Panel 7: Patents and Commercial Law
Prof. Sapna Kumar, University of Houston Law Center
The Accidental Agency?
Fed. Cir. is functionally the administrator of the Patent
Act. It’s unusual to have no agency interpreting, and the Fed. Cir. has filled
the gap. Judge Rich also shaped the
change from the CCPA, which used to be very deferential to the PTO. Separation of powers issues?
Is this a stable model?
No. Not because it wasn’t working
before, not because it couldn’t work in an ideal universe, but it’s because of
the tension between Congress and the Supreme Court. Congress wanted a strong court with the power
to unify patent law; even though PTO gets new powers under AIA, Federal Circuit
is still the check. But the Supreme
Court is fighting back: they want to unify administrative law. No reason to treat tax cases differently just
because they’re tax; IRS gets Chevron;
no exceptionalism in administrative law.
This would prevent Fed. Cir. from being one-stop shop for unifying
patent law.
SCt is also uneasy with bright-line rules.
Prof. Daryl Lim, John Marshall Law School
Deconstructing Patent Misuse
Gorillas in our midst: people miss the gorilla that walks
across the screen because they’re paying attention to something else. We can miss the obvious and unaware that we’re
missing it.
Two kinds of misuse: harm to patent system and harm to
competition. SCt today may be more
sympathetic to older arguments since the inception of the Federal Circuit; thus
it may be willing to make misuse more broadly applicable. TM and copyright
cases percolate up through various circuits, but the SCt may be concerned that
doctrinal checks should be stronger where institutional checks are weaker. Antitrust people are very worried about
patents—big entities are letting trolls assert patents and sharing the
bounties; also concerns with drugs.
Harm to innovation and harm to competition are
different. Fed. Cir. may understand
innovation better, but if it doesn’t pay attention to competition, another
decisionmaker will start doing so.
Dr. Nahoko Ono, Visiting Scholar, Columbia University School
of Law (Japan)
Bridging the Divide Between IP Law and Commercial Law in
Light of Secured Transaction
Importance of IP, particularly through bundled rights worth
billions. Secured transactions: UCC art.
9 is supposed to cover all personal property including general
intangibles. Functional approach: substance
over form. But there is case law
confusion about where to file. At the copyright office? Some cases say yes,
others say it should be a state filing, as do cases involving TM and
patent. Which would produce a better,
more predictable rule? Divide between IP
and commercial law, but also a divide between copyright and patent/TM.
Reform efforts got some support from the ABA to make a
uniform IP perfection system, but nothing really happened. Motion picture/copyright lobbies didn’t like
it.
Economists and federal government want track records; state
gov’t wants a source of revenue; lenders want a one-stop registry; IP owners
want an IP one-stop registry. But what
would one-stop look like? All personal
property? All IP? Just maintain office-based recordation
systems, Copyright and USPTO together
UCC article 9 deals with federal statutes governing the
rights of parties to and third parties affected by transactions—a copyright
preemption provision. Issues still
remain, for example perfection of security interest in an unregistered
copyright. Is there an indirect conflict
with the Berne Convention, which precludes formalities?
Even if we revised patent & TM law, nonfederal protected
IP exists, such as common law copyright and state TMs. ? (I wonder how the right of publicity fits
in.) In addition, federal statutes are
still asset-based, as opposed to modern secured transactions based on cash flow
from underlying assets. Possibly an
international registry is the answer.
Prof. Jason Rantanen, University of Iowa College of Law
In Memoriam Best Mode
Best mode has been criticized: e.g., disadvantages foreign
applicants; can be unimportant when patent expires and tech has moved on over
17 years. AIA stripped courts of power
to invalidate for failure to provide best mode. Still technically in the law
but effectively eliminated.
Withholding best mode can reduce the public domain defining
benefit of the patent—makes the boundaries of the patent less clear. Inventions that are more completely disclosed—more
than bare bones, but also best mode—provide higher quality prior art. Any example is better to think with, and thus
better at creating a public domain, than an abstract description.
Prof. Karen E. Sandrik, Florida State University College of
Law
Reframing Patent Remedies
Property/trespass rules make the most sense for
patents. When a tech is very important
to lots of other people (losing our iPhones), we should have a small exception denying
injunctive relief and rewarding damages.
What about the problems where a big product uses a tiny patented
component? Very hard to get injunctive relief for those patentees. Microsoft tried to make i4i’s software
obsolete—seems willful. But other people
would lose millions from taking Word off the market—so do we allow a willful
infringer to keep infringing and just award punitive damages? With a liability structure after eBay, we will see more and more of these
big companies that can’t be forced to the bargaining table. Should incentivize small companies to invest
with a property rule. We can keep
Microsoft without creating bad incentives by having very limited exceptions to
the property rule. eBay had publicly announced that it had a design-around, and yet
the district court went ahead and allowed it to continue. Other cases, including i4i, had similar
facts. Injunctions lead them to sit down
at the bargaining table; can also stay the injunction for a transition to the
design-around.
Holdouts who try to extract far more than their component is
worth: can issue an incomplete privilege, finding infringement and awarding
liability damages until there’s a design around. Majorities of patentees would still have the
property rule structure.
Prof. Christopher B. Seaman, Chicago-Kent College of Law
The Presumption of Validity in Patent Litigation: An
Experimental Study (with Prof. David Schwartz, Chicago-Kent College of Law)
What is the proper burden of proof for invalidity? Preponderance, at least when PTO didn’t
consider the prior art at issue? SCt
held that the standard was clear & convincing evidence, but jury could hear
that it was hearing evidence the PTO had no opportunity to hear in its own
examination.
Would eliminating clear & convincing burden result in
different jury outcomes? There haven’t been many civil jury studies on the burden
of proof.
External validity: short fact pattern v. detailed evidence
at trial; reading v. live witnesses; this study asks for individual decisions
rather than deliberation, but hope to change that in future studies. Inattention to fact pattern is also a risk,
though attempted to control for that with validation questions.
Fact pattern based on actual golf ball case, with a piece of
prior art not disclosed to the PTO. 3
conditions: Given clear & convincing standard, c&c with instruction
stating the burden is more easily satisfied when the prior art wasn’t
considered by the examiner, and preponderance.
Used Mechanical Turk, group broadly representative of US population.
Asked the Q: did the accused infringer prove by
C&C/preponderance that the patent was obvious. C&C was lower (27.1%) and preponderance
higher (38.3%). But the C&C plus i4i percentage of those concluding that
the patent was obvious was actually higher (43.6%) than for preponderance. Possible demand effect? Addition of instruction may give cues about
what constitutes appropriate decisionmaking.
“Is” easier to satisfy v. “may be” easier to satisfy D’s burden. “In this case” may also serve as a
signal. Tested different
formulations. No satistically
significant differences between three varieties, including may/is, though close
to statistical significance.
Q for Sandrik: trespass seems difficult in cases of
independent invention.
Sandrik: yes, thinking of dropping the trespass part because
it bites off a bigger debate.
Q for Ono: consider issues about unfinished works that are
used as collateral while unfinished (e.g., films).
Ono: Wants a user-friendly regime. If we think about international system, a
title-based recordation system isn’t universal.
Cash-flow basis would be a better way to look at it.
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