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SICPA Product Security Vindicated In Patent Claim

SICPA Product Security, LLC Vindicated in Patent Case as Tax-Right Loses Patent Infringement Claim and is Obligated to Pay SICPA’s Costs

Tax-Right LLC (West Berlin, NJ) has agreed to pay SICPA Product Security, LLC (‘SICPA’) a confidential amount in court costs and fees, as a result of Tax-Right dismissing its own frivolous lawsuit against SICPA in September 2012 for an alleged patent infringement (The United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia (Tax-Right v. SICPA, Civ. No. 3:12-CV-657)).

 

The settlement also includes Tax-Right’s obligation to retract false allegations that it had made to the industry, including a withdrawal letter to be sent to all concerned parties and issuance of a Press Release clearing SICPA of any wrongdoing. Tax-Right now admits that SICPA does not infringe its patent, and further admits that its patent has no bearing on Master Settlement Agreement (‘MSA’) information capture and verification.

 

The agreement is a victory for SICPA and its customers and puts an end to Tax-Right’s efforts to claim that its patent covers MSA information capture and verification and prevents another empty patent infringement lawsuit from occurring.

 

The Court ultimately found that the Tax-Right patent did not cover or relate to MSA information capture and verification. As trial by jury approached, Tax-Right admitted that its infringement claims against SICPA had no merit and sought to drop the infringement claims and walk away. SICPA, however, insisted that Tax-Right reimburse SICPA for its court costs and fees based on the lack of legal merit of Tax-Right’s lawsuit.

 

Throughout the case, the Court criticized Tax-Right’s theory of the case, questioned the validity of the patent claims, and found it hard to believe key Tax-Right testimony, as can be seen in the following extracts:

 

THE COURT: I have got to tell you that I am strongly inclined on reading the patent, and I have read your briefs, but I am strongly inclined to say that an order is a customer order. It is just twisting things around to make it something else.

 

Most importantly, the Court finds that the ordinary meaning of the term “item requirements of an order” does not include compliance with the Master Settlement Agreement (“MSA”), but rather the quantity and types of items requested by a customer.

The majority of the filings in this case are publically available, many of which can be found here:

 

1. Motion to Strike the Errata Sheets of Tax-Right’s Expert (Dr. Wells) and Tax-Right’s Rule 30(B)6 Witness, Mr. Stomel

 

                   a. DI138 – Order from the Court unsealing Motion to Strike the Errata Sheets

 

3. DI 141 – The Court’s Claim Construction Order issued September 4th 2013

 

4. Transcript from Markman Hearing held August 20th 2013

 

5. DI 95 – Memorandum of Law by Defendant SICPA in Support of its Motion

 

Contact:

 

Emmy Ansinelli

 

Marketing Director, NAFTA
SICPA Product Security LLC

+1 212 308 6933
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