Walter Farmer, of Atlanta, Georgia, filed separate suits against
Alpha
Technologies, Inc, ("Alpha"), of Bellingham,
Washington, and Aspin Kemp & Associates ("Aspin
Kemp"), of Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada, alleging that each
company infringes Farmer's patent directed to uninterruptable
power supply systems.
Farmer is the sole named inventor of U.S. Patent No. 7,362,007 ("the '007
Patent"), entitled "Hybrid Uninterruptible Power Supply
System." The claimed system allows for a
telecommunications system to alternate between AC and DC power
systems based on unplanned interruptions and other events.
Representative Figure 5 of the '007 Patent is reproduced
below:
The complaints do not state whether Farmer practices the invention or licenses the patent to any other entities. The complaints allege that Alpha and Aspin Kemp infringe the '007 patent by "developing, using, offering to sell and/or selling in the United States or importing into the United States" their Alpha Micro 1000 UPS System and Omni B System, respectively.1 The complaints allege, without detail, that Alpha and Aspin Kemp had "actual knowledge and/or notice of the '007 Patent from a time prior to the filing of the present Complaint," and thus are liable for willful infringement. The complaints also allege that Farmer will suffer immediate and irreparable harm in the absence of an injunction.
Alpha Micro 1000 UPS System
The complaints request preliminary and permanent injunctions --
although no motion for preliminary injunctive relief has been filed
in either case -- damages, including trebled damages for alleged
willful infringement, and attorneys' fees and costs under 35
U.S.C. § 285.
The first case is Farmer v. Alpha Technologies,
Inc., Case No. 1:14-cv-02958-SCJ, filed September 15, 2014 in
the Northern District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, and is assigned
to U.S. District Judge Steve C. Jones. The second case is
Farmer v. Aspin Kemp & Associates, Case No.
1:14-cv-02959-RWS, filed September 15, 2014 in the Northern
District of Georgia, Atlanta Division, and is assigned to U.S.
District Judge Richard W. Story. One assumes that the two
cases will be handled by the same judge, should they proceed, but
no reassignments have been docketed to date.
Footnotes
1.The Alpha complaint calls the allegedly infringing system the "Micro 1000 USB System," but after inspection of Alpha's website and the '007 Patent, it is evident that this is a typographical error and is intended to refer to the "UPS," or "Uninterruptible Power Supply," system.
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