Agis Software v. Lenovo & Motorola Mobility: 5-Patent Mobile Tech Suit Dismissed With Prejudice
Agis Software Development filed a patent infringement action against Lenovo, Lenovo (United States), and Motorola Mobility in the Eastern District of Texas, asserting five patents covering forced mobile alerts and ad hoc digital networks. The case closed with prejudice after 461 days — permanently barring Agis from refiling the same claims against these defendants.
Five-patent mobile tech assertion against Lenovo ends permanently in E.D. Texas
On 18 November 2022, Agis Software Development, LLC — a non-practising entity holding a portfolio of mobile communications patents — filed suit in the Eastern District of Texas against Lenovo, Inc., Lenovo (United States), Inc., and Motorola Mobility, LLC. The complaint alleged infringement of five US patents: US9445251B2, US8213970B2, US9467838B2, US9749829B2, and US9820123B2, covering methods for forced interactive alerts and ad hoc password-protected digital and voice networks. The case was assigned to Chief Judge Rodney Gilstrap, one of the country’s most experienced patent jurists.
The case closed on 22 February 2024, when Agis filed a Notice of Dismissal With Prejudice under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 41(a)(1)(A)(i). Judge Gilstrap accepted and acknowledged the dismissal, closing all claims and causes of action with prejudice. Crucially, the court ordered each party to bear its own costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees — meaning neither side recovered litigation costs from the other. The dismissal with prejudice is a permanent resolution: Agis is legally barred from reasserting these specific claims against these defendants.
At 461 days, the case resolved faster than many patent suits in E.D. Texas typically do, suggesting early settlement discussions or a strategic decision by Agis to exit before costly claim construction proceedings. The public record does not disclose whether a confidential settlement was reached — the dismissal mechanism used (Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(i), a unilateral plaintiff filing) does not require court approval or disclosure of settlement terms. What drove the resolution, and whether any licensing arrangement was negotiated, remains unknown from the public record.
Filing to resolution in 461 days
461 days — closed before trial in a court where median patent cases often exceed 700 days
Dismissed with prejudice: what this means for Agis, Lenovo, and Motorola Mobility
Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(i): Plaintiff’s unilateral right to dismiss
Agis invoked FRCP Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(i), which permits a plaintiff to dismiss an action without a court order before the defendant serves an answer or a motion for summary judgment. This mechanism is available early in litigation and requires no judicial approval — the court here simply accepted and acknowledged the filing. It is the most straightforward exit route available to a plaintiff and typically signals a pre-trial resolution.
Plaintiff-initiated dismissalWith prejudice: Agis permanently barred from refiling these claims
A dismissal with prejudice operates as a final adjudication on the merits. Agis cannot refile the same patent infringement claims against Lenovo or Motorola Mobility in any US court. This differs from a dismissal without prejudice, which would preserve Agis’s right to refile. By accepting prejudice, Agis gave up significant future leverage — a concession that may reflect a broader licensing resolution, a portfolio reassessment, or pressure on claim validity.
Permanent bar on refilingEach party bears its own costs — no fee-shifting ordered
The court directed each party to bear its own costs, expenses, and attorneys’ fees. In patent cases, fee-shifting under 35 U.S.C. § 285 is reserved for ‘exceptional’ cases. The mutual cost arrangement here is consistent with a negotiated exit rather than a contested ruling — neither side paid the other, which typically suggests either a private settlement offset or a mutual decision to walk away cleanly.
No fee-shifting appliedFive patents dismissed — implications for Agis’s broader assertion strategy
Agis asserted five patents in a single action, spanning forced alert methods (US9445251, US8213970, US9467838, US9749829) and ad hoc network methods (US9820123). Dismissing all five with prejudice against these defendants removes a significant assertion avenue. Agis is an active NPE litigant, and this outcome — particularly the with-prejudice nature — may suggest the patents face validity or claim-scope challenges that made continued litigation unattractive.
All 5 patents dismissedFull party and counsel information
| Role | Name | Typ | Detail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kläger | Agis Software Development, LLC | Unternehmen | Mobile communications NPE — holder of US9445251B2 and 4 further alert/network patentsSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Beklagter | Lenovo, Inc. | Unternehmen | Lenovo, Inc. and Motorola Mobility, LLC — global consumer electronics and smartphone manufacturersSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Alfred Ross Fabricant | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Enrique William Iturralde | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Justin Kurt Truelove | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Justine Minseon Park | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Peter Lambrianakos | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Plaintiff counsel | Vincent J. Rubino , III | Attorney | Counsel for Agis Software Development, LLCSearch in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Bill Trac | Attorney | Counsel for Lenovo, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | Gregory Blake Thompson | Attorney | Counsel for Lenovo, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Defendant counsel | James Mark Mann | Attorney | Counsel for Lenovo, Inc.Search in Eureka ↗ |
| Presiding judge | Judge Rodney Gilstrap | Oberster Richter | Texas Eastern District Court — Chief JudgeSearch in Eureka ↗ |
Stipulation of dismissal — official text
The court’s acceptance of the Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(i) notice is administrative rather than adjudicative — Judge Gilstrap did not evaluate the merits of the infringement claims. The with-prejudice designation, however, carries full legal weight: it functions as a final judgment on the merits, preventing Agis from pursuing these five patents against Lenovo or Motorola Mobility again. The mutual costs order suggests no party emerged with a financial advantage from the dismissal itself, though any confidential settlement terms fall outside the public record.
US9445251B2 and 4 further patents — mobile forced alerts and ad hoc network methods
The five patents asserted in this case cover two overlapping technical domains: forced alert mechanisms for interactive remote mobile communications, and methods for establishing ad hoc, password-protected digital and voice networks. US8213970B2, the earliest-filed (application 12/324122), establishes foundational priority dating to 2008, with later continuation applications (including US9445251B2 and US9749829B2 sharing application 14/633804 and 14/633764 respectively) extending claim coverage into mobile network coordination and alert-delivery workflows. These patents sit within the mobile software and communications stack relevant to Android and similar platform implementations.
For smartphone OEMs and device manufacturers, this portfolio is strategically significant because forced alert and ad hoc network functionality is embedded in a wide range of consumer and enterprise mobile products — from emergency alert systems to proximity-based communication features. Agis has historically asserted this family broadly, and while Lenovo and Motorola Mobility have obtained with-prejudice protection in this case, the same patents may be enforced against other OEMs. Companies developing or licensing products in the push-notification, alert broadcasting, or ad hoc mobile networking space should treat this portfolio as an active enforcement risk.
Should your team run an FTO against the Agis mobile alert patent portfolio?
Any OEM, ODM, or software platform provider whose products implement forced push alerts, interactive mobile notifications, or ad hoc peer-to-peer network connectivity should evaluate exposure to this patent family. The dismissal with prejudice protects only Lenovo and Motorola Mobility — it creates no safe harbour for other companies. Given the breadth of continuation filings across this family, new product launches in the mobile communications and alert-system space warrant a structured FTO before commercialisation.
PatSnap Eureka’s FTO Search Agent can map the full claim scope of US9445251B2, US8213970B2, and the three related patents against your product’s technical specification, identifying potential overlap at the feature level. Eureka’s claim monitoring tools also track continuation applications in the same patent family — important here, given that the with-prejudice dismissal covers only the asserted patents, not potential continuations with narrower or differently scoped claims that may not yet be litigated.
Run a freedom-to-operate analysis on US9445251B2 to assess your product’s exposure
Run FTO in Eureka →Similar mobile alert and ad hoc network patent cases in E.D. Texas
PatSnap Eureka tracks related litigation across truck body equipment, vehicle accessories, and comparable infringement actions in the Georgia district system.
What this case signals for mobile communications patent enforcement
An NPE asserting five mobile tech patents against a tier-1 OEM and its subsidiary — and walking away with prejudice — carries strategic signal beyond this single docket.
With-prejudice dismissal limits Agis’s enforcement reach against these defendants
Lenovo and Motorola Mobility have obtained permanent protection against these five specific Agis patents. Any future product teams at those companies building on the same alert or ad hoc network functionality can rely on this dismissal as a bar. Competitors of Lenovo in the same technology space, however, remain exposed to potential Agis assertion using the same portfolio.
E.D. Texas NPE cases resolving pre-claim-construction deserve close tracking
Cases that close before Markman proceedings — as this one appears to have done — often settle on terms that are never disclosed. For in-house IP teams, this means public docket analysis alone cannot confirm whether a royalty was paid. Monitoring NPE behaviour patterns across dockets is more reliable than reading individual case outcomes in isolation.
Agis v Lenovo — key questions answered
Agis Software Development filed a patent infringement action against Lenovo, Lenovo (United States), and Motorola Mobility in the Eastern District of Texas on 18 November 2022, asserting five patents covering mobile forced alert and ad hoc network methods. On 22 February 2024, Agis voluntarily dismissed the case with prejudice under FRCP 41(a)(1)(A)(i). Each party was ordered to bear its own costs. The dismissal permanently bars Agis from refiling the same claims against these defendants.
Dismissal with prejudice in this context means the court treated the case as a final adjudication on the merits. Agis Software Development cannot refile the same patent infringement claims — based on any of the five asserted patents — against Lenovo, Lenovo (United States), or Motorola Mobility in any US court. This differs from a without-prejudice dismissal, which would have preserved Agis’s right to refile at a later date.
Agis asserted five US patents: US9445251B2, US8213970B2, US9467838B2, US9749829B2, and US9820123B2. These cover methods for forced interactive remote mobile alerts and for establishing ad hoc, password-protected digital and voice networks. The earliest application in the group (US8213970B2) dates to 2008, with later continuations extending claim scope through the mid-2010s.
The public record does not disclose the specific reason. Voluntary dismissals with prejudice under Rule 41(a)(1)(A)(i) before a court order are frequently associated with confidential settlement agreements, though the filing itself does not confirm this. Other possible drivers include a reassessment of claim validity, pressure from inter partes review, or a strategic portfolio decision. The with-prejudice nature and mutual cost order are consistent with a negotiated resolution rather than a unilateral walkaway.
No. The dismissal with prejudice in Case No. 2:22-cv-00445 protects only the named defendants: Lenovo, Inc., Lenovo (United States), Inc., and Motorola Mobility, LLC. Other OEMs, device manufacturers, or software platform providers remain potentially exposed to assertion of the same five patents, as well as any related continuation applications not extinguished by this specific case. Companies in the mobile alert or ad hoc networking space should conduct their own freedom-to-operate analysis.
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