K.Mizra LLC vs. Verizon: Location Tech Patent Case Dismissed in Landmark EDTX Ruling
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📋 Case Summary
| Case Name | K.Mizra LLC v. Verizon Communications, Inc. et al. |
| Case Number | 2:21-cv-00243 (E.D. Tex.) |
| Court | Eastern District of Texas (Chief Judge Rodney Gilstrap) |
| Duration | Jun 2021 – Mar 2024 2 years 9 months |
| Outcome | Plaintiff Claims Dismissed with Prejudice |
| Patents at Issue | |
| Accused Products | Location Management Function (LMF), Secure User Plane Location Platform (SLP), Serving Mobile Location Centers (SMLC), Enhanced Serving Mobile Location Center (E-SMLC) |
Introduction
After nearly three years of litigation, K.Mizra LLC’s patent infringement campaign against Verizon Communications and its affiliated entities ended in a coordinated, with-prejudice dismissal on March 7, 2024 — a resolution that simultaneously closed parallel actions against AT&T and T-Mobile in one of the most strategically notable location technology patent disputes to emerge from the Eastern District of Texas in recent years.
Filed on June 30, 2021, Case No. 2:21-cv-00243 centered on U.S. Patent No. 8,958,819 (the “‘819 patent”), covering location management technology deployed across cellular networks. The case accused Verizon’s core location infrastructure — including its Enhanced Serving Mobile Location Center (E-SMLC) — of infringement, raising significant commercial stakes in a technology space underpinning emergency services, navigation, and network-based location applications.
For patent attorneys, IP professionals, and R&D leaders, the case offers a textbook study in multi-defendant NPE litigation strategy, coordinated settlement architecture, and the nuanced rights reserved through carefully drafted dismissal stipulations.
Case Overview
The Parties
⚖️ Plaintiff
A non-practicing entity (NPE) asserting patent rights in wireless telecommunications technology. Pursued simultaneous infringement actions against three major U.S. carriers.
🛡️ Defendant
One of the largest telecommunications providers in the United States, operating nationwide LTE and 5G networks with location management architecture dependencies.
The Patent at Issue
This case centered on U.S. Patent No. 8,958,819, claiming innovations in wireless location determination technology. The patent covers systems and methods relating to Location Management Function (LMF) protocols, foundational to how cellular networks calculate and communicate device position data.
- • US 8,958,819 — Wireless location determination technology, including LMF protocols.
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Litigation Timeline & Procedural History
K.Mizra filed three parallel actions on June 30, 2021, in the Eastern District of Texas — a venue historically favorable to patent plaintiffs due to its expedited dockets, plaintiff-friendly jury pools, and experienced patent bench.
The case was presided over by Chief Judge Rodney Gilstrap, the nation’s single busiest federal patent judge by caseload, known for rigorous case management and deep familiarity with complex telecommunications IP disputes.
| Milestone | Date |
| Complaint Filed | June 30, 2021 |
| Case Closed (Dismissal Order) | March 7, 2024 |
| Total Duration | 981 days (~2.7 years) |
The Verdict & Legal Analysis
Outcome
On March 7, 2024, Chief Judge Gilstrap granted a Joint Motion to Dismiss filed by all parties across Case Nos. 2:21-cv-00241, 2:21-cv-00242, and 2:21-cv-00243. The dismissal terms were precisely structured:
- • K.Mizra’s infringement claims against Verizon (and AT&T, T-Mobile, and Intervenor Ericsson) were dismissed with prejudice as to all products and services through the dismissal date.
- • Defendants’ counterclaims were dismissed with prejudice.
- • Each party bears its own fees and costs — a notable deviation from fee-shifting outcomes sometimes pursued in NPE litigation.
- • No damages award was disclosed, consistent with a confidential or no-monetary settlement structure.
Verdict Cause Analysis
The stipulated dismissal preserves a strategically critical carve-out: K.Mizra explicitly retains the right to assert the ‘819 patent against future products or services that “materially differ” from those accused through the dismissal date. This forward-looking reservation is a hallmark of NPE settlement architecture — closing the door on current-generation accused products while preserving optionality against next-generation deployments, including 5G NR positioning enhancements and future LMF implementations under 3GPP Release 16 and beyond.
The involvement of Ericsson as an Intervenor-Defendant is procedurally significant. Ericsson’s intervention suggests that the accused E-SMLC and LMF functionality was substantially implemented through Ericsson-supplied network equipment — a common pattern in carrier patent disputes where infrastructure vendors carry indemnification obligations and strategic interest in defending infringement claims.
Legal Significance
This case reinforces several established patterns in NPE telecommunications litigation:
- Coordinated multi-defendant assertion against all three major U.S. carriers simultaneously creates settlement leverage but also incentivizes defendants to align on joint defense strategies.
- Intervenor participation by infrastructure OEMs (here, Ericsson) can materially shift litigation dynamics, introducing parties with stronger technical defenses and independent invalidity arguments.
- With-prejudice dismissals preserving future claims based on “materially different” future products represent a sophisticated prosecution-litigation hybrid strategy that patent holders should evaluate carefully against reissue or continuation prosecution alternatives.
Freedom to Operate (FTO) Analysis
This case highlights critical IP risks in location technology. Choose your next step:
📋 Understand This Case’s Impact
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- View all related patents in location technology space
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High Risk Area
LMF/E-SMLC implementations in cellular networks
US 8,958,819
Patent at the core of the dispute
Future Assertion Rights
Retained for materially different products
✅ Key Takeaways
Coordinated multi-defendant NPE assertions create settlement economies but require careful stipulation drafting to preserve future assertion rights.
Search related case law →Ericsson’s intervenor role demonstrates the strategic value of OEM participation in carrier infrastructure patent disputes.
Explore precedents →With-prejudice dismissals in multi-case campaigns do not necessarily signal patent weakness — reservation clauses preserve significant future leverage.
Analyze NPE strategies →Freedom-to-operate analysis on LMF and location management implementations is essential before deploying next-generation 5G positioning features.
Start FTO analysis for my product →“Materially different” product design strategies can provide meaningful protection under dismissal stipulations of this type.
Try AI patent drafting →Frequently Asked Questions
The case concerned U.S. Patent No. 8,958,819 (Application No. US13/924458), covering location management technology including LMF, SLP, SMLC, and E-SMLC systems used in cellular networks.
All parties jointly moved for dismissal. K.Mizra dismissed infringement claims with prejudice as to current products, while retaining rights to assert the ‘819 patent against future materially different products or services.
The case signals continued NPE activity in wireless location services. K.Mizra’s retained future-assertion rights and the involvement of Ericsson as intervenor establish important precedents for how similar carrier infrastructure disputes may be structured and resolved.
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PatSnap IP Intelligence Team
Patent Research & Competitive Intelligence · PatSnap
This analysis was produced by the PatSnap IP Intelligence Team — a group of patent analysts, IP strategists, and data scientists who work daily with PatSnap’s global patent database of over 2 billion structured data points across patents, litigation records, scientific literature, and regulatory filings.
The team specialises in tracking landmark litigation outcomes, translating complex court rulings into actionable IP strategy, and identifying the competitive intelligence implications for R&D and legal teams. All case analysis is grounded in primary sources: official court records, USPTO filings, and Federal Circuit opinions.
References
- USPTO Patent Public Search — US8958819B2
- PACER Case Locator — TXED 2:21-cv-00243
- Eastern District of Texas Local Patent Rules
- PatSnap — IP Intelligence Solutions for Law Firms
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. All case information is drawn from publicly available court records. For platform capabilities, visit PatSnap.
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