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I couldn't find a picture for this. Just imagine each leaf is an individual claim construction oral order.
I couldn't find a picture for this. Just imagine each leaf is an individual claim construction oral order. Erol Ahmed, Unsplash

I've noticed that, since November of last year, Judge Burke has been issuing claim construction opinions in some cases in the form of a series of oral orders on the docket, rather than a formal memorandum opinion or an order with footnotes. I thought I'd flag this so that people know what may happen if you have claim construction in a case before Judge Burke.

I first saw the Court construe terms via oral orders on the docket in November 2023, in The Nielsen Company (US), LLC v. TVision Insights, Inc., C.A. No. 22-057, D.I. 140-141 (D. Del. Nov. 9, 2023). There, the Court addressed the construction of two terms, each in its own lengthy oral order along these lines:

ORAL ORDER: The Court, having reviewed the parties' motions for claim construction regarding the second term to be construed ("identify[ing] a first frequency component having a first spectral power and a second frequency component having a second spectral power by performing a spectral transform operation on the first frame of media samples" (the "identifying term")), . . . the briefing related thereto, . . . having considered the legal standards regarding claim construction, . . . and having heard argument at a Markman . . . , hereby ORDERS that the "identifying" term be construed to mean "generate first and second frequency components by performing a spectral transform operation on the first frame of media samples" (i.e., Plaintiff's proposal). The Court adds the following with regard to its rationale: [lengthy discussion of the Court's view on five separate points raised by the parties regarding this term]. Ordered by Judge Christopher J. Burke on 11/9/2023.

Since then, the Court has done this in several cases. In Scale Biosciences, Inc. v. Parse Biosciences, Inc., C.A. No. 22-1597-CJB (D. Del.), for example, the Court issued a series of oral orders addressing individual terms, starting just over 30 days after the Markman hearing:

  • 01/18/2024 - D.I. 118: "ORAL ORDER: The Court . . . hereby addresses the construction of term 1: [setting forth term and lengthy discussion]"
  • 01/18/2024 - D.I. 119: "ORAL ORDER: With regard to the parties' motions for claim construction, . . . the Court now addresses the construction of term 2: [similar lengthy discussion]"
  • 01/26/2024 - D.I. 121: "ORAL ORDER: With regard to the parties' motions for claim construction, . . . the Court now addresses the construction of term 3: [similar lengthy discussion]"
  • 02/06/2024 - D.I. 126: "ORAL ORDER: With regard to the parties' motions for claim construction, . . . the Court now addresses the construction of term 4: [similar lengthy discussion]"

The Court has continued this technique in other cases, including for example:

  • State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Amazon.com, Inc., C.A. No. 22-1447-CJB (D. Del. Jan. 2024): Three terms construed in three separate orders over two days, starting seven days after the Markman hearing.
  • Topia Technology, Inc. v. Egnyte, Inc., C.A. No. 21-1821-CJB (D. Del. Mar.-Apr. 2024): Seven terms construed in seven separate orders over the course of just over three weeks, staring 187 days after the Markman hearing.
  • Hilti Aktiengesellschaft v. Specified Technologies Inc., C.A. No. 22-1383-CJB (D. Del. Mar. 25, 2024): Three terms construed in three separate orders all issued on the same day, four days after the Markman hearing.
  • Qfix Systems, LLC v. Klarity Medical Products, LLC, C.A. No. 23-77-CJB (D. Del. Apr. 2024): Two terms construed over twelve days, starting six days after the Markman hearing.
  • Parus Holdings Inc. v. Amazon.com, Inc., C.A. No. 23-190-GBW-CJB (D. Del. May 3, 2024): Four oral orders (some titled "Report and Recommendation") construing four terms, starting six days after the Markman hearing and spanning three days.
  • Agilent Technologies, Inc. v. Axion BioSystems, Inc., C.A. No. 23-198 (D. Del. Aug. 2024): Seven oral orders construing seven terms over seven days, starting two days after the Markman hearing.

As you can see, it looks like these generally start to issue within about a week after the Markman hearing, and the Court does one term per oral order, sometimes spread over up to three weeks.

This is an interesting new technique that I haven't seen the Court apply before. Just based on the dockets, it looks like it could help the Court get decisions to the parties quickly. A turnaround of one week or less is much faster than Judge Burke's (and former Judge Stark's) stated goal of having claim construction opinions out within 60 days.

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