Blackbird Tech LLC v. Health in Motion LLC
Citation944 F.3d 910
Date Filed2019-12-16
Docket18-2393
Cited14 times
StatusPublished
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit
______________________
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC, DBA BLACKBIRD
TECHNOLOGIES,
Plaintiff-Appellant
v.
HEALTH IN MOTION LLC, DBA INSPIRE
FITNESS, LEISURE FITNESS EQUIPMENT LLC,
Defendants-Appellees
______________________
2018-2393
______________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Central District of California in No. 2:17-cv-03488-R-GJS,
Senior Judge Manuel L. Real.
______________________
Decided: December 16, 2019
______________________
JEFFREY AHDOOT, Blackbird Tech LLC, Boston, MA, ar-
gued for plaintiff-appellant. Also represented by WENDY
VERLANDER; STAMATIOS STAMOULIS, Stamoulis &
Weinblatt LLC, Wilmington, DE.
WILLMORE F. HOLBROW, III, Buchalter, A Professional
Corporation, Los Angeles, CA, argued for all defendants-
appellees. Defendant-Appellee Health In Motion LLC also
represented by CHRISTINA LE TRINH, Irvine, CA.
______________________
2 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC
Before PROST, Chief Judge, WALLACH and HUGHES, Circuit
Judges.
WALLACH, Circuit Judge.
Appellant Blackbird Tech LLC (âBlackbirdâ) sued Ap-
pellees Health In Motion LLC (âHIMâ) and Leisure Fitness
Equipment LLC (âLeisureâ) (together, âAppelleesâ) in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware, and later
transferred to the U.S. District Court for the Central Dis-
trict of California, for infringement of U.S. Patent
No. 6,705,976(âthe â976 patentâ) owned by Blackbird. Af- ter more than nineteen months of litigation, Blackbird vol- untarily dismissed its suit with prejudice and executed a covenant not to sue, after which Appellees were granted attorney fees and expenses in the amount of $363,243.80. Blackbird Tech LLC v. Health In Motion LLC, No. 2:17-cv- 03488-R-GJS (C.D. Cal. Sept. 10, 2018) (Order) (J.A. 17â 20). Blackbird appeals. We have jurisdiction pursuant to28 U.S.C. § 1295
(a)(1) (2012). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
In October 2016, Blackbird sued Appellees in the U.S.
District Court for the District of Delaware (âDelaware Dis-
trict Courtâ) for infringement of the â976 patent. J.A. 418â
28 (Original Complaint). 1 The â976 patent relates to âexer-
cise equipment,â â976 patent col. 1 l. 11, and more
1 Blackbird is an entity owned and controlled en-
tirely by attorneys, see Oral Arg. at 3:53â4:25,
http://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/default.aspx?fl=
2018-2393.mp3, whose business model consists of purchas-
ing patents and monetizing them âthrough litigation,â
J.A. 1258â59 (Declaration of Blackbirdâs Vice President
and Head of Litigation).
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 3
particularly to â[e]xercise equipment including a housing
having a structural surface defining an arcuate pathâ and
âmultiple pairs of pulleys positioned along the arcuate
path, each pair of pulleys having passed between them a
cable the proximal end of which is located outside the
curved path, the distal end of the cable being coupled to a
source of resistance within the housing,â id., Abstract.
In March 2017, Appellees filed a motion to transfer to
the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California
(âDistrict Courtâ). J.A. 28. The Delaware District Court
granted Appelleesâ motion to transfer in April 2017. Black-
bird Tech LLC v. TuffStuff Fitness, Intâl, Inc., No. 1:16-cv-
00733âGMS, 2017 WL 1536394, at *1 (D. Del. Apr. 27, 2017) (J.A. 536, 547); seeid.
at *1 n.2 (explaining that
âHIM has incorporated by reference TuffStuffâs arguments
in its motion to transfer . . . , therefore the courtâs memo-
randum and order will apply to both casesâ).
In June 2017, Blackbird offered to settle its case
against Appellees for $80,000. J.A. 2069. Appellees de-
clined Blackbirdâs offer, explaining that Blackbirdâs âin-
fringement allegations lack[ed] meritâ â[i]n view of the
substantial differences between what is claimed in the
[â]976 [p]atent and the accused device,â viz., HIMâs M1
Multi-Gym. J.A. 2070; see J.A. 1176, 1185â86 (User Man-
ual for the M1 Multi-Gym). 2 Appellees also explained that
they âbelieve[d] there [was] a strong likelihoodâ that Black-
bird would be ordered to pay Appelleesâ attorney fees, and
countered with a settlement offer that included, inter alia,
Blackbird âmak[ing] a payment of $120,000â to Appellees.
2 HIM âdesigns, markets[,] and sells fitness equip-
ment,â including the M1 Multi-Gym, âthroughout the
United States.â J.A. 561. Leisure âoperates numerous re-
tail outlets, throughout the [United States], where it sells
various types of physical fitness equipment, including the
M1 [Multi-Gym].â J.A. 561.
4 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC
J.A. 2070. In October 2017, Blackbird made another set-
tlement offer, this time for $50,000. J.A. 2241; see
J.A. 1440 (âBlackbirdâs counsel . . . made an oral offer to
settle the case if [Appellees] paid Blackbird $50,000.â).
Again, Appellees declined. J.A. 1140, 2241. In April 2018,
Blackbird offered to settle yet again, this time for $15,000.
J.A. 1440. Appellees once again declined, âmaintain[ing]
their request that Blackbird pay a portion of [Appelleesâ]
expenses[.]â J.A. 1440. Later that same month, and again
the following month (May 2018), Blackbird offered âa
âwalk-awayâ settlement whereby [Appellees] would receive
a license to the [â976] patent for zero dollars, and the case
would be dismissed.â J.A. 2239 (describing the April 2018
offer), 2539 (describing the May 2018 offer). Once again,
Appellees declined. J.A. 2239; see J.A. 2239â40 (Black-
birdâs Vice President and Head of Litigation stating that
â[Appellees], through counsel, have rejected all settlement
offers by Blackbird . . . , including the zero-dollar âwalk-
awayâ offer. . . . I understand the reasoning for this to be
that [Appellees] have a belief that they will ultimate[ly] be
awarded their legal fees after judgment in this matterâ).
In May 2018, shortly before discovery was scheduled to
end, Appellees filed a motion for summary judgment.
J.A. 555â75 (Motion for Summary Judgement). Blackbird
opposed, J.A. 1215â45, but, after Appelleesâ motion was
fully briefed, and without notifying Appellees in advance,
Blackbird filed a notice of voluntary dismissal with preju-
dice, J.A. 1338â39 (Notice of Voluntary Dismissal), exe-
cuted a covenant not to sue, J.A. 1334â35 (Covenant Not to
Sue), and filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject mat-
ter jurisdiction, J.A. 1323â28 (Motion to Dismiss). 3 See
3 In its Motion to Dismiss, Blackbird argued that be-
cause it issued Appellees a âcovenant not to sue on all
claims of [the â976 patent],â âno case or controversy exists
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 5
J.A. 1441 (Appelleesâ lead counsel explaining that âBlack-
birdâs counsel never mentioned that he intended to file a
covenant not to sue. . . . Blackbird surprisingly filed a No-
tice of Dismissal, Covenant Not to Sue[,] and Motion to Dis-
missâ); Oral Arg. at 20:19â20:38 (Appelleesâ counsel stating
that Appellees âdidnât even get a call from Blackbird, [Ap-
pellees] just saw . . . on the [CM/]ECF [system] that [Black-
bird] had filed these documents dismissing the caseâ).
In June 2018, the District Court dismissed Blackbirdâs
claims with prejudice and denied Blackbirdâs Motion to
Dismiss, while authorizing Appellees to âseek to recover
their costs, expenses, and/or attorney[] fees.â J.A. 1383â
85. That same month, Appellees filed a motion for attorney
fees and expenses, J.A. 1386â87 (Motion for Attorney Fees
and Expenses), 1390â1417 (Memorandum in Support of
Motion for Attorney Fees and Expenses), requesting
$357,768.50 in attorney fees and $5,475.30 in expenses,
J.A. 1417. In September 2018, the District Court issued its
Order granting Appelleesâ Motion for Attorney Fees and
Expenses for the total requested amount of $363,243.80.
J.A. 17â20.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review and Legal Standard
By statute, a âcourt in exceptional cases may award
reasonable attorney fees to the prevailing party.â 35 U.S.C.
§ 285(2012). â[A]n âexceptionalâ case is simply one that stands out from others with respect to the substantive strength of a partyâs litigating position (considering both the governing law and the facts of the case) or the unrea- sonable manner in which the case was litigated.â Octane Fitness, LLC v. ICON Health & Fitness, Inc.,572 U.S. 545, 554
(2014). â[T]here is no precise rule or formula for between the parties,â and thus âthe case has been mooted, and should be dismissed.â J.A. 1324; see J.A. 1325â27. 6 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC making these determinationsâ; instead, district courts âmay determine whether a case is âexceptionalâ in the case- by-case exercise of their discretion, considering the totality of the circumstances.âId.
(internal quotation marks and
citation omitted).
On appeal, we âreview all aspects of a district courtâs
§ 285 determination for abuse of discretion.â Highmark
Inc. v. Allcare Health Mgmt. Sys., Inc., 572 U.S. 559, 561(2014). A district court abuses its discretion when it ââbase[s] its ruling on an erroneous view of the law or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the evidence.ââ Rothschild Connected Devices Innovations, LLC v. Guardian Prot. Servs., Inc.,858 F.3d 1383, 1387
(Fed. Cir. 2017) (quoting Highmark,572 U.S. at 563
n.2). âA factual finding is clearly erroneous if, despite some supporting evidence, we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.âId.
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). âWe apply Federal Circuit case[]law to the § 285 analysis, as it is unique to patent law.â Digeo, Inc. v. Au- dible, Inc.,505 F.3d 1362, 1366
(Fed. Cir. 2007) (citation
omitted).
II. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in
Concluding that This Case Is âExceptionalâ Under
35 U.S.C. § 285
Considering the âtotality of the circumstances,â the
District Court found that Blackbirdâs case against Appel-
lees is âexceptional within the meaning of [§] 285 and Oc-
tane Fitness.â J.A. 18. Specifically, the District Court
determined that Blackbirdâs case against Appellees is âex-
ceptionalâ because it âstand[s] out from . . . others with re-
spect toâ both âthe substantive strength of [Blackbirdâs]
litigation positionâ and âthe unreasonable manner in which
the case [was] litigatedâ by Blackbird. J.A. 17â18. The
District Court also found that âgranting a fee award [was]
warrantedâ in this case âto deter future abusive litigation.â
J.A. 19. Finally, the District Court concluded that
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 7
Appelleesâ requested award of $363,243.80 was reasonable
considering each attorneyâs âcomparable skill, experience,
and reputation.â J.A. 19 (citing Blum v. Stenson, 465 U.S.
886, 888 (1984)). We review each of the District Courtâs
determinations in turn.
A. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in
Determining that This Case âStands Outâ with Respect to
the Lack of Substantive Strength in Blackbirdâs Litigation
Position
The District Court found that Blackbirdâs litigation po-
sition was âmeritlessâ and âfrivolous.â J.A. 18â19. Specifi-
cally, the District Court determined that â[w]hen
challenged on the merits, [Blackbird] raised flawed claim
construction and infringement contentions,â and ulti-
mately âdid not prevail on the merits . . . because [Black-
bird] dismissed its claims with prejudice, and submitted a
covenant not to sue on the eve of trial.â J.A. 18. Blackbird
argues, however, that its âclaim construction and infringe-
ment positions were eminently reasonable, and likely cor-
rect.â Appellantâs Br. 19; see id. at 19â29. We disagree
with Blackbird.
Independent claim 1 of the â976 patent requires a
âhousingâ that includes a âstructural surface defining a
prescribed concave arcuate contourâ that: (1) delimits an
inside, i.e., âwithin the housing,â and an âoutsideâ of the
âhousing,â â976 patent col. 16 ll. 45â52; and (2) includes âat
least three cable exit points . . . each . . . having [a cable]
passed therethrough,â i.e., from âwithin the housingâ to
âoutsideâ the âhousing,â id. col. 16 ll. 43â45. 4 Additionally,
independent claim 1 requires that a âcommon source of
4 Blackbird alleged, in its Original and Amended
Complaints, that HIM infringed âat least [independent]
claim 1 of the â976 patent.â J.A. 425, 520; see J.A. 426â27,
521â23, 534.
8 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC
resistanceâ be provided âwithin the housing.â Id. col. 16
ll. 50â51. Before the District Court, Blackbird proposed to
construe the term âhousingâ as a âpart designed to shelter,
cover, contain, or support a component.â J.A. 1231. Even
accepting Blackbirdâs proposed construction, the accused
device does not include a âhousingâ that meets the require-
ments of independent claim 1. For example, to the extent
the alleged âhousingâ of the M1 Multi-Gym includes a âcon-
cave[,] arcuateâ âstructural surface,â the cables of the ac-
cused device are not âpassed therethrough,â i.e., from
âwithin the housingâ to âoutsideâ the âhousing,â at even a
single âexit point.â Compare â976 patent col. 16 ll. 41â52,
with J.A. 422, 517, 1176, 1185â86. 5 Rather, the cables of
the M1 Multi-Gym are arranged outside of the alleged
âhousing,â passing through a series of pulleys and flanges
provided on the outside surfaces of the M1âs tubular frame
members. See J.A. 422â25, 517â20, 1176, 1185â86. More-
over, a âcommon source of resistanceâ is not provided
âwithinâ the alleged âhousingâ as required by independent
claim 1. Instead, the weights of the M1 Multi-Gym are
housed within a separate structural component. See
J.A. 422, 517, 1176. 6
5 Before the District Court, Blackbird argued that
the âhousingâ of the M1 Multi-Gym âconsists of a âheavy-
duty round tubular steelâ frame,â that includes: (1) âup-
right supportsâ; (2) a âcenter upright braceâ; and (3) a
âmain upright.â J.A. 1240; see J.A. 1176â86 (depicting the
M1 Multi-Gym).
6 Blackbird contends that the District Courtâs deci-
sion should be vacated, because the âDistrict Court never
construed any claim element of the asserted patent.â Ap-
pellantâs Br. 15. In light of the material differences be-
tween the claims of the â976 patent and the accused device,
even accepting Blackbirdâs proposed constructions, â[c]laim
construction was unnecessary before finding
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 9
Blackbirdâs counterarguments are unpersuasive.
First, Blackbird argues that âthe record compels a reversal
as a matter of law because . . . the District Court did not
find Blackbirdâs arguments objectively baseless (merely
âflawedâ), and that is insufficient to support an award of
fees[.]â Appellantâs Br. 9. However, the District Courtâs
finding that Blackbirdâs âclaim construction and infringe-
ment contentionsâ were âflawed,â is only a single consider-
ation among the totality of circumstances considered by the
court in concluding that Blackbirdâs litigation position
lacked substantive strength. J.A. 18; see J.A. 18â19; see
also Octane Fitness, 572 U.S. at 554â55 (explaining that
âthere is no precise rule or formulaâ for determining
whether a case âstands out from others with respect to the
substantive strength of a partyâs litigating positionâ; in-
stead, district courts may make this determination âin the
case-by-case exercise of their discretion, considering the to-
tality of the circumstancesâ (internal quotation marks and
brackets omitted)).
Second, Blackbird argues that â[t]here is simply no ba-
sis for finding that Blackbird should have known its litiga-
tion position was purportedly weak,â Appellantâs Br. 19, as
âneither [Appellees] nor the District Court put Blackbird
on adequate notice of the purported weakness of its posi-
tion to support an award of fees,â id. at 9. The District
Court was not obliged to advise Blackbird of the weak-
nesses in its litigation position, and further, while a âlack
of . . . early notice . . . can support a denial of attorney[]
fees,â âwe have not held that such notice is rigidly re-
quired.â Thermolife Intâl LLC v. GNC Corp., 922 F.3d 1347,
1358(Fed. Cir. 2019). Moreover, the exercise of even a modicum of due diligence by Blackbird, as part of a pre-suit noninfringement in this case[.]â Lumen View Tech. LLC v. Findthebest.com, Inc.,811 F.3d 479, 483
(Fed. Cir. 2016); see J.A. 18 (finding that the â[â976] patent isnât infringedâ). 10 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC investigation, would have revealed the weaknesses in its litigation position. See Bayer CropScience AG v. Dow Agro- Sciences LLC,851 F.3d 1302, 1307
(Fed. Cir. 2017) (âWe
cannot say that the district court erred in reasoning that
had [the plaintiff] conducted a more searching pre-suit in-
vestigation . . . it would have not filed suit. Nor did the dis-
trict court err in treating pre-suit diligence as a factor in
the totality-of-the-circumstance approach[.]â). It is also un-
clear what effect, if any, notice would have had on Black-
birdâs conduct, as Blackbird waited until the âeve of trialâ
to dismiss its suit, J.A. 18; see J.A. 33, 35â36, despite being
aware of Appelleesâ non-infringement contentions months
before, see Appellantâs Br. 5.
At a minimum, Blackbird was aware of Appelleesâ in-
tention to seek attorney fees and expenses as early as De-
cember 2016, when, in answering Blackbirdâs Original
Complaint, Appellees requested attorney fees and ex-
penses. J.A. 510. While this request may not have pro-
vided the âfocusedâ and âsupportedâ notice that we have
looked for in other cases, Stone Basket Innovations, LLC v.
Cook Med. LLC, 892 F.3d 1175, 1181 (Fed. Cir. 2018), it
undermines Blackbirdâs attempt to blame others, including
the District Court, for it being purportedly unaware of the
weaknesses in its litigation position. Accordingly, the Dis-
trict Court did not abuse its discretion in determining that
this case âstands outâ with respect to the lack of substan-
tive strength in Blackbirdâs litigation position.
B. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in
Determining that This Case âStands Outâ with Respect to
the Manner in Which Blackbird Litigated
The District Court did not limit its findings to the sub-
stantive strength of Blackbirdâs litigation position, and fur-
ther determined that Blackbirdâs case against Appellees
was âexceptionalâ because Blackbird âlitigated . . . in an
unreasonable manner.â J.A. 18. The District Court made
multiple findings to support this determination, J.A. 18,
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 11
each of which is supported by the record. First, the District
Court found that Blackbird âmade multiple settlement de-
mands that were far less than the anticipated cost of de-
fense,â i.e., nuisance value settlement offers. J.A. 18; see,
e.g., Eon-Net LP v. Flagstar Bancorp, 653 F.3d 1314, 1327
(Fed. Cir. 2011) (finding that the district court did not err
in determining that the patentee had âacted in bad faith by
exploiting the high cost to defend complex litigation to ex-
tract a nuisance value settlementâ). By its own admission,
Blackbird made a series of decreasing settlement offers, see
Appellantâs Br. 5â7; see also J.A. 1440, 2069, 2239â41,
2539, each of which was significantly less than the cost of
litigation, see J.A. 1417 (Appelleesâ litigation costs totaled
at least $363,243.80).
Second, the District Court found that Blackbird unrea-
sonably âdelayed in producing documents, withheld many
documents until after [Appellees] took [Blackbirdâs] depo-
sition[,] and completely failed to produce other responsive
documents.â J.A. 18. Again, the record supports the Dis-
trict Courtâs findings; indeed, the record shows numerous,
unexcused delays by Blackbird in producing documents,
see, e.g., J.A. 2084, as well as Blackbirdâs attempts to with-
hold responsive documents entirely, without notice or ex-
cuse, until Appellees learned of the documents during
depositions, see J.A. 1440â41; Oral Arg. at 3:54â6:03
(Blackbird admitting that it âhad the documents in-houseâ
yet failed to produce them), 24:13â24:50 (Blackbird admit-
ting â[t]hat [it] is trueâ that âdocuments identified in th[e]
depositionâ have never been produced). 7 While Blackbird
subsequently implied that some of these documents might
be privileged, see J.A. 2230, Blackbird has failed to identify
7 As Appellees aptly point out, âBlackbird is an all-
in-one affair, in which employee-attorneys possessed the
documents, which were not . . . produced prior to the depo-
sitions[.]â Appelleesâ Br. 35; see Oral Arg. at 3:53â4:25.
12 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC
in the record any such assertion of privilege prior to the
depositions.
Finally, the District Court determined that Blackbird
had unreasonably âfiled a notice of dismissal, covenant not
to sue, and motion to dismiss without first notifying [Ap-
pelleesâ] counsel, on the same day pretrial submissions
were due and shortly before [Appelleesâ] motion for sum-
mary judgment was to be decided.â J.A. 18. The record
supports these findings. See J.A. 33, 35â36, 1323â28,
1334â35, 1338â39, 1441. Accordingly, the District Court
did not abuse its discretion in determining that this case
stands out with respect to the manner in which Blackbird
litigated.
C. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion by
Considering the Need to Deter Future Abusive Litigation
In addition to its findings as to the substantive
strength of Blackbirdâs litigation position and conduct dur-
ing litigation, the District Court found that âgranting a fee
award [was] warrantedâ in this case âto deter future abu-
sive litigation.â J.A. 19; see J.A. 19 (explaining that Black-
bird âhas filed over one hundred patent infringement
lawsuits, and none have been decided, on the merits, in fa-
vor of [Blackbird]â). 8 Doing so was âwithin the scope of [the
8 As of August 2018, Blackbird had filed âover 110â
lawsuits since its inception in 2014. J.A. 1439 (citing
J.A. 1961â64); see J.A. 2238 (Blackbird acknowledging that
as of July 16, 2018, âBlackbird . . . ha[d] filed over 100 in-
dividual lawsuits since its inception, asserting over 20 dif-
ferent patentsâ). Blackbird admits that the vast majority
of these lawsuits were settled before a determination on
the merits could be made, see Appellantâs Reply Br. 5, and
acknowledges that not a single of its lawsuits âha[s]
reached a full, final decision on the merits,â Oral Arg.
at 3:26â3:53.
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 13
District Courtâs] discretion in finding this case to be excep-
tional based on the weakness of [Blackbirdâs infringement
contentions] and the need to deter similarly weak argu-
ments in the future.â Inventor Holdings, LLC v. Bed
Bath & Beyond, Inc., 876 F.3d 1372, 1377â78 (Fed. Cir. 2017). The District Court therefore did not abuse its discretion by considering the need to deter future abusive litigation. Accordingly, the District Court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that Blackbirdâs case against Ap- pellees is âexceptionalâ within the meaning of35 U.S.C. § 285
. 9
III. The District Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion in
Determining that Appellees Are Entitled to $363,243.80
in Attorney Fees and Expenses
The District Court concluded that Appelleesâ requested
award of $363,243.80 was reasonable considering each at-
torneyâs âcomparable skill, experience, and reputation.â
J.A. 19 (citing Blum, 465 U.S. at 888). Blackbird contends, however, that â[e]ven if some award of fees [is] permissi- ble,â Appellantâs Br. 9, âthe District Court erred in award- ing fees for the full amount of the litigation, in two respects,âid.
at 38: (1) âby failing to consider the reasona-
bleness of the hours worked,â id. at 39; and (2) âby award-
ing fees for the entirety of the litigation rather than
9 Blackbird challenges the sufficiency of the District
Courtâs findings and reasoning underlying its determina-
tion that this case is âexceptional,â see Appellantâs Br. 14â
19, arguing that remand is necessary because âthe District
Court did not supply the facts and reasoning it relied
upon,â id. at 16. As our review of the District Courtâs deci-
sion makes clear, the District Court âprovide[d] a basis for
meaningful appellate review,â by setting forth factual find-
ings and âthe reasoning underlying its decision.â Superior
Fireplace Co. v. Majestic Prods. Co., 270 F.3d 1358, 1377
(Fed. Cir. 2001).
14 BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC
relating it to the purported misconduct,â id. at 40. We dis-
agree with Blackbird.
The District Courtâs Order demonstrates its considera-
tion of the record, including Appelleesâ âdetailed break-
down of the tasks performed by each lawyer, the [billing]
rate of each lawyer, and the time spent by each lawyerâ
working on this case. J.A. 19 (emphasis added); see
J.A. 19â20; see also Lumen View, 811 F.3d at 483 (âIn cal-
culating an attorney fee award, a district court usually ap-
plies the lodestar method, which provides a presumptively
reasonable fee amount, by multiplying a reasonable hourly
rate by the reasonable number of hours required to litigate
a comparable case.â (internal citations omitted)). Appellees
requested, in total, fees corresponding to just over 650
hours of work, J.A. 1413, an amount that the District Court
did not abuse its discretion in awarding, especially consid-
ering, as the record shows, that this case was the subject of
extensive motions practice and trial preparation, includ-
ing, inter alia: a motion to transfer that was fully briefed
and granted in Appelleesâ favor, J.A. 28â29, 536, 547; a mo-
tion for summary judgment that was fully briefed, J.A. 34â
35, 555â75; a motion to dismiss that was filed, J.A. 35,
1321â28; pre-trial submissions that were prepared for fil-
ing, J.A. 36; and considerable discovery that was com-
pleted, including bi-coastal depositions, J.A. 1966, 1976,
1985, 1987, 2003â07, 2489, 2499â2509. 10
10 Blackbird argues also that the District Court erred
in awarding Appellees attorney fees corresponding to forty
hours that âwere an estimate of future services to be ren-
dered briefing a reply in the motion for fees and prepara-
tion for and attendance at a hearing the [District] Court
never held.â Appellantâs Br. 39 (emphasis omitted). Appel-
leesâ counsel clarified during oral argument, however, that
they âactually . . . exceeded the forty hours.â Oral Arg.
at 17:05â17:27.
BLACKBIRD TECH LLC v. HEALTH IN MOTION LLC 15
Blackbirdâs contention that â[g]iven the amount at
stake, the District Court should have determined whether
it was reasonable to expend so many hours on such a small
claimâ is misplaced. Appellantâs Br. 39. Indeed, 650 hours,
for this litigation, is a far cry from the âcountless hoursâ we
have cautioned against. Bywaters v. United States, 670
F.3d 1221, 1231(Fed. Cir. 2012) (âWhere only a small amount is at stake, it certainly would not be reasonable to expend countless hours on such a small claim[.]â). To hold otherwise would, in effect, cause Appellees to make the un- tenable choice between: (1) submitting to Blackbirdâs set- tlement demandsâsmall as they may be; or (2) risking non-reimbursement of attorney fees accrued in defending themselves against Blackbirdâs unmeritorious claims. Moreover, the record supports the conclusion that Black- birdâs misconduct âso severely affected every stage of the litigation that a full award of attorney fees was proper here.â Monolithic Power Sys., Inc. v. O2 Micro Intâl Ltd.,726 F.3d 1359, 1369
(Fed. Cir. 2013). As the District Court
found, âfrom the very early stages of this case until the at-
torney[] fees stage, there has been exceptional conduct by
[Blackbird].â J.A. 18â19. Accordingly, the District Court
did not abuse its discretion in awarding Appellees the full
requested amount of $363,243.80.
CONCLUSION
We have considered Blackbirdâs remaining arguments
and find them unpersuasive. Accordingly, the Order of the
U.S. District Court for the Central District of California is
AFFIRMED