Thomas22 said:
KSM was about modified devices that were found to be in violation of an injunction. The word "modified" appears throughout KSM. New or used is unimportant.
Paragraph 9:
In view of these and other considerations to be discussed, where the patent owner seeks to enforce an injunction against an enjoined infringer by reason of a manufacture which was not the subject of the original litigation, the courts have been uniform in exercising restraint in affording the patent owner the benefit of contempt proceedings. KSM
But the four million DVR's found to be infringing are the subject of the original litigation, and infringement has been found.
One does not "retry" a device which has already been found infringing.
Thomas22 said:
In KSM the appeals court said that the district court failed to look at whether the modification potentially cured the infringement problem and reversed the contempt finding.
No, the District Court originally issued an injunction against the Therma-Lock product. The patentee, KSM, asked the District Court to find contempt against other products (Ultra-Lok I and II) that were never adjudged before the court.
The Court of Appeals smacked down the granting of the contempt motion because the judge did not evaluate Ultra-Lok I and II for infringement.
You are suggesting that Joe Blow's four-year old 501 has never been adjudged, when in fact it has been found infringing and ordered disabled. Because it has been adjudged as an infringement, it cannot be tried again.
jacmyoung said:
If those same DVRs now no longer infringe on the patent, the act of using them as DVRs obviously do not constitute an act of infringement, I hope people can see the logic in this, and therefore if the court still prohibits such act which no longer infringes, the court will have violated Rule 65(d).
Except that an injunction in full force and effect
in violation of Rule 65(d) is still a valid injunction. From
Dupuy v. Illinois Dept of Children and Family Services:
So Rule 65(d) was flouted. But a violation of the rule does not deprive the appellate court of jurisdiction to review the injunction (e.g., Combs v. Ryan's Coal Co., 785 F.2d 970, 978 (11th Cir. 1986)) unless as a result of the violation it is so unclear what the defendant is enjoined from doing that he could not be punished for violating the injunction. For in that event he would lack standing to challenge the injunction because, being unenforceable, it would place no burden on him. He could thumb his nose at it with impunity.
Any injunction can violate Rule 65(d) and still be legal. However, the injunction needs to be challenged about a lack of compliance to Rule 65(d) before it takes effect.
Once the injunction takes effect, any problems with Rule 65(d) are off the table:
Paragraph 28:
Despite the reference to the complaint, contrary to Rule 65(d), Jones has not challenged this error, nor does Jones challenge that the injunction is enforceable against devices other than the specific THERMAL-LOCK device of the original suit. Jones' challenge is to the standards applied by the district court in holding the company in contempt.
The injunction referenced the original complaint, which is against Rule 65(d). Yet the injunction was still valid.
Jones was arguing that the standards holding the company in contempt were wrong:
KSM and Jones agreed to an injunction, where Jones was "restrained from making, using or selling insulation hangers or refractory anchors of the type and nature identified by the Plaintiff in its Complaint against the Defendant for the remainder of the life of U.S. Patent No. 3,738,217 issued June 12, 1973."
KSM accused Jones that sales of the Ultra-Lok I and II products violated this injunction.
TiVo is simply accusing DISH/SATS of refusing to follow the order to disable devices that were already found infringing. There has been no accusation of "sales of infringing products", which is what KSM discusses wholly.