Communications Test Design v. Contec, LLC ( 2020 )


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  • Case: 19-1672    Document: 51     Page: 1   Filed: 03/13/2020
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant
    v.
    CONTEC, LLC,
    Defendant-Appellee
    ______________________
    2019-1672
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Pennsylvania in No. 2:18-cv-04077-
    GJP, Judge Gerald J. Pappert.
    ______________________
    Decided: March 13, 2020
    ______________________
    RICHARD WILLIAM MILLER, Ballard Spahr LLP, At-
    lanta, GA, argued for plaintiff-appellant. Also represented
    by DENNIS ALAN WHITE, JR.; LYNN E. RZONCA, Philadel-
    phia, PA.
    COBY SCOTT NIXON, Taylor English Duma LLP, At-
    lanta, GA, argued for defendant-appellee. Also repre-
    sented by KELLY MULLALLY, SETH KINCAID TRIMBLE.
    ______________________
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51      Page: 2    Filed: 03/13/2020
    2               COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    Before O’MALLEY, MAYER, and WALLACH, Circuit Judges.
    O’MALLEY, Circuit Judge.
    Communications Test Design, Inc. (“CTDI”) filed suit
    in the United States District Court for the Eastern District
    of Pennsylvania, seeking declaratory judgment that its test
    systems do not infringe two of Contec, LLC’s patents (“the
    Pennsylvania action”). Six days later, Contec sued CTDI
    for patent infringement in the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of New York (“the New York ac-
    tion”). Contec moved to dismiss the Pennsylvania action,
    arguing that CTDI’s anticipatory filing was made in bad
    faith during active licensing discussions. The district court
    granted the motion, exercising its discretion to decline ju-
    risdiction over CTDI’s declaratory judgment action.
    Commc’ns Test Design, Inc. v. Contec LLC, 
    367 F. Supp. 3d 350
    , 360 (E.D. Pa. 2019). In doing so, the court found that
    equitable considerations warranted departure from the
    first-to-file rule. CTDI appeals the district court’s dismis-
    sal of the Pennsylvania action. Because we conclude that
    the district court did not abuse the broad discretion ac-
    corded to it—both under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28
    U.S.C. § 2201(a) and pursuant to the first-to-file rule—we
    affirm.
    I. BACKGROUND
    A. The Parties
    CTDI is an engineering, repair, and logistics company
    with its principal place of business in West Chester, Penn-
    sylvania. Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F.3d at 353
    . Since
    2007, CTDI has developed, manufactured, and been using
    its “Gen3” and “Gen5” test systems within the United
    States for testing set-top boxes and multimedia devices. 
    Id. These test
    systems, which form the basis of Contec’s in-
    fringement claims, were designed and developed at CTDI’s
    West Chester facility. Although based in Pennsylvania,
    Case: 19-1672     Document: 51      Page: 3    Filed: 03/13/2020
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                    3
    CTDI has over ninety facilities worldwide, including one in
    Glenville, New York.
    Contec “provides repair, test and reverse logistics for
    electronics hardware used in a broad range of markets.”
    
    Id. Contec is
    the owner by assignment of the two patents
    at issue in this case: (1) U.S. Patent No. 8,209,732 for an
    “Arrangement and Method for Managing Testing and Re-
    pair of Set-Top Boxes;” and (2) U.S. Patent No. 8,689,071
    for a “Multimedia Device Test System.” 
    Id. The systems
     described in the asserted patents were designed and devel-
    oped at Contec’s corporate headquarters in Schenectady,
    New York. 
    Id. Three of
    the six inventors of the asserted
    patents reside in New York, while another left Contec in
    2014 and works in CTDI’s Glenville, New York facility. 
    Id. at 359,
    360 n.3.
    B. Pre-Suit Communications
    In September 2017, Contec sent a letter to CTDI to de-
    termine whether CTDI’s test systems infringed any claims
    of the asserted patents. Over the course of the following
    year, the parties exchanged numerous emails and letters.
    In June 2018, counsel for both parties met in person, and
    CTDI disclosed certain information about its test systems
    pursuant to a confidentiality agreement.
    In September 2018, Contec’s counsel sent a letter to
    CTDI stating that “the parties’ extrajudicial process for ob-
    taining information about CTDI’s systems, without the full
    discovery obligations that would be imposed during litiga-
    tion, has proved unsatisfactory.” 
    Id. at 353.
    Counsel ex-
    plained that Contec had a good faith basis to believe that
    CTDI infringes at least one claim of the asserted patents.
    The letter asked CTDI to indicate, by September 19, 2018,
    whether it was willing to “discuss potential terms for a pa-
    tent license agreement.” 
    Id. at 353–54.
    Contec warned
    that, if it did not receive such confirmation, it would sue for
    patent infringement. 
    Id. at 354.
    Contec attached to its let-
    ter a draft of its proposed complaint. 
    Id. Case: 19-1672
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    4               COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    On September 19—Contec’s stated deadline—Jerry
    Parsons, CTDI’s Chairman and chief executive officer
    (CEO), spoke on the phone with Hari Pillai, Contec’s CEO,
    about a possible license for Contec’s patents. During that
    conversation, Pillai proposed initial terms, and the execu-
    tives agreed to talk again on September 24, when Parsons
    would make a counterproposal. 
    Id. After their
    discussion,
    Pillai emailed Parsons, confirming the follow-up call and
    indicating that he looked forward to the counterproposal.
    
    Id. Later that
    same day, CTDI’s counsel sent an email to
    Contec’s counsel, confirming that “CTDI will consider po-
    tential terms as requested in your most recent letter.” 
    Id. Counsel reiterated
    that, “[d]espite our firm position on non-
    infringement and without admission, in an attempt to
    avoid an impasse, we remain willing to consider reasonable
    licensing terms and so, we encourage a continued conver-
    sation between the executives.” 
    Id. On September
    21—two days after accepting Contec’s
    request to discuss licensing terms—CTDI filed a declara-
    tory judgment action in Pennsylvania. 
    Id. Later that
    af-
    ternoon, Parsons sent an email to Pillai, confirming that
    CTDI would put a licensing proposal together and accept-
    ing Pillai’s suggested time for their follow-up call on Sep-
    tember 24. 
    Id. Parsons made
    no mention of the fact that
    CTDI had filed its declaratory judgment complaint.
    On September 24—the day the CEOs were scheduled
    to talk—CTDI’s counsel emailed Contec’s counsel a copy of
    the declaratory judgment complaint. Counsel stated that
    official service would be held for a period of time to allow
    further discussion between the executives. 1
    1  CTDI ultimately served its declaratory judgment
    complaint on October 15, 2018.
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    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                  5
    On September 27, 2018, Contec filed its complaint for
    patent infringement in the Northern District of New York.
    That case remains pending.
    C. Procedural History
    As noted, CTDI filed the Pennsylvania action on Sep-
    tember 21, 2018. On November 13, 2018, Contec moved to
    dismiss, or in the alternative, transfer or stay, CTDI’s com-
    plaint. Contec argued that CTDI filed the Pennsylvania
    action “in bad faith during active licensing discussions,
    only after inducing Contec to refrain from filing its own
    complaint against CTDI in a different forum.” Def.’s Mot.
    to Dismiss, Commc’ns Test Design, Inc. v. Contec, LLC, No.
    2:18cv4077 (E.D. Pa. Nov. 13, 2018), ECF No. 5. Contec
    asked the court to decline to exercise jurisdiction over the
    declaratory judgment action and dismiss the complaint in
    favor of the New York action.
    On February 15, 2019, the district court granted Con-
    tec’s motion and dismissed CTDI’s complaint. At the out-
    set, the court noted that “[n]either party disputes that an
    actual controversy exists here.” Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 355
    . Both the Pennsylvania and New
    York actions involve the same parties, the same patents,
    the same allegedly infringing products, and the same issue:
    whether CTDI’s test systems infringe Contec’s patents.
    The court recognized that, between CTDI’s first-filed de-
    claratory judgment action and Contec’s subsequently filed
    patent infringement action, CTDI’s first-filed action is pre-
    ferred “unless considerations of judicial and litigant econ-
    omy, and the just and effective disposition of disputes,
    require otherwise.” 
    Id. at 356
    (quoting Genentech, Inc. v.
    Eli Lilly & Co., 
    998 F.2d 931
    , 937 (Fed. Cir. 1993), abro-
    gated on other grounds by Wilton v. Seven Falls Co., 
    515 U.S. 277
    , 288 (1995)).
    Relying on the timing and content of the parties’ com-
    munications, the district court found that “CTDI filed suit
    in anticipation of Contec’s impending infringement suit.”
    Case: 19-1672     Document: 51     Page: 6    Filed: 03/13/2020
    6               COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    
    Id. at 357.
    Although CTDI promised Contec “a desire for a
    non-judicial resolution and continued negotiations,” it sued
    Contec two days later, thereby “beat[ing] Contec to the
    courthouse.” 
    Id. The court
    found that, although CTDI “had
    every right, in its business and legal judgment, to break off
    negotiations and resort to litigation,” it was not permitted
    to “string Contec along just long enough to get the judicial
    drop and file this lawsuit in its own backyard.” 
    Id. at 358.
     The court noted that CTDI’s communications before and
    after its filing reveal its “nefarious motive,” and ultimately
    determined that “CTDI’s conduct was inconsistent with the
    policy of promoting extrajudicial dispute resolution, not to
    mention sound judicial administration and the conserva-
    tion of judicial resources.” 
    Id. at 357,
    358.
    Recognizing that the anticipatory nature of CTDI’s suit
    is “merely one factor in the analysis” under the first-to-file
    rule, the district court explained that “[i]nterference with
    ongoing negotiations constitutes another ‘sound reason
    that would make it unjust’ to exercise jurisdiction over the
    declaratory judgment action.” 
    Id. at 358
    (citation omitted).
    The court also considered the convenience of the parties
    and availability of witnesses and determined that, “on bal-
    ance the Northern District of New York is a more conven-
    ient forum to resolve the dispute between the parties.” 
    Id. at 359.
    Given these considerations, the district court dis-
    missed the Pennsylvania action in favor of Contec’s later-
    filed infringement action. 2
    2   After the district court dismissed the Pennsylvania
    action, the district court in the Northern District of New
    York issued a decision denying CTDI’s motion to dismiss
    that action. Contec, LLC v. Commc’ns Test Design, Inc.,
    No. 18-cv-1172, 
    2019 WL 4736455
    , at *3 (N.D.N.Y. Sept.
    27, 2019). The New York district court explained that it
    deferred to the Eastern District of Pennsylvania’s determi-
    nation under the first-to-file rule, and noted that, “were it
    Case: 19-1672     Document: 51      Page: 7    Filed: 03/13/2020
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                    7
    CTDI appeals. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
    § 1295(a)(1).
    II. DISCUSSION
    On appeal, CTDI argues that the district court abused
    its discretion when it dismissed CTDI’s first-filed com-
    plaint seeking declaratory judgment of non-infringement
    in favor of Contec’s later-filed patent infringement action.
    According to CTDI, the Pennsylvania action was “entitled
    to precedence” over the New York action because there was
    no “sound reason” to depart from the first-to-file rule and
    because the “center of gravity” of the alleged infringing ac-
    tivity is in Pennsylvania. Appellant Br. 12–13. CTDI asks
    this court to find an abuse of discretion, reverse the district
    court’s dismissal, and remand for further proceedings on
    the merits of the declaratory judgment action. In the alter-
    native, CTDI submits that we should remand for an evi-
    dentiary hearing so that the district court can make factual
    findings regarding CTDI’s alleged motive. We address
    each issue in turn.
    A. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion.
    The Declaratory Judgment Act provides, in relevant
    part, that: “In a case of actual controversy within its juris-
    diction . . . any court of the United States, upon the filing
    of an appropriate pleading, may declare the rights and
    other legal relations of any interested party seeking such
    declaration, whether or not further relief is or could be
    up to this Court to determine the appropriate forum, it
    would have come to the same conclusion.” 
    Id. at *3–4.
    In
    doing so, the New York district court remarked that it was
    “unable to see how an email from CTDI’s CEO suggesting
    that a proposal was on the way—and which was written
    the same day that CTDI filed the Pennsylvania Action—
    could be anything other than a delay tactic to ensure the
    Pennsylvania Action was filed first.” 
    Id. at *4.
    Case: 19-1672      Document: 51      Page: 8     Filed: 03/13/2020
    8                COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    sought.” 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a). Given the statute’s use of the
    word “may,” the Supreme Court has said that a district
    court has “unique and substantial discretion in deciding
    whether to declare the rights of litigants.” 
    Wilton, 515 U.S. at 286
    . The use of that discretion is not plenary, however,
    and “[t]here must be well-founded reasons for declining to
    entertain a declaratory judgment action.” Capo, Inc. v. Di-
    optics Med. Prods., 
    387 F.3d 1352
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2004);
    see also 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 937
    (“When there is an ac-
    tual controversy and a declaratory judgment would settle
    the legal relations in dispute and afford relief from uncer-
    tainty or insecurity, in the usual circumstance the declara-
    tory action is not subject to dismissal.”). We review a
    district court decision declining jurisdiction over a declara-
    tory judgment for an abuse of discretion. 3 
    Wilton, 515 U.S. at 289
    –90.
    As long as the district court “acts in accordance with the
    purposes of the Declaratory Judgment Act and the princi-
    ples of sound judicial administration, [it] has broad discre-
    tion to refuse to entertain a declaratory judgment action.”
    
    EMC, 89 F.3d at 813
    –14. We have stated that “the purpose
    of the Declaratory Judgment Act . . . in patent cases is to
    provide the allegedly infringing party relief from uncer-
    tainty and delay regarding its legal rights.” Goodyear Tire
    & Rubber Co. v. Releasomers, Inc., 
    824 F.2d 953
    , 956 (Fed.
    Cir. 1987). We have also stated that the “question whether
    to accept or decline jurisdiction in an action for a declara-
    tion of patent rights in view of a later-filed suit for patent
    infringement impacts this court’s mandate to promote
    3    The Declaratory Judgment Act is not an independ-
    ent basis for jurisdiction. See, e.g., Skelly Oil Co. v. Phillips
    Petroleum Co., 
    339 U.S. 667
    , 671–72 (1950); Cat Tech LLC
    v. TubeMaster, Inc., 
    528 F.3d 871
    , 879 (Fed. Cir. 2008). The
    district court had jurisdiction over this action pursuant to
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1338(a).
    Case: 19-1672     Document: 51      Page: 9    Filed: 03/13/2020
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                    9
    national uniformity in patent practice.” Elecs. for Imaging,
    Inc. v. Coyle, 
    394 F.3d 1341
    , 1345 (Fed. Cir. 2005). Because
    it is an issue that falls within our exclusive subject matter
    jurisdiction, “we do not defer to the procedural rules of
    other circuits.” Serco Servs. Co., L.P. v. Kelley Co., Inc., 
    51 F.3d 1037
    , 1038 (Fed. Cir. 1995).
    The district court dismissed CTDI’s declaratory judg-
    ment action so that Contec’s patent infringement action—
    filed six days later—could proceed in New York. In these
    circumstances, where the issue is whether a suit for decla-
    ration of patent rights should yield to a later-filed infringe-
    ment suit, the trial court’s discretion is guided by the first-
    to-file rule, “whereby the forum of the first-filed case is fa-
    vored.” 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 937
    . “The ‘first-to-file’ rule
    is a doctrine of federal comity, intended to avoid conflicting
    decisions and promote judicial efficiency, that generally fa-
    vors pursuing only the first-filed action when multiple law-
    suits involving the same claims are filed in different
    jurisdictions.” Merial Ltd. v. Cipla Ltd., 
    681 F.3d 1283
    ,
    1299 (Fed. Cir. 2012) (citing 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 937
    –
    38). The filing date of an action derives from the filing of
    the complaint. 
    Id. (citing Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 3). Under the
    first-to-file rule, a district court may choose to stay, trans-
    fer, or dismiss a later-filed duplicative action. 
    Id. The general
    rule is that the first-filed action is pre-
    ferred, even if it is declaratory, “unless considerations of
    judicial and litigant economy, and the just and effective
    disposition of disputes, require otherwise.” 
    Serco, 51 F.3d at 1039
    . “[T]rial courts have discretion to make exceptions
    to this general rule in the interest of justice or expediency,”
    and we have recognized that such “exceptions are not rare.”
    Micron Tech., Inc. v. Mosaid Techs., Inc., 
    518 F.3d 897
    , 904
    (Fed. Cir. 2008) (citing 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 937
    ). For
    example, a district court may consider “a party’s intention
    to preempt another’s infringement suit when ruling on the
    dismissal of a declaratory action, but that consideration is
    merely one factor in the analysis.” 
    Id. (citing Genentech,
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51      Page: 10    Filed: 03/13/2020
    10              COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, 
    LLC 998 F.2d at 938
    ). “Other factors include the convenience
    and availability of witnesses, the absence of jurisdiction
    over all necessary or desirable parties, and the possibility
    of consolidation with related litigation.” 
    Id. at 904–05.
         When one of two competing suits in a first-to-file analy-
    sis is a declaratory judgment action, district courts enjoy a
    “double dose” of discretion: discretion to decline to exercise
    jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment action and discre-
    tion when considering and applying the first-to-file rule
    and its equitable exceptions. See Kerotest Mfg. Co. v. C-O-
    Two Fire Equip. Co., 
    342 U.S. 180
    , 183–84 (1952) (noting
    that, in questions of priority between similar proceedings,
    “an ample degree of discretion, appropriate for disciplined
    and experienced judges, must be left to the lower courts”).
    Although district courts can, in the exercise of that discre-
    tion, dispense with the first-to-file rule, there must “be
    sound reason that would make it unjust or inefficient to
    continue the first-filed action.” 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 938
    .
    With this framework in mind, we turn to the district court’s
    analysis.
    Here, the district court carefully considered the record
    of the parties’ dispute, up to and including the competing
    filings, and concluded that several factors warranted de-
    parture from the first-to-file rule. Specifically, the court
    found that: (1) CTDI filed its declaratory judgment com-
    plaint in anticipation of Contec’s patent infringement com-
    plaint; (2) CTDI’s suit interfered with ongoing negotiations
    between the parties and did not serve the objectives of the
    Declaratory Judgment Act; and (3) on balance, the North-
    ern District of New York is a more convenient forum. As
    explained below, we find no abuse of discretion in the dis-
    trict court’s analysis.
    At the outset, the record is clear that CTDI’s filing was
    anticipatory. It is undisputed that, after the parties’ extra-
    judicial discussions proved unsatisfactory to Contec, Con-
    tec sent CTDI a draft complaint and told CTDI that it
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    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                    11
    would file suit if CTDI did not confirm by September 18,
    2018, that it was willing to discuss the terms of a potential
    license. Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 357
    .
    When that deadline arrived, CTDI indicated to Contec—on
    the phone and by letter—that it was willing to engage in
    licensing discussions. But two days later, CTDI filed its
    declaratory judgment action in Pennsylvania. Given these
    facts, the district court concluded that “CTDI filed suit in
    anticipation of Contec’s impending infringement suit.” 
    Id. On appeal,
    CTDI does not take issue with the district
    court’s characterization of the Pennsylvania action as an-
    ticipatory. 4 Instead, it focuses on the district court’s state-
    ment that CTDI’s “communications, both immediately
    before and after CTDI’s filing, . . . reveal its ‘nefarious mo-
    tive’ to anticipate Contec’s impending suit and interfere
    with negotiations that Contec reasonably believed CTDI
    was conducting in good faith.” Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 357
    (quoting Sony Elecs., Inc. v. Guardian
    Media Techs., Ltd., 
    497 F.3d 1271
    , 1286 (Fed. Cir. 2007)).
    CTDI claims that the district court’s dismissal was “largely
    if not entirely based” on its “nefarious motive”
    4    Although CTDI attempts to challenge the district
    court’s characterization of its complaint as anticipatory for
    the first time in its reply brief, counsel for CTDI conceded
    at oral argument that it failed to raise this argument in the
    opening brief.      Oral Arg. at 7:07–18, available at
    http://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/default.aspx?fl=
    2019-1672.mp3. It is well established that an issue not
    raised by an appellant in its opening brief is waived. Bec-
    ton Dickinson & Co. v. C.R. Bard, Inc., 
    922 F.2d 792
    , 800
    (Fed. Cir. 1990); see also Amhil Enters. Ltd. v. Wawa, Inc.,
    
    81 F.3d 1554
    , 1563 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (“A reply brief, which
    should ‘reply to the brief of the appellee,’ see Fed. R. App.
    P. 28(c), is not the appropriate place to raise, for the first
    time, an issue for appellate review.”).
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51     Page: 12   Filed: 03/13/2020
    12              COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    determination, and that such a determination “was an
    abuse of discretion.” Appellant Br. 18. We disagree.
    Although the court remarked that CTDI’s pre-suit com-
    munications revealed a “nefarious motive” to anticipate
    and interfere with negotiations, its decision to dismiss was
    not, as CTDI suggests, based “largely if not entirely” on
    that statement. Instead, the court analyzed the parties’
    pre-filing actions and communications and found that
    CTDI filed suit in anticipation of Contec’s impending in-
    fringement suit. Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 357
    .     The court explained that, “[a]rmed with the
    knowledge that Contec intended to sue if the parties did
    not enter into a patent license, CTDI continued the pre-
    tense of good faith negotiations.” 
    Id. When Contec’s
    stated
    deadline arrived, CTDI reassured Contec that it was will-
    ing to discuss non-judicial resolution and that litigation
    might be avoidable. Indeed, CTDI expressly agreed to have
    further licensing discussions the following week, thereby
    ensuring that Contec would refrain from filing its com-
    plaint. At the same time, however, CTDI was preparing its
    declaratory judgment complaint.
    CTDI argues that, as of September 19, 2018, it was ap-
    parent to Parsons “that a licensing agreement would prob-
    ably not be reached between Contec and CTDI.” Appellant
    Br. 19. As the district court found, however, Parsons’ ap-
    parent belief was never communicated to Contec.
    Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 358
    . In other
    words, even if Parsons believed non-judicial resolution was
    unlikely, the undisputed, objective evidence showed that
    CTDI continued to engage in and encourage negotiations.
    The district court found that “CTDI had every right, in its
    business and legal judgment, to break off negotiations and
    resort to litigation.” 
    Id. But CTDI
    did not have the right
    to “string Contec along just long enough to get the judicial
    drop and file this lawsuit in its own backyard.” 
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    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                   13
    On this record, regardless of CTDI’s motive or intent,
    its pre-suit communications and conduct support the dis-
    trict court’s conclusion that the declaratory judgment ac-
    tion was filed in anticipation of Contec’s infringement suit.
    As such, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s
    characterization of CTDI’s complaint as anticipatory.
    Recognizing that the anticipatory nature of CTDI’s de-
    claratory action was “merely one factor in the analysis,” the
    district court also found that CTDI’s “[i]nterference with
    ongoing negotiations” provided “another ‘sound reason that
    would make it unjust’ to exercise jurisdiction over the de-
    claratory judgment action.” Commc’ns Test Design, 367 F.
    Supp. 3d at 358 (quoting 
    Genentech, 998 F.2d at 938
    ). As
    we held in EMC, district courts “may take into account the
    pendency of serious negotiations to sell or license a patent
    in determining to exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory
    judgment action.” 
    EMC, 89 F.3d at 814
    . We reasoned that,
    when there are ongoing negotiations, a district court may
    find that “the need for judicial relief is not as compelling as
    in cases in which there is no real prospect of a non-judicial
    resolution of the dispute.” 
    Id. In EMC,
    for example, the accused infringer filed a de-
    claratory judgment action while it was in active negotia-
    tions with the patentee, and told the patentee that its filing
    was “merely a defensive step” and that it wanted to con-
    tinue discussions between the parties. 
    Id. at 815.
    On ap-
    peal, we affirmed the district court’s finding that the
    declaratory judgment complaint was “a tactical measure
    filed in order to improve [the accused infringer’s] posture
    in the ongoing negotiations—not a purpose that the Declar-
    atory Judgment Act was designed to serve.” 
    Id. Here, CTDI
    argues that it filed the Pennsylvania ac-
    tion, not as a “tactical measure” to improve its “bargaining
    position,” but rather “to obtain a resolution that nearly a
    year of discussions had failed to achieve.” Appellant Br.
    23. It submits that, “unlike EMC’s complaint, CTDI’s
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51      Page: 14    Filed: 03/13/2020
    14              COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    complaint was filed for a purpose that the Declaratory
    Judgment Act was designed to serve—to provide CTDI
    with relief from uncertainty and delay regarding its legal
    rights.” 
    Id. at 24.
         As the district court explained, the undisputed evi-
    dence demonstrates that license negotiations were ongoing
    when CTDI filed suit. Given these facts, the district court
    found that “CTDI took advantage of the fact that Contec
    deferred filing its complaint based on Contec’s reasonable
    belief that licensing discussions were taking place in ear-
    nest, with the obvious hope that litigation would not be nec-
    essary.” Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 359
    .
    The court concluded that CTDI’s conduct was “inconsistent
    with the policy promoting extrajudicial dispute resolution,
    not to mention sound judicial administration and the con-
    servation of judicial resources.” 
    Id. at 358.
    The district
    court was within its discretion in reaching this conclusion. 5
    Finally, CTDI argues that the district court erred in
    finding that, “on balance the Northern District of New York
    is a more convenient forum to resolve the dispute between
    the parties.” Appellant Br. 27 (quoting Commc’ns Test De-
    
    sign, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 359
    ). On this point, the district
    court considered that CTDI is headquartered in West Ches-
    ter, Pennsylvania, and that many of the witnesses with tes-
    timony relevant to the accused test systems are located in
    West Chester. Commc’ns Test 
    Design, 367 F. Supp. 3d at 359
    . But the district court also considered that CTDI has
    over ninety facilities worldwide, including in Glenville,
    5  Although CTDI argues that the district court erred
    in focusing on the parties’ dealings after September 12,
    2018, and not on their communications over the course of
    the prior year, the record is clear that the parties did not
    begin to discuss a potential license until September 19,
    2018.
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51     Page: 15    Filed: 03/13/2020
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                 15
    New York, where the accused test systems have been used.
    
    Id. As to
    Contec, the district court considered that: (1) its
    corporate headquarters are in New York; (2) it has no wit-
    nesses, physical facilities or place of business in Pennsyl-
    vania; (3) Contec’s employee files for its current and former
    employees, its email server and its record databases are
    maintained in its New York facility; (4) three of the six in-
    ventors of the patents at issue are current residents of New
    York; and (5) five of the inventors, “who would serve as key
    witnesses,” are beyond the subpoena power of the district
    court. 
    Id. On balance,
    the court found that these factors
    favored Contec’s later-filed New York action. 
    Id. at 359–
     60.
    On appeal, CTDI does not take issue with the district
    court’s fact findings relevant to the convenience factors.
    Oral Arg. at 10:05–31 (“We don’t dispute the findings, Your
    Honor, but [we] do dispute the conclusion that they demon-
    strate that the Northern District of New York is in fact a
    more convenient forum overall.”). Instead, it argues that,
    on balance, the “center of gravity” of the alleged infringing
    activity is in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Appel-
    lant Br. 28. We find no error in the district court’s balanc-
    ing of the convenience factors, which is committed to the
    court’s sound discretion. These factors, coupled with the
    district court’s findings that CTDI’s complaint interfered
    with ongoing negotiations and was filed in anticipation of
    Contec’s infringement suit, support the district court’s de-
    cision to depart from the first-to-file rule and dismiss
    CTDI’s complaint.
    B. Remand Is Not Necessary.
    Although CTDI maintains that this court should re-
    verse the district court’s dismissal and remand for further
    proceedings on the merits of the declaratory judgment ac-
    tion, it asks, in the alternative, that we remand for an evi-
    dentiary hearing because “the district court made factual
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51     Page: 16    Filed: 03/13/2020
    16              COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC
    findings regarding CTDI’s ‘motive’ necessary to its deci-
    sion.” Appellant Br. 34.
    The procedure employed by the district court to make
    jurisdictional determinations is a “procedural question not
    unique to patent law,” and thus is governed by the law of
    the regional circuit—here, the Third Circuit. Microsoft
    Corp. v. GeoTag, Inc., 
    817 F.3d 1305
    , 1310 (Fed. Cir. 2016).
    We review the district court’s choice of procedure for an
    abuse of discretion. See Tanzymore v. Bethlehem Steel
    Corp., 
    457 F.2d 1320
    , 1323 (3d Cir. 1972). For the reasons
    explained below, we find no such abuse of discretion. Ac-
    cordingly, remand is not warranted.
    First, in support of its procedural objection, CTDI ar-
    gues that Contec’s motion to dismiss was “akin to a factual
    attack on subject matter jurisdiction” and relies on proce-
    dures district courts employ when reviewing factual chal-
    lenges to subject matter jurisdiction in the Rule 12(b)(1)
    context. Appellant Br. 35. But as CTDI concedes, “whether
    the district court had subject matter jurisdiction was not at
    issue.” 
    Id. at 34.
    Importantly, Contec’s motion to dismiss
    was not a Rule 12(b)(1) motion, and did not challenge the
    district court’s subject matter jurisdiction. Instead, Contec
    moved to dismiss CTDI’s complaint pursuant to the district
    court’s discretion under the Declaratory Judgment Act,
    which does not implicate the court’s subject matter juris-
    diction. See Countrywide Home Loans, Inc. v. Mortg. Guar.
    Ins. Corp., 
    642 F.3d 849
    , 853 (9th Cir. 2011) (explaining
    that the Declaratory Judgment Act (“DJA”) “does not con-
    fer jurisdiction, and therefore also does not afford the op-
    portunity to decline it. The DJA gives district courts the
    discretion to decline to exercise the conferred remedial
    power, but in no way modifies the district court’s jurisdic-
    tion, which must properly exist independent of the DJA.”
    (internal citation omitted)). Given this posture, the proce-
    dures CTDI attempts to invoke—which provide for a hear-
    ing if there is a dispute of material fact relevant to a
    jurisdictional issue—are inapplicable. CTDI cites no
    Case: 19-1672    Document: 51      Page: 17    Filed: 03/13/2020
    COMMUNICATIONS TEST DESIGN v. CONTEC, LLC                  17
    authority requiring a district court to hold an evidentiary
    hearing when deciding whether it should, in its discretion,
    exercise jurisdiction over a declaratory judgment action.
    Second, it is well-established that a “court can evaluate
    its jurisdiction without an evidentiary hearing ‘so long as
    the court has afforded [the parties] notice and a fair oppor-
    tunity to be heard.’” McCann v. George W. Newman Irrev-
    ocable Trust, 
    458 F.3d 281
    , 290 (3d Cir. 2006) (quoting
    
    Tanzymore, 457 F.2d at 1323
    –24). “A key consideration in
    determining whether a hearing is required is whether ei-
    ther party requested one.” 
    Id. Here, the
    parties had ample
    opportunity to be heard through declarations and briefs.
    Neither party requested oral argument or an evidentiary
    hearing. As such, the district court did not err in dismiss-
    ing CTDI’s complaint without a hearing.
    Finally, where there are no material facts in dispute, a
    hearing is not required. See 
    McCann, 458 F.3d at 290
    . Ac-
    cording to CTDI, in finding that it acted with a “nefarious
    motive,” the district court made certain factual and credi-
    bility determinations that should have only been made af-
    ter a hearing. Appellant Br. 34. But the district court’s
    statement that CTDI acted with a “nefarious motive” was
    not necessary to its decision. The district court found that
    CTDI’s filing was anticipatory, disruptive to ongoing nego-
    tiations, and inconsistent with the purpose of the Declara-
    tory Judgment Act. The objective evidence in the record
    supports these findings. As such, remand for a hearing is
    not warranted.
    III. CONCLUSION
    We have considered CTDI’s remaining arguments and
    find them unpersuasive. Because the district court acted
    within its discretion in declining to exercise jurisdiction
    over CTDI’s declaratory judgment action, we affirm the dis-
    trict court’s dismissal.
    AFFIRMED