BullsEye Newsletter: July 2006
Legislation that would dramatically overhaul U.S.
patent law appears to be on a fast track in Congress, with Senators
Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont) and Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) leading the
charge.
But legal and business groups are finding themselves
at odds over the legislation, with some saying it would reduce
patent litigation costs and improve patent quality while others
say it would do just the opposite. Everyone, it seems, can find
parts of the measure to love and others to hate.
In April, identical bills were filed in the Senate
and House, each titled the Patent Reform Act of 2007. In the
Senate, Leahy and Hatch introduced S. 1145, while in the House
Representatives Howard Berman (D-California) and Lamar Smith
(R-Texas) introduced H.R. 1908.
On May 16th, a House subcommittee approved the bill for further
review by the full Judiciary Committee, which held hearings on
it in June. The committee released a revised version of the bill
June 21st.
In an effort to help make sense of this legislation,
we offer this guide to its key provisions, together with summaries
of the arguments being raised for and against.
CONVERT U.S. TO
FIRST-TO-FILE
What it would do: In what would be a fundamental
shift in U.S. patent law, the bill would bring the United States
into conformity with the rest of the world by converting it from
a first-to-invent to a first-inventor-to-file system.
Arguments for: Proponents maintain this
would simplify the patent process, reduce legal costs, improve
fairness, and enhance the opportunity to make progress toward
a more harmonized international patent system. A first-to-file
system, they say, provides a fixed and easy-to-determine date
of priority of invention. This, in turn, would result in greater
legal certainty within innovative industries.
Proponents also believe that this change would
decrease the complexity, length, and expense associated with
current USPTO interference proceedings. Rather than tie up inventors
in lengthy proceedings seeking to prove dates of inventive activity
that may have occurred many years earlier, inventors could continue
to focus on inventing.
Finally, because this change would bring the U.S.
into harmony with the patent laws of other countries, it would
enable U.S. companies to organize and manage their portfolios
in a consistent manner.
Proponents include: Biotechnology industry.
Arguments against :Opponents argue that
adoption of a first-to-file system could promote a rush to the
USPTO with premature and hastily prepared disclosure information,
resulting in a decline in quality. Also, because many independent
inventors and small entities lack sufficient resources and expertise,
they would be unlikely to prevail in a "race to the patent
office"
against large, well-endowed entities.
Opponents include: The USPTO opposes immediate
conversion to a first-to-file system, in part because this remains
a bargaining point in its ongoing harmonization discussions with
foreign patent offices. Inventors also oppose this.
APPORTIONMENT OF
DAMAGES
What it would do: The bill would significantly
change the apportionment of damages in patent cases. Under current
law, a patentee is entitled to damages adequate to compensate
for infringement but in no event less than a reasonable royalty.
Section 5(a) of the bill would require a court to ensure that
a reasonable royalty is applied only to the economic value attributed
to the patented invention, as distinguished from the economic
value attributable to other features added by the infringer.
The bill also provides that in order for the entire-market
rule to apply, the patentee must establish that the patent’s
specific improvement is the predominant basis for market demand.
Arguments for: Proponents say this measure
is necessary to limit excessive royalty awards and bring them
back in line with historical patent law and economic reality.
By requiring the court to determine as a preliminary matter the "economic
value properly attributable to the patent's specific contribution
over the prior art," the bill would ensure that only the
infringer's gain attributable to the claimed invention's contribution
over the prior art will be subject to a reasonable royalty. The
portion of that gain due to the patent holder in the form of
a reasonable royalty can then be determined by reference to other
relevant factors.
Complex products, the proponents contend, often
rely on a number of features or processes, many of which may
be unpatented. Even where the patented component is insignificant
as compared to unpatented features, patentees base their damage
calculations on the value of an entire end product. This standard
defies common sense, distorts incentives, and encourages frivolous
litigation.
Further, courts in recent years have applied the
entire-market-value rule in entirely dissimilar situations, leaving
the likely measure of damages applicable in any given case open
to anyone's guess.
Proponents include: Large technology companies
and the financial services industry.
Arguments against: Opponents argue that
Congress should not attempt to codify or prioritize the factors
that a court may apply when determining reasonable royalty rates.
The so-called Georgia-Pacific factors provide courts with adequate
guidance to determine reasonable royalty rates. The amount of
a reasonable royalty should turn on the facts of each particular
case.
Although intended to guard against allegedly inflated
damage awards, this mandatory apportionment test would represent
a dramatic departure from the market-based principles that currently
govern damages calculations, opponents say. Even worse, it would
result in unpredictable and artificially low damages awards for
the majority of patents, no matter how inherently valuable they
might be.
Opponents further argue that this change would
undermine existing licenses and encourage an increase in litigation.
Existing and potential licensees would see little downside to "rolling
the dice" in court before taking a license. Once in court,
this measure would lengthen the damages phase of trials, further
adding to the staggering cost of patent litigation and delays
in the judicial system.
Opponents include: The USPTO, Federal Circuit
Court of Appeals Chief Judge Paul Michel, the biotechnology industry,
smaller technology companies, patent-holding companies, medical
device manufacturers, university technology managers, the NanoBusiness
Alliance and the Professional Inventors Alliance.
WILLFUL INFRINGEMENT
What it would do: Section 5(a) of the bill
would limit a court's authority to award enhanced damages for
willful infringement. It would statutorily limit increased damages
to instances of willful infringement, require a showing that
the infringer intentionally copied the patented invention, require
notice of infringement to be sufficiently specific so as to reduce
the use of form letters, establish a good faith belief defense,
require that determinations of willfulness be made after a finding
of infringement, and require that determinations of willfulness
be made by the judge, not the jury.
Arguments for: Proponents say that willfulness
claims are raised too frequently in patent litigation – almost
as a matter of course, given their relative ease of proof and
potential for windfall damages. For defendants, this raises the
cost of litigation and their potential exposure.
A codified standard with fair and meaningful notice
provisions would restore balance to the system, proponents say,
reserving the treble penalty to those who were truly intentional
in their willfulness and ending unfair windfalls for mere knowledge
of a patent.
Further, tightening the requirements for finding
willful infringement would encourage innovative review of existing
patents, something the current standard discourages for fear
of helping to establish willfulness.
Proponents include: Large technology companies,
the financial services industry, and the biotechnology industry.
Arguments against: Opponents argue that
willfulness is already difficult to establish under existing
law. The additional requirements, limitations, and conditions
set forth in the bill would significantly reduce the ability
of a patentee to obtain treble damages when willful conduct actually
occurs. The possibility of treble damages under current law is
an important deterrent to patent infringement that should be
retained as is.
Opponents include: The USPTO, the Professional
Inventors Alliance.
INTERLOCUTORY APPEALS
What it would do: Section 10(b) of the bill
would permit an interlocutory appeal to the Federal Circuit Court
of Appeals after a Markman hearing on claim construction, rather
than waiting for a final judgment from the district court.
Arguments for: Proponents say these appeals
would reduce the length and cost of litigation. Claim construction,
they argue, is a fundamental predicate that goes to the heart
of any patent infringement case. Until a claim is construed,
it is impossible to establish whether infringement occurred and
whether the patent is invalid. This process also serves to narrow
discovery and motion practice and related expenses.
Proponents assert that an interlocutory appeal would help to
mitigate the judicial inefficiency that occurs when a full trial
is conducted based on an incorrect interpretation of the patent,
only to be reversed on appeal and sent back for a second trial.
More than a third of all Markman rulings are overturned on appeal,
meaning that many litigants end up paying the attorney fees and
expenses for two trials.
Proponents include: Large technology companies
and the financial services industry.
Arguments against: Opponents say interlocutory
appeals from Markman hearings would increase litigation and court
congestion and offer "another bite at the apple" because
the reversal rate for claim construction is fairly high. The
net result, they say, will be to significantly delay final judgments
from the lower court, significantly delay potential settlements,
and significantly increase litigations costs.
Opponents argue that the Federal Circuit would
not be able to handle expeditiously the large numbers of Markman
appeals, meaning that resolution of the underlying district court
cases would be delayed for years.
If this provision is enacted, opponents say, it
would result in an interlocutory appeal in virtually every patent
infringement case as soon as a Markman order is issued. One study
estimates this would double the number of appeals each year.
Opponents include: The USPTO, Federal Circuit
Chief Judge Michel, the biotechnology industry, smaller technology
companies, and smaller patent-holding companies.
POST-GRANT REVIEW
What it would do: The bill would expand
the ability of third parties to challenge a patent after its
issuance. In particular, it would allow any person to oppose
a patent within 12 months after it is granted. More controversially,
it would allow a challenge at any time if the petitioner "establishes
a substantial reason to believe that the continued existence
of the challenged claim in the petition causes or is likely to
cause the petitioner significant economic harm."
A newly designated Patent Trial and Appeal Board
would be responsible for conducting the post-grant reviews. The
presumption of validity that applies to patents during litigation
would not apply to these post-grant review proceedings. Instead,
a "preponderance of the evidence" standard would apply.
Arguments for: Proponents say these post-grant
review procedures would be an improvement over existing reexamination
procedures because they would allow consideration of evidence
gleaned through depositions and interrogatories as well as from
patents and other documents. Also, proceedings would be overseen
by an administrative law judge rather than a patent examiner.
These changes would allow for more meaningful review and that,
in turn, would lead to better patent quality overall.
The so-called second window – the ability to challenge
at any time – is necessary, proponents say, to allow for
a meaningful and broadly available reevaluation of suspect patent
claims before a firm is forced into prolonged and expensive litigation.
Proponents include: Large technology companies
and the financial services industry.
Arguments against: While reexamination is
an important component of the patent system, it must be structured
in a manner that preserves the value and enforceability of the
majority of patents, opponents say. This change would create
an essentially limitless opportunity to challenge a patent at
any time during its life. This would be a dramatic departure
from the norm and cast a cloud of uncertainty over issued patents.
If a patent can easily be challenged at any time under a low
standard of proof, patents will have much less value and investment
predicated upon them will inevitably be diminished. This, in
turn, will likely result in less innovation.
Additionally, the resulting surge in complex, post-grant
review proceedings would further strain an already overburdened
and under-funded USPTO, thereby jeopardizing the agency’s
ability to improve pre-grant patent quality.
Opponents include: The USPTO, the biotechnology
industry, smaller technology companies, patent-holding companies,
medical device manufacturers, university technology managers,
the NanoBusiness Alliance and the Professional Inventors Alliance.
PRIOR USER DEFENSE
What it would do: Section 5(b) of the bill
expands the prior-use defense, which presently applies only to
business-methods patents, to cover all patents.
Arguments for: Proponents argue that this
expansion is reasonable in a competitive economy and strikes
a balance between trade secret and patent protection. They also
say it goes hand-in-hand with U.S. adoption of a first-to-file
rule. Prior-user rights benefit smaller businesses, which often
lack the resources or know-how to pursue patent protection, proponents
say. This measure would allow them to commercialize their inventions
when they used the subject matter of the invention prior to the
patent's filing date, even when they did not pursue patent rights.
Some foreign countries presently allow prior-user
rights, including Germany and Japan. This measure would help
level the playing field for U.S. companies by putting them in
the same competitive position as their overseas counterparts.
Proponents include: The financial services
industry and the biotechnology industry.
Arguments against: Opponents contend that
prior-user rights undermine the purpose of a patent system by
creating a strong incentive to protect innovations as trade secrets.
Under a prior-use defense regime, if inventors are able to protect
their innovations as trade secrets, they are able to use them
indefinitely, even if someone else obtains a patent on the invention.
Opponents also argue that this change would benefit
larger corporations at the expense of smaller ones. They also
contend that prior-user rights would reduce the value of patents
and therefore make innovation less desirable.
Opponents include: The USPTO, the Professional
Inventors Alliance.
VENUE
What it would do: Section 10(a) of the bill
limits the places where corporations may be sued in patent cases
by amending 28 U.S.C. § 1400(b) to provide that a corporation
"resides" only where it has its principal place of
business or in the state in which the corporation is incorporated.
Current law presumes a corporation to reside wherever it is subject
to personal jurisdiction. This change would not apply to declaratory
judgment actions brought by alleged infringers.
Arguments for: Proponents argue that this
change would discourage forum shopping. As the law now stands,
any company whose products are sold nationwide is subject to
patent litigation in any jurisdiction in the country. As a result,
certain jurisdictions have become magnets for patent cases because
of the disproportionately high number of cases they decide in
favor of patentees.
This forum shopping imposes a costly burden on
businesses which must collect evidence and witnesses and travel
to remote jurisdictions to try complex patent cases over a period
of weeks or months.
Proponents include: Large technology companies,
the financial services industry, and the biotechnology industry.
Arguments against: Opponents argue that
this change would be a substantial departure from established
practice and may not result in the most appropriate and convenient
venue for litigation. Certain district courts attract patent
cases not because of favoritism, they say, but because of their
expertise and timeliness. They also argue that the impact of
forum shopping is minimized by the existence of a single appellate
court for patent cases, the Federal Circuit.
Opponents include: Smaller patent-holding
companies, smaller technology companies.
USPTO REGULATORY
AUTHORITY
What it would do: The bill would authorize
the USPTO to promulgate substantive – as opposed to procedural
– rules and regulations for the first time in its history.
Arguments for: Proponents argue that giving
the USPTO substantive rulemaking authority would be beneficial
to the patent system and would help ensure an efficient and quality-based
patent examination process.
Proponents include: The USPTO.
Arguments against: Opponents note that the
U.S. Constitution expressly gives Congress the power to protect
intellectual property and that delegating that authority to an
administrative agency would be an ill-considered abdication of
that Constitutional authority. Further, this grant of authority
would create instability in the patent system, because the USPTO
could make multiple changes to the law during the life of a patent.
The job of defining substantive patent law is better left to
Congress and the courts.
Opponents include: The biotechnology industry,
smaller technology companies, patent-holding companies, university
technology managers, medical device manufacturers, and the NanoBusiness
Alliance.
INVENTOR'S OATH
What it would do: The bill would change
the current practice of requiring the inventor to sign an application.
It would allow the assignee of an invention to file a patent
application in its own name. It would also allow substitutes
for the inventor's oath where the inventor is unable or unwilling
to sign.
Arguments for: Proponents say this change
would reduce unnecessary formalities in the patent application
and simplify and streamline the process. They also say this change
would go hand-in-hand with a U.S. shift to a first-to-file system.
Proponents include: The USPTO.
Arguments against: Opponents say that patent
applications filed by assignees may lack the actual inventor's
personal guarantee that the application was properly prepared.
In addition, assignee filing might derogate the right of natural
persons to their inventions.
Opponents include: The Professional Inventors
Alliance.
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