not a cavity as construed by the Court. Id. The Accused Ladders also have a 
“boss” atop the wedge that sits inside a hollowed-out space within the knob that does not 
pass all the way through, but they are much smaller than the wedge/bracket of Tricam’s 

locking mechanism. Id. ¶¶ 91, 93. Other hollowed-out spaces set into the underside of the 
Tricam handle that do not pass all the way through enclose no portion of the Tricam ramp 
and “are only present to reduce the amount of plastic required and aid in molding the 
knob.” Id. ¶ 93. By Ver Halen’s calculation, the portion of the boss that sits inside the 
cavity of the Tricam handle constitutes approximately 20% of the ramp-and-boss/bracket. 

Id.                                                                       
    Ver Halen finds it significant that the “wings of the [Tricam] knob define a space 
that is open on three sides” and it “passes all the way through” because “it is not bounded 
on the ends.” Id. ¶ 97. In further reference to the Claim Construction Order, Ver Halen 
likens open space created by the wings to an “opening” or a “tunnel.” Id. Ver Halen 

disagrees  with  Smith’s  assessment  that  the  portions  of  the  ramp  that  the  wings  of 
Tricam’s knob sit atop are disposed within a cavity because Smith’s report erroneously 
suggests that portions of the ramp that are merely concealed by the knob are placed inside 
a hollowed-out space. See id. ¶ 98. Not only does he take issue with Smith’s calculations, 
but Ver Halen also notes that Smith does not address the effect of prosecution history 

estoppel and Little Giant’s amendments of its original claim language to overcome the 
examiner’s objections based on Grebinoski. See id. ¶¶ 39, 98, 100, 105.   
    Ver Halen also disagrees with Smith regarding the significance of the Tidyman 
reference and the examiner’s observations about the Tidyman handle containing a cavity. 
Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶ 113. He points out that in the February 19, 2020 office action, the 
examiner focused on a defining a cavity as a “‘hollowed out space [not passing all the 
way through].’” Id. (quoting 2/19/20 Office Action). According to Ver Halen, both he 

and Smith agree that the Tidyman space passes all the way through, and the subsequent 
reasons for allowance reflected in the February 2020 office action suggest that “Tidyman 
had an opening or a tunnel not a cavity.” Id. Ver Halen also noted that having the bracket 
“[d]isposed within a cavity was required to gain allowance,” which the Court construed 
to mean “‘placed inside of’ a cavity[, which in turn] differs substantially from something 

in a tunnel or opening that passes all the way through.” Id. ¶ 114.       
    In addition, Ver Halen disagrees with Smith’s assessment that the Speed Locks 
have a cavity that is similar to the lever-style handle in the preferred embodiment of the 
’416 patent. Id. ¶ 110. According to Ver Halen, the Tricam knob is not “bounded in 
enough  directions  that  the  hollowed-out  area  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through  the 

handle. This space passes all the way through and out opposite sides.” Id. Further, Ver 
Halen finds it significant that “[o]ne end of the Little Giant lever is closed, [and] there is 
no closed end on the Tricam handle.” Id. Ver Halen suggests that Smith has misconstrued 
Tricam’s argument and that Tricam has not taken the position that “a cavity has to be 
bounded on all sides but one”; rather, Ver Halen contends that the portion of the Speed 

Lock that Little Giant says is a cavity is not because it is not bounded on the ends. Id. 
¶ 112. VerHalen suggests that the analogy Smith draws of knowing where to put the 
fillings in a taco is irrelevant and ignores the Claim Construction Order. Id. 
                          DISCUSSION                                     
I.   Legal Standard                                                       
    A. Summary Judgment                                                  

    Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact 
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); 
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
477 U.S. 317
, 322–23 (1986); Dowden v. Cornerstone Nat’l Ins. 
Co., 
11 F.4th 866, 872
 (8th Cir. 2021). The moving party must demonstrate that the 
material facts are undisputed. Celotex, 
477 U.S. at 322
. A fact is “material” only if its 

resolution could affect the outcome of the suit under the governing substantive law. 
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
477 U.S. 242, 248
 (1986). When the moving party 
properly  supports  a  motion  for  summary  judgment,  the  party  opposing  summary 
judgment  may  not  rest  on  mere  allegations  or  denials,  but  must  show,  through  the 
presentation of admissible evidence, that specific facts exist creating a genuine issue for 

trial. 
Id. at 256
; McGowen, Hurst, Clark & Smith, P.C. v. Com. Bank, 
11 F.4th 702, 710
 
(8th Cir. 2021). A dispute of fact is “genuine” only if “the evidence is such that a 
reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.” Anderson, 
477 U.S. at 248
.  Courts  must  view  the  inferences  to  be  drawn  from  the  facts  in  the  light  most 
favorable to the nonmoving party. Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith Radio 

Corp., 
475 U.S. 574
, 587–88 (1986); Irvin v. Richardson, 
20 F.4th 1199, 1204
 (8th Cir. 
2021).                                                                    
    B. Patent Infringement and Summary Judgment                          
    A patent is infringed when a person “without authority makes, uses, offers to sell, 
or sells any patented invention, within the United States . . . during the term of the patent 

. . . .” 
35 U.S.C. § 271
(a). “Literal infringement of a claim exists when every limitation 
recited in the claim is found in the accused device.” Kahn v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
135 F.3d 1472, 1477
 (Fed. Cir. 1998). “If any claim limitation is absent from the accused device, 
there is no literal infringement as a matter of law.” Bayer AG v. Elan Pharm. Research 
Corp., 
212 F.3d 1241, 1247
 (Fed. Cir. 2000). Even if a product does not literally infringe 

a patent, it may still infringe under the doctrine of equivalents. Warner-Jenkinson Co., 
Inc. v. Hilton Davis Chem. Co., 
520 U.S. 17, 21
 (1997). The most common framework 
for evaluating equivalence is whether the accused product performs substantially the 
same function in substantially the same way to obtain substantially the same result. See 
Mylan Institutional LLC v. Aurobindo Pharma Ltd., 
857 F.3d 858
, 866–67 (Fed. Cir. 

2017) (citing Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Prod. Co., 
339 U.S. 605, 608, 609
 
(1950)). “[T]he doctrine of equivalents must be applied to individual elements of the 
claim, not to the invention as a whole. It is important to ensure that the application of the 
doctrine,  even  as  to  an  individual  element,  is  not  allowed  such  broad  play  as  to 
effectively eliminate that element in its entirety.” Warner-Jenkinson Co., 
520 U.S. at 29
. 

    Where, as here, a patent’s claims have already been construed, summary judgment 
as to non-infringement requires the court to determine “whether the properly construed 
claims read on the accused device.” Pitney Bowes, Inc. v. Hewlett–Packard Co., 
182 F.3d 1298, 1304
 (Fed. Cir. 1999). An accused infringer may prevail at the summary judgment 
phase either by producing evidence that would preclude a finding of infringement, or by 
showing that the evidence on file fails to create a material factual dispute as to any 
essential element of the patentee’s case. See Novartis Corp. v. Ben Venue Labs., Inc., 
271 F.3d 1043, 1046
 (Fed. Cir. 2001). “Whether a claim is infringed under the doctrine of 
equivalents may be decided on summary judgment if no reasonable jury could determine 
that the limitation and the element at issue are equivalent.” Zelinski v. Brunswick Corp., 
185 F.3d 1311, 1317
 (Fed. Cir. 1999).                                     
II.  Proper Construction of the Cavity Limitation                         

    As discussed, the cavity limitation appears in the following phrase of Claim 1 of 
the ’416 patent: “a substantial amount of the first bracket is disposed within a cavity 
defined by the first component.” After construing several terms within this phrase, the 
Court adopted the following construction:                                 
         more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of a 
         hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined    
         by the first component.                                         

Claim Construction Order 25–26.                                           
    Both Little Giant and Tricam argue that they are entitled to summary judgment on 
the issue of infringement of the cavity limitation. However, Little Giant argues that even 
though the Court has already issued a construction of this limitation, we cannot yet 
proceed to the second step in an infringement analysis. Little Giant suggests that the 
parties disagree about what the Court’s construction means, so the infringement dispute 
on this issue “collapses to a legal claim construction dispute.” Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 
16 & n.12. In essence, Little Giant argues that the Court’s construction leaves open the 
question of what “not passing all the way through” means in the context of the ’416 
patent. It contends that “the parties’ dispute here warrants a clarifying construction from 
the Court for ‘cavity’ to ensure that the jury is not improperly tasked with resolving the 

legal question of claim construction.” Pl.’s Mem. in Opp’n to Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. 
(“Pl.’s SJ Opp’n”) at 4 n.2 (Doc. 194). Accordingly, Little Giant proposes that the cavity 
term must be construed in the following manner:                           
         [T]he proper understanding of the Court’s construction must     
         be that a “cavity” is  a hollowed-out space in a mass that      
         doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to allow  
         more than a majority of the bracket to be placed inside even if 
         the space passes all the way through in some directions.        

Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 21.9 The Court rejects Little Giant’s request to rewrite its 
claim construction in this manner for several reasons.                    
    A. Unsupported Request for Reconsideration                           
    For starters, though Little Giant does not call it one, it has essentially made an 
unsupported  request  for  reconsideration  of  the  Claim  Construction  Order.  At  the 
summary  judgment  hearing,  Little  Giant  suggested  that  courts  regularly  revisit  their 
constructions  or  engage  in  rolling  construction  throughout  the  course  of  litigation. 
Although it is “true that a court’s prior claim construction can be altered, alteration 
generally requires the parties to present new evidence.” Snyders Heart Valve LLC v. St. 
Jude Med., No. 18-cv-2030 (JRT/DTS), 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 (D. Minn. Mar. 25, 

    9 Having previously offered two different proposals for how to construe this term at the 
claim-construction phase, this marks Little Giant’s third suggestion for how to understand the 
scope of the claimed “cavity” and the broader phrase in which it appears. Claim Construction 
Order at 21 (citing Doc. 70 at 16; Doc. 81 at 9).                         
2020) (citing Pfizer, Inc. v. Teva Pharms., USA, Inc. 
429 F.3d 1364, 1377
 (Fed. Cir. 
2005)). Here, Little Giant has not presented any new evidence in support of its latest 
proposed construction of the cavity term. Instead, it seeks only to “relitigate old issues.” 

Id.,
 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 n.7 (quoting Caddy Prods., Inc. v. Am. Seating Co., No. 05-
cv-800 (JRT/FLN), 
2008 WL 2447294
, at *1 (D. Minn. June 13, 2008)).       
    This is also not a situation in which, over the course of the litigation, the Court’s 
“understanding of the technology [has] evolve[d].” See Pfizer, Inc., 
429 F.3d at 1377
. As 
a result, a “rolling claim construction” is out of place in this case. 
Id.
 (discussing how 

“district courts may engage in a rolling claim construction, in which the court revisits and 
alters  its  interpretation  of  the  claim  terms  as  its  understanding  of  the  technology 
evolves”).                                                                
    Little Giant appears to be seeking reconsideration of the Claim Construction Order 
by a different name. In suggesting that the Court should issue a clarifying construction, 

Little Giant largely repeats arguments previously raised and presents arguments it could 
have but did not raise before. These are not grounds for reconsideration. See Corning Inc. 
v. Wilson Wolf Mfg. Corp., No. 20-cv-700 (DWF/TNL), 
2023 WL 3306506
, at *4–5 (D. 
Minn.  May  8,  2023)  (denying  defendants  request  for  reconsideration  of  claim 
construction order where the defendants had not presented “any new, material evidence 

that could not have been presented at the Markman stage of this litigation”). And the 
Court finds that Little Giant has failed to show that its prior construction of the cavity 
term is clearly erroneous. Snyders Heart Valve, 
2020 WL 1445835
, at *4 (indicating that 
the court would not revisit its prior claim constructions unless they were shown to be 
“‘clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice’”) (quoting Christianson v. Colt 
Indus. Operating Corp., 
486 U.S. 800
, 817–18 (1988)).                     
    Moreover, this is not a case where the Court must provide further clarification of 

its construction to avoid the kind of error Little Giant warns about. Little Giant asserts 
that under Sound View Innovations, LLC v. Hulu, LLC, 
33 F.4th 1326
 (Fed. Cir. 2022) 
and O2 Micro Int’l Ltd. v. Beyond Innovation Tech. Co., 
521 F.3d 1351
 (Fed. Cir. 2008), 
if the Court declines to engage in further construction of the cavity term, it would err by 
leaving the legal issue of claim construction to the jury to resolve. In both Sound View 

and O2 Micro, the district courts’ claim constructions were deemed inadequate for the 
second step of an infringement analysis because they failed to resolve a dispute about the 
meaning of a claim term by issuing no construction at all. Sound View, 33 F.4th at 1336–
37  (finding  error  because  the  district  court  treated  the  claim  term  “buffer”  and  the 
“caches” in the accused edge servers as completely distinct based solely on the fact they 

had a different name); O2 Micro, 
521 F.3d at 1361
 (district court failed to construe claim 
term “only if” where “the parties disputed not the meaning of the words themselves, but 
the  scope  that  should  be  encompassed  by  this  claim  language,”  namely  whether  it 
allowed  exceptions  to  claim  language  “only  if  said  feedback  signal  is  above  a 
predetermined threshold”). Unlike Sound View and O2 Micro, the Court has not failed to 

or declined to issue a construction of the cavity term. To the contrary, after reviewing 
significant briefing and the intrinsic and extrinsic evidence and holding a lengthy claim-
construction hearing, the Court issued a construction of the cavity limitation. Indeed, the 
construction adopted was, in many respects, one of the two previously advocated by 
Little Giant. What is happening now is that Little Giant finds that construction less than 
supportive of its infringement position. Finjan, Inc. v. Secure Computing Corp., 
626 F.3d 1197, 1207
 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (“Restating a previously settled argument does not create an 

‘actual dispute regarding the proper scope of the claims’ within the meaning of O2 
Micro.”).                                                                 
    Little Giant also cites Power-One, Inc. v. Artesyn Tech., Inc., 
599 F.3d 1343
 (Fed. 
Cir. 2010), which discusses the district court’s obligation to issue a construction that is 
sufficiently precise to ensure a jury fully understands the court’s rulings and what is 

covered by the claims. 
Id. at 1348
. But Little Giant does not explain why, if this case 
were to go to a jury, they could not fully understand an instruction based on the existing 
construction of the cavity limitation—a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way 
through).  If  there  were  disputed  issues  of  material  fact,  it  seems  quite  likely  that  a 
hypothetical jury could draw its own conclusions about whether Tricam’s handle has a 

space that does or does not pass all the way through. And because the Court grants 
summary judgment to Tricam, no jury will be asked to grapple with this issue. 
    Accordingly, Little Giant has not persuaded the Court that reconsideration of its 
previous construction or clarification is necessary to avoid error.       
    B. Not Passing All the Way Through                                   

    Not only does the Court finds that reconsideration of its construction of the cavity 
limitation  is  unnecessary,  but  the  Court  also  finds  Little  Giant’s  third  proposed 
construction unsupported and unpersuasive on its merits.                  
         1.  Drawings and Preferred Embodiment                           
    As noted above, in arguing for the clarifying construction it seeks, Little Giant 
repeats several arguments that it previously raised during the claim-construction phase of 

the litigation. Relying on drawings of the  lever-style handle, Little Giant previously 
asserted that “the handle shown in the drawings of the ’416 patent show [sic] a hollowed 
out space that passes all the way through in one direction (shown with [a] blue line . . .) 
yet doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to hide most of the bracket.” 
Pl.’s Opening Claim Construction Br. (“Pl. Markman Br.”) at 14–15 (Doc. 70). Little 

Giant  relies  on  similar  drawings  and  arguments  now  to  make  virtually  identical 
arguments. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 5 (including drawings of lever-style handle from 
Smith Report at 17–19). Further, in both the claim-construction and summary-judgment 
briefing, Little Giant argued that the cavity limitation’s concept of “not passing all the 
way through” must be understood to allow the space to pass all the way through in at 

least one direction—otherwise, the construction would improperly exclude a preferred 
embodiment. Pl.’s Markman Br. at 15; Pl.’s Infringement Mem. 15–16 n.11.  
    The  Court  is  not  persuaded  that  Little  Giant’s  drawings  support  its  proposed 
construction  nor  that  rejecting  its  latest  proposed  construction  excludes  a  preferred 
embodiment.  The  drawings  Little  Giant  emphasizes  in  their  claim-construction  and 

summary-judgment briefing, like those depicted below, are not based upon any specific 
language in the claims themselves, and they are not taken from the specification or the 
file history.                                                             
               (oi,                   B= miner 

                                             NOT all the way through 
Consequently,  these  diagrammatic  depictions  of the  lever-style  handle  do  not  reflect 
statements by the inventor or the examiner that would lead a person of ordinary skill in 
the art to understand the scope of the claimed cavity. 
     In  addition,  Little  Giant’s  requested clarification  and its  drawings  purporting to 
show that the preferred embodiment does pass  all the way through in  some  directions 
ignore both the context of the claim language and the actual illustrations that are found in 
the specification.  When Claim  1  of the  ’416 patent introduces the phrase in which the 
cavity term  appears,  it refers  to  the  “first  component”  (the  handle)  being  in  “the  first 
rotational  position.”  °416  patent,  col.  10:44-45.  The  specification,  through  certain 
illustrations, offers only one real hint as to what the scope of the claimed cavity might be. 
When the lever-style handle is depicted in the first rotational position in the drawings in 
the specification, most notably Figure 13A, the hollowed-out space defined by the handle 
sits parallel to the outer rails of the ladder. One end of the handle is flush with the rail. 
Therefore, it is bounded on one end by the rounded, upper portion of the handle, open on 
the other end of the handle, and blocked off on the underside by the plane of the rail. In 
that  configuration,  the  hollowed-out  space  does  not  pass  all  the  way  through  in  any 
direction. 
     Additional  context  for  the  cavity  in  the  surrounding  language  of  Claim  1 
undermines Little Giant’s third proposed construction. The cavity is a hollowed-out space 

                                     26 

that that has more than a majority of the bracket “disposed within it.” The Court has 
construed “disposed within” to mean that the bracket is “placed inside of” the opened 
space  in the handle.  The most natural understanding of  the bracket being “disposed 

within” the open space of the handle is that the cavity surrounds or encloses the bracket 
so that the open space does not pass all the way through. To conclude that Little Giant’s 
interpretation  is  correct,  and  that  any  other  construction  excludes  a  preferred 
embodiment, one must ignore both this surrounding claim language and the existence of 
the rails. As a result, the Court rejects Little Giant’s argument that “not passing all the 

way through” actually means something akin to—passing all the way through in some 
directions, but not in every direction.10 Rather, the cavity claimed by Little Giant is an 
hollowed-out space that is not unbounded on two ends when it is in the first rotational 
position and that is sufficiently closed off that it surrounds or encloses the bracket. 
         2.  Grebinoski and Tidyman                                      

    Little Giant further argues that the Court should rethink its construction based on a 
couple of additional arguments premised on the file history that it could have raised 
earlier  but  did  not.  First,  Little  Giant  points  to  the  handle  depicted  in  Grebinoski, 
suggesting that it shows a cavity that is consistent with its current proposal. Second, Little 
Giant refers to the examiner’s rejection due to the Tidyman prior art, arguing that the file 

history strongly supports its concept of a cavity that passes all the way through in some 

    10 The Court also notes that to the extent the handles depicted in Figures 15, 16, and 17 in 
the specification illustrate the claimed cavity at all, they similarly reveal that there is no space 
passing all the way through such a cavity and the open space of the handle surrounds or encloses 
the bracket while a rail or rung blocks off the opening underneath the handle. 
directions. As an initial matter the Court is troubled by the litigation strategy Little Giant 
seems to be employing, trying for a second (or third) bite at the claim construction apple 
with new arguments when its earlier efforts were unsuccessful. But as explained below, 

the Court finds neither argument compelling aside from their timing.      
    Start with Little Giant’s reliance on Grebinoski. Little Giant says that Grebinoski 
“defines a cavity . . . which passes all the way through in some directions” and points to 
its March 8, 2019 response to the examiner’s rejection. Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 6. 
However, in response to the initial rejection based on Grebinoski, Little Giant merely 

stated that “Grebinoski does not disclose any portion of the bracket . . . ever being within 
a cavity of the lever.” Miller Decl. (July 26, 2023), Ex. L, 3/8/19 Response to Office 
Action.  Nothing  about  this  statement  clearly  indicates  Little  Giant’s  belief  that  the 
Grebinoski handle, in fact, contains the cavity at all. Nor does Little Giant’s effort to 
distinguish the Grebinoski prior art provide support for the interpretation of “not passing 

all  the  way  through”  that  Little  Giant  now  wants  the  Court  to  adopt.  In  short,  the 
communications with the examiner regarding Grebinoski say nothing about what does 
and does not constitute the claimed cavity.                               
    Turning to Tidyman, Little Giant conceded that it presented no argument based on 
Tidyman in its claim-construction briefing.  At  the summary-judgment hearing, Little 

Giant asserted that Tidyman first came up when the parties’ experts submitted their 
reports after the Court issued its Claim Construction Order, but it also contends that 
Tidyman  contains  the  most  explicit  statement  concerning  a  cavity  in  the  entire  file 
history. Summ. J. Hr’g Tr. at 31–32. This explanation is unconvincing.    
    If Tidyman were as consequential to the proper understanding of the scope of the 
claimed  cavity  as  Little  Giant  asserts,  the  Court  has  no  doubt,  given  the  enormous 
resources that both parties have poured into this case, that the litigants would have relied 

upon it at the claim-construction phase. Little Giant certainly has presented no argument 
explaining why this aspect of the file history could not have been raised earlier—it 
plainly could have been presented before but wasn’t. See Niazi Licensing Corp. v. Bos. 
Sci. Corp., No. 17-cv-5094 (WMW/BRT), 
2019 WL 6827588
, at *1 (D. Minn. Dec. 13, 
2019) (“A motion for reconsideration cannot be employed to . . . introduce . . . evidence 

or arguments that could have been made. . . .”). As such, the Court is skeptical that the 
discussion of Tidyman from the file history informs the proper construction of cavity. 
    Moreover, in considering the merits of Little Giant’s Tidyman argument, the Court 
finds that the discussion in the file history and the examiner’s comments are entitled to 
little weight in construing the scope of the claimed cavity. The examiner initially rejected 

the language in Claim 1 in light of the Tidyman prior art, and in relevant part, the 
examiner stated that Tidyman teaches a cavity. The examiner posited that the Tidyman 
handle depicted in one of the Tidyman drawings would constitute a cavity even if it 
merely sat atop the bracket in an L-shaped configuration with one of the handle’s two 
protruding ears removed. But the Court finds these statements fail to define the scope of 

the claim.                                                                
    As an initial matter, patent examiners apply very broad standards of construction, 
whereas district courts are required to arrive at the “proper construction; that is, the court 
construes the patent claims in a manner that most naturally aligns with the patent’s 
description of the invention” in light of “the specification, prosecution history, prior art, 
and other claims.” Geospan Corp. v. Pctometry Int’l Corp., No. 08-cv-816 (ADM/JSM), 
2012 WL 5942005
, at *5 (D. Minn. Nov. 28, 2012) (internal quotations omitted). The 

examiner’s discussion of the cavity concept in the September 16, 2019 Office Action 
applied  an  extraordinarily  broad  interpretation  of  what  constitutes  a  cavity.  That 
interpretation  ignores  and  conflicts  with  language  that  the  parties  agreed  should  be 
included in the proper construction of the cavity limitation—“not passing all the way 
through.”                                                                 

    There are several other problems with the argument Little Giant makes in reliance 
on Tidyman. First, removing one of the ears from the Tidyman handle eliminates the 
possibility that one could actually conceive of a hollowed-out space within the mass of a 
handle  at  all.  Second,  the  examiner’s  discussion  of  the  Tidyman  structure  does  not 
indicate any appreciation for whether the space between the Tidyman ears passes all the 

way through, which is a feature Little Giant concedes is claimed by the ’416 patent. 
Third, Little Giant never responded to this aspect of the examiner’s rejection and the 
examiner allowed the claims without any amendment of the cavity language. It was not 
central to the ultimate conclusion or the dialog between the inventor and examiner. As a 
result, the public looking at this file history would have no way of knowing the inventor’s 

own position on whether the cavity of Claim 1 is broader or narrower than the examiner’s 
assessment of Tidyman. Fourth, the examiner’s assessment of Tidyman as possessing the 
claimed cavity does not consider the greater context of the claim in which more than a 
majority of the bracket is “disposed within” the open space. In either configuration of the 
Tidyman handle (with both ears or with one ear removed) the bracket is not significantly 
surrounded or enclosed by the sides and the rails such that the bracket is placed inside of 
the  open  space  inside  the  handle.  And  finally,  the  examiner’s  interpretation  of  the 

Tidyman handle as possessing a cavity even with one ear removed conflicts with the 
prosecution history in which Little Giant surrendered claim scope for a first component 
that merely hides or conceals a substantial amount of the first bracket when in the first 
rotational position.                                                      
    For all the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that Little Giant’s efforts to obtain a 

new construction of the cavity term are unsupported, whether they are characterized as 
seeking reconsideration, clarification, a new construction, or given some other label. The 
Court rejects Little Giant’s proposed construction that the cavity is “a hollowed-out space 
in a mass that doesn’t pass all the way through in enough directions to allow more than a 
majority of the bracket to be placed inside even if the space passes all the way through in 

some directions.”                                                         
    Instead,  the  Court’s  original  construction—“more  than  a  majority  of  the  first 
bracket is placed inside of a hollowed-out space (not passing all the way through) defined 
by the first component”—stands.                                           
III.  Tricam’s Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony                         

    One additional detour is required before addressing the issue of infringement of 
the cavity limitation. Tricam argues that the Court should exclude the testimony of Little 
Giant’s expert, Fred Smith, concerning infringement of the cavity limitation. Tricam does 
not argue that Mr. Smith is unqualified to offer such an opinion. Instead, it argues that the 
Court should exclude Mr. Smith’s infringement opinions because he failed to apply the 
Court’s construction of that term.11 The Court agrees.                    
    “The admissibility of expert testimony is an issue of law for the district court to 

decide and is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 702 and Daubert v. Merrell Dow 
Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 
509 U.S. 579
 (1993).” CellTrust Corp. v. ionLake, LLC, 
625 F. Supp. 3d 810
, 851 (D. Minn. 2022). The party seeking to introduce expert testimony has 
the burden to show it is admissible by a preponderance of the evidence, and district courts 
have considerable discretion in ruling on issues of admissibility. 
Id. at 852
. 

    “Expert  testimony  that  conflicts  with  a  district  court’s  claim  construction  is 
inadmissible.”  Niazi  Licensing  Corp.  v.  St.  Jude  Med.  S.C.,  Inc.,  No.  17-cv-5096 
(WMW/BRT), 
2020 WL 5512507
, at *6 (D. Minn. Sept. 14, 2020) (citing Finjan, Inc., 
626 F.3d at 1207
).  A  party  may  not  use  expert  testimony  to  “resurrect  a  claim 
construction that the district court already rejected.” Finjan, 
626 F.3d at 1207
. District 

courts hearing patent-infringement suits may exclude expert testimony when it is “based 
on a claim construction that is materially different from the construction adopted by the 
parties and the court.” Treehouse Avatar LLC v. Valve Corp., 
54 F.4th 709, 715
 (Fed. Cir. 
2022) (affirming district court’s decision to exclude portions of patentee’s expert’s report 

    11 Tricam also argues that the Court should exclude several other aspects of Mr. Smith’s 
testimony. For example, it argues that Smith’s opinion that the ’416 patent is not anticipated by 
Krause should be excluded because it contradicts concessions that Little Giant made in response 
to Tricam’s invalidity contentions. Tricam also argues that the Court should exclude Smith’s 
opinions concerning the infringement of the “first component” limitation because Smith (1) fails 
to apply the Court’s claim construction, (2) substitutes a new theory of the “way” the term 
performs its function in applying the function-way-result test, and (3) provides only a conclusory 
analysis of the doctrine of equivalents. Because the Court decides this case on narrower grounds, 
it does not reach these issues and denies Tricam’s motion without prejudice in regard to these 
arguments.                                                                
where the expert applied the plain and ordinary meaning of a claim limitation and not the 
construction that the parties had agreed upon and the court had adopted). 
    Based on the Court’s review of Smith’s initial and rebuttal reports, it is apparent 

that he reviewed and seriously considered the Claim Construction Order, including the 
construction the Court gave to the cavity limitation. However, in doing so, the Court 
finds that Smith engaged in further construction of the Court’s construction, based his 
opinions  about  infringement  on  an  understanding  of  the  cavity  limitation  that  is 
materially  different  from  the  Court’s  construction,  and  ultimately  seeks  to  revive  a 

construction of the limitation that the Court already rejected.           
    Smith reached the conclusion that the space between the wings on either side of 
the Tricam knob constitutes the cavity claimed in the ’416 patent because, even though 
that space passes all the way through in at least one direction—the space indisputably 
passes all the way through parallel to the rails when the handle is in the first, i.e. locked, 

position—it “does not go all the way through in every other direction, literally satisfying 
the  Court’s  claim  construction.”  Smith  Reply  ¶ 29  (underlining  in  original).  But  as 
explored above, that is not the construction that the Court adopted. Smith essentially 
reconstrues the cavity limitation to mean any hollowed-out space that does not pass 
through  in every  direction.  See  EZ Dock,  Inc. v. Schafer Sys., Inc., No. 98-cv-2364 

(RHK/AJB), 
2003 WL 1610781
, at *12 (D. Minn. Mar. 8, 2003) (“[P]arties are not 
entitled to ‘construe’ the Court’s claim construction.”).                 
    Smith’s infringement analysis also depends on an understanding of the cavity 
limitation that is materially different from the Court’s construction because it would 
encompass hollowed-out spaces, like a tunnel, that do pass all the way through. His 
interpretation is that a hollowed-out space defined by the first component does not pass 
all the way through even if a person could draw an arrow through the open space of the 

first component in any direction. Smith Report at 18 (“Tricam’s basis for disputing the 
presence  of this element is  Tricam’s belief that the phrase ‘not passing all the way 
through’ necessarily means it is bounded on all sides but one and excludes spaces that are 
‘not bounded on the ends.’”). His reports reference drawings in which he depicts arrows 
passing all the way through opening on the underside of the lever-style handle depicted in 

the ’416 patent’s illustrations, but his drawings disregard the presence of the rails. 
Id.
 at 
18–19. Smith also based his infringement analysis and understanding of what is and is 
not a cavity on a prolonged discussion on the references to Tidyman in the file history, 
going so far as to suggest that the “examiner’s view” of a cavity was the basis for the 
Court’s construction.12 
Id.
 at 20–22.                                     

    This  analysis  contradicts  the  Court’s  construction  because  Smith  essentially 
determined that “not passing all the way through” means that a hollowed-out space in a 
handle would literally have the claimed cavity even if it passed all the way through two 
unbounded ends. This would mean that a tunnel, which the Court expressly distinguished 


    12 The Court has found in this Order that the Tidyman reference in the file history does 
not inform the scope of the claimed cavity. It is entirely incorrect to say that the examiner’s view 
of whether Tidyman has a cavity formed the basis for the Court’s construction of the cavity 
limitation because, as noted, Little Giant did not rely on this portion of the file history in its 
claim-construction briefing. The Claim Construction Order noted that both parties had agreed the 
cavity limitation should be construed to include the phrase “not passing all the way through,” and 
it is true that language was drawn from statements made in the Notice of Allowance. But the 
Notice of Allowance did not, in any way, refer to Tidyman.                
from a cavity in its Claim Construction Order, would fall within the scope of the claim. It 
also runs afoul of the Court’s further discussion of the cavity limitation in this Order, 
where the Court has even more explicitly stated that the claimed cavity does not include 

hollowed-out spaces that are unbounded on both ends. In addition, Mr. Smith’s analysis 
differs  from  the  Court’s  assessment  that  the  “disposed  within”  language  invokes  a 
structure having an open space that at least partially surrounds or encloses the bracket 
that is placed inside it. His taco shell example, Smith Report at 18, does not account for 
that reality. Consequently, allowing Mr. Smith to testify concerning  his infringement 

opinions would permit him to testify to an understanding of the cavity limitation that is at 
odds with the Court’s own construction. Treehouse Avatar, 
54 F.4th at 715
 (affirming 
district court’s decision to strike portions of an expert report based on a “on a claim 
construction that is materially different from the construction adopted by the . . . court” 
and  citing  cases);  CellTrust  Corp.,  625  F.  Supp.  at  855  (excluding  expert’s 

noninfringement opinions because they were “contrary to the Court’s claim construction” 
and, therefore, were not relevant).                                       
    For  these  reasons,  the  Court  excludes  Mr. Smith’s  testimony  to  the  extent  he 
opines that the Speed Locks literally contain the cavity limitation because he failed to 
apply the Court’s construction.                                           

IV.  Infringement of the Cavity Limitation                                
    A. Literal Infringement                                              
    Both parties seek summary judgment on the issue of literal infringement of the 
cavity limitation. In assessing literal infringement, the “properly construed claims are 
compared to the allegedly infringing device” and the Court asks whether, taking the 
evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, there is sufficient evidence 
to allow a reasonable jury to find in that party’s favor. Having viewed the evidence 

through this lens, and in light of its decision not to adopt Little Giant’s latest proposed 
claim construction, the Court finds that no reasonable jury could find the Speed Locks on 
the Accused Ladders literally infringe the cavity limitation.             
    Tricam admits that there are five hollowed-out spaces on the underside of the 
Speed  Lock  handles.13  Among  these  is  the  deepest  central,  cylindrical  hollow  that 

receives the boss of the ramp-and-boss structure. In addition, there are  four smaller 
hollows, which Mr. Ver Halen explained were removed for manufacturing purposes. It is 
undisputed that these five hollowed-out spaces in the Tricam handle do not pass all the 
way through. It is also undisputed that no portion of the Tricam bracket sits within the 
four smaller hollows. Tricam admits that approximately 20% of the volume of the ramp-

and-boss structure—essentially all of the boss itself—is placed inside of the central, 
cylindrical hollow. Ver Halen Rebuttal ¶¶ 78, 93. But no reasonable jury could find that 
20% is “more than a majority of the first bracket.” Absent some other hollowed-out space 
in the Tricam handle that does not pass all the way through yet does have substantially 
more of the bracket placed inside of it, the evidence does not show that the Accused 

Ladders have the cavity limitation.                                       


    13 Tricam concedes that each of these hollowed-out spaces is a cavity. Def.’s Summ. J. 
Br. at 14.                                                                
    Of course, Little Giant argues that the cavity limitation is satisfied by the full 
space between the two wings of the Tricam handle, not just by the five smaller cavities 
acknowledged  by  Tricam.  It  asserts  that  the  evidence  shows  a  hollowed-out  space 

between those wings. Further, Little Giant notes that the portion of the ramp-and-boss 
structure that sits between the wings of the Tricam handle, when combined with the boss 
that inserts into the handle’s central, cylindrical hollow, constitutes more than a majority 
of the first bracket placed inside of a hollowed-out space. Finally, Little Giant argues that 
the hollowed-out space does not pass all the way through because, in at least some 

directions, the space between the wings does not pass all the way through, though it does 
pass all the way through in others.                                       
    In opposing Tricam’s motion for summary judgment (and in support of its own) 
Little  Giant  relies  on  the  opinions  of  Smith.  Smith  used  3D  scans  of  the  Accused 
Ladders’ locking mechanisms to determine that, in terms of both the percentages of 

surface area and volume of the Tricam bracket, more than 50% of the ramp-and-boss is 
inside the central recess that receives the boss and the open space between the wings. 
Smith Report at 17–18 & Ex. 5. Although Tricam disagrees that the space between the 
wings constitutes a cavity within the meaning of the ’416 patent, it does not dispute 
Smith’s assessment of the amount of the bracket that is within spaces Little Giant defines 

as cavities. Indeed, Little Giant points to testimony in Ver Halen’s deposition in which he 
acknowledges that portions of the ramp are inside the space between the wings. Ver 
Halen Dep. 32–33 (Doc. 180-3); see id. at 34–35 (acknowledging that Ver Halen did not 
perform contradictory measurements). So, the question of infringement boils down to 
whether  that  space  between  the  wings  of  Tricam’s  Speed  Lock  handle  is  properly 
considered a cavity within the meaning of the Court’s construction.       
    Smith reaches the conclusion that the space between the wings is a cavity because, 

even though it passes all the way through in at least one direction (parallel to the rails 
when the handle is in the first, i.e. locked, position) it “does not go all the way through in 
every other direction, literally satisfying the Court’s claim construction.” Smith Reply 
¶ 29 (underlining in original). But the Court has already found that Smith fails to properly 
apply its construction, and the Court has rejected Little Giant’s request to revise—either 

expressly or implicitly—that construction.                                
    Aside from Smith’s disregarded opinion about the space between the wings of the 
Tricam handle constituting a cavity, Little Giant identifies no other evidence that could 
allow  a  reasonable  jury  to  conclude  that  the  Tricam  handle  literally  practices  the 
following claim limitation: “when the first component is in the first rotational position, 

more than a majority of the first bracket is placed inside of a hollowed out space (not 
passing all the way through) defined by the first component.” Therefore, with respect to 
literal infringement of the cavity limitation, Little Giant’s motion for summary judgment 
is denied and Tricam’s motion for summary judgment is granted.            
    B. Doctrine of Equivalents                                           

    Both parties also seek summary judgment on the issue of infringement of the 
cavity limitation under the doctrine of equivalents. According to Little Giant, even if the 
Court’s  construction  excludes  spaces  that  are  unbounded  on  both  ends,  there  is  no 
genuine dispute of material fact that the space between the wings is essentially the same 
as the claimed cavity. Little Giant asserts that the wing space in the Speed Lock handle 
“performs the same function as the claimed cavity by encompassing more than a majority 
of the bracket when in the first rotational position, and does this in substantially the same 

way to achieve substantially the same result.” Pl.’s Infringement Mem. at 9–10. 
    Tricam  argues  that  Little  Giant  is  prohibited  from  relying  on  the  doctrine  of 
equivalents for the cavity limitation due to prosecution history estoppel. According to 
Tricam, because Little Giant amended the cavity limitation in response to the examiner’s 
rejection based on the Grebinoski prior art, Little Giant surrendered claim scope that 

cannot now be recaptured through application of the doctrine of equivalents. Tricam 
argues that Little Giant has failed to overcome the presumption that estoppel applies 
under Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co. Ltd., 
535 U.S. 722, 740
 
(2002) (Festo I) and Festo Corp. v. Shoketsu Kinzoku Kogyo Kabushiki Co. Ltd., 
344 F.3d 1359, 1367
 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (Festo II).                              

         1.  Estoppel and the Festo Presumption                          
    As discussed above, the doctrine of equivalents allows a patentee to “lay claim to 
‘those insubstantial alterations that were not captured in drafting the original patent claim 
but which could be created through trivial changes.’” Conoco, Inc. v. Energy & Env’t 
Int’l, L.C., 
460 F.3d 1349, 1363
 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (quoting Festo I, 536 U.S. at 733). 

Under  the  rule  of  prosecution  history  estoppel,  however,  a  patentee  cannot  use  the 
doctrine of equivalents “‘to recapture subject matter surrendered from the literal scope of 
a claim during prosecution.’” Pharma Tech Sols., Inc. v. LifeScan, Inc., 
942 F.3d 1372, 1380
 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting Trading Techs. Int’l, Inc. v. Open E Cry, LLC, 
778 F.3d 1309, 1322
 (Fed. Cir. 2013)). “Prosecution history estoppel can  occur  in two ways: 
‘either (1) by making a narrowing amendment to the claim (‘amendment-based estoppel’) 
or (2) by surrendering claim scope through argument to the patent examiner (‘argument-

based estoppel’).’” 
Id.
 (quoting Conoco, 
460 F.3d at 1363
). This case implicates the first 
scenario, that of amendment-based estoppel.                               
    When  dealing  with  amendment-based  estoppel,  courts  may  presume  that  the 
“‘patentee’s decision to narrow . . . through amendment [acts as] a general disclaimer of 
the territory between the original claim and the amended claim.’” 
Id.
 (quoting Festo I, 

535 U.S. at 740
).14 The presumption is rebuttable, however, if the patentee shows that the 
amendment fits within one of three exceptions. Pharma Tech, 
942 F.3d at 1380
. These 
exceptions require the patentee to show                                   
         (1)  the  equivalent  was  “unforeseeable  at  the  time  of  the 
         application”;  (2)  “the  rationale  underlying  the  amendment 
         may bear no more than a tangential relation to the equivalent   
         in  question”;  or  (3)  “there  may  be  some  other  reason   
         suggesting that the patentee could not reasonably be expected   
         to have de-scribed the insubstantial substitute in question.”   




    14 No such presumption arises when the patentee narrows claims through argument, and 
argument-based estoppel will prevent a patentee’s reliance on the doctrine of equivalents only 
where “‘the prosecution history . . . evince[s] a clear and unmistakable surrender of subject 
matter.’” Conoco, 
460 F.3d at 1364
 (quoiting Deering Precision Instruments, LLC v. Vector 
Distrib. Sys., Inc., 
347 F.3d 1314
, 1326 (Fed. Cir. 2003)). This case does not implicate argument-
based estoppel.                                                           
Id. (quoting Festo I, 535 U.S. at 740–41). The focus in this case is on the second of these 
exceptions.15                                                             
    For a patentee to rely on the second exception, the patentee must show that “the 

reason  for the narrowing amendment was peripheral,  or not directly relevant,  to the 
alleged equivalent.” Festo II, 
344 F.3d at 1369
. “[A]n amendment made to avoid prior art 
that contains the equivalent in question is not tangential; it is central to allowance of the 
claim.”  
Id.
  Courts  asking  whether  the  amendment  is  “tangential”  to  the  particular 
equivalent at issue “focus on the patentee’s objectively apparent reason for the narrowing 

amendment” and “that reason should be discernible from the prosecution history record” 
to fulfill the purpose of notifying the public of the scope of the claimed invention. 
Id.
 at 
1369–70.  The  court  should  reach  this  conclusion  on  the  “prosecution  history  record 
without the introduction of additional evidence, except when necessary, testimony from 
those skilled in the art as to the interpretation of that record.” 
Id. at 1370
. “The tangential 

relation exception is ‘very narrow.’” Integrated Tech. Corp. v. Rudolph Techs., Inc., 
734 F.3d 1352, 1358
 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (quoting Cross Med. Prods., Inc. v. Medtronic Sofamor 
Danek, Inc., 
480 F.3d 1335, 1342
 (Fed. Cir. 2007)).                       

    15 Under the first exception, amendment-based estoppel will not bar application of 
the doctrine of equivalents if the patentee can show that the particular equivalent alleged 
to infringe “would have been unforeseeable to one of ordinary skill in the art at the time 
of the amendment.” Festo II, 
344 F.3d at 1369
. This showing depends on the underlying 
facts, including expert testimony or other extrinsic evidence. 
Id.
 The third exception is 
“narrow,” and “may be satisfied when there was some reason, such as the shortcomings 
of language, why the patentee was prevented from describing the alleged equivalent 
when it narrowed the claim.” 
Id.
 In determining whether the patentee has shown that this 
exception applies, the focus “should also be limited to the prosecution history record.” 
Id.
 
Little Giant does not invoke either of these exceptions, focusing solely on whether the 
amendment is tangential to the alleged equivalent at issue here.          
         2.  Analysis                                                    
    Little  Giant  seems  to  raise  two  distinct  challenges  to  the  application  of 
amendment-based estoppel here. First, it argues that the amendments at issue did not 

surrender the territory into which the equivalent at issue falls at all. Second, Little Giant 
invokes the second exception to amendment-based estoppel, claiming that the portions of 
the subject matter surrendered here were tangential to the equivalent implicated by the 
Speed Lock.16 The Court disagrees on both counts and finds that prosecution-history 
estoppel applies.                                                         

           (a) The Grebinoski Amendments                                 
    When Little Giant originally submitted its claims to the PTO, on October 6, 2017, 
the  relevant  language  claimed:  “when  the  first  component  is  in  the  first  rotational 
position, the engagement pin extends through a pair of aligned openings, including a first 
opening in the first rail and a second opening formed in the third rail. . . .” Armstrong 

Decl., Ex. 7, 10/6/17 Application at 16. The examiner rejected this aspect of Claim 1 
because Grebinoski already teaches an engagement extending through aligned openings 
in the rails when the first component of the locking mechanism is in the first rotational 

    16 Whether Little Giant, in fact, raises these as two separate arguments is not entirely 
clear from its briefing. Little Giant argues that “[i]t is clear from the prosecution history that the 
amendment adding ‘cavity’ to the claims did not surrender territory encompassing the Speed 
Lock.” Pl.’s SJ Opp’n at 5; 
id.
 at 5–7. Then, without raising any real distinction between that 
argument  and  the  next,  Little  Giant  asserts  that  “[t]he  ‘tangential  rebuttal  to  the  Festo 
presumption of estoppel applies in exactly these circumstances.” Id. at 8. In other words, Little 
Giant’s discussion of this issue collapses the question of the scope of claim territory surrendered 
with the question of whether the purpose of the amendment was tangential to the equivalent at 
issue. But in candor, much of the relevant caselaw does the same thing. And in this case, the 
analysis of whether the amendment surrendered the equivalent is very similar to the question of 
whether the rationale behind that amendment is tangential to the equivalent. 
position. Id., Ex. 8, 12/21/17 Office Action. On June 20, 2018, Little Giant amended the 
claim language to read: “when the first component is in the first rotational position, a 
substantial portion of the first bracket is concealed between the first rail and the first 

component and the first engagement pin extends through a pair of aligned openings.” Id., 
Ex. 9, 6/20/18 Response at 2.                                             
    The examiner again rejected the claim as anticipated by Grebinoski. The examiner 
explained that the newly added phrase “substantial portion of the first bracket” could be 
interpreted  in  numerous  ways,  including:  that  the  “substantial  portion”  could  be 

considered “important”; it could be any portion “which has substance”; or it could be “a 
considerable  amount.”  Id.,  Ex. 10,  9/10/18  Office  Action  at  12.  The  examiner  also 
suggested that other meanings not specifically articulated were contemplated. Id. The 
examiner further stated:                                                  
              Note that the claims as currently recited do not require   
         an entirety of the first bracket to be substantially concealed  
         when the first component is in the first rotational position    
         which seems to be what the applicant may be intending to        
         encompass in scope, but does not provide the claim with the     
         language to encompass the scope to require it [sic] be limited  
         so  that  an  entirety  of  the  first  bracket  is  substantially 
         concealed when the first component is in the first rotational   
         position.                                                       

Id. at 13.                                                                
    On  March  8,  2019,  Little  Giant  amended  the  claim  language  again,  reciting: 
“when the first component is in the first rotational position a substantial portion amount 
of the first bracket is concealed between the first rail and the fir component disposed 
within a cavity defined by the first component and the first engagement pin extends 
through a pair of aligned openings. . . .” Id., Ex. 11, 3/8/19 Response at 2 (underlining 
and strikethroughs in original). Little Giant stated that it disagreed with the examiner’s 
rejection. However, it further described the amendment of the claim language: 

         In an effort to further prosecution, [Little Giant] has amended 
         claim 1 to recite that when the first component is in the first 
         rotational position, a substantial amount of the first bracket is 
         disposed within a cavity defined by the first component. Such   
         subject matter is clearly disclosed by the as-filed application 
         (see, e.g., FIGS. 12-14) and Grebinoski does not disclose any   
         portion of the bracket ever being within a cavity of the lever. 

Id. at 9.                                                                 
           (b) Scope of the Territory Surrendered                        
    Little Giant argues that this prosecution history shows that it never surrendered 
any claim scope where the bracket is inside the handle of the first component. Little Giant 
contends  that  “the  scope  of  the  original  ‘concealed  between’  version  of  the  claim 
encompassed designs that could conceal part of the bracket both inside and outside the 
handle  space.”  Pl.’s  SJ  Opp’n  at  7.  Because  Grebinoski  only  dealt  with  concealed 
portions of the bracket falling outside the handle, Little Giant argues that its narrowing 
amendment, made to avoid Grebinoski, did not surrender any designs where concealed 
portions of the bracket fall inside the handle. Id. Instead, Little Giant essentially argues 
that it gave up only the scope necessary to avoid the specific category of designs that 
would be encompassed by Grebinoski.                                       
    The Court disagrees. Contrary to Little Giant’s position, it has not shown that the 
only territory it surrendered was a design where the bracket is concealed outside handle 
space. The territory between designs where the bracket is concealed between the handle 
and the rails and where it is disposed within a cavity of the handle is broad, and it 
includes not only designs where that concealment occurs outside any handle space, but 
also designs where the bracket is inside handle space that doesn’t constitute a cavity.  

    Little Giant’s original claim  was expansive, and included  all designs where a 
substantial portion of the bracket was concealed between the first component and the rail. 
The patent examiner rejected that claim because Grebinoski already taught a bracket that 
was  concealed  between  the  rail  and  the  first  component.  In  response,  Little  Giant 
amended  its  claim  using  narrower  language  and  abandoning  designs  where  the  first 

component is merely concealed between the handle and the rails. But in doing so, Little 
Giant affirmatively chose to claim only those designs where a majority of the bracket was 
placed inside of a cavity defined by the first component. It introduced not only the 
placement inside of space in the handle, but through its reference to the first bracket 
being “disposed within a cavity,” it limited its claim to designs where the bracket was at 

least  partially  encapsulated  or  surrounded.  It  did  not,  as  it  now  argues,  hang  on  to 
equivalents where the bracket’s concealment occurs inside open handle space that passes 
all the way through.17 In other words, Little Giant could have offered claim language that 
fell between the broad concealment it started with and what it ultimately chose, but 
instead it amended its claim language to encompass a far narrower scope than it now 

attempts to assert through the doctrine of equivalents. See Norian Corp. v. Stryker Corp., 
432 F.3d 1356
,  1361–62  (Fed.  Cir.  2005)  (“[I]t  frequently  happens  that  patentees 
surrender more through amendment than may have been absolutely necessary to avoid 
particular prior art. In such cases, we have held the patentees to the scope of what they 
ultimately  claim,  and  we  have  not  allowed  them  to  assert  that  claims  should  be 

interpreted as if they had surrendered only what they had to.”); see also Ely Lilly & Co. v. 
Hospira, Inc., 
933 F.3d 1320, 1332
 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (“Amendments are not construed to 
cede only that which is necessary to overcome the prior art.”). Having chosen to narrow 
its claims by use of this language, Little Giant cannot recapture claim scope through the 
doctrine of equivalents where the majority of the bracket is concealed between the handle 

    17 In light of this broader surrender of claim scope, the Court is unpersuaded by Little 
Giant’s reliance on Primos, Inc. v. Hunter’s Specialties, Inc., 
451 F.3d 841
 (Fed. Cir. 2006). In 
Primos the invention at issue was an animal call that employed a plate “differentially spaced” 
above a membrane, which emitted an animal sound when a hunter blew into the device. 
Id.
 at 
843–44. During prosecution, the patentee added the “differentially spaced” limitation to avoid 
prior art that “consisted of a shelf-like structure positioned on top of the membrane without any 
spacing.” 
Id. at 849
. The defendant’s accused device used a dome structure that the patentee 
argued infringed the patent under the doctrine of equivalents because the dome was spaced above 
the membrane.  
Id.
 The  Primos  court held  that the narrowing amendment surrendered only 
“plates that are not differentially spaced above the membrane” and the ceded territory was only 
tangentially related “to the contested element in the accused device.” 
Id.
 Thus, in Primos, the 
patentee only surrendered the plates that were attached to the membrane, so even though its 
amendment narrowed its original claims, it retained claims for plates differentially spaced above 
the membrane—though the dome in the accused device was not a plate, it was an equivalent that 
was tangential to the reason for the amendment. In contrast, because Little Giant gave up both 
more and more relevant territory in its March 2019 amendment, allowing Little Giant to assert 
that Tricam’s handles infringe through the doctrine of equivalents would permit it to regain claim 
scope that was surrendered to avoid prior art.                            
and the rail simply because that concealment occurs by placing substantial portions of the 
bracket inside a space that is not a cavity.                              
           (c) Tangential-Relation Exception                             

    Little Giant invokes an exception to the Festo presumption, arguing that even if 
the equivalent at issue falls within the surrendered territory, it was so tangential to the 
amendment that estoppel doesn’t apply. Again the Court disagrees. Here, the difference 
between concealment (or something being hidden between the handle and the rail) and 
being disposed within a cavity, was at the heart of the amendments to avoid Grebinoski. 

And the cases relied on by Little Giant are readily distinguishable on this point. For 
instance, in Insituform Technologies, Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc., the patentee amended 
its claims to avoid a prior-art reference that taught a single vacuum source placed far 
away from a resin source. 
385 F.3d 1360, 1368
 (Fed. Cir. 2004). The amended claim 
language applied to a single vacuum source near the resin source. The alleged equivalent 

used multiple vacuum sources, and the  Federal Circuit found that tangential-relation 
exception applied because the purpose for the amendment was to avoid the prior art 
regarding placement of the vacuum source in relation to the resin source, not to specify 
how many vacuum sources would be employed. 
Id.
 at 1368–70. Here the situation is 
otherwise. The reason for the March 8, 2019 amendment—avoiding a prior art locking 

mechanism that conceals the bracket between the handle and the rail—directly relates to 
the  accused  equivalent,  Tricam’s  locking  mechanism  that  also  conceals  the  bracket 
between the handle and the rail.18                                        
    For these reasons, the Court finds that Little Giant may not rely on the doctrine of 

equivalents  to  assert  infringement  of  the  cavity  limitation  and  Tricam  is  entitled  to 
summary judgment on this issue.                                           
V.   The Remaining Summary Judgment Issues                                
    In Little Giant’s motion, it seeks a determination that it is entitled to summary 
judgment on the issues of infringement and on Tricam’s invalidity defenses. Little Giant 

argues that based on the undisputed evidence, the Accused Ladders satisfy the “bracket,” 
“first component,” “cavity,” and “retaining mechanism” limitations in the ’416 patent as 
a matter of law. Pl.’s Infringement Mem., passim. Little Giant also argues that Tricam’s 
invalidity defenses fail as a matter of law because the ’416 patent is not anticipated by 
any prior art reference, the patent’s claims are not obvious in light of prior art, and 

Tricam cannot show by clear and convincing evidence that the patent’s claims are invalid 
for lack of a written description, indefiniteness, or lack of enablement. Pl.’s Mem. in 
Supp. of Summ. J. on Invalidity (Doc. 178). In addition to seeking summary judgment on 
the  issue  of  non-infringement  of  the  cavity  limitation,  Tricam  also  argues  that  it  is 


    18 The Court is also not persuaded by Little Giant’s reliance on Ajinomoto Co. v. 
International Trade Commission, 
932 F.3d 1342, 1355
 (Fed. Cir. 2019). There the court 
found the tangential-relation exception applied because the rationale for the patentee’s 
amendment, which narrowed claimed DNA sequences to avoid a particular prior art 
protein, was unrelated to the asserted equivalent which selected from codon-randomized 
sequences that corresponded to a different protein. 
Id.
 Beyond a broad statement of the 
tangential-relation  exception  rule,  Little  Giant  does  not  explain  how  the  decision  in 
Ajinomoto informs the analysis in this case.                              
entitled to summary judgment because the Accused Products do not infringe the “first 
component” limitation and because the ’416 patent is invalid as anticipated by prior art. 
Def.’s SJ Mem. at 18–27.                                                  

    Because the Court has found that no reasonable jury could conclude that Tricam’s 
Accused Ladders infringe the cavity limitation of the ’416 patent, it is unnecessary for the 
Court to reach these remaining issues. Accordingly, to the extent they raise issues beyond 
the infringement of the cavity limitation, the Court denies the parties’ cross-motions for 
summary judgment as moot and declines to address their merits.            

VI.  Order                                                                
    For the reasons discussed above, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED THAT:          
    1.  Plaintiff’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 164) is DENIED. The Court 
      denies Plaintiff’s motion on the merits to the extent Plaintiff argues that it is 
      entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the issues of whether the Accused 
      Ladders infringe the cavity limitation in the ’416 patent literally or under the 
      doctrine of equivalents. In all other respects, the Court finds Plaintiff’s motion 
      is moot.                                                           

    2.  Defendant’s  Motion  for  Summary  Judgment  (Doc. 167)  is  GRANTED 
      because no reasonable jury could conclude that the Accused Ladders literally 
      infringe the cavity limitation in the ’416 patent and amendment-based estoppel 
      precludes  Plaintiff  from  relying  on  the  doctrine  of  equivalents  to  prove 
      infringement  of  this  limitation.  In  all  other  respects,  the  Court  finds 
      Defendant’s motion is moot.                                        

    3.  Defendant’s Motion to Exclude Expert Testimony of Fred Smith (Doc. 171) is 
      GRANTED IN PART. The Court excludes Mr. Smith’s opinions concerning 
      infringement of the cavity limitation because Mr. Smith failed to apply the 
      Court’s claim construction. In all other respects, the Court finds Defendant’s 
      motion is moot.                                                    

    4.  This action is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE.                         

    Let Judgment be entered accordingly.                                 
Date: March 28, 2024             s/Katherine Menendez                     
                                Katherine Menendez                       
                                United States District Judge             

Reference

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