Flexuspine, Inc. v. Globus Medical, Inc. , 879 F.3d 1369 ( 2018 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Cross-Appellant
    v.
    GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellant
    ______________________
    2017-1188, 2017-1189
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Texas in No. 6:15-cv-00201-JRG-KNM,
    Judge J. Rodney Gilstrap.
    ______________________
    Decided: January 19, 2018
    ______________________
    MARK STRACHAN, Sayles Werbner, P.C., Dallas, TX,
    argued for plaintiff-cross-appellant. Also represented by
    E. SAWYER NEELY, DARREN PATRICK NICHOLSON; TODD
    BLUMENFELD, BRETT MICHAEL PINKUS, JONATHAN TAD
    SUDER, Friedman, Suder & Cooke, Fort Worth, TX.
    ARUN SUBRAMANIAN, Susman Godfrey LLP, New
    York, NY, argued for defendant-appellant. Also repre-
    sented by JACOB W. BUCHDAHL, MARK HOWARD HATCH-
    MILLER; JOHN PIERRE LAHAD, Houston, TX.
    ______________________
    2                   FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, CLEVENGER and DYK,
    Circuit Judges.
    PROST, Chief Judge.
    Globus Medical, Inc., appeals the district court’s deci-
    sion denying its Rule 59(e) motion and denying as moot
    its Rule 50(b) motion. Flexuspine, Inc., cross-appeals
    from the district court’s grant of summary judgment of
    noninfringement of its 
    U.S. Patent No. 8,123,810
     (“’810
    patent”).    We affirm the district court’s decisions
    (1) denying Globus’s Rule 59(e) motion, (2) denying as
    moot its Rule 50(b) motion, and (3) granting summary
    judgment of noninfringement.
    I
    Flexuspine filed a complaint alleging Globus infringed
    five patents. Globus denied Flexuspine’s allegations of
    infringement and asserted affirmative defenses of non-
    infringement and invalidity, among others. Globus also
    filed declaratory judgment counterclaims of non-
    infringement and invalidity for each patent and requested
    a jury trial for its counterclaims. As a result of IPR
    proceedings and claim construction, the parties then
    jointly moved and the court dismissed a number of Flex-
    uspine’s claims and Globus’s counterclaims. The magis-
    trate judge also issued a report and recommendation
    granting Globus’s motion for summary judgement of non-
    infringement with respect to the ’810 patent, which the
    district court subsequently adopted.
    Over a month before trial on the remaining claims,
    the parties submitted a joint proposed pre-trial order
    along with proposed jury instructions and verdict forms
    from each party. Flexuspine’s proposed verdict form
    included a “stop instruction” which conditioned the sub-
    mission of invalidity on an affirmative finding of in-
    fringement. Globus’s proposed verdict form did not.
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.                 3
    Flexuspine’s stop instruction read “ANSWER THIS NEXT
    QUESTION ONLY AS TO THOSE CLAIMS YOU
    ANSWERED “YES” TO IN QUESTION 1 [the infringe-
    ment question] ABOVE—OTHERWISE DO NOT
    ANSWER THIS QUESTION.” J.A. 2837. On the second
    day of trial, the parties submitted proposed joint final jury
    instructions but competing verdict forms. Again, Flex-
    uspine’s amended proposed verdict form continued to
    include the same stop instruction, while Globus’s amend-
    ed proposed verdict form did not condition the invalidity
    question on an infringement finding.
    After the conclusion of evidence, the district court
    held an in-chambers informal charge conference to discuss
    the jury instructions and verdict form with the parties.
    As a result of those discussions, the district court gener-
    ated its intended final jury instructions and final verdict
    form. The final jury instructions and verdict form were
    adopted nearly word-for-word from Flexuspine’s proposed
    instructions and verdict form. The final verdict form
    included Flexuspine’s proposed stop instruction.
    The next day, the district court afforded the parties
    an opportunity to object to the final jury instructions and
    verdict form on the record. During this formal charge
    conference, the district court went page-by-page through
    the final instructions and the verdict form asking the
    parties if they had any objections. Neither party objected
    to Question 2 concerning invalidity or the stop instruction
    preceding Question 2. The district court specifically
    inquired as to the propriety of the instruction: “[t]urning
    to Page 3 wherein the Court has set forth Question 2, is
    there any objection from either party?” J.A. 4912. Globus
    answered “Nothing from the Defendant, Your Honor.” 
    Id.
    At the conclusion of the formal charge conference, the
    court again asked if there was “[a]nything further from
    the Defendant with regard to the verdict form?” and
    Globus answered: “No, Your Honor.” J.A. 4.
    4                  FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    After deliberation, the jury reported that they had
    reached a verdict. Upon reviewing the verdict form,
    however, the district court determined that the jury had
    not filled out the verdict form correctly. The jury an-
    swered “no” to all parts of Question 1 regarding infringe-
    ment but did not heed the verdict form’s stop instruction
    and continued to answer Questions 2 and 3 (the questions
    pertaining to invalidity and damages). The answer to
    Question 2 indicated the claims were found invalid, and
    in Question 3 the jury wrote in “0” for the damages
    amount.
    The district court instructed the jury to retire again
    with a blank verdict form, review the verdict form, and
    return a verdict consistent with both questions asked and
    the district court’s written instructions on the verdict
    form. The court then asked, “[d]oes either party object to
    the Court having sent the jury back to re-execute the
    verdict form consistent with each instruction included
    therein?” In response, neither party lodged a formal
    objection. Globus stated, “[y]our Honor, I was not present
    at the charge conference but I—as I understand it, or as I
    thought I understood it, a jury could still be allowed to
    pass on the validity of patents even in the absence of a
    finding of infringement.” J.A. 5014. The court responded
    that it had reviewed the verdict form with the parties and
    no formal objection had been made at the on-the-record
    charge conference.
    Shortly thereafter, the jury returned a verdict in ac-
    cordance with the district court’s instructions. This
    verdict found the claims not to be infringed and left the
    other questions unanswered. It was only at this point,
    after the jury returned its final verdict without answering
    the validity or damages questions, that Globus lodged its
    first formal objection. J.A. 5020 (“I do want to lodge a
    formal objection over the verdict. I understand that we
    did not make that at the appropriate time, but we do
    object for the record.”).
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.                5
    The district court entered final judgment that Globus
    did not infringe any of the asserted claims of the two
    remaining patents. The court’s judgment did not address
    invalidity of the patents-in-suit. Globus filed a Rule 59(e)
    motion requesting that the judgment be amended to
    include the jury’s invalidity verdict. Flexuspine opposed.
    Globus then filed a Rule 50(b) motion for judgment as a
    matter of law on invalidity. Globus argued in support of
    the Rule 50(b) motion that given the overwhelming inva-
    lidity evidence presented at trial, judgment as a matter of
    law on invalidity was required even if the court denied
    Globus’s Rule 59(e) motion. Flexuspine did not file a
    response to the Rule 50(b) motion.
    The district court denied Globus’s Rule 59(e) motion.
    The court also dismissed Globus’s invalidity counter-
    claims without prejudice and so denied as moot its Rule
    50(b) motion. Globus appeals. Flexuspine cross-appeals
    from the district court’s pre-trial order granting summary
    judgment of no infringement on the ’810 patent. Flex-
    uspine does not appeal the judgment of noninfringement
    of the other two patents-in-suit.
    We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(1).
    II
    A
    Globus appeals the district court’s order denying its
    Rule 59(e) motion. This court applies regional circuit
    law—here, the law of the Fifth Circuit—to review the
    denial of a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend a judg-
    ment. Minton v. Nat’l Ass’n of Sec. Dealers, Inc., 
    336 F.3d 1373
    , 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2003). The Fifth Circuit generally
    reviews the denial of a Rule 59(e) motion for abuse of
    discretion, except to the extent the ruling involved recon-
    sideration of a question of law, in which case the review is
    de novo. Potts v. Chesapeake Expl., LLC, 
    760 F.3d 470
    ,
    473 (5th Cir. 2014). Rule 59(e) motions to alter or amend
    6                   FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    a judgment “serve the narrow purpose of allowing a party
    to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present
    newly discovered evidence.” Waltman v. Int’l Paper Co.,
    
    875 F.2d 468
    , 473 (5th Cir. 1989) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Globus argues that, under Rule 59(e), the district
    court’s judgement should be amended to add a judgment
    of invalidity. This must be done, Globus argues, in order
    to correct the manifest errors of law made by the district
    court when it refused to enter judgment of invalidity and
    when it retired the jury for further deliberations after the
    jury initially returned its verdict. Because we perceive no
    manifest error of law to support Globus’s Rule 59(e)
    motion to alter or amend the judgment, we affirm the
    district court’s order denying this motion.
    First, Globus argues that the district court was not
    authorized to direct the jury to further consider its an-
    swers and verdict because the jury’s first answers were
    not inconsistent with each other. Globus maintains that
    the fact that the jury overlooked the stop instructions was
    not sufficient to render the verdict internally inconsistent.
    We disagree.
    In White v. Grinfas, 
    809 F.2d 1157
     (5th Cir. 1987),
    like here, the problem with the verdict “was caused by the
    jury’s failure to follow the court’s instructions.” 
    809 F.2d at 1161
    . In that case, the jury was directed to answer
    questions following question 3 only if it answered “yes” to
    that question. The jury answered “no” to that question
    but continued to answer further questions, ignoring the
    court’s instructions. The Fifth Circuit observed that
    “[b]ecause all the questions subsequent to question 3 were
    predicated on an affirmative response to that question,
    the subsequent answers had to conflict with the [“no”]
    answer to question 3, regardless of whether they were
    also in conflict with each other.” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added).
    Accordingly, under Fifth Circuit law, a jury answering
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.                 7
    questions in violation of a stop instruction is sufficient to
    render the verdict internally inconsistent.
    Here, as in White, because, according to the verdict
    form, answers to the validity and damages questions were
    predicated on an affirmative response to the infringement
    question, the jury’s answers to the validity and damages
    questions “had to conflict” with the jury’s answer of no
    infringement. 
    Id.
     The district court was entitled to find
    these answers inconsistent and was entitled to decline to
    enter judgment on invalidity. Richard v. Firestone Tire &
    Rubber Co., 
    853 F.2d 1258
    , 1260 (5th Cir. 1988) (citing
    White, 
    809 F.2d at 1161
    ) (recognizing the broad discretion
    the district court enjoys to refuse to consider interrogato-
    ries answered in violation of the court’s instructions). The
    district court also acted within its discretion when it
    retired the jury for further deliberations after the jury
    initially returned its verdict. 
    Id.
     at 1260–61. The district
    court has discretion to determine when a series of an-
    swers submitted by a jury is not clear and therefore
    requires resubmission. 
    Id.
     We decline to disturb the
    district court’s proper exercise of its discretion.
    Second, Globus argues that even if the jury’s answers
    were inconsistent with the verdict form, they were not
    inconsistent with the jury instructions. Globus submits
    that the jury instructions did not condition that the jury
    only determine invalidity if it found infringement, but
    instead suggested that the jury should resolve both in-
    fringement and invalidity. Globus maintains that the
    verdict form’s stop instruction was, therefore, in conflict
    with the jury instructions. According to Globus, the jury
    properly resolved this conflict in favor of following the
    jury instructions and so its answers to the verdict ques-
    tions, following those instructions, were not inconsistent.
    Under the Seventh Amendment and Fifth Circuit law,
    Globus argues, the district court was therefore required to
    adopt the jury’s verdict. Nance v. Gulf Oil Corp., 
    817 F.2d 1176
    , 1178 (5th Cir. 1987).
    8                   FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    Globus acknowledges that there is no directly on-point
    Fifth Circuit authority governing how to resolve a conflict
    between jury instructions and a verdict form, but con-
    tends that the district court got it wrong when it rejected
    the jury’s verdict. We need not decide how to address
    such a conflict because, to the extent there was any con-
    flict, the district court clarified the jury instructions, and
    Globus did not timely object.
    Both here and before the district court, Globus cited
    United States v. McKenna to support its view that any
    conflict between jury instructions and the verdict form
    should be resolved in favor of following the instructions.
    
    327 F.3d 839
     (9th Cir. 2003). In that case, a criminal
    defendant argued that a special verdict form impermissi-
    bly amended the indictment because it merely summa-
    rized the charge without setting out the specific elements.
    Because the district court had provided oral instructions
    setting forth those elements and because the district court
    specifically advised the jury the verdict form was only a
    summary and that the oral instructions should control,
    the Ninth Circuit held the verdict form did not impermis-
    sibly amend the indictment. 
    Id. at 843
    .
    We agree with the district court that McKenna, if any-
    thing, supports its conduct here. Like the defendant in
    that case, Globus did not object to the verdict form.
    Further, to the extent that there was any conflict between
    the verdict form and jury instructions, the district court
    here, as in McKenna, clearly instructed the jury on which
    instructions should control when it asked the jury to
    retire again with a blank verdict form and return a ver-
    dict consistent with both the questions asked and the stop
    instructions on the verdict form. 1
    1   During oral argument before this court, Globus
    cited Idaho Golf Partners v. TimberStone Management,
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.                9
    As discussed above, under Fifth Circuit law, the dis-
    trict court clearly has discretion to determine when a
    series of answers submitted by a jury is not clear and
    therefore requires resubmission. Richard, 
    853 F.2d at
    1260–61. Because the verdict form unambiguously sub-
    mitted the issue of validity to the jury only as an affirma-
    tive defense, the district court was entitled to find that
    the jury’s first answers on the verdict form were irrecon-
    cilable because they were in conflict with the clear in-
    structions on the face of the verdict form, whether or not
    those answers may have been consistent with the oral
    instructions. 
    Id. at 1260
    . “The judge [was] in an excellent
    position to evaluate whether the jury w[ould] likely be
    able to resolve this uncertainty with proper guidance.” 
    Id.
    at 1260–61. And the judge provided this guidance when
    he asked the jury to return a new verdict consistent with
    the stop instructions in the verdict form. “Removing any
    uncertainty in the jury’s findings obviously solidifies any
    judgment entered on the verdict.” 
    Id. at 1260
    . We, there-
    fore, decline to disturb the district court’s exercise of
    discretion in determining that the series of answers
    submitted by this jury required resubmission. 
    Id.
     at
    1260–61. And there is no Seventh Amendment violation
    by the resubmission of the verdict form when the answers
    in the first verdict are irreconcilable. Nance, 
    817 F.2d at 1178
    . Moreover, when specifically questioned, Globus did
    which is similarly inapposite. No. 1:14-CV-00233-BLW,
    
    2017 WL 3531481
    , at *1 (D. Idaho Aug. 17, 2017). That
    decision simply dealt with reconciling apparent internal
    inconsistencies within the special verdict form. The
    district court looked to the oral instructions as an expla-
    nation for the jury’s apparent inconsistent findings, but
    Idaho Golf never decided that the oral instruction must
    trump an unambiguous verdict form, nor did the jury in
    that case disobey unambiguous verdict form instructions,
    as it did here.
    10                  FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    not object to the district court sending the jury back for
    further deliberation and therefore waived any objection to
    the district court’s conduct.
    Finally, and in the alternative, Globus contends that
    the district court improperly found waiver of Globus’s
    right to a jury trial on its invalidity counterclaims based
    on Globus’s lack of objection to the verdict form. The
    district court’s decision to reject the jury’s invalidity
    verdict, therefore, allegedly violated Globus’s Seventh
    Amendment rights.
    The district court did not deprive Globus of its right to
    a jury trial outright, it merely declined to submit its
    counterclaims to this jury. The district court properly
    determined from Globus’s lack of objection to the verdict
    form prior to the jury’s deliberations that Globus submit-
    ted the issue of invalidity to the jury only as an affirma-
    tive defense, not as a counterclaim.          McDaniel v.
    Anheuser-Busch, Inc., 
    987 F.2d 298
    , 306 (5th Cir. 1993)
    (“[F]ailure to object to the wording of a special issue
    prevents a party from objecting to such wording on ap-
    peal.”). As discussed below, because the district court
    dismissed Globus’s invalidity counterclaims without
    prejudice, the claim survives for Globus to file another
    day.
    B
    Globus also appeals the district court’s order denying
    as moot its Rule 50(b) motion. This court applies regional
    law to review the denial of a Rule 50(b) motion for judg-
    ment as a matter of law. Apple Inc. v. Samsung Elecs.
    Co., 
    839 F.3d 1034
    , 1040 (Fed. Cir. 2016). The Fifth
    Circuit reviews the denial of a Rule 50(b) motion de novo.
    Hoffman v. L & M Arts, 
    838 F.3d 568
    , 580 (5th Cir. 2016).
    We review for abuse of discretion, however, a district
    court’s decision to dismiss without prejudice an invalidity
    counterclaim challenging a patent that it concludes was
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.               11
    not infringed. Liquid Dynamics Corp. v. Vaughan Co.,
    
    355 F.3d 1361
    , 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    We conclude that the district court was within its dis-
    cretion to dismiss Globus’s invalidity counterclaims
    without prejudice. This court has expressly held that “[a]
    district court judge faced with an invalidity counterclaim
    challenging a patent that it concludes was not infringed
    may either hear the claim or dismiss it without preju-
    dice.” 
    Id.
     (citing Nystrom v. TREX Co., 
    339 F.3d 1347
    ,
    1351 (Fed. Cir. 2003)). Globus is correct that a district
    court is typically faced with a live invalidity counterclaim
    only after the court grants summary judgment of nonin-
    fringement and that its discretion to dismiss invalidity
    counterclaims at later stages in the proceedings may be
    more limited. 2 Under the specific circumstances here,
    however—where the district court clarified that Globus’s
    invalidity counterclaims were not submitted to the jury
    and Globus waived its right during the trial to have the
    jury consider those claims—it was within the district
    court’s discretion to dismiss Globus’s counterclaims
    without prejudice.
    Once the district court dismissed Globus’s invalidity
    counterclaims without prejudice, invalidity was no longer
    a live issue amenable to being decided as a matter of law.
    The court properly denied as moot Globus’s Rule 50(b)
    motion for judgment as a matter of law of invalidity.
    2     The Supreme Court has “commented at length on
    the wasteful consequences of relitigating the validity of a
    patent after it has once been held invalid in a fair trial,
    and [it has] noted the danger that the opportunity to
    relitigate might, as a practical matter, grant monopoly
    privileges to the holders of invalid patents.” Cardinal
    Chem. Co. v. Morton Int’l, Inc., 
    508 U.S. 83
    , 100–01 (1993)
    (citing Blonder Tongue Labs., Inc. v. Univ. of Ill. Found.,
    
    402 U.S. 313
    , 329 (1971)).
    12                   FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    III
    Flexuspine cross-appeals from the district court’s
    grant of summary judgment of noninfringement of the
    ’810 patent. We review a district court’s grant of sum-
    mary judgment de novo, applying the same standard as
    the district court. Potts, 760 F.3d at 473. Under that
    standard, summary judgment is proper if the movant
    shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material
    fact, and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law. Id.
    Claim 17 of the ’810 patent requires an “upper body,”
    a “lower body,” and an “expansion member.” Relevant
    here is the following claim element:
    an expansion member comprising an elongated
    body having a substantially flat inferior surface,
    a substantially flat superior surface, and a first
    angled portion at an insertion end of the elon-
    gated body, wherein the expansion member is
    configured to be positioned between the upper
    body and the lower body such that applying a
    force to a trailing end of the elongated body op-
    posite the insertion end of the elongated body is
    configured to advance the first angled portion
    and the substantially flat superior and inferior
    surfaces of the expansion member in a substan-
    tially linear direction between and at least par-
    tially oblique to at least a portion of the inferior
    surface of the upper body and at least a portion
    of the superior surface of the lower body after in-
    sertion of the upper and lower body in the spine
    to increase a separation distance between the
    superior surface of the upper body and the infe-
    rior surface of the lower body.
    ’810 patent col. 36 ll. 13–29 (emphasis added).
    FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.                  13
    The parties agreed to an interpretation of the term
    “oblique,” as follows:
    (1) the expansion member’s movement must be
    oblique (in a slanting or sloping direction) to the
    surfaces of the upper and lower bodies, and
    (2) the first angled portion and the flat surfaces of
    the expansion member must move obliquely with
    respect to the same portion of the surface of the
    upper and lower bodies.
    J.A. 2918, 646–47, 735.
    The magistrate judge’s report and recommendation
    noted that “Flexuspine provide[d] no evidence to satisfy
    th[e second] requirement” “of the parties’ agreed construc-
    tion: that both the first angled portion and the flat surfac-
    es of the expansion member move obliquely to the same
    part of the superior and inferior surfaces of the upper and
    lower bodies.” J.A. 2921–22. “Even further, Flexuspine’s
    expert d[id] not mention this requirement in his in-
    fringement analysis at all.” J.A. 2922. “Absent such
    evidence,” the magistrate judge determined, “a reasonable
    juror could not find Caliber infringes the asserted claim.”
    Id. The district court reached the same conclusion.
    J.A. 3528 (noting that, as the magistrate judge identified,
    Flexuspine’s theory wholly fails to address the second
    requirement of the interpretation agreed to by the parties
    in claim construction).
    On appeal, Flexuspine does not dispute this portion of
    the district court’s order, nor does it affirmatively or
    explicitly take issue with the district court’s statement
    that its witness failed to address the second requirement
    of the parties’ agreed upon interpretation of “oblique.”
    Flexuspine does not cite to any evidence that might
    satisfy the second requirement of the claim construction.
    It even neglected to address this issue in its reply brief
    after Globus expressly identified the deficit in Flex-
    14                   FLEXUSPINE, INC.   v. GLOBUS MEDICAL, INC.
    uspine’s opening cross-appeal brief. We therefore affirm
    the district court’s order granting summary judgment. 3
    AFFIRMED
    COSTS
    The parties shall bear their own costs.
    3  Flexuspine also argues in its cross-appeal that the
    district court abused its discretion by precluding Flex-
    uspine’s reliance on an unrelated jury verdict. Because
    Flexuspine does not appeal from the jury’s noninfringe-
    ment verdict below, and we affirm the district court grant
    of summary judgment of noninfringement of the ’810
    patent, we need not reach this issue.