Personal Liability for Corporate Patent Infringement

Currently, the Federal Circuit requires a “piercing of the corporate veil” for individual liability of corporate officers in a patent infringement suit. In a new manuscript, Lynda Oswald (Michigan) argues that the current standard is wrong and overly broad.

In adopting this piercing standard, the Federal Circuit has inadvertently and radically expanded the scope of individual officer liability and has exposed corporate officers to a form of strict liability for their corporation’s infringing activities. I propose instead a standard that parallels the “personal participation” standard of traditional corporate doctrine, which would ensure that culpable corporate actors are held liable in appropriate circumstances, but would avoid wholesale imposition of personal liability upon officers for the patent infringement of their corporations.

IDEA: The Journal of Law and Technology, Vol. 44