It is axiomatic that the claims of a patent describe the invention, and for Alice challenges, define whether an invention is drawn to an abstract idea without an inventive concept. Of course, claims are construed in light of the specification and some courts delay ruling on Alice motions until after a Markman hearing is held. The Southern District of Texas continued this trend by denying a Motion to Dismiss on Alice grounds, holding the patent-in-suit must be construed before an Alice analysis can be performed.

In the case of Mantissa Corporation v. Ondot Systems, Inc., Case No. 4:15-cv-1133 (S.D. Texas, August 12, 2016 Order on Motion to Dismiss) the court focused on the specification of the patent-in-suit and refused to view the claims in a vacuum on a Motion to Dismiss. Citing Enfish, the court held a proper Alice analysis requires "a stage-one filter to claims, considered in light of the specification..." (emphasis in original). The court discussed the more narrow situation where the invention is alleged to improve the function of the computer itself, again citing Enfish: "[whether] the claims are directed to an improvement of an existing technology is bolstered by the specification's teachings that the claimed invention achieves other benefits over conventional databases..." (emphasis in original). The court then held the claims must be construed in light of the specification before determining whether the claims were invalid under §101.

The court appeared to be worried about a possible reversal if it conducted an Alice analysis pre-claim construction. In a frank passage of the opinion, the court summarized Enfish as follows: "This reversal was largely based on the Federal Circuit's finding that the district court oversimplified ... the claims and downplayed the invention's benefits... By first allowing claim construction, the Court hopes to avoid that situation in this case."

Takeaway:

Courts tend to take up an Alice challenge early where the issue does not turn on any claim construction. It is unclear whether competing claim constructions were set forth here, so early in the case, but the court was obviously worried about a reversal and wanted to approach the situation cautiously. Patent owners may therefore consider raising the issue of claim construction to persuade a nervous court to push an Alice challenge to later in the case.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.