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Non-Practicing Entities. Kimberly N. Van Voorhis AIPLA-LESJ Meeting Tokyo, Japan April 8, 2013. Litigation Trends and Solutions. NPE Lawsuit Statistics. 2011 NPEs brought 45% of 2011 patent litigations 63% of 2011 patent litigation defendants were defendants to NPE suits
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Non-Practicing Entities Kimberly N. Van Voorhis AIPLA-LESJ Meeting Tokyo, Japan April 8, 2013 Litigation Trends and Solutions
NPE Lawsuit Statistics • 2011 • NPEs brought 45% of 2011 patent litigations • 63% of 2011 patent litigation defendants were defendants to NPE suits • Source: RPX Corporation Litigation Database & Pacer
NPE Lawsuit Statistics • 2012 • NPEs brought 62% of 2012 patent litigations • 94% by corporate NPEs • 5% by individual inventors • 1% by universities • 59% of 2012 patent litigation defendants were defendants to NPE suits • Source: RPX Corporation Litigation Database & Pacer
NPE Lawsuit Statistics • In 2012, NPEs sued more non-tech companies than tech companies. • Retailers are among hardest hit. • 55% unique NPE defendants make $10M or less • 66% unique NPE defendants make $100M or less • Source: Chien, Colleen V., Patent Trolls by the Numbers (March 13, 2013). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2233041
NPE suits in the ITC Source: Facts and Trends Regarding USITC Section 337 Investigations, prepared by the USITC, 6/18/2012
Increased ITC Litigation • Domestic industry requirement can be met by licensing activity • NPEs do not have to show irreparable injury and inadequate damages under eBay • Not limited by the new AIA provision restricting joinder • Rare for ITC to grant a motion to stay pending a PTO reexamination
Increased ITC Litigation • Interdigital Communications, LLC, v. ITC, _F.3d_ (Fed. Cir. 2013)(on panel reh’g) (2012) • Federal Circuit confirmed that a domestic industry can consist of purely licensing activities as a “substantial investment in [the patent’s] exploitation.” • No need for domestic manufacture. • InterDigital met this requirement because it (1) invested around $7.6 million on employees engaged in licensing and (2) received almost $1 billion in licensing revenue.
Litigation Limits • Permanent injunctions limited post-Ebay • Stricter requirements for software claims • Limits to damages • Reliance on prior settlement agreements, negotiations • Early disclosure requirements • Patent Pilot Program
Permanent Injunctions after Ebay • eBay, Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006) • Before this case, irreparable harm for patent infringement was presumed • 4-factor test for permanent injunction in patent cases: (1) irreparable injury, (2) showing of inadequate relief, (3) considering the balance of hardships, remedy in equity is warranted, (4) public interest will not be disserved • Difficult for NPEs to satisfy these factors
Stricter Requirements for Software Claims? • CLS Bank v. Alice, 685 F.3d 1341 (2012) – opinion vacated; rehearing granted en banc • District court held software patents invalid as abstract ideas. • Federal Circuit reversed, then decided to rehear. • En Banc hearing to clarify whether a computer implemented invention is a patent-ineligible “abstract idea”. • Federal Circuit may further clarify what software is patentable under §101.
Stricter Requirements for Damages • LaserDynamics v. Quanta Computer, 694 F.3d 51 (Fed. Cir. 2012) • Entire market value rule is a narrow exception • Royalties cannot be based on entire market value for a product unless the patented features constitute the basis for consumer demand • Applies to "smallest saleable patent-practicing unit" • Must be reasonable in light of the technology • Consider economic reality
Prior Settlements & Royalties • ResQNet.com v. Lansa, 594 F.3d 860 (Fed. Cir. 2010) • Past license evidence used to calculate royalty rates should be reasonably related to the claimed invention. • Courts should not rely on unrelated or extraneous licenses to increase the reasonable royalty rate above rates more clearly linked to the economic demand for the claimed technology.
Prior Settlements & Royalties • In re MSTG, 675 F. 3d 1337 (Fed. Cir. 2012) • Federal Circuit determined that license negotiation discussions are not protected from discovery based on a settlement negotiation privilege • District court did not abuse its discretion by compelling MSTG to produce documents related to license negotiation discussions • Relevance v. Admissibility
Early Disclosure Requirements – Dist. Court • N.D.Cal Local Patent Rules: • Exchange infringement contentions - < 14 days after initial case management conference (Patent L-R- 3-1) • Exchange invalidity contentions - < 45 days after disclosing asserted claims and infringement contentions (Patent L-R 3-3) • E.D. Texas Local Patent Rules: • Exchange of infringement contentions - < 10 days before the initial case management conference (P.R. 3-1) • Exchange invalidity contentions - < 45 days after disclosing infringement contentions (P.R. 3-3) • 27 districts have official local patent rules. • Source: http://www.localpatentrules.com/
Early Disclosure Requirements - ITC • 337-TA-874 – Certain Products Having Laminated Packaging • ITC investigated an investigation based on a complaint filed by a Longview, Texas based patent entity. • ITC directed the ALJ to hold early evidentiary hearing on economic domestic industry. • Issue an initial determination within 100 days of institution. • If no domestic industry, case stayed.
Patent Pilot Program • 10 year pilot program to determine if changes are needed in the way courts resolve patent disputes due to the technical and procedural complexities of patent cases • Groups of judges are selected to hear patent cases and given specialized training • Study differences in reversal rates and disposition times between “patent” and “non-patent” judges
Statutory Solutions • Joinder limitations under the America Invents Act (AIA), 35 U.S.C. § 299 • Post-Grant review, interpartes review; transitional program for business methods under AIA • SHIELD Act
Joinder Limitations under the AIA • 35 U.S.C. § 299 provides a higher joinder standard • Joinder permitted only where: • Claims arise out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions, or occurrences • There are questions of fact common to all defendants • Accused infringers may not be joined together “based solely on allegations that they each have infringed the patent or patents in suit” §299(a)(2)
Joinder Limitations under the AIA • Phoenix Licensing, LLC v. Aetna, Inc., 2012 WL 3472973, at *2 (E.D. Tex. 2012) • Defendant improperly joined under Section 299 because only commonality between codefendants was “allegations of patent infringement” • Digitech Image Technologies LLC v. Agfaphoto Holding GmbH, 2012 WL 4513805 at *1 (C.D. Cal. 2012) • NPE sued 45 defendants for patent infringement • Court granted motion to sever for improper joinder under Section 299
Thanks for your attention! Questions? Kimberly N. Van Voorhis Partner Morrison & Foerster, LLP 755 Page Mill Rd. Palo Alto, CA 94306 +1650-813-4262 kvanvoorhis@mofo.com