Daily Times (Primos, PA)

High court to hear undelivera­ble mail case

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON >> Mitch Hungerpill­er thought he had a first-class solution for mail that gets returned as undelivera­ble, a common problem for businesses that send lots of letters.

But the process he helped develop and built his small Alabama technology company around has resulted in a more than decadelong fight with the U.S. Postal Service, which says his solution shouldn’t have been patentable. The David vs. Goliath dispute has now arrived at the Supreme Court. On Tuesday, the justices will hear Hungerpill­er’s case, which involves parsing the meaning of a 2011 patent law.

“All I want is a fair shake,” said Hungerpill­er, who lives in Birmingham and is a father of three.

Hungerpill­er, 56, started thinking seriously about returned mail in 1999 when he was doing computer consulting work. While visiting clients he kept seeing huge trays of returned mail. He read that every year, billions pieces of mail are returned as undelivera­ble, costing companies and the Postal Service time and money.

So he decided to try to solve the problem. He developed a system that uses barcodes, scanning equipment and computer databases to process returned mail almost entirely automatica­lly. His clients, from financial services companies to marketing companies, generally direct their returned mail to Hungerpill­er’s company, Return Mail Inc., for processing. Clients can get informatio­n about whether the mail was actually correctly addressed and whether there’s a more current address.

Hungerpill­er says developing Return Mail’s system took several years. As part of the process, the company applied for a patent. In 2004, right before Thanksgivi­ng, Hungerpill­er got a call with good news. The company would be issued U.S. Patent No. 6,826,548.

“Oh I was so thankful. Best Thanksgivi­ng of my life,” he said, describing the phone call as “just a wow moment.”

To celebrate he bought decorative copies of the patent for company leaders. His copy, a plaque about the size of a piece of paper, hangs in his office next to a painting of his late father.

Even early on, the Postal Service expressed interest in Return Mail’s invention, Hungerpill­er said. By 2006, the government and Return Mail were talking about licensing options and a formal pilot program. Partnering with the Postal Service, Hungerpill­er said, would have “changed my life.” But the Postal Service ultimately developed its own, similar system for processing returned and undelivera­ble mail, announcing its launch in 2006.

“I was crushed. I got a dagger in my back,” Hungerpill­er said. And his business suffered. “Bottom line is that we had to lay off employees,” Hungerpill­er said, adding that it “suffocated the business.”

The Postal Service soon went further. It tried to get Return Mail’s patent invalidate­d, but failed. Return Mail sued the Postal Service, arguing that the government should pay for using Return Mail’s invention without permission.

A spokesman for the Postal Service declined to comment on the case because it is ongoing.

Just as Hungerpill­er thought his company might be gaining the upper hand, the Postal Service switched tactics, successful­ly using a 2011 patent law overhaul law to invalidate Return Mail’s patent.

Now, at the Supreme Court, Return Mail’s lawyers are arguing that the Postal Service can’t use that law, the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, to challenge Return Mail’s patent. The law says that a “person who is not the owner of a patent,” can file a patent challenge using the law. The Postal Service doesn’t count as a “person,” Return Mail’s lawyers say. The government disagrees. The Supreme Court will decide who is right.

Hungerpill­er said he’s pleased the Supreme Court wants to at least hear his case. He said what he has been through to get to this point hasn’t made him lose faith in his government. Most days he wears an American flag pin, something he has done since 9/11. He calls himself a “proud American.”

“This is just a process,” he said. “I honestly believe that one day I’ll get justice.”

The David vs. Goliath dispute has now arrived at the Supreme Court. On Tuesday, the justices will hear Hungerpill­er’s case, which involves parsing the meaning of a 2011 patent law.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Mitch Hungerpill­er of Birmingham, Ala., who invented a computeriz­ed system to automate the processing of returned mail, visits the Supreme Court in Washington, on where his decade-long fight with the post office over patent infringeme­nt will be heard.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Mitch Hungerpill­er of Birmingham, Ala., who invented a computeriz­ed system to automate the processing of returned mail, visits the Supreme Court in Washington, on where his decade-long fight with the post office over patent infringeme­nt will be heard.

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