

A recent claim construction ruling in a case involving both Nintendo and Microsoft set the stage for a Spring 2008 jury trial on a number of patents involving game controller technology owned by Plaintiff
Anascape Ltd. Both Microsoft and Nintendo sought unsuccessfully to stay the entire litigation in view of an on-going reexamination of several patents-in-suit. Judge Ron Clark stayed the litigation as to some but not all of the patents. In his claims construction order, entered November 30, 2007, Judge Carter construed seven terms that relate to four patents, Patent Nos. 5,999,084, 6,102,802, 6,135,886, and 6,343,991. These patents all relate to the switches and buttons on controllers used for video games. The Order (link below PDF), awarded Anascape its definition for “pressure-sensitive variable conductance material,” finding that Microsoft's construction improperly tried to limit the definition of the disputed claim term by excluding a preferred embodiment of the term. He also agreed with Anascape's contention that no construction was necessary for terms related to individual button pressing. Anascape lost any literal infringement arguments concerning the terms “pressure-sensitive variable conductance material” and “means for creating an analog [output proportional to][signal representing] varying applied physical pressure.” According to Judge Carter, the jury will have to pass on these limitations under a theory of infringement by the Doctrine of Equivalents.
Labels: 5999084, 6102802, 6135886, 6343991, claim construction, Game controller patents, Judge Ron Carter, McKool Smith, Microsoft, Nintendo