Life Technologies Corp. v. Promega Corp. , 137 S. Ct. 734 ( 2017 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2016                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U.S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. ET AL. v. PROMEGA
    CORP.
    CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
    THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT
    No. 14–1538. Argued December 6, 2016—Decided February 22, 2017
    Respondent Promega Corporation sublicensed the Tautz patent, which
    claims a toolkit for genetic testing, to petitioner Life Technologies
    Corporation and its subsidiaries (collectively Life Technologies) for
    the manufacture and sale of the kits for use in certain licensed law
    enforcement fields worldwide. One of the kit’s five components, an
    enzyme known as the Taq polymerase, was manufactured by Life
    Technologies in the United States and then shipped to the United
    Kingdom, where the four other components were made, for combina-
    tion there. When Life Technologies began selling the kits outside the
    licensed fields of use, Promega sued, claiming that patent infringe-
    ment liability was triggered under §271(f)(1) of the Patent Act, which
    prohibits the supply from the United States of “all or a substantial
    portion of the components of a patented invention” for combination
    abroad. The jury returned a verdict for Promega, but the District
    Court granted Life Technologies’ motion for judgment as a matter of
    law, holding that §271(f)(1)’s phrase “all or a substantial portion” did
    not encompass the supply of a single component of a multicomponent
    invention. The Federal Circuit reversed. It determined that a single
    important component could constitute a “substantial portion” of the
    components of an invention under §271(f)(1) and found the Taq poly-
    merase to be such a component.
    Held: The supply of a single component of a multicomponent invention
    for manufacture abroad does not give rise to §271(f)(1) liability.
    Pp. 4–11.
    (a) Section 271(f)(1)’s phrase “substantial portion” refers to a quan-
    titative measurement. Although the Patent Act itself does not define
    the term “substantial,” and the term’s ordinary meaning may refer
    2          LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Syllabus
    either to qualitative importance or to quantitatively large size, the
    statutory context points to a quantitative meaning. Neighboring
    words “all” and “portion” convey a quantitative meaning, and nothing
    in the neighboring text points to a qualitative interpretation. More-
    over, a qualitative reading would render the modifying phrase “of the
    components” unnecessary the first time it is used in §271(f)(1). Only
    the quantitative approach thus gives meaning to each statutory pro-
    vision.
    Promega’s proffered “case-specific approach,” which would require
    a factfinder to decipher whether the components at issue are a “sub-
    stantial portion” under either a qualitative or a quantitative test, is
    rejected. Tasking juries with interpreting the statute’s meaning on
    an ad hoc basis would only compound, not resolve, the statute’s am-
    biguity. And Promega’s proposal to adopt an analytical framework
    that accounts for both the components’ quantitative and qualitative
    aspects is likely to complicate rather than aid the factfinder’s review.
    Pp. 4–8.
    (b) Under a quantitative approach, a single component cannot con-
    stitute a “substantial portion” triggering §271(f)(1) liability. This
    conclusion is reinforced by §271(f)’s text, context, and structure. Sec-
    tion 271(f)(1) consistently refers to the plural “components,” indicat-
    ing that multiple components make up the substantial portion.
    Reading §271(f)(1) to cover any single component would also leave lit-
    tle room for §271(f)(2), which refers to “any component,” and would
    undermine §271(f)(2)’s express reference to a single component “espe-
    cially made or especially adapted for use in the invention.” The bet-
    ter reading allows the two provisions to work in tandem and gives
    each provision its unique application. Pp. 8–10.
    (c) The history of §271(f) further bolsters this conclusion. Congress
    enacted §271(f) in response to Deepsouth Packing Co. v. Laitram
    Corp., 
    406 U.S. 518
    , to fill a gap in the enforceability of patent rights
    by reaching components that are manufactured in the United States
    but assembled overseas. Consistent with Congress’s intent, a suppli-
    er may be liable under §271(f)(1) for supplying from the United
    States all or a substantial portion of the components of the invention
    or under §271(f)(2) for supplying a single component if it is especially
    made or especially adapted for use in the invention and not a staple
    article or commodity. But, as here, when a product is made abroad
    and all components but a single commodity article are supplied from
    abroad, the activity is outside the statute’s scope. Pp. 10–11.
    
    773 F. 3d
    . 1338, reversed and remanded.
    SOTOMAYOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNE-
    DY,  GINSBURG, BREYER, and KAGAN, JJ., joined, and in which THOMAS
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)                     3
    Syllabus
    and ALITO, JJ., joined as to all but Part II–C. ALITO, J., filed an opinion
    concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which THOMAS,
    J., joined. ROBERTS, C. J., took no part in the decision of the case.
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)                               1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 14–1538
    _________________
    LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION, ET AL.,
    PETITIONERS v. PROMEGA CORPORATION
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT
    [February 22, 2017]
    JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
    This case concerns the intersection of international
    supply chains and federal patent law. Section 271(f )(1) of
    the Patent Act of 1952 prohibits the supply from the
    United States of “all or a substantial portion” of the compo-
    nents of a patented invention for combination abroad. 
    35 U.S. C
    . §271(f )(1). We granted certiorari to determine
    whether a party that supplies a single component of a
    multicomponent invention for manufacture abroad can be
    held liable for infringement under §271(f )(1). 579 U. S.
    ___ (2016). We hold that a single component does not
    constitute a substantial portion of the components that
    can give rise to liability under §271(f )(1). Because only a
    single component of the patented invention at issue here
    was supplied from the United States, we reverse and
    remand.
    I
    A
    We begin with an overview of the patent in dispute.
    Although the science behind the patent is complex, a basic
    understanding suffices to resolve the question presented
    2           LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    by this case.
    The Tautz patent, U. S. Reissue Patent No. RE 37,984,
    claims a toolkit for genetic testing.1 The kit is used to take
    small samples of genetic material—in the form of nucleo-
    tide sequences that make up the molecule deoxyribonu-
    cleic acid (commonly referred to as “DNA”)—and then syn-
    thesize multiple copies of a particular nucleotide sequence.
    This process of copying, known as amplification, generates
    DNA profiles that can be used by law enforcement agen-
    cies for forensic identification and by clinical and research
    institutions around the world. For purposes of this litiga-
    tion, the parties agree that the kit covered by the Tautz
    patent contains five components: (1) a mixture of primers
    that mark the part of the DNA strand to be copied; (2)
    nucleotides for forming replicated strands of DNA; (3) an
    enzyme known as Taq polymerase; (4) a buffer solution for
    the amplification; and (5) control DNA.2
    Respondent Promega Corporation was the exclusive
    licensee of the Tautz patent. Petitioner Life Technologies
    Corporation manufactured genetic testing kits.3 During
    the timeframe relevant here, Promega sublicensed the
    Tautz patent to Life Technologies for the manufacture and
    sale of the kits for use in certain licensed law enforcement
    fields worldwide. Life Technologies manufactured all but
    one component of the kits in the United Kingdom. It
    manufactured that component—the Taq polymerase—in
    ——————
    1 TheTautz patent expired in 2015. The litigation thus concerns past
    acts of infringement only.
    2 Because the parties here agree that the patented invention is made
    up of only these five components, we do not consider how to identify the
    “components” of a patent or whether and how that inquiry relates to
    the elements of a patent claim.
    3 Applied Biosystems, LLC, and Invitrogen IP Holdings, Inc., are also
    petitioners in this proceeding and are wholly owned subsidiaries of Life
    Technologies Corporation. The agreement at issue here was originally
    between Promega and Applied Biosystems. 
    773 F. 3d
    1338, 1344, n. 3
    (CA Fed. 2014).
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)            3
    Opinion of the Court
    the United States. Life Technologies shipped the Taq
    polymerase to its United Kingdom facility, where it was
    combined with the other four components of the kit.
    Four years into the agreement, Promega sued Life
    Technologies on the grounds that Life Technologies had
    infringed the patent by selling the kits outside the li-
    censed fields of use to clinical and research markets. As
    relevant here, Promega alleged that Life Technologies’
    supply of the Taq polymerase from the United States to its
    United Kingdom manufacturing facilities triggered liabil-
    ity under §271(f )(1).
    B
    At trial, the parties disputed the scope of §271(f )(1)’s
    prohibition against supplying all or a substantial portion
    of the components of a patented invention from the United
    States for combination abroad. Section 271(f )(1)’s full text
    reads:
    “Whoever without authority supplies or causes to be
    supplied in or from the United States all or a substan-
    tial portion of the components of a patented invention,
    where such components are uncombined in whole or
    in part, in such manner as to actively induce the com-
    bination of such components outside of the United
    States in a manner that would infringe the patent if
    such combination occurred within the United States,
    shall be liable as an infringer.”
    The jury returned a verdict for Promega, finding that
    Life Technologies had willfully infringed the patent. Life
    Technologies then moved for judgment as a matter of law,
    contending that §271(f )(1) did not apply to its conduct
    because the phrase “all or a substantial portion” does not
    encompass the supply of a single component of a multi-
    component invention.
    The District Court granted Life Technologies’ motion.
    4        LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    The court agreed that there could be no infringement
    under §271(f )(1) because Promega’s evidence at trial
    “showed at most that one component of all of the accused
    products, [the Taq] polymerase, was supplied from the
    United States.” 
    2012 WL 12862829
    , *3 (WD Wis., Sept.
    13, 2012) (Crabb, J.). Section 271(f )(1)’s reference to “a
    substantial portion of the components,” the District Court
    ruled, does not embrace the supply of a single component.
    
    Id., at *5.
       The Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversed
    and reinstated the jury’s verdict finding Life Technologies
    liable for infringement.4 
    773 F. 3d
    1338, 1353 (2014). As
    relevant here, the court held that “there are circumstances
    in which a party may be liable under §271(f )(1) for supply-
    ing or causing to be supplied a single component for com-
    bination outside the United States.” 
    Ibid. The Federal Circuit
    concluded that the dictionary definition of “sub-
    stantial” is “important” or “essential,” which it read to
    suggest that a single important component can be a “ ‘sub-
    stantial portion of the components’ ” of a patented inven-
    tion. 
    Ibid. Relying in part
    on expert trial testimony that
    the Taq polymerase is a “ ‘main’ ” and “ ‘major’ ” component
    of the kits, the court ruled that the single Taq polymerase
    component was a substantial component as the term is
    used in §271(f )(1). 
    Id., at 1356.
                                  II
    The question before us is whether the supply of a single
    component of a multicomponent invention is an infringing
    act under 
    35 U.S. C
    . §271(f )(1). We hold that it is not.
    ——————
    4 Chief Judge Prost dissented from the majority’s conclusion with
    respect to the “active inducement” element of 
    35 U.S. C
    . §271(f)(1). 
    773 F. 3d
    , at 1358–1360. Neither that question, nor any of the Federal
    Circuit’s conclusions regarding Life Technologies’ liability under
    §271(a) or infringement of four additional Promega patents, see 
    id., at 1341,
    is before us. See 579 U. S. ___ (2016).
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)             5
    Opinion of the Court
    A
    The threshold determination to be made is whether
    §271(f )(2)’s requirement of “a substantial portion” of the
    components of a patented invention refers to a quantita-
    tive or qualitative measurement. Life Technologies and
    the United States argue that the text of §271(f )(1) estab-
    lishes a quantitative threshold, and that the threshold
    must be greater than one. Promega defends the Federal
    Circuit’s reading of the statute, arguing that a “substan-
    tial portion” of the components includes a single compo-
    nent if that component is sufficiently important to the
    invention.
    We look first to the text of the statute. Sebelius v. Cloer,
    569 U. S. ___, ___ (2013) (slip op., at 6). The Patent Act
    itself does not define the term “substantial,” and so we
    turn to its ordinary meaning. 
    Ibid. Here we find
    little
    help. All agree the term is ambiguous and, taken in isola-
    tion, might refer to an important portion or to a large
    portion. Brief for Petitioners 16; Brief for Respondent 18;
    Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 12. “Substan-
    tial,” as it is commonly understood, may refer either to
    qualitative importance or to quantitatively large size. See,
    e.g., Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2280
    (defs. 1c, 2c) (1981) (Webster’s Third) (“important, essen-
    tial,” or “considerable in amount, value, or worth”); 17
    Oxford English Dictionary 67 (defs. 5a, 9) (2d ed. 1989)
    (OED) (“That is, constitutes, or involves an essential part,
    point, or feature; essential, material,” or “Of ample or
    considerable amount, quantity, or dimensions”).
    The context in which “substantial” appears in the stat-
    ute, however, points to a quantitative meaning here. Its
    neighboring terms are the first clue. “[A] word is given
    more precise content by the neighboring words with which
    it is associated.” United States v. Williams, 
    553 U.S. 285
    ,
    294 (2008). Both “all” and “portion” convey a quantitative
    meaning. “All” means the entire quantity, without refer-
    6      LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    ence to relative importance. See, e.g., Webster’s Third 54
    (defs. 1a, 2a, 3) (“that is the whole amount or quantity of,”
    or “every member or individual component of,” or “the
    whole number or sum of ”); 1 OED 324 (def. 2) (“The entire
    number of; the individual components of, without excep-
    tion”). “Portion” likewise refers to some quantity less than
    all. Webster’s Third 1768 (defs. 1, 3a) (“an individual’s
    part or share of something,” or “a part of a whole”); 12
    OED 154, 155 (def. 1a, 5a) (“The part (of anything) allotted
    or belonging to one person,” or “A part of any whole”).
    Conversely, there is nothing in the neighboring text to
    ground a qualitative interpretation.
    Moreover, the phrase “substantial portion” is modified
    by “of the components of a patented invention.” It is the
    supply of all or a substantial portion “of the components”
    of a patented invention that triggers liability for infringe-
    ment. But if “substantial” has a qualitative meaning, then
    the more natural way to write the opening clause of the
    provision would be to not reference “the components” at
    all. Instead, the opening clause of §271(f )(1) could have
    triggered liability for the supply of “all or a substantial
    portion of . . . a patented invention, where [its] compo-
    nents are uncombined in whole or in part.” A qualitative
    reading would render the phrase “of the components”
    unnecessary the first time it is used in §271(f )(1). When-
    ever possible, however, we should favor an interpretation
    that gives meaning to each statutory provision. See Hibbs
    v. Winn, 
    542 U.S. 88
    , 101 (2004). Only the quantitative
    approach does so here. Thus, “substantial,” in the context
    of §271(f )(1), is most reasonably read to connote a quanti-
    tative measure.
    Promega argues that a quantitative approach is too
    narrow, and invites the Court to instead adopt a “case-
    specific approach” that would require a factfinder to deci-
    pher whether the components at issue are a “substantial
    portion” under either a qualitative or quantitative test.
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)                   7
    Opinion of the Court
    Brief for Respondent 17, 42. We decline to do so. Having
    determined the phrase “substantial portion” is ambiguous,
    our task is to resolve that ambiguity, not to compound it
    by tasking juries across the Nation with interpreting the
    meaning of the statute on an ad hoc basis. See, e.g., Rob-
    inson v. Shell Oil Co., 
    519 U.S. 337
    , 345–346 (1997).
    As a more general matter, moreover, we cannot accept
    Promega’s suggestion that the Court adopt a different
    analytical framework entirely—one that accounts for both
    the quantitative and qualitative aspects of the compo-
    nents. Promega reads §271(f )(1) to mean that the answer
    to whether a given portion of the components is “substan-
    tial” depends not only on the number of components in-
    volved but also on their qualitative importance to the
    invention overall. At first blush, there is some appeal to
    the idea that, in close cases, a subjective analysis of the
    qualitative importance of a component may help deter-
    mine whether it is a “substantial portion” of the compo-
    nents of a patent. But, for the reasons discussed above,
    the statute’s structure provides little support for a qualita-
    tive interpretation of the term.5
    Nor would considering the qualitative importance of a
    component necessarily help resolve close cases. To the
    contrary, it might just as easily complicate the factfinder’s
    review. Surely a great many components of an invention
    (if not every component) are important. Few inventions,
    including the one at issue here, would function at all
    without any one of their components. Indeed, Promega
    has not identified any component covered by the Tautz
    ——————
    5 The examples Promega provides of other statutes’ use of the terms
    “substantial” or “significant” are inapposite. See Brief for Respondent
    19–20. The text of these statutes, which arise in different statutory
    schemes with diverse purposes and structures, differs in material ways
    from the text of §271(f )(1). The Tax Code, for instance, refers to “a
    substantial portion of a return,” 
    26 U.S. C
    . §7701(a)(36)(A), not to “a
    substantial portion of the entries of a return.”
    8       LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    patent that would not satisfy Promega’s “importance”
    litmus test.6 How are courts—or, for that matter, market
    participants attempting to avoid liability—to determine
    the relative importance of the components of an invention?
    Neither Promega nor the Federal Circuit offers an easy
    way to make this decision. Accordingly, we conclude that
    a quantitative interpretation hews most closely to the text
    of the statute and provides an administrable construction.
    B
    Having determined that the term “substantial portion”
    refers to a quantitative measurement, we must next de-
    cide whether, as a matter of law, a single component can
    ever constitute a “substantial portion” so as to trigger
    liability under §271(f )(1). The answer is no.
    As before, we begin with the text of the statute. Section
    271(f )(1) consistently refers to “components” in the plural.
    The section is targeted toward the supply of all or a sub-
    stantial portion “of the components,” where “such compo-
    nents” are uncombined, in a manner that actively induces
    the combination of “such components” outside the United
    States. Text specifying a substantial portion of “compo-
    nents,” plural, indicates that multiple components consti-
    tute the substantial portion.
    The structure of §271(f ) reinforces this reading. Section
    271(f )(2), which is §271(f )(1)’s companion provision, reads
    as follows:
    “Whoever without authority supplies or causes to be
    supplied in or from the United States any component
    of a patented invention that is especially made or es-
    pecially adapted for use in the invention and not a
    staple article or commodity of commerce suitable for
    ——————
    6 Life Technologies’ expert described the Taq polymerase as a “main”
    component. App. 160. The expert also described two other components
    the same way. 
    Ibid. Cite as: 580
    U. S. ____ (2017)                   9
    Opinion of the Court
    substantial noninfringing use, where such component
    is uncombined in whole or in part, knowing that such
    component is so made or adapted and intending that
    such component will be combined outside of the
    United States in a manner that would infringe the pa-
    tent if such combination occurred within the United
    States, shall be liable as an infringer.”
    Reading §271(f )(1) to refer to more than one component
    allows the two provisions to work in tandem. Whereas
    §271(f )(1) refers to “components,” plural, §271(f )(2) refers
    to “any component,” singular. And, whereas §271(f )(1)
    speaks to whether the components supplied by a party
    constitute a substantial portion of the components,
    §271(f )(2) speaks to whether a party has supplied “any”
    noncommodity component “especially made or especially
    adapted for use in the invention.”
    We do not disagree with the Federal Circuit’s observa-
    tion that the two provisions concern different scenarios.
    See 
    773 F. 3d
    , at 1354. As this Court has previously ob-
    served, §§271(f )(1) and 271(f )(2) “differ, among other
    things, on the quantity of components that must be ‘sup-
    plie[d] . . . from the United States’ for liability to attach.”
    Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp., 
    550 U.S. 437
    , 454, n. 16
    (2007). But we do not draw the Federal Circuit’s conclu-
    sion from these different but related provisions. Reading
    §271(f )(1) to cover any single component would not only
    leave little room for §271(f )(2), but would also undermine
    §271(f )(2)’s express reference to a single component “espe-
    cially made or especially adapted for use in the inven-
    tion.”7 Our conclusion that §271(f )(1) prohibits the supply
    of components, plural, gives each subsection its unique
    ——————
    7 ThisCourt’s opinion in Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp., 
    550 U.S. 437
    , 447 (2007), is not to the contrary. The holding in that case turned
    not on the number of components involved, but rather on whether the
    software at issue was a component at all.
    10       LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORP. v. PROMEGA CORP.
    Opinion of the Court
    application.8 See, e.g., Cloer, 569 U. S., at ___ (slip op.,
    at 6).
    Taken alone, §271(f )(1)’s reference to “components”
    might plausibly be read to encompass “component” in the
    singular. See 
    1 U.S. C
    . §1 (instructing that “words im-
    porting the plural include the singular,” “unless the con-
    text indicates otherwise”). But §271(f )’s text, context, and
    structure leave us to conclude that when Congress said
    “components,” plural, it meant plural, and when it said
    “component,” singular, it meant singular.
    We do not today define how close to “all” of the compo-
    nents “a substantial portion” must be. We hold only that
    one component does not constitute “all or a substantial
    portion” of a multicomponent invention under §271(f )(1).
    This is all that is required to resolve the question presented.
    C
    The history of §271(f ) bolsters our conclusion. The
    Court has previously observed that Congress enacted
    §271(f ) in response to our decision in Deepsouth Packing
    Co. v. Laitram Corp., 
    406 U.S. 518
    (1972). See Microsoft
    
    Corp., 550 U.S., at 444
    . In Deepsouth, the Court deter-
    mined that, under patent law as it existed at the time, it
    was “not an infringement to make or use a patented prod-
    uct outside of the United 
    States.” 406 U.S., at 527
    . The
    ——————
    8 Promega argues that the important distinction between these provi-
    sions is that §271(f )(1), unlike §271(f )(2), requires a showing of specific
    intent for active inducement. Brief for Respondent 34–41. But cf.
    Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S. A., 
    563 U.S. 754
    , 765–766
    (2011) (substantially equating the intent requirements for §§271(b) and
    271(c), on which Promega asserts §§271(f )(1) and (f )(2) were modeled).
    But, to repeat, whatever intent subsection (f )(1) may require, it also
    imposes liability only on a party who supplies a “substantial portion of
    the components” of the invention. Thus, even assuming that subsection
    (f )(1)’s “active inducement” requirement is different from subsection
    (f )(2)’s “knowing” and “intending” element—a question we do not reach
    today—that difference between the two provisions does not read the
    “substantial portion” language out of the statute.
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)          11
    Opinion of the Court
    new §271(f ) “expand[ed] the definition of infringement to
    include supplying from the United States a patented
    invention’s components,” as outlined in subsections (f )(1)
    and (f )(2). 
    Microsoft, 550 U.S., at 444
    –445.
    The effect of this provision was to fill a gap in the en-
    forceability of patent rights by reaching components that
    are manufactured in the United States but assembled
    overseas and that were beyond the reach of the statute in
    its prior formulation. Our ruling today comports with
    Congress’ intent.       A supplier may be liable under
    §271(f )(1) for supplying from the United States all or a
    substantial portion of the components (plural) of the in-
    vention, even when those components are combined
    abroad. The same is true even for a single component
    under §271(f )(2) if it is especially made or especially
    adapted for use in the invention and not a staple article or
    commodity. We are persuaded, however, that when as in
    this case a product is made abroad and all components but
    a single commodity article are supplied from abroad, this
    activity is outside the scope of the statute.
    III
    We hold that the phrase “substantial portion” in 
    35 U.S. C
    . §271(f )(1) has a quantitative, not a qualitative,
    meaning. We hold further that §271(f )(1) does not cover
    the supply of a single component of a multicomponent
    invention. The judgment of the Court of Appeals for the
    Federal Circuit is therefore reversed, and the case is
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    It is so ordered.
    THE CHIEF JUSTICE took no part in the decision of this
    case.
    Cite as: 580 U. S. ____ (2017)            1
    Opinion of ALITO, J.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 14–1538
    _________________
    LIFE TECHNOLOGIES CORPORATION, ET AL.,
    PETITIONERS v. PROMEGA CORPORATION
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT
    [February 22, 2017]
    JUSTICE ALITO, with whom JUSTICE THOMAS joins,
    concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
    I join all but Part II–C of the Court’s opinion. It is clear
    from the text of 
    35 U.S. C
    . §271(f) that Congress intended
    not only to fill the gap created by Deepsouth Packing Co. v.
    Laitram Corp., 
    406 U.S. 518
    (1972)—where all of the
    components of the invention were manufactured in the
    United States, 
    id., at 524—but
    to go at least a little fur-
    ther. How much further is the question in this case, and
    the genesis of §271(f) sheds no light on that question.
    I note, in addition, that while the Court holds that a
    single component cannot constitute a substantial portion
    of an invention’s components for §271(f)(1) purposes, I do
    not read the opinion to suggest that any number greater
    than one is sufficient. In other words, today’s opinion
    establishes that more than one component is necessary,
    but does not address how much more.