BEARBOX LLC v. LANCIUM LLC , No. 23-1922 (Fed. Cir. 2025)
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BearBox LLC and Austin Storms alleged that Lancium LLC and its co-founders, Michael T. McNamara and Dr. Raymond E. Cline, Jr., improperly used Storms' ideas and patented them. The dispute arose from a conversation at a Bitcoin mining conference and a follow-up email from Storms to McNamara containing BearBox's system details. BearBox claimed that Storms should be named as an inventor on Lancium's U.S. Patent No. 10,608,433.
The United States District Court for the District of Delaware granted summary judgment to Lancium, dismissing BearBox's Louisiana state law conversion claim as preempted by federal patent law. The court also excluded BearBox's expert's supplemental report and denied BearBox's claim that Storms was either a sole or joint inventor of the '433 patent.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reviewed the case. The court affirmed the district court's judgment on all issues. It held that BearBox's conversion claim was preempted by federal patent law because it sought patent-like protection for unpatented technology. The court also upheld the exclusion of the expert's supplemental report, finding no abuse of discretion in the district court's decision. Finally, the court agreed with the district court's conclusion that BearBox failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that Storms was a sole or joint inventor of the '433 patent. The court found that the information Storms shared with Lancium did not establish his contribution to the claimed invention and that Lancium had independently conceived the subject matter of the patent before Storms' communication.
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