Biodelivery Scis. Int'l, Inc. v. Aquestive Therapeutics, Inc.
Opinion
ORDER
BioDelivery Sciences International, Inc. ("BioDelivery") moves to remand this case to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board to consider non-instituted claims and non-instituted grounds in accordance with the Supreme Court's recent decision in
SAS Institute, Inc. v. Iancu
, --- U.S. ----,
DISCUSSION
BioDelivery filed three petitions for
inter partes
review of
The Patent Trial and Appeal Board ("PTAB") decided each petition separately, and issued separate final written decisions that sustained the patentability of all instituted claims of the '167 Patent on all instituted grounds, and included discussion concerning the application of collateral estoppel between inter partes reexamination and inter partes review. BioDelivery appealed the PTAB's three decisions to this court. Aquestive responded, and the Director intervened to confess error as to the PTAB's assumption that inter partes reexamination could give rise to collateral estoppel in inter partes review.
This court received oral argument in the three appeals on February 9, 2018. On April 24, 2018, the Supreme Court issued its decision in
SAS Institute, Inc. v. Iancu
, --- U.S. ----,
Nine days after the Court's SAS decision issued, BioDelivery requested that this court remand the final decision in IPR2015-00165 to consider the patentability of the non-instituted claims. See ECF No. 88. In response, Aquestive argued that BioDelivery had waived any SAS -based relief for failing to raise any issue of non-instituted claims during this appeal. See ECF No. 90. In addition, Aquestive argued that a remand would not alter the result on appeal. Id .
Orders in other cases began to issue from this court, applying the Court's decision in
SAS
and outlining the contours of
SAS
-based requests for relief.
See, e.g.
,
Ulthera, Inc. v. DermaFocus LLC
, No. 2018-1542, slip op. at 3 (Fed. Cir. May 25, 2018) (granting petitioner's motion for remand to the PTAB to consider non-instituted claims);
Polaris Indus. Inc. v. Arctic Cat, Inc.
,
This court explained that
SAS
"require[s] a simple yes-or-no institution choice respecting a petition, embracing all challenges included in the petition."
PGS Geophysical AS v. Iancu
,
We also declined to find that a party waived its right to seek
SAS
-based relief due to failure to argue against partial institution before the PTAB.
Polaris
,
Both Aquestive and the Director argue that BioDelivery has waived its right to seek
SAS
-based relief for not raising the issue (A) upon the Supreme Court agreeing to hear
SAS
in May 2017,
see
ECF No. 93 at 2; (B) during the pendency of the
inter partes
reviews,
see
ECF No. 92 at 4; or (C) during the briefing period in this appeal,
see
id
. As discussed in
Polaris
, however,
SAS
represented a significant change in law that occurred during the pendency of BioDelivery's appeals.
Polaris
,
Aquestive and the Director also argue that BioDelivery's motion requesting remand for consideration of non-instituted grounds is untimely. See ECF No. 93 at 4 ("Biodelivery Sciences has waited nearly two months after the SAS decision to seek relief-after the parties spent the time to brief and argue the case, and more than three months after the appeal was submitted to the panel for decision."); ECF No. 92 at 6 ("Even if Appellant did not waive its arguments for a complete remand, its argument that the appeals from all three IPRs should be terminated and remanded is untimely.").
Nine days after the
SAS
decision, BioDelivery filed its first request for
SAS
-based relief from the PTAB's institution of less than all claims in IPR2015-00165.
See
ECF No. 88;
see also
SAS
,
BioDelivery made its second request for SAS -based relief soon after this court began ordering remands when the PTAB considered less than all asserted grounds, explaining that such requests were appropriate in view of SAS . Compare ECF No. 91 (dated June 19, 2018), with Polaris (issued May 30, 2018), Baker Hughes Oilfield (issued May 30, 2018), and Nestle Purina PetCare (issued June 11, 2018). Aquestive argues that BioDelivery should have requested this type of relief earlier, pointing to the PTO's informal "guidance" memorandum dated April 26, 2018 as evidence that "in view of SAS , [the PTAB] was going to institute on all claims and grounds of unpatentability raised in the petition." ECF No. 92 at 6-7 (discussing Guidance on the Impact of SAS on AIA Trial Proceedings , U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (Apr. 26, 2018), available at https://www.uspto.gov/patentsapplication-process/patent-trial-and-appeal-board/trials/guidance-impact-sas-aia-trial). The PTO's salutary decision concerning future action does not insulate earlier PTAB actions from remedy.
Aquestive further argues that because the PTAB recognized SAS to require institution on all challenged claims and all challenged grounds, BioDelivery should have also recognized this and requested complete relief in its May 3 filing. ECF No. 92 at 7 (discussing this court's statements in PGS Geophysical ). We agree that SAS requires institution on all challenged claims and all challenged grounds. See PGS Geophysical , 891 F.3d at 1360 ("Equal treatment of claims and grounds for institution purposes has pervasive support in SAS."). However, even if a prior action did not appear unlawful at the time, this does not insulate it from corrective action. The second request for SAS -based relief was not untimely simply because BioDelivery did not predict that this court would authorize requests for remand when the PTAB instituted on less than all grounds as well as on all claims. It is undisputed that BioDelivery acted promptly after these occurrences, requesting remand within days of this court's first orders granting remand for the PTAB's failure to institute on all asserted grounds.
Aquestive also asks that if this court decides that remand is appropriate, that we first decide the presently appealed issues. However, "[a]ppellate courts have historically disfavored piecemeal litigation and permitted appeals from complete and final judgments only."
W.L. Gore & Assocs., Inc. v. Int'l Med. Prosthetics Research Assocs., Inc.
,
Aquestive also asserts that remand would result in prejudice "because it will negatively impact Appellee's ability to assert and defend its patent rights in other venues and against other parties." ECF No. 92 at 14. Aquestive states that it "is actively enforcing its patents in numerous district court litigations," id ., including two district court actions against BioDelivery. We take note that one of these suits was stayed (jointly) during the inter partes reviews. See Reckitt Benckiser Pharm., Inc. v. BioDelivery Sci. Int'l, Inc. , No. 5:15-cv-00350-D (E.D.N.C. Sept. 22, 2014), ECF Nos. 39 & 42. Whether district court litigation is stayed for these remand procedures is within the province of the district court. Thus, the prejudice alleged by Aquestive does not weigh against a remand in this case.
Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED THAT :
(1) Biodelivery's request for remand to implement the Court's decision in SAS is granted in Federal Circuit Appeal Nos. 2017-1265, 2017-1266, and 2017-1268.
(2) The PTAB's decisions in PTAB Nos. IPR2015-00165, IPR2015-00168, and IPR2015-00169, are vacated.
(3) Pursuant to Federal Circuit Rule 41, this order shall constitute the mandate in Appeal Nos. 2017-1265, 2017-1266, and 2017-1268.
(4) Each party shall bear its costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BIODELIVERY SCIENCES INTERNATIONAL, INC., Appellant v. AQUESTIVE THERAPEUTICS, INC., Fka MonoSol Rx, LLC, Appellee Andrei Iancu, Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Intervenor
- Cited By
- 20 cases
- Status
- Published