U.S. Court of Appeals,
Federal Circuit
ClearCorrect Operating,
LLC, v. International Trade Commission
810 F.3d 1283
2015
PROST, Chief Judge.
The Tariff Act of 1930 provides the
International Trade Commission ("Commission") with authority to
remedy only those unfair acts that involve the importation of
"articles" as described in 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a). Here, the Commission
concluded that "articles" "should be construed to include
electronic transmission of digital data...." In re Certain Digital Models,
Inv. No. 337-TA-833 at 55 (Apr. 3, 2014) ("Final Comm'n
Op."). We disagree.
The Commission's decision to expand the
scope of its jurisdiction to include electronic transmissions of digital data
runs counter to the "unambiguously expressed intent of Congress."
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843,
104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). Under step one
of Chevron, "[w]e begin with the text of [the statute]." King v.
Burwell, ___ U.S. ___, 135 S.Ct. 2480, 2489, 192
L.Ed.2d 483 (2015). Here, it is clear that "articles" means
"material things," whether when looking to the literal text or when
read in context "with a view to [the term's] place in the overall
statutory scheme." Id. We recognize, of course, that electronic transmissions
have some physical properties — for example an
electron's invariant mass is a known quantity — but commonsense dictates that
there is a fundamental difference between electronic transmissions and
"material things." Our analysis is therefore complete. However, even
under step two of Chevron, an analysis of the Commission's opinion makes clear
that it is unreasonable and therefore not entitled to deference.[1]
Accordingly, we reverse and remand the
Commission's decision and conclude that the Commission does not have
jurisdiction over this case.[2]
I. BACKGROUND
The Commission instituted the present
investigation based on a complaint filed by Align Technology, Inc.
("Align"). Align alleged a violation of 19 U.S.C. § 1337
("Section 337") by reason of infringement of
various claims of seven different patents.[3] The respondents to the investigation were
ClearCorrect Operating, LLC ("ClearCorrect US"), and Clear Correct Pakistan
(Private), Ltd. ("ClearCorrect Pakistan")
(collectively "ClearCorrect").
The technology at issue in this case
relates to the production of orthodontic appliances, also known as aligners.
The aligners in question "are configured to be placed successively on the
patient's teeth and to incrementally reposition the teeth from an initial tooth
arrangement, through a plurality of intermediate tooth arrangements, and to a
final tooth arrangement." `880 patent (abstract). ClearCorrect
is a producer of these aligners.
ClearCorrect makes its aligners through the
following process. ClearCorrect U.S. scans physical
models of the patient's teeth and creates a digital recreation of the patient's
initial tooth arrangement. This digital recreation is
electronically transmitted to ClearCorrect
Pakistan, where the position of each tooth is manipulated to create a final
tooth position. ClearCorrect Pakistan then creates
digital data models of intermediate tooth positions. One intermediate tooth
position is created for each incremental aligner. ClearCorrect Pakistan then transmits these digital models
electronically to ClearCorrect US. Clear-Correct U.S.
subsequently 3D prints these digital models into physical models. Then an
aligner is manufactured by thermoplastic molding using
the physical model. Here, the accused "articles" are the transmission
of the "digital models, digital data and treatment plans, expressed as
digital data sets, which are virtual three-dimensional models of the desired
positions of the patients' teeth at various stages of orthodontic
treatment" ("digital models"), from Pakistan to the United
States. Final Comm'n Op. at 17.
The parties and the
Commission agreed to divide the patent claims into four Groups: Group I
contains those claims that relate to methods of forming dental appliances,[4] Group II contains those claims that
relate to methods of producing digital data sets,[5] Group III contains those claims that
relate to a treatment plan based on a series of digital data sets on a storage
medium,[6] and Group IV contains those claims that
relate to methods of producing dental appliances.[7]
The Commission found the Groups I and II claims[8] to be infringed and not
invalid. It is these claims that are at issue in this appeal. The
Commission found the Groups III and IV claims to be either
beyond the scope of the Commission's jurisdiction or not infringed. The Commission's
ruling concerning Groups III and IV are at issue in companion case Align
Technology, Inc. v. International Trade Commission, No. 2014-1533, and not at
issue in this case.
While the Group I[9] and Group II[10] claims differ, for purposes of this
appeal it is the similarity in Align's allegations of
ClearCorrect's infringement that are relevant —
namely, ClearCorrect Pakistan's electronic
transmission of digital models to ClearCorrect US.
The Administrative Law Judge
("ALJ") conducted an evidentiary hearing in February 2013, and on May
6, 2013, issued its Initial Determination. The ALJ found that — but for the
claims related to the `666 patent — ClearCorrect
infringed the Groups I and II patent claims. In so
finding, the ALJ determined that the Commission had authority to order ClearCorrect to stop electronically importing digital
models into the United States. The ALJ recommended that the Commission issue a
cease and desist order directed to Clear-Correct to prohibit the importation of
digital models.
In response, both ClearCorrect
and Align filed petitions for Commission review. The Commission initiated a
review of the entire Initial Determination and solicited briefing from the
parties and the public. While the public did not respond to the initial request
by the Commission, the Commission extended its deadline and issued another
notice to the public. In response to this notice, the Commission received
briefing from various nonparties including: the Association of American
Publishers, Google Inc., Andrew Katz, The Motion Picture Association of
America, and Nokia Corp.
On April 3, 2014, the Commission
terminated the investigation finding the Groups I and II
patent claims infringed. Specifically, the Commission found that
Clear-Correct U.S. directly infringed the Group I patents and ClearCorrect Pakistan contributed to that infringement.[11] The Commission determined that, because
Clear-Correct US's infringement occurred in the United States, it was not a
violation of Section 337. The Commission instead exerted its authority over ClearCorrect Pakistan as a contributory infringer for
importing the data models. Additionally, the Commission found that ClearCorrect Pakistan practiced the Group II method claims
in Pakistan and found that the importation of the resulting digital models
violated 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(B)(ii). Finally, the Commission agreed with the
ALJ that the Commission had jurisdictional authority over electronically
imported data under Section 337. The Commission has stayed its cease and desist
order until this appeal is resolved.
Following the Commission's decision,
this case was timely appealed to us. We have
jurisdiction to review the Commission's findings under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(6).
II. DISCUSSION
"Section 337 declares certain
activities related to importation to be unlawful trade acts and directs the
Commission generally to grant prospective relief if it has found an unlawful
trade act to have occurred." Suprema, Inc., 796 F.3d at 1345. "As a
trade statute, the purpose of Section 337 is to regulate international
commerce. Section 337 necessarily focuses on commercial activity related to
cross-border movement of goods." Id. (citation omitted). Congress established
Section 337 to "curb[] unfair trade practices
that involve the entry of goods into the U.S. market via importation. In sum,
Section 337 is an enforcement statute enacted by Congress to stop at the border
the entry of goods, i.e., articles, that are involved
in unfair trade practices." Id. Section 337(a)(1)
reads as follows:
Subject to paragraph (2), the following
are unlawful, and when found by the Commission to exist shall
be dealt with, in addition to any other provision of law, as provided in
this section:
(A) Unfair methods of competition and
unfair acts in the importation of articles (other than articles provided for in
subparagraphs (B), (C), (D), and (E)) into the United States, or in the sale of
such articles by the owner, importer, or consignee, the threat or effect of
which is —
...
(B) The importation into the United
States, the sale for importation, or the sale within the United States after
importation by the owner, importer, or consignee, of articles that —
...
(C) The importation into the United
States, the sale for importation, or the sale within the United States after
importation by the owner, importer, or consignee, of articles that infringe a
valid and enforceable United States trademark registered under the Trademark
Act of 1946 [15 U.S.C. 1051 et seq.].
...
(E) The importation into the United
States, the sale for importation, or the sale within the United States after
importation by the owner, importer, or consigner, of an article that constitutes
infringement of the exclusive rights in a design protected under chapter 13 of
title 17.
19 U.S.C. § 1337 (alteration in original)
(emphases added).
The Commission's jurisdiction to remedy
unfair international trade practices is limited to "unfair acts"
involving the importation of "articles." 19
U.S.C. § 1337(a). Thus, when there is no importation of "articles"
there can be no unfair act, and there is nothing for
the Commission to remedy. Here, the only purported "article" found to
have been imported was digital data that was transferred
electronically, i.e., not digital data on a physical medium such as a compact
disk or thumb drive. The Commission's April 3, 2014, majority opinion devotes
twenty-one pages of analysis to the question of whether "articles"
encompasses digital data and ultimately concludes that it does.
We have exclusive jurisdiction over
"final determinations of the United States International Trade Commission
relating to unfair practices in import trade made under Section 337 of the
Tariff Act of 1930." 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(6)
(1994). However, when dealing with the interpretation of Section 337, "the
ITC is entitled to appropriate deference." Enercon
GmbH v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 151 F.3d 1376, 1381
(Fed.Cir.1998). As we recently held in Suprema, "[t]here is no dispute
that Congress has delegated authority to the Commission to resolve ambiguity in
Section 337 if the Commission does so through formal adjudicative
procedures." Suprema, Inc., 796 F.3d at 1345. Furthermore, because the
"Commission's investigations under Section 337 require adequate notice,
cross-examination, presentation of evidence, objection, motion, argument, and
all other rights essential to a fair hearing," "we review the
Commission's interpretation pursuant to Chevron ...." Id. (citations
omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Under Chevron, in reviewing an agency's
construction of its organic statute, we address two questions. City of
Arlington, Tex. v. FCC, ___ U.S. ___, 133 S.Ct. 1863,
1868, ___ L.Ed.2d ___ (2013). The two questions are as follows:
The first is whether Congress has
directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If the answer is yes, then
the inquiry ends, and we must give effect to Congress' unambiguous intent. If
the answer is no, the second question is whether the agency's answer to the
precise question at issue is based on a permissible construction of the
statute. The agency's interpretation governs in the absence of unambiguous
statutory language to the contrary or unreasonable resolution of language that
is ambiguous.
Suprema, Inc., 796 F.3d at 1346
(citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted) (brackets omitted).
A. Chevron Step One
"In construing a statute, we begin
with its literal text, giving it its plain meaning." Hawkins v. United
States, 469 F.3d 993, 1000 (Fed.Cir.2006).
If the statutory language is plain, we
must enforce it according to its terms. But oftentimes
the meaning — or ambiguity — of certain words or phrases may only become
evident when placed in context. So when deciding whether the language is plain,
we must read the words in their context and with a view to their place in the
overall statutory scheme.
King, 135 S.Ct.
at 2489 (citations omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
Here we conclude that the literal text
by itself, when viewed in context and with an eye towards the statutory scheme,
is clear and thus answers the question at hand. "Articles" is defined as "material things," and thus does not
extend to electronic transmission of digital data.
1
The term "articles" is not defined in the Act. "In the absence of such a
definition, we construe a statutory term in accordance with its ordinary or
natural meaning." FDIC v. Meyer, 510 U.S. 471, 476, 114 S.Ct. 996, 127 L.Ed.2d 308 (1994) (citing Smith v. United
States, 508 U.S. 223, 228, 113 S.Ct. 2050, 124
L.Ed.2d 138 (1993)). When looking to the term's plain meaning we must look
first not to the 1930 Tariff Act but instead its predecessor, the 1922 Tariff
Act. That is because the term "articles," as used in Section 337 of
the Tariff Act, originates in section 316 of the Tariff Act. Section 316(a)
reads in part:
That unfair methods of
competition and unfair acts in the importation of articles into the United
States, or in their sale by the owner, importer, consignee, or agent of either,
the effect or tendency of which is to destroy or substantially injure an
industry, efficiently and economically operated, in the United States, or to
prevent the establishment of such an industry, or to restrain or monopolize
trade and commerce in the United States, are hereby declared unlawful, and when
found by the President to exist shall be dealt with, in addition to any other
provisions of law, as hereinafter provided.
Tariff Act of 1922, Ch. 356 § 316 (1922)
(emphasis added).
The Commission found that
contemporaneous definitions of "articles" "embrace a generic
meaning that is synonymous with a particular item or thing, such as a unit of
merchandise." Final Comm'n Op. at 39. In doing so, the Commission relies on the 1924 edition of Webster's
that defines "article," in pertinent part, as "something
considered by itself and as apart from other things of the same kind or from
the whole of which it forms a part; also, a thing of a particular class or
kind; as an article of merchandise; salt is a necessary article."
Id. (citing Article, WEBSTER'S NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
LANGUAGE (1924)). Based on this definition, the Commission concluded that
"the term `article' was understood at the time of the enactment of the
Tariff Act to carry the meaning of an identifiable unit, item or thing, with
examples indicating that such articles may be traded in commerce or used by
consumers" and thus would include digital data. Id. We disagree.
Contemporaneous dictionaries indicate
that the term "articles" is limited to a "material thing,"
and thus could not include digital data.[12] One such dictionary is
cited in a footnote of the Commission's Opinion, FUNK & WAGNALLS NEW
STANDARD DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE published in 1931. Id. at n. 20.
This dictionary defines "article" in relevant part as "a
particular object or substance; a material thing or class of things...."
Article, FUNK & WAGNALLS NEW STANDARD DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (1931)
(emphasis added). Other contemporaneous dictionaries provide similar
definitions, notably THE CENTURY DICTIONARY AND CYCLOPEDIA from 1911. This
dictionary defines "article" as "[a] material thing as part of a
class, or, absolutely, a particular substance or commodity...." Article,
THE CENTURY DICTIONARY AND CYCLOPEDIA (1911) (emphasis added).[13] Additionally, WEBSTER'S
NEW MODERN ENGLISH DICTIONARY, published in 1922, defines an
"article" as "a material thing, as one of a class."
Article, WEBSTER'S NEW MODERN ENGLISH DICTIONARY (1922) (emphasis added). As the contemporaneous dictionaries demonstrate, the meaning of the
term "article" at the time of the passage of the 1922 Tariff Act was
a "material thing" and thus would not include digital data.
The contemporaneous dictionary
definition upon which the Commission relied, the 1924 edition of Webster's,
does not aid our search for the definition of "articles" because it
is imprecise at best. It is notable, however, that
both examples provided in Webster's dictionary are of material things,
indicating that the vague language used was in reference to tangible items.
More modern
dictionaries also
support the conclusion that an "article" is a tangible thing,
including the three that are referenced by the Commission in footnotes 20 and
21 of its final opinion. The Commission refers to WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY which defines "article" as "one of a
class of material things... piece of goods; COMMODITY." Article, WEBSTER'S
THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (1966) (italicized emphasis added). The
Commission additionally refers to the 2002 edition of WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY which defines
"article" as "a material thing ...." Article, WEBSTER'S
THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (2002) (emphasis added). Finally, the
Commission refers to RANDOM HOUSE WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY as published
in 2001, which defines "article" as "an individual object,
member or portion of a class; an item or particular: an article of food;
articles of clothing.... an item for sale; commodity." Article, RANDOM
HOUSE WEBSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY (2001) (emphases added). The Random House
dictionary's use of the term "individual object" further supports "article"
being defined as a "material thing."
Defining "articles" as
"material things" is further consistent with the United States Tariff
Commission's[14] own
definition of the term "articles" as laid out in its DICTIONARY OF
TARIFF INFORMATION, issued September 1924. While this dictionary is not a
"regular dictionary" — because it was published by the Commissioners
— nor perfectly contemporaneous — as it was published in 1924 — it does provide
us with guidance as to how a person in the respective field would have
interpreted "articles" close to the time of the passage of the Tariff
Act. The DICTIONARY OF TARIFF INFORMATION defines "articles" as
follows:
The word "article" as
ordinarily used in tariff acts embraces commodities generally, whether
manufactured wholly or in part or not at all. (Jungle
[Junge] v. Heddon [Hedden], 146 U.S., 233, 239 [13 S.Ct.
88, 36 L.Ed. 953 (1892)].) It is
used in this sense in section 1 of Title I of the tariff act of 1922,
subjecting to duty "all articles when imported from any foreign country
into the United States or into any of its possessions (except the Philippine
Islands, the Virgin Islands, and the islands of Guam and Tutuila)," and in
section 201 of Title II of that act, exempting from duty "the articles mentioned
in the following paragraphs, when imported in the United States or into any of
its possessions (except the Philippine Islands, the Virgin Islands, and the
islands of Guam, and Tutuila)."
This broad use of the word is also shown in paragraph 1514 of the act of 1922,
exempting from duty under stated conditions "articles of growth, produce,
or manufacture of the United States."
As defined in section 318 of Title III
of the act of 1922, which enlarges the duties of the Tariff Commission, the
word "article" includes any commodities grown, produced, fabricated,
manipulated, or manufactured.
There are however, tariff provisions in
which the word "article" is used in a
restricted sense, such as those distinguishing articles from materials. Thus,
in paragraphs 920 of the act of 1922, the words "articles" and
"fabrics" are applied, respectively, to finished manufactures and to
partial manufactures, and in paragraph 1015 provision is made for
"fabrics" with fast edges: and also for "articles made
therefrom."
The restricted use of the word
"article" has been recognized by the courts and the rule laid down
that where an intention appears from the text of the law to give the word
"article" a narrower meaning than its ordinarily has, such meaning
shall be applied in the administration of the law.
The word "article," as
commonly accepted in trade and elsewhere, has been declared to
be something different from bulky and heavy commodities. (Harrison
Supply Co. v. United States, 171 Fed. 406, 407 [(1909)].)
Vessels arriving at ports of the United
States in the ordinary course of navigation are not imported
articles. (The Conqueror, 166 U.S. 110, 115 [17 S.Ct.
510, 41 L.Ed. 937 (1897)].)
Articles, DICTIONARY OF TARIFF
INFORMATION (1924) (emphasis added). The aforementioned definition provides
both the "ordinary" use of the term "articles" and the
possible scope of the term "articles," i.e., its broadest and
narrowest definition. At its broadest, which the dictionary deems its ordinary
meaning, "articles" "embraces commodities generally, whether
manufactured wholly or in part or not at all." The plain understanding of
this phrase is that it covers material items that are fully manufactured,
material items that are altered in some way, or raw
materials. This understanding of the term is further
established by the dictionary's definition of the narrowest use of the
term "articles." The dictionary indicates that narrower definitions
of "articles" "distinguish articles from materials." Consequently,
if the narrowest definition is defined as a subset of
"materials," there is an implication that the broadest understanding
of the term is confined to "materials."
Finally, while the contemporaneous
second edition of BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY does not shed light on the definition
of "article," the third edition does. The third edition of the
dictionary, published in 1933, defines "article" in relevant part as
"A particular object or substance, a material thing or a class of
things." Article, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (3d
ed.1933) (emphasis added). Again, this definition provides further support that
the term "articles" is defined as a
"material thing" and thus excludes purely digital data.
The aforementioned dictionaries make
clear that the ordinary meaning of the term "articles" is
"material things." It is not a question of whether there are multiple
definitions for us to choose between. Instead, every
dictionary referenced by the Commission, with the exclusion of one imprecise
definition, along with all the other relevant dictionaries point to the fact
that "articles" means "material things." As we "must
presume that [the] legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a
statute what it says," Conn. Nat'l Bank v. Germain,
503 U.S. 249, 253-54, 112 S.Ct. 1146, 117 L.Ed.2d 391
(1992), we conclude that "articles" does not cover electronically
transmitted digital data.[15]
2
As the presence of ambiguity in the
meaning of a term "may only become evident when
placed in context" with the statute, we turn next to how
"articles" is used throughout Section 337. King, 135 S.Ct. at 2489. The use of the word "articles" in
other sections of the 1930 Tariff Act reinforces the conclusion that Congress's
unambiguously expressed intent was for "articles" to mean
"material things."
The Supreme Court has consistently held
that "identical words used in different parts of the same act are intended
to have the same meaning." Sullivan v. Stroop,
496 U.S. 478, 484, 110 S.Ct. 2499, 110 L.Ed.2d 438
(1990) (quoting Sorenson v. Sec'y of Treasury, 475
U.S. 851, 860, 106 S.Ct. 1600, 89 L.Ed.2d 855 (1986)); Helvering v. Stockholms
Enskilda Bank, 293 U.S. 84, 87, 55 S.Ct. 50, 79 L.Ed. 211 (1934); Atl. Cleaners & Dyers, Inc. v. United
States, 286 U.S. 427, 433, 52 S.Ct. 607, 76 L.Ed. 1204 (1932). For "[i]t is a cardinal principle of statutory construction that
a statute ought, upon the whole, to be so construed that, if it can be
prevented, no clause, sentence, or word shall be superfluous, void, or insignificant."
TRW Inc. v. Andrews, 534 U.S. 19, 31, 122 S.Ct. 441,
151 L.Ed.2d 339 (2001) (internal quotation marks omitted). The statutory
context in which Congress uses "articles" makes clear that Congress's
unambiguously expressed intent was for "articles" to mean
"material things," not intangibles, for if "articles" had a
broader definition, numerous subsections would be rendered
inoperative.
The Commission concluded that because
the term "articles" appears in the statutory provisions defining a
violation of Section 337, 19 U.S.C. §§ 1337(a)(1)(A), (B), (C), and (E), with
the terms "importation" and "sale," the term
"articles" is meant to encompass all "imported items that are
bought and sold in commerce." Final Comm'n Op.
at 40. The Commission then stated that, in accordance with various Supreme
Court and circuit court cases, "articles of commerce" includes
digital files. We disagree.[16]
The context in which "articles" is used
throughout the chapter, not just this singular subsection, indicates that
"articles" means "material things."
If the term "articles" was defined to include intangibles, numerous statutory
sections would be superfluous at best. One such example is the forfeiture
subsection of Section 337. This section reads in part:
(i) Forfeiture
(1) In addition to taking action under
subsection
(d) of this section, the Commission may
issue an order providing that any article imported in violation of the
provisions of this section be seized and forfeited to the United States if —
(A) the owner,
importer, or consignee of the article previously attempted to import the
article into the United States;
(B) the article was previously denied
entry into the United States by reason of an order issued under subsection (d)
of this section; and....
19 U.S.C. § 1337(i)
(emphasis added). This section permits the Commission to exclude
"articles" from importation into the United States; however, it is
difficult to see how one could physically stop electronic transmissions at the
borders under the current statutory scheme. Furthermore, if articles included
digital data, it would render the section's use of the terms
"forfeited" and "seized" hollow, as an electronic
transmission cannot be "seized" or "forfeited." By way of
example, digital transmissions from satellites do not move through border
crossings, nor can they be stopped at our borders via
any enforcement mechanism contemplated in the statutory scheme. As Commissioner
David S. Johanson points out in his dissent, an
"exclusion order directed against electronic transmissions could not only
have no effect within the context of Section 337 — it simply would make no
sense as it would not be enforce[able]." Final Comm'n
Op. Dissent at 6 (David S. Johanson,
dissenting).
A construction of the term
"articles" that includes electronically transmitted digital data is
also not reasonable when applied to Section 337(i)(3). This section reads, "[u]pon
the attempted entry of articles subject to an order issued under this
subsection, the Secretary of the Treasury shall immediately notify all ports of
entry of the attempted importation and shall identify the persons notified
under paragraph (1)(C)." Not only can an electronic transmission not be
subject to an "attempted entry" through a "port of entry,"
it also cannot be intercepted at a "port of
entry" as contemplated in the statute. Returning to our satellite example,
once the transmission is made from a satellite and directed
to the United States, it is illogical to consider its entry as an
"attempted entry." The transmission either
passes through our border or it does not. If the term "articles" was intended by Congress to be inclusive of nonmaterial
objects, such as electronic transmissions, it would render this section moot.
Align further argues that because
"articles" is used in connection with "articles that
infringe," "articles" must be read broadly enough that it
encompasses all possible forms of infringement. We disagree. The question before
us is not what types of infringement are covered, but what goods are protected from infringement under Section 337. It is
perfectly reasonable that Congress only intended that some
subset of infringing goods be covered by Section 337. "Further,
were we to adopt [the Commission's] construction of the statute, we would
render the word `[articles]' insignificant, if not
wholly superfluous. It is our duty to give effect, if possible, to every clause
and word of a statute." Duncan v. Walker, 533 U.S. 167, 174, 121 S.Ct. 2120, 150 L.Ed.2d 251 (2001) (citation omitted).
3
We further look to the Tariff Act in its
entirety as "the words of a statute must be read
in their context and with a view to their place in the overall statutory
scheme." King, 135 S.Ct. at 2492. As when
defining words in a statute, their ultimate meaning should remain consistent
with the remainder of the statute as a term's meaning must be "compatible
with the rest of the law." Util. Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA, ___ U.S. ___
134 S.Ct. 2427, 2442, 189 L.Ed.2d 372 (2014). Here,
the basic statutory scheme, and specifically its original remedial scheme,
provides further support for the conclusion that Congress understood
"articles" to mean "material things" and not to include
intangibles such as digital data.
The original version of Section 337
provided only a single remedy for violations:
Whenever the existence
of any such unfair method or act shall be established to the satisfaction of
the President he shall direct that the articles concerned in such unfair
methods or acts, imported by any person violating the provisions of this Act,
shall be excluded from entry into the United States, and upon information of
such action by the President, the Secretary of the Treasury shall, through the
proper officers, refuse such entry.
Tariff Act of 1930, Pub.L.
71-361, 46 Stat. 704 (1930). This sole remedy of exclusion could only have an
impact on material things. Obviously, intangibles, such as electronic
transmissions, do not pass through United States ports and cannot
be excluded by Customs. Thus, as electronic transmissions of digital
data could not be excluded in the fashion contemplated
by the Act, an expansion of the term "articles" beyond "material
things" would mean that Congress included an entire set of commodities in
the statute without providing a method to curtail their importation. The
impossibility of this result supports confining "articles" to
"material things."
The Commission points to the 1974
authorization of cease and desist orders as support for its conclusion that "articles"
includes digital data. The Commission argues that the addition of this section
"strengthened the statute to protect against unfairly traded imports by
providing additional remedies for a violation...." Final Comm'n Op. at 47. We disagree.
Congress's 1974 authorization of cease
and desist orders supports the conclusion that the statutory scheme is premised
upon "articles" being defined as "material things." Fifty-two years after the creation of Section 337 Congress added a
second remedial tool to the Commission's arsenal, the cease and desist order.
See Trade Act of 1974, Pub.L. 93-618, 88 Stat.1978,
2055 (1975). This tool was meant to be used as a lesser and "softer
remedy" than exclusion orders rather than the exclusive remedy
which would be the case were digital data considered an article.
Textron, Inc. v. U.S. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 753 F.2d
1019, 1029 (Fed.Cir.1985) ("[T]he contemplated range of remedies was
expanded by the Trade Act of 1974 to include `softer' sanctions such as
cease-and-desist orders...."); see S. Rep. 93-1298 at 198 (1974). In fact,
in passing the bill, Congress made clear that "[n]o change [was] made in
the substance of the jurisdiction conferred under Section 337(a) with respect
to unfair methods of competition or unfair acts in the import trade." S.Rep. No. 931298, 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 7186, 7327 (1974).
Instead, the purpose of the provision, according to the Senate Report, was to add "needed flexibility" because "the
existing statute, which provides no remedy other than the exclusion of articles
from entry, is so extreme or inappropriate in some cases that it is often
likely to result in the Commission not finding a violation of this
section." Id. at 7331. Furthermore, while the Commission cites to the
repeated updates in the amount of the fine associated with cease and desist
orders as support for the fact that this section expanded the scope of
"articles," there is no logical connection between the amount of the
fine and whether cease and desist orders expanded the Commission's jurisdiction.
The text of the cease and desist
language further supports the conclusion that "articles" cannot be
defined in such a way as to include electronic transmissions. This is because
if "articles" was defined to include
electronic transmissions, the addition of cease and desist orders would not be
a lesser alternative for exclusion orders, but an expansion of the exclusion
power. We agree with Commissioner David S. Johanson who argued in his dissent that "[i]ndeed, [the cease and desist]
provision demonstrates that the definition of articles for Section 337(f) must
be the same as the rest of the statute; otherwise the provision for replacement
[of cease and desist orders with exclusion orders] would be rendered a nullity
and read out of the statute." Final Comm'n
Op. Dissent at 8 (David S. Johanson,
dissenting). The fact that a definition of "articles" that includes
intangibles would read out the very purpose behind the inclusion of cease and
desist orders yields further evidence that the term article is
meant to be limited to tangibles.
Finally, Section 337's connection to
what is now known as the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States
(HTSUS) supports a narrower definition of the term "articles" than
provided by the Commission. When the Tariff Act of 1930 was first passed it
was, at its heart, a tariff provision that imposed duties on specific imports.
Section 1 of the title reads:
That on and after the
day following the passage of this Act, except as otherwise specially provided
for in this Act, there shall be levied, collected, and paid upon all articles
when imported from any foreign country into the United States or into any of
its possessions ... the rates of duty which are prescribed by the schedules and
paragraphs of the dutiable list of this title, namely:
46 Stat. 590 (emphasis added). Congress
then provided ninety-five pages of schedules identifying specific dutiable and
non-dutiable goods. Every single item in these schedules was a material thing.
See 46 Stat. 590-685. Furthermore, Congress assumed that these schedules were
not comprehensive and thus included catchall clauses. One
such clause can be found in paragraph 1559, which reads in relevant part,
"That each and every imported article, not enumerated in this Act, which
is similar, either in material, quality, texture, or the use to which it may be
applied to any article enumerated in this Act ... shall be subject to the same
rate of duty which is levied on the enumerated article...." Id. at
672. Similarly, paragraph 1558 states, "That there shall be levied,
collected, and paid on the importation of all raw or unmanufactured articles
not enumerated or provided for...." Id. Both of these catchalls are premised on the notion that articles are tangible and
dutiable. This provides further evidence that the statutory scheme was to solely regulate "material things" and thus not
electronic transmission of digital data, which is not dutiable.
Tariff Schedules have continued to limit
articles to tangibles. The dutiable schedules in the Tariff Act of 1930 were later replaced in 1963 with the Tariff Schedule of the
United States, Pub.L. 87-456. Accompanying
this revision was the Tariff Classification Study Submitting Report. In this
report, the Commission wrote, "General headnote 5
sets forth certain intangibles which, under various established customs
practices, are not regarded as articles subject to treatment under the tariff
schedules." Id. at 18. This subsection includes items such as electricity,
securities, and similar evidences of value. Id. at 12. The Tariff
Schedule of the United States was in turn replaced by the Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States in 1988, pursuant to the Omnibus Trade and
Competitiveness Act. Pub.L. 100-418 § 1206, 102 Stat.
1151, codified at 19 U.S.C. § 3006. While this schedule included a heading for
electrical energy, it specifically removed it from the purview of section 484
of the Tariff Act of 1930 and placed its regulation purely in the hands of the
Secretary of the Treasury. Section 484 regulates the entry requirements under
the Tariff Act. This succession of tariff schedules provides further evidence
that the Act's scheme was not meant to include
intangibles.
4
The clarity of the statutory context
obviates the need to turn to the legislative history. The Tariff Act's
legislative history further confirms the conclusion that "articles"
is limited to "material things," however, and thus not inclusive of
electronic transmissions of digital data. This is supported
by two distinct points in the Tariff Act's legislative history: (1) the period
of time when "articles" first appeared in Section 337 of the Tariff
Act of 1930, inclusive of section 316 of the 1922 Tariff Act; and (2) the
legislative history from 1988 in which for the first time the Tariff Act was
expanded to explicitly cover IP infringement.
The Commission argues that, because
Congress treated the terms "goods" and "articles" as
synonymous within the legislative history, articles must be
read broadly. Final Comm'n Op. at 39. We agree
with the Commission in part and disagree in part. We agree with the Commission
that Congress used "goods" and "articles" synonymously at
the time of the passage of the Act;[17],[18] however, we disagree that this mandates
a definition of "articles" that is broader than "material
things."
At the time of enactment
"goods" had a clear definition. The second edition of BLACK'S LAW
DICTIONARY, which was contemporaneous with the passage of the Tariff Act,
states that "goods" "[are] not so wide
as `chattels,' for it applies to inanimate objects, and does not include
animals or chattels real." Goods, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (2d ed.1910). Black's dictionary divides "chattels"
into two groups "chattels real" and "chattels personal."
Id. at Chattels. "Chattels real" are "interests in land which
devolve after the manner of personal estate, as leaseholds" while
"chattels personal" are "movables only." Id. The clear
conclusion to draw from this is that "goods" are also limited to
movables, i.e., material things. Thus, both words used by Congress at the time
of enactment to describe the bounds of Section 337, "goods" and
"articles," were limited to "material things."
The Commission argues that the
legislative history relating to the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of
1988 reaffirmed that "articles" was meant to
include digital data. The Commission relies on the relevant Senate Report's
statement that the will of Congress was to block any United States sale of a
product covered by an IP right, because "[t]he importation of any
infringing merchandise derogates from the statutory right, diminishes the value
of the intellectual property, and thus indirectly harms the public interest."
Final Comm'n Op. at 48 (quoting S. Rep. 100-71 at
12-29 (1987); H.R. Rep. 100-40 at 156 (1987)). The Commission argues that the
use of the word "commerce" indicates that "articles" should be read broadly. We disagree.
While the Omnibus Trade and
Competitiveness Act made numerous changes to the Tariff Act, it included no
language that increased the scope of "articles." The Commission's
argument fails to take into account the contemporaneous definition of the term
"merchandise." "Merchandise" was defined at the time as
"[a]ll goods which merchants usually buy and
sell ..., [b]ut the term is generally not understood
as including real estate" and "goods," while "a term of
variable content and meaning," is ultimately defined as "[i]tems of merchandise, supplies,
raw materials, or finished goods. Merchandise, Goods, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY (5th ed.1979). Sometimes the meaning of `goods' is extended
to include all tangible items, as in the phrase `goods and services.'" Id.
at Goods. This definition makes clear, that at its broadest the definition of
"goods," and thus merchandise, was limited to tangible items.
This analysis comports with our opinion
in Bayer. In Bayer we analyzed the history of section
271(g) along with its overlap with Section 337. We found that Congress adopted
the definition of "article" from Section 337 and imported it into
section 271(g). Bayer AG v. Housey Pharm., Inc., 340
F.3d 1367, 1374 (Fed.Cir.2003). Our opinion concludes that
"there is no indication of any intent to reach products other than tangible
products produced by manufacturing processes." Id. at 1375. Furthermore we stated:
We recognize that section 1337 covers
both articles that were "made" and articles that were "produced,
processed, or mined." While this language in section 1337 perhaps suggests
a broader scope for section 1337 than for section 271(g), nothing in section
1337 suggests coverage of information, in addition to articles under section
271(g).
Id. at 1367, n. 9.
In sum, the literal text, the context in
which the text is found within Section 337, and the
text's role in the totality of the statutory scheme all indicate that the
unambiguously expressed intent of Congress is that "articles" means
"material things" and does not extend to electronically transmitted
digital data.[19],[20]
B. Chevron Step Two
As Congress's expressed intent is
unambiguous, we need not address step two of Chevron. However, even if we were
to address step two, it is clear that the Commission's interpretation of the
term "articles" was unreasonable.
Step two of Chevron requires us to
determine "whether the [Commission's] answer is based on a permissible
construction of the statute." Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def.
Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843, 104 S.Ct. 2778,
2782, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). Because the Commission failed to
properly analyze the plain meaning of "articles," failed to
properly analyze the statute's legislative history, and improperly relied on
Congressional debates, the Commission's analysis does not warrant deference.
The Commission's analysis of dictionary
definitions evidences the irrationality of the Commission's interpretation of
the term "article." While the Commission ostensibly analyzes various
dictionary definitions, it fails to adopt a definition consistent with any of
the definitions it references. For example, as discussed in the prior section,
the Commission turns to the 1924 edition of the Webster's dictionary for the
definition of "article," but rather than adopt that definition it
concludes that it will "embrace a broader meaning that describes something
that is traded in commerce." Final Comm'n Op. at
39. In other words, it generates its own definition, unrelated to the
definition provided by the dictionary.
Furthermore, the Commission inexplicably
cites to several dictionaries in two footnotes that support
"articles" being defined as "material things," but provides
no analysis as to why these dictionaries should not be
considered.
Footnotes 20 and 21 read:
20 Some definitions of
"article," in addition to stating a broader generic meaning, also set
forth a more granular meaning of a material thing. For example, a 1929 edition
of Funk and Wagnall's defines "articles," in pertinent part as: "A particular object or substance; a material thing
or class of things; as, an article of food." The Federal Circuit,
interpreting 35 U.S.C. § 271(g), noted one definition of "article" in
Webster's Third New Dictionary (a more recent edition of Webster's). "Article"
is there defined as "one of a class of material things ... pieces of
goods; COMMODITY." Thus, while an "article" was
understood to include something material, as shown in the text above,
the term was also understood to embrace a broader meaning that describes
something that is traded in commerce.
21 More recent context relevant
definitions of "articles" are in accord. See, e.g. WEBSTER'S THIRD
NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (2002) ("5: a material thing";... "6a: a thing of a particular class of kind as
distinct from a thing of another class of kind"); RANDOM HOUSE WEBSTER'S
UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY (2nd Edition 2001) ("2. An
individual object, member, or portion of a class; an item or particular; an
article of food; articles of clothing; ... 4. An item for sale;
commodity").
Id. (citation omitted).
Despite the definitions quoted in the
footnotes running directly counter to the definition adopted by the Commission,
the Commission provides virtually no analysis as to why they should not
control. It is not reasonable for the Commission to conclude that the
dictionary definitions that it cites "embrace a broader meaning that
describes something that is traded in commerce," when the Commission's
definition cannot be found in any dictionary cited by the Commission and the
Commission's conclusion is not logically connected to any of the definitions
cited by the Commission.
Additionally, the Commission fails to properly analyze the legislative history regarding the
Tariff Act. This failure is echoed in its briefing to
the court. The Commission concludes, based in large part on a Senate Report
from 1922, that "The central purpose of Section
337, since the enactment of the original statute in 1922, has been to prevent
every type of unfair act or practice in import trade that harms U.S. industries."
Final Comm'n Op. at 44-45. The Commission's Opinion
cites the Senate Report, S. Rep. 67-595, as authority for this conclusion and
then quotes it as follows:
The provision relating to unfair methods
of competition is broad enough to prevent every type and form of unfair
practice and is, therefore, a more adequate protection to American industry
than any antidumping statute the country ever had.
However, the actual quote reads as
follows:
The provision relating to unfair methods
of competition in the importation of goods is broad enough to prevent every
type and form of unfair practice and is, therefore, a more adequate protection
to American industry than any antidumping statute the country ever had.
S. Rep. 67-595, at 3
(1922) (emphasis added). The Commission's omission of the phrase, "in the
importation of goods" is highly misleading; not only was a key portion of
the quote omitted, but it was omitted without any
indication that there had been a deletion.[21] Furthermore, while we may agree that the
quote, as incorrectly stated by the Commission, would indicate a broad
authority for the Commission, the phrase "in the importation of
goods" clearly limits the Commission's authority. And
as we discussed above, it limits it in such a way as to exclude non-material
things. Because the Commission uses this misquote as its main evidence that the
purpose of the act was to cover all trade, independent of what form it takes,
the Commission's conclusion regarding the purpose of the Act is unreasonable.
Finally, the Commission wrongly focuses
on current debates in Congress as indicative of what "articles"
means. The Commission comments as follows:
We note recent developments that show
the acceptance of digital goods traded in commerce as falling within
international trade. Senators Baucus and Hatch and
Congressman Camp have introduced Trade Promotion Authority bills that instruct
the Administration to seek increased protection for digital trade in future
trade agreements. Moreover, Congress has requested that the Commission study
the impact of digital trade under Section 332, another part of Title 19.
Final Comm'n
Op. at 43, 44 (citation omitted). This analysis is improper. First, Congress
has not passed any of the cited bills. Second, even if the bills were passed, they would not have informed us as to whether
the Commission has jurisdiction over digital goods.
In sum, the Commission repeatedly and
unreasonably erred in its analysis of the term "article." It is not simply
a question of the Commission having the choice between two "right"
definitions, but instead it represents a systematic pattern of the Commission
picking the wrong conclusion from the evidence. Here the Commission has not
offered a reasoned explanation for its definition of "articles" and
thus is owed no deference.
III. CONCLUSION
While Congress's intent regarding
"articles" is unambiguous, it is worth repeating what we said in
Bayer:
Under these circumstances
we think it is best to leave to Congress the task of expanding the statute if
we are wrong in our interpretation. Congress is in a far better position to
draw the lines that must be drawn if the product of
intellectual processes rather than manufacturing processes are to be included
within the statute.
Bayer, 340 F.3d at 1376-77.
For the reasons stated above, we reverse
and remand the Commission's decision, finding that the Commission does not have
jurisdiction over this case.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
__________________________________
O'MALLEY, Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree with the majority's
well-reasoned conclusion that the International Trade Commission ("the
Commission") lacks jurisdiction over this case. The majority's analysis
under the Chevron framework correctly reveals that the Commission's
interpretation of 19 U.S.C. § 1337 ("Section 337") is not entitled to
deference. I write separately, however, because I believe we need not resort to
Chevron steps one and two to resolve this matter.
Deference to an agency interpretation
under the Chevron framework "is premised on the theory that a statute's
ambiguity constitutes an implicit delegation from Congress to the agency to
fill in the statutory gaps." King v. Burwell, ___ U.S. ___, 135 S.Ct. 2480, 2488, 192 L.Ed.2d 483 (2015) (quoting FDA v.
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 159, 120 S.Ct. 1291, 146 L.Ed.2d 121 (2000)). There are
"extraordinary cases," however, where we should "hesitate before
concluding that Congress has intended such an implicit delegation." Id. at
2488-89 (quoting FDA, 529 U.S. at 159, 120 S.Ct.
1291). In other words, there are times when courts should not search for an
ambiguity in the statute because it is clear Congress could not have intended
to grant the agency authority to act in the substantive space at issue. This is
one of those extraordinary cases. Where, as here, Congress has not delegated
authority to an agency, courts need not apply the Chevron framework to the
agency's interpretation of its governing statute. See id. at
2489.
The Commission has concluded that it has
jurisdiction over all incoming international Internet data transmissions. It
reaches this conclusion despite never having purported to regulate Internet
transmissions in the past, despite no reference to data transmissions in the
statute under which it acts, despite an absence of expertise in dealing with
such transmissions, and despite the many competing policy concerns implicated
in any attempt to regulate Internet transmissions. The Internet is
"arguably the most important innovation in communications in a
generation." Comcast Corp. v. FCC, 600 F.3d 642, 661 (D.C.Cir.2010). If
Congress intended for the Commission to regulate one of the most important
aspects of modern-day life, Congress surely would have said so expressly. Utility
Air Regulatory Grp. v. EPA, ___ U.S. ___, 134 S.Ct.
2427, 2444, 189 L.Ed.2d 372 (2014) (rejecting EPA's vast expansion of its
program of requiring clean air permits because such an expansion "would
bring about an enormous and transformative expansion in EPA's regulatory
authority without clear congressional authorization"). The Supreme Court
has noted that "[w]hen an agency claims to
discover in a long-extant statute an unheralded power to regulate `a
significant portion of the American economy,' we typically greet its
announcement with a measure of skepticism." Id. The Court further
indicated that Congress must "speak clearly if it wishes to assign to an
agency decisions of vast `economic and political significance.'" Id.
(quoting FDA, 529 U.S at 160, 120 S.Ct. 1291). Here,
far from clearly addressing the issue of whether the Commission should have
jurisdiction over the international exchange of data on the Internet,
Congress's last major amendment to Section 337 was made well before the
Internet became a regular vehicle for commercial transactions.
Although the Commission's jurisdiction
over imported physical goods is undeniable, it is very unlikely that Congress
would have delegated the regulation of the Internet to the Commission, which
has no expertise in developing nuanced rules to ensure the Internet remains an
open platform for all. See King, 135 S.Ct. at 2489.
Instead, the responsibility lies with Congress to decide how best to address
these new developments in technology. See Microsoft v. AT & T Corp., 550
U.S. 437, 458-59, 127 S.Ct. 1746, 167 L.Ed.2d 737
(2007) ("If the patent law is to be adjusted better to account for the
realities of software distribution, the alteration should be made after focused
legislative consideration.") (quotation omitted); see also Gottschalk v.
Benson, 409 U.S. 63, 73, 93 S.Ct. 253, 34 L.Ed.2d 273
(1972) ("If [computer] programs are to be patentable, considerable
problems are raised which only committees of Congress can manage, for broad
powers of investigation are needed, including hearings which canvass the wide
variety of views which those operating in this field entertain.").
Indeed, Congress has enacted laws and
debated bills whose intent is to balance an interest in open access to the
Internet and the need to regulate potential abusers. See,
e.g., Communications Decency Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 230(b)(1), (c)(1) (2012)
(statute enacting immunity from liability for Internet service providers in
order to "promote the continued development of the Internet and other
interactive computer services and other interactive media"); 17 U.S.C. §
512 (statute limiting copyright infringement liability based on a similar
policy); The Digital Trade Act of 2013, S.1788, 113th Cong. (2013-2014) (bill
seeking to have agencies "staffed with experts and leaders to fulfill the
mission of promoting an open, global Internet that facilitates commerce and
digital trade"); Online Protection and Enforcement of Digital Trade Act,
S.2029/H.R. 3782 (112th Cong.2011-2013) (bill proposing amendment of the Tariff
Act to formally confer the ITC with jurisdiction over digital importation).
Not once in these debates has Congress said or implied that it need not concern
itself with these issues because it had already delegated the authority to do
so to the Commission. Because Congress did not intend to delegate such
authority to the Commission, I would find the two step
Chevron inquiry inapplicable in this case; I would find that we never get past
what some refer to as Chevron step zero when assessing the propriety of the
Exclusion Order before us.[1]
Assuming, arguendo, that the Chevron
framework does apply to the Commission's interpretation, however, I agree with
the majority's ruling that the Commission erred when
it determined that it had jurisdiction over the disputed digital data.
__________________________________
NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
Today's culture, as well as today's
economy, are founded on advances in science and
technology. As the Industrial Revolution advanced, and recognizing the
importance to the nation of technology-based industry, the Tariff Acts of 1922
and 1930 were enacted to provide additional support to
domestic industries that dealt in new and creative commerce, by providing an
efficient safeguard against unfair competition by imports that infringe United
States patents or copyrights. The International Trade Commission correctly
applied the Tariff Act and precedent to encompass today's forms of infringing
technology.
The new technologies of the Information
Age focus on computer-implemented methods and systems, whose applications of
digital science provide benefits and conveniences not imagined in 1922 and
1930. Throughout this evolution, Section 337 served its statutory purpose of
facilitating remedy against unfair competition, by providing for exclusion of
imports that infringe United States intellectual property rights.
Until today.
The court today removes Section 337
protection from importations that are conducted by
electronic transmission. The court's reason is that electronically transmitted
subject matter is not "tangible," and that only tangible imports are
subject to exclusion. This holding is contrary to Section 337, and conflicts
with rulings of the Supreme Court, the Federal Circuit, the Court of Customs
and Patent Appeals, the Court of International Trade, the International Trade
Commission, the Customs authorities, and the Department of Labor. I
respectfully dissent.
Infringement is not here at issue; the
only issue is the Section 337 cease and desist order.
The imports are infringing "digital
models, digital data, and treatment plans for use in making incremental dental
positioning adjustment appliances," produced for ClearCorrect
in Pakistan and imported into the United States by electronic transmission. The
International Trade Commission found, and it is not disputed,
that the imported data sets are "virtual three-dimensional models" of
a patient's teeth, and that the imports are used in the United States to make a
three-dimensional physical model of the dental appliance. Certain Digital
Models, Digital Data, & Treatment Plans for Use in Making Incremental
Dental Positioning Adjustment Appliances, the Appliances Made Therefrom, &
Methods of Making the Same, Inv. No. 337-TA-833, at 17 (April 10, 2014) ("Comm'n Op.").
Infringement of the Align Technology
patents is not at issue. The only issue is whether the Section 337 remedy is
available to exclude the infringing digital subject matter. The
Commission, reviewing the "plain language of the statute, its legislative
history and purpose, pertinent case law, and the arguments of the parties and
public commenters," held that "the digital data sets at issue ... are
true articles of international commerce that are imported into the United States,
and their inclusion within the purview of section 337 would effectuate the
central purpose of the statute." Comm'n
Op. at 55.
The Commission issued a Cease and Desist
Order against "importing (including through electronic transmission)"
the digital models, digital data, and orthodontic plans that were
found to infringe the Align patents. Order (April 3, 2014). The panel
majority now revokes that Order, holding that imports reaching the United
States by electronic transmission are not subject to Section 337. This ruling
is contrary to the statute and contrary to precedent; and if there were there
doubt as to the intended scope of Section 337, the Commission's ruling requires
deference.
The Commission correctly held that
section 337 applies to imports of infringing digital goods.
Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930,
as amended, makes unlawful:
(B) The importation into the United
States, the sale for importation, or the sale within the United States after
importation... of articles that —
(i) infringe a valid and enforceable United States patent or ...
copyright...; or
(ii) are made,
produced, processed, or mined under, or by means of, a process covered by the
claims of a valid and enforceable United States patent.
19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(B)(i)-(ii).
The Commission determined that ClearCorrect's infringement of the Align patents in the
United States, and infringement by the process practiced for ClearCorrect in Pakistan, is subject to Section 337. The
court's rejection of that ruling is in contravention of the text and the
purpose of Section 337 of the Tariff Act.
Section 337 was
enacted to facilitate the protection of American industry against unfair
competition by infringing imports. The statute was designed to reach
"every type and form" of unfair competition arising from importation.
The Senate Report stated: "The provision relating
to unfair methods of competition in the importation of goods is broad enough to
prevent every type and form of unfair practice and is, therefore, a more
adequate protection to American industry than any antidumping statute the
country has ever had." S.Rep. No. 67-595 at 3
(1922).
Our predecessor Court of Customs and
Patent Appeals emphasized that this purpose is "to give to industries of
the United States, not only the benefit of the favorable laws and conditions to
be found in this country, but also to protect such industries from being
unfairly deprived of the advantage of the same and permit them to grow and
develop." Frischer & Co. v. Bakelite Corp.,
17 CCPA 494, 39 F.2d 247, 259 (1930).
Until today, this Tariff Act provision has been interpreted to implement this protective incentive.
In In re Northern Pigment Co., 22 CCPA 166, 71 F.2d 447
(1934), the court applied Section 337 to reach products produced abroad by a
process patented in the United States, stating that "if unfair methods of
competition or unfair acts in the importation of articles into the United
States are being practiced or performed by any one, they are to be regarded as
unlawful, and the section was intended to prevent them." Id. at
455. This ruling is codified at Section 1337(a)(1)(B)(ii),
supra.
Over the decades, the International
Trade Commission and the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals implemented
Section 337 "to provide an adequate remedy for domestic industries against
unfair methods of competition and unfair acts initiated by foreign concerns
operating beyond the in personam jurisdiction of
domestic courts." Sealed Air Corp. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n,
68 CCPA 93, 645 F.2d 976, 985 (1981). The Federal Circuit reiterated this
purpose, stating in Lannom Mfg. Co. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 799 F.2d 1572 (Fed.Cir.1986), that "the
purpose of section 337 from its inception was to provide relief to United
States industry from unfair acts, including infringement of United States
patents by goods manufactured abroad." Id. at 1580.
Congress again considered Section 337
during the process of enacting the Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of
1988, Pub.L. No. 100-418 § 1341, 102 Stat. 1107,
stating that:
As indicated by the scope of its
language, section 337 was intended to cover a broad
range of unfair acts not then covered by other unfair import laws. However,
over the years, patent, copyright, and trademark infringement were recognized
as unfair trade practices within the meaning of section 337, and today section
337 is predominantly used to enforce U.S. intellectual property rights.
S.Rep. No. 100-71 (1987) at 130. The Act
itself reiterated the purpose to provide "a more effective remedy for the
protection of United States intellectual property rights" through
exclusion of infringing imports. Omnibus Trade and Competitiveness Act of 1988,
Pub.L. No. 100-418 § 1341(b), 102 Stat. 1107, 1212.
This court recently reaffirmed that
"the legislative history consistently evidences Congressional intent to
vest the Commission with broad enforcement authority to remedy unfair trade
acts." Suprema, Inc. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 796 F.3d 1338,
1350 (Fed.Cir.2015) (en banc).
The purpose of Section 337 to provide a
facilitated remedy against infringing imports is beyond dispute. The panel
majority's removal of this remedy from a preeminent form of today's technology
is a dramatic withdrawal of existing rights, devoid of statutory support and of
far-reaching impact. The majority's ruling, that digital goods cannot be excluded under Section 337 because digital goods
are "intangible," is incorrect.
The Commission correctly held that
Section 337 is not limited to the kinds of technology that existed in 1922 or
1930.
Patents are for things that did not
previously exist, including kinds of technology that were not
previously known. The panel majority, rejecting today's digital
technologies and overruling the International Trade Commission, holds that
Section 337 does not apply to digital technology forms that the majority
describes as "intangible." It is not disputed
that digital information, such as the data sets and models here imported, is
patentable subject matter and can be infringing subject matter. There is no
basis for excluding imported infringing subject matter from Section 337,
whatever the form of the subject matter.
The Supreme Court in Fortnightly Corp.
v. United Artists Television, Inc., 392 U.S. 390, 88 S.Ct.
2084, 20 L.Ed.2d 1176 (1968), considered "a statute that was drafted long
before the development of the electronic phenomena with which we deal
here," stating that "[w]e must read the statutory language ... in the
light of drastic technological change." Id. at 395-96, 88 S.Ct. 2084. This rule aptly applies to the Tariff Acts of
1922 and 1930.
The Court has referred
to adaptation of the copyright statute to new technologies, observing in
Twentieth Century Music Corp. v. Aiken, 422 U.S., 151, 95 S.Ct.
2040, 45 L.Ed.2d 84 (1975), that although Congress did not revise the Copyright
Act of 1909 following the advent of radio (and television), "copyright law
was quick to adapt to prevent the exploitation of protected works through the
new electronic technology."
Id. at 158, 95 S.Ct. 2040. The Court noted the
"ultimate aim" of the copyright law "to stimulate artistic
creativity for the general public good," and stated that
"[w]hen technological change has rendered its literal terms ambiguous, the
Copyright Act must be construed in light of this basic purpose." Id. at
156, 95 S.Ct. 2040.
The Commission has previously dealt with
Section 337 importation in the form of digitally distributed software and
digital files, stating that "[h]aving found that respondents' software contributorily
infringes the claims in issue, we are of the view that our remedial orders must
reach that software." Certain Hardware Logic Emulation Systems, Inv. No.
337-TA-383, USITC Pub. 3089, at 18 (March 1998). The
court's ruling today contravenes Commission precedent, as well as our own.
The Federal Circuit dealt with the
nature of digital files in Lucent Techs., Inc. v. Gateway, Inc., 580 F.3d 1301,
1321 (Fed. Cir.2009). The court rejected the argument that digital files such
as computer software are not a "material or apparatus" subject to
infringement as set forth in the Patent Act at 35 U.S.C. § 271(c). This
reasoning applies to the "articles" subject to infringement as set
forth in the Tariff Act at 19 U.S.C. § 1337. The court's decision today is a
distortion of the statute's language and purpose, for Section 337 is designed to cover infringing subject matter; and digital
software, as noted in Lucent, can be infringing subject matter.
Until today, Section 337 applied to all
patented technologies, including digital technologies, whatever the path of
importation. The court's exclusion of digital products and data technologies
imported by electronic transmission has no support in statute, precedent, or
policy.
The Commission correctly held that
"articles" in the Tariff Act means "articles of commerce."
The Commission held that the term
"articles" in the Tariff Act is intended to
include all infringing imported "articles of commerce." The
Commission stated that "the statutory construction of `articles' that hews
most closely to the language of the statute and implements the avowed
Congressional purpose for Section 337 encompasses within its scope the
electronic transmission of the digital data sets at issue in this
investigation." Comm'n Op. at 36.
The panel majority holds that the term
"articles" in the Tariff Act excludes imported digital articles, but
in a different section, the Tariff Act definition of "article" is
unchanged from the 1922 and 1930 statutes:
The term "article" includes
any commodity, whether grown, produced, fabricated, manipulated, or
manufactured.
19 U.S.C. § 1332(e)(1);
Tariff Act of 1930, Part II, § 332, 46 Stat. 590, 699 (1930); Tariff Act of
1922, Part II, § 318(b), 42 Stat. 858, 947 (1922). This
definition is striking in its breadth, and is commensurate with the stated
purpose to reach "every type and form of unfair practice," see
Senate Rep. No. 67-595, supra.
Digital articles of commerce did not
exist when the Tariff Act was first enacted. However,
the intention to omit unforeseen, later-discovered technologies cannot be imputed to this statute, and is negated by the
all-inclusive breadth of the definition that was written.
Nonetheless, the panel majority rules
that the digital data sets and digital models that are here imported are not
"material things" and therefore are excluded
from Section 337. Maj. Op. at 1297. Citing definitions in dictionaries of the
1920s, the majority rules that digital goods are "intangible," and
that infringing imports when electronically transmitted are
excluded from the Tariff Act.
However, the Tariff Act did not lock Section
337 into the technology in existence in 1922 or 1930. It cannot have been the
legislative intent to stop the statute with the forms of "article"
then known. Further, the particles and waveforms of electronics and photonics
and electromagnetism are not intangible, although not
visible to the unaided eye.[1]
Section 337 was
written in broad terms, whereby no field of invention, past, present, or
future, was excluded. It is not reasonable to impute the legislative intent to exclude
new fields of technology, and inventions not yet made, from a statute whose
purpose is to support invention.
The court nonetheless imputes this
legislative purpose to the Tariff Act, placing weight on selected definitions
of "article" in dictionaries of the 1920s, while dismissing
unselected definitions as "imprecise at best." Maj. Op. at 1292. Thus the court arbitrarily rejects the definition in the leading
dictionary of the era, Webster's New International Dictionary of the English
Language, 1924 Edition, and the 1934 Second Edition, which define
"article" broadly and generally, as "a thing of a particular
class or kind as distinct from a thing of another class or kind; a commodity;
as, an article of merchandise." Merchandise, in turn, is defined as
"the objects of commerce; whatever is usually bought and sold in trade;
wares; goods."
Precedent has long recognized that
"article" in the Tariff Act was intended to be all-encompassing.
The Court of Customs and Patent Appeals in 1940, citing Webster's New
International Dictionary, explained that, in the Tariff Act of 1930,
"Congress said: `and paid upon all articles when imported from any foreign
country.' Unquestionably, Congress meant, by employing that language, to
include under the word `articles' any provided-for substance, material or thing
of whatever kind or character that was imported into this country." United
States v. Eimer & Amend, 28 C.C.P.A. 10, 12, 1940
WL 4014 (1940).
The Commission defined
"articles" in Section 337 to encompass "articles of
commerce." Comm'n Op. at 40. The Supreme Court
defined "articles of commerce" to include pure information, holding
in Reno v. Condon, 528 U.S. 141, 120 S.Ct. 666, 145
L.Ed.2d 587 (2000), that the Commerce Clause applies to interstate transmission
of information in motor vehicle records sold or released "into the
interstate stream of business." Id. at 148, 120 S.Ct.
666.
Although data sets carrying information,
imported by electronic or photonic or electromagnetic
transmission, are not mentioned in the dictionaries of the 1920s, no reason has
been shown to exclude them from articles of commerce. No dictionary, and no
statutory constraint, limits "articles" to items that are grossly
"tangible." Data carried by electronic particles or waves constitute
articles of commerce, and may be imported, bought and sold, transmitted, and
used.
My colleagues' removal of digital goods
from the Tariff Act is devoid of definitional or statutory support. The
Commission correctly defined "articles" in Section 337 as meaning articles
of commerce, including digital articles and electronic commerce.
The Commission correctly held that
importation of infringing articles is not restricted to specific kinds of
carriers or modes of entry.
It is not disputed
that the digital data sets and digital models of teeth are imported.
Importation subject to Section 337 does not depend on the mode of entry into
the territory of the United States:
Importation ... consists in bringing an
article into a country from the outside. If there be
an actual bringing in it is importation regardless of the mode in which it is effected. Entry through a customs house is not of the
essence of the act.
Cunard S.S. Co. v. Mellon, 262 U.S. 100,
122, 43 S.Ct. 504, 67 L.Ed.
894 (1923).
The Bureau of Customs and Border
Protection has established that Internet transmission is
"importation" into the United States. See HQ 114459 (Sept. 17, 1998)
("We further find that the transmission of software modules and products
to the United States from a foreign country via the Internet is an importation
of merchandise into the customs territory of the United States"). The
Customs rulings reflect the accepted view that digital products are
"articles of commerce," "goods," or
"merchandise."
The Customs statute classifies software
as "merchandise" under 19 U.S.C. § 1401(c). See HQ114459 ("we
find that the subject software modules and products are `merchandise' and
`goods'..."); see also Heading 8523, USHTS (2015)
(Rev.2) (classifying software for importation duties). Although the panel
majority argues that the Tariff Schedule exempts telecommunications
transmissions from import duties, see General Note 3(e)(ii),
HTSUS (2015) (Rev.2), it is established that telecommunications transmissions,
including electronically imported software, are within the purview of the
Customs service. The Court of International Trade stated in Former Employees of
Computer Sciences Corp. v. U.S. Secretary of Labor, 30 Ct. Int'l. Tr. 124, 414
F.Supp.2d 1334 (2006):
General Note 3(e) supports the
conclusion that telecommunications transmissions, which would include
transmissions of software code via the Internet, are exempt from duty while
acknowledging that they are goods entering into the Customs boundaries of the
United States.
Id. at 131, 414 F.Supp.2d 1334.
Exemption from import duty is not
exemption from patent infringement. The court now discards established
protocols and practices concerning electronic and digital technologies,
although it is beyond debate that digital articles are "goods" or "merchandise"
and may be bought and sold and patented and imported. Today's ruling discards
the Tariff Act's purpose of protecting domestic industry from unfair trade in
the importation of this vast and powerful body of commercial articles that may
infringe United States patents.
The Commission correctly held that
electronic importation of digital goods is subject to the trade laws.
My colleagues on this panel do not
dispute that the Patent Act applies to the subject matter that is imported,
although they hold that the Tariff Act does not apply, thereby rendering
Section 337 incapable of performing its statutory purpose.
Section 337 does not distinguish between
digital goods imported electronically and digital goods imported as embedded in
a physical medium. My colleagues hold that importation of infringing digital
data can be excluded when the data are carried on
discs or other storage media, but cannot be excluded when carried in packets or
waves by wired or wireless transmission. This distinction has
long been discarded as unjustifiable, and in the context of Section 337
and other Trade statutes and rulings, precedent is universally contrary.
The Commission explained in Hardware
Logic Emulation Systems, supra, that "it would be
anomalous for the Commission to be able to stop the transfer of a CD-ROM or
diskette containing respondents' software, but not be able to stop the transfer
of that very same software when transmitted in machine readable form by
electronic means." Id. at 29.
Reaching the same logical conclusion, the
Department of Labor, interpreting the Trade Act for purposes of Trade
Adjustment Assistance, stated that "[s]oftware
and similar intangible goods that would have been considered articles, for the
purposes of the Trade Act, if embodied in a physical medium will now be
considered to be articles regardless of their method of transfer." IBM
Corporation Global Services Division, Piscataway, NJ; Middletown, NJ; Notice of
Revised Determination on Remand, 71 FR 29183-01 (May 19, 2006). And as mentioned supra, the Customs service holds that
"[t]he fact that the importation of the merchandise via the Internet is
not effected by a more `traditional vehicle' (e.g., transported on a vessel)
does not influence our determination." HQ 114459 at 2.
To further illustrate, Congress rejected the distinction the
court creates, in the context of trade negotiations. The recently enacted
Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities and Accountability Act of 2015 covers
"digital trade in goods and services" and states that "[t]he
principal negotiating objectives of the United States ... are ... to ensure
that electronically delivered goods and services receive no less favorable
treatment under trade rules and commitments than like products delivered in
physical form." Pub L. No. 114-26, § 102(a)(6)
and (a)(6)(B)(i), 129 Stat. 320, 325 (2015).
Although various forms of wired and
wireless transmission have become commonplace, within nations and across
borders, the panel majority has locked the International Trade Commission into
technological antiquity. The court ignores precedent and logic, and removes a
vast body of technology from the protection of a statute designed for its
protection.
Difficulty of enforcement is not grounds
for discarding a remedial statute.
The court argues that violation of
Section 337 by electronic transmission into the United States, such as via the
Internet or other cloud technologies, may be difficult to track and enforce.
This argument, whatever the present state of science, cannot apply to the facts
of this case, for the electronically imported digital goods are
produced by the Pakistani affiliate of the United States importer, who
is subject to the Commission's Cease-and-Desist Order.
Cease-and-desist orders as a remedy for
Section 337 violations are not new, including orders relating to infringement
by digital importation. See Hardware Logic Emulation Systems, supra, at 3 (ordering that respondent "shall not ... import
(including electronically) into the United States, or use, duplicate, transfer,
or distribute by electronic means or otherwise, within the United States,
hardware logic emulation software that constitutes covered product").
Even if enforcement were difficult,
difficulty of enforcing a remedial statute is not grounds for judicial
elimination of all remedy. See Bally/Midway Mfg. Co. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 714 F.2d 1117, 1122 (Fed. Cir.1983) (rejecting the
position that absence of remedy precludes a finding of violation of Section
337). The court stated that "Congress did not
intend the Commission to consider questions of remedy when the agency
determines whether there is a violation." Id. at 1123.
My colleagues' reliance on possible
difficulty of enforcement against electronic transmission of infringing digital
data and related articles, although not at issue in this case, merely adds
imprecision to judicial guidance in this commercially important area.
The Commission's ruling requires
judicial deference in accordance with Chevron.
It is not disputed
that the digital data sets and digital models for teeth alignment, produced in
Pakistan and imported into the United States, infringe the patents of Align
Technology. The Commission recognized that this technology is subject to
Section 337. This ruling is a reasonable statutory interpretation.
If Section 337 were
deemed ambiguous as applied to these fields of technology and commerce,
the Commission's well-reasoned interpretation, amid extensive corroboratory
rulings, is entitled to judicial deference. "[I]f the statute is silent or
ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the question for the court is
whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of the
statute." Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
843, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). A
permissible construction is one that is "rational and consistent with the
statute." Sullivan v. Everhart, 494 U.S. 83, 88-89, 110 S.Ct. 960, 108 L.Ed.2d 72 (1990) (quoting N.L.R.B. v.
United Food & Commercial Workers Union, Local 23, AFL-CIO, 484 U.S. 112,
123, 108 S.Ct. 413, 98 L.Ed.2d 429 (1987)). "If
the agency interpretation is not in conflict with the plain language of the
statute, deference is due." Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Boston &
Maine Corp., 503 U.S. 407, 417, 112 S.Ct. 1394, 118
L.Ed.2d 52 (1992).
The rule of deference
to the Commission's reasonable statutory interpretation has long been
recognized by the Federal Circuit. E.g., TianRui
Grp. Co. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 661 F.3d 1322, 1332
(Fed. Cir.2011) ("We have held that the Commission's
reasonable interpretations of section 337 are entitled to deference."); Kinik Co. v. Int'l Trade Comm'n.,
362 F.3d 1359, 1363 (Fed.Cir.2004) ("To the extent that there is any
uncertainty or ambiguity in the interpretation of § 337(a) and its successor §
1337(a)(1)(B)(ii), deference must be given to the view of the agency that is
charged with its administration."); Enercon GmbH
v. Int'l Trade Comm'n, 151 F.3d 1376, 1381
(Fed.Cir.1998) ("As the agency charged with the administration of section
337, the ITC is entitled to appropriate deference to its interpretation of the
statute.").
"Congress cannot, and need not,
draft a statute which anticipates and provides for all possible circumstances
in which a general policy must be applied to a specific set of facts. It
properly leaves this task to the authorized agency." Micron Tech., Inc. v.
United States, 243 F.3d 1301, 1312 (Fed. Cir.2001). To the extent that new
technologies are involved in these infringing importations, deference is
appropriate to the agency's reasonable application of the statute it is charged to administer. See Nat'l Cable &
Telecommunications Ass'n, Inc. v. Gulf Power Co., 534
U.S. 327, 339, 122 S.Ct. 782, 151 L.Ed.2d 794
(upholding agency interpretive authority where the statute involved
"technical, complex, and dynamic" subject matter that "might be
expected to evolve in directions Congress knew it could not anticipate.").
On any standard, the Commission's
determination is reasonable, and warrants respect. The panel majority's
contrary ruling is not reasonable, on any standard.
CONCLUSION
The Commission's ruling is consistent
with the language, structure, and purpose of Section 337, and decades of
precedent concerned with digital data, electronic transmission, and infringing
importation. From the court's erroneous departure from statute and precedent, I
respectfully dissent.
[1] While this court recently interpreted the phrase
"articles that infringe" in Suprema, Inc. v. International Trade
Commission, that opinion does not control here. 796
F.3d at 1344-45. In Suprema, we were dealing with the single issue of whether
the respondent violated 19 U.S.C. § 1337 by inducing a direct patent
infringement that did not occur until after a tangible item was imported into
the United States. Our opinion turned exclusively on the term
"infringe" as used in 19 U.S.C. § 1337(a)(1)(B)(1).
Conversely, here we are exclusively looking to the meaning of the term
"articles." Furthermore, the "articles" in question in
Suprema were physical objects, and thus do not inform the question now before
the court. Indeed the analysis in Suprema supports the decision here, as discussed
infra.
[2] As
we do not overcome the threshold issue of the Commission's jurisdiction, we do
not reach the Appellant's appeal regarding the Commission's analysis of
estoppel, contributory infringement, or invalidity. Appellant's Br. 17-59.
[3]
U.S. Patent No. 6,217,325 ("`325 patent"); U.S. Patent No. 6,705,863
("`863 patent"); U.S. Patent No. 6,626,666 ("`666 patent");
U.S. Patent No. 8,070,487 ("`487 patent"); U.S. Patent No. 6,471,511
("`511 patent"); U.S. Patent No. 6,722,880 ("`880 patent");
and U.S. Patent No. 7,134,874 ("`874 patent").
[4]
Claims 21 and 30 of the `325 patent and claim 1 of the `880 patent.
[5] Claims
31 and 32 of the `325 patent, claims 1 and 4-8 of the `863 patent, claims 1, 3,
7, and 9 of the `666 patent, and claims 1, 3, and 5 of the `487 patent.
[6]
Claims 7-9 of the `487 patent.
[7]
Claims 1-3, 11, 13-14, 21, 30-35, and 38-39 of the `325 patent, claims 1 and 3
of the `880 patent, claim 1 of the `511 patent, and claims 1-2, 38-39, 41, and
62 of the `874 patent.
[8] To
the extent that Group I and II claims overlap with Group IV claims, the
Commission found that these claims were infringed and not invalid. Because of
the posture of this appeal, the nature of the overlap is not relevant to this
case and thus will not be discussed.
[9] Claim 1 of the `880 patent is
representative of the Group 1 claims and reads:
A method
for making a predetermined series of dental incremental position adjustment
appliances, said method comprising:
a) obtaining a digital data set representing an initial tooth
arrangement;
b) obtaining a repositioned tooth arrangement based on the
initial tooth arrangement;
c) obtaining a series of successive digital data sets
representing a series of successive tooth arrangements; and
d) fabricating a predetermined series of dental incremental
position adjustment appliances based on the series of successive digital data
sets, wherein said appliances comprise polymeric shells having cavities shaped
to receive and resiliently reposition teeth, and said appliances correspond to
the series of successive tooth arrangements progressing from the initial to the
repositioned tooth arrangement.
`880
patent col. 22 ll. 13-29.
[10] Claim 21 of the `325 patent is representative of the Group
II claims and reads:
A method
for fabricating a dental appliance, said method comprising:
providing
a digital data set representing a modified tooth arrangement for a patient;
controlling a fabrication machine based on the digital data set to produce a
positive model of the modified tooth arrangement; and
producing the dental appliance as
a negative of the positive model.
`325
patent col. 17 ll. 7-16.
[11]
Commissioner David S. Johanson dissented in the
Commission's findings.
[12]
While normally we would turn to the Second Edition of BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY,
as it was contemporaneous with passage of the 1922 Tariff Act, that dictionary
only defines "article" in regard to written
documents, not with respect to trade.
[13]
The Supreme Court cited to this dictionary exclusively for the definition of
"manufacture" when interpreting the Plant Patent Act of 1930. Am.
Fruit Growers v. Brogdex Co., 283 U.S. 1, 11, 51 S.Ct. 328, 75 L.Ed. 801 (1931).
[14]
The United States Tariff Commission is the predecessor of the International
Trade Commission.
[15] We
briefly address two arguments raised by the dissent regarding the proper
definition of the term "articles" in Section 337. First, the dissent
argues that in Lucent Technologies, Inc. v. Gateway, Inc., 580 F.3d 1301, 1321
(Fed.Cir.2009), we "rejected the argument that digital files such as
computer software are not a `material or apparatus' subject to infringement as
set forth in the Patent Act at 35 U.S.C. § 271(c)." Dissent at 1307.
Lucent involved a patent infringement suit. Thus, Lucent had nothing to do with
the scope of the Commission's jurisdiction. Indeed, it never even considered
the term "article," instead assessing the meaning of the unrelated
term "material or apparatus." Second, the dissent argues that the
term "`article' in the Tariff Act was intended to be all-encompassing."
Id. at 1308 (discussing United States v. Eimer &
Amend, 28 C.C.P.A. 10, 1940 WL 4014 (1940)). The "sole question" in Eimer was whether the term "articles" should
cover "glass wool" objects, since such objects "do not have
definite form and shape." Eimer, 28 C.C.P.A. at
12. Because the "glass wool" at issue in Eimer
was undisputedly a material object, Eimer is
inapposite to the present question of whether the term "articles"
encompasses intangible data.
[16]
The Commission made this conclusion based upon definitions of "articles of
commerce" found in one Supreme Court case and one Seventh Circuit case,
Reno v. Condon, 528 U.S. 141, 148, 120 S.Ct. 666, 145
L.Ed.2d 587 (2000), and Senne v. Vill.
of Palatine, 695 F.3d 617, 620 (7th Cir.2012). Final Comm'n Op. at 40. These two cases are not relevant to the
analysis at hand; they interpret the Driver's Privacy Protection Act rather
than the statute at issue in this case.
[17]
"The House and Senate Reports of the 1922 and 1930 Acts and Congressional
debate refer to articles as synonymous with goods.... See S. Rep. 67-595 at 3
(1922); H.R. Rep. 71-7 at 3 (1929); 71 Cong. Rec. S. 3872, 4640 (1929)."
Final Comm'n Op. at 43. For example, the Senate
Report stated its amendments were meant to
"prohibit the importation of particular goods for the purpose of
preventing unfair methods of competition in the importation of goods." S.
Rep. 67-595 at 3. The report further noted that,
"The provision relating to unfair methods of competition in the
importation of goods is broad enough to prevent every type and form of unfair
practice." Id. at 3.
[18]
Our recent opinion in Suprema also uses "goods" synonymously with
"articles." See Suprema, Inc., 796 F.3d at 1340-41.
[19]
This is markedly different from Suprema where we concluded that the relevant
text was ambiguous. See Suprema, Inc., 796 F.3d at 1343-46.
[20] We
note that we do not limit the parties' other legal remedies, such as a possible
action in district court.
[21] It
is noteworthy that this is not the Commission's only failure to cite evidence
correctly. The Commission additionally states that "goods, commodities,
and merchandise" have the same definition as "articles" as
defined in the second edition of BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY. Final Comm'n Op. at 43. However, BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY does not
provide the cited definition.
__________________________________
[1] Chevron "step zero" has been
defined as "the initial inquiry into whether the Chevron framework
applies at all." See Cass R. Sunstein, Chevron
Step Zero, 92 VA. L.REV. 187, 191 (2006). Some scholars believe this additional
inquiry aids and streamlines review of administrative decision
making. See, e.g., Thomas W. Merrill, Symposium, Chevron at 30: Looking Back and Looking Forward: Step Zero After City of Arlington,
83 FORDHAM L.REV. 731, 744 (2014) (opining that the announcement of the Chevron
step zero inquiry in United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 121 S.Ct. 2164, 150 L.Ed.2d 292 (2001) was a
"positive" step forward in administrative law, and critiquing more
recent developments in Chevron step zero jurisprudence).
__________________________________
[1] It
is reported that the elusive Higgs boson, a
fundamental particle of matter, has been detected by observing its effects. By the same laws of physics, digital matter is most readily
observed in its effects. The panel majority's ruling that such matter is not
"material" is contrary to the law of the courts, the Customs agency,
and the Commission.