Patent Reform 2007: Apportionment of Damages

Patent are business tools that can help ensure some monetary reward for innovative effort.  Although few patent are litigated through final decision, the threat of litigation casts an ever-present shadow on licensing negotiations and inter-corporate dealings.  Of course, any underlying threat is closely related to the size of potential damages and strength of a potential injunction.  In the past two-years, damages in particular have become more important as the Supreme Court's decision in EBay v. MercExchange lessens the likelihood of injunctive relief.

There has been little scholarly discussion of how ongoing money damages should be assessed when an injunction is denied.  I take the position that a denial of an injunction should not necessarily result in a compulsory license and that there are many times when continued infringement would be considered willful.

The Patent Reform Acts of 2007 (both House and Senate) propose changes to damage calculations that would require specific economic analysis to ensure that any reasonable royalty damage award captures "only [the] economic value properly attributable to the patent's specific contribution over the prior art."  These calculations would apparently apply to calculations of both past and future damages. CAFC Chief Judge Michel recently testified before Congress -- discussing some practical implementation of the damage modifications:

[T]he provision on apportioning damages would require courts to adjudicate the economic value of the entire prior art, the asserted patent claims, and also all other features of the accused product or process whether or not patented. This is a massive undertaking for which courts are ill-equipped. For one thing, generalist judges tack experience and expertise in making such extensive, complex economic valuations, as do lay jurors. For another, courts would be inundated with massive amounts of data, requiring extra weeks of trial in nearly every case. Resolving the meaning of this novel language could take years, as could the mandating of proper methods. The provision also invites an unseemly battle of "hired-gun" experts opining on the basis of indigestible quantities of economic data. Such an exercise might be successfully executed by an economic institution with massive resources and unlimited time, but hardly seems within the capability of already overburdened district courts. Appellate issue would also proliferate increasing complexity and delays on appeal, not to mention the risk of unsound decisions.

I am unaware of any convincing demonstration of the need for either provision, but even if the Committee ultimately concludes that they would represent an improvement over current patent policies embedded in Title 35 of the United States Code, their practicality seems to me very dubious. That is, the costs in delay and added attorneys fees for the parties and overburden for the courts would seem to outweigh any potential gains. Finally, even if the policy gains were viewed as significant, the courts as presently constituted simply cannot implement the provisions in a careful and timely manner, in my judgment.


To continue reading, become a Patently-O member. Already a member? Simply log in to access the full post.

May 2005 Report on New Academic Research

AcademicEach month I post a note discussing new research from the academic side of patent law.  The May 2005 edition includes three great articles from a range of topics:

1. Donald S. Chisum, Reforming Patent Law Reform, 4 J. Marshall Rev. Intell. Prop. L. 336 (2005).  In a short and accessible article, Professor Chisum discusses the nuts and bolts behind patent law reform and asks “reformers” to take a high road.  Specifically, the article proposes six “principles” that any proposed patent legislation should follow: (i) simplicity; (ii) zero-based budgeting; (iii) cost sensitivity; (iv) completeness and generality; (v) international compatibility; and (vi) clarity on effective dates.  As demonstrated by Chisum, the proposed legislation fails each of these principles.  Download the article. (Also, check out footnote 31). (Thanks to Karl Maersch for the tip).

2. Douglas G. Lichtman, Substitutes for the Doctrine of Equivalents: A Response to Meurer and Nard, U Chicago Law & Economics, Olin Working Paper No. 244 (May 2005). In a preemptive strike, Professor Lichtman has taken issue with the forthcoming patent claim scope article by Professors Michael Meurer and Craig Nard. Lichtman argues that the doctrine of equivalents (DOE) is still useful in today’s patent world.  Making three major points, Lichtman argues that the DOE (i) ensures patent viability despite language and foresight limitations; (ii) discourages wasteful efforts to “perfect” claim language; and (iii) allows the patent system to make decisions based on todays knowledge rather than living in the false construct that time stopped at the date of the invention.  Remembering the article’s title, Lichtman argues that the DOE has no equivalent substitutes. Meurer Nard Article, Lichtman Article. (The Meurer Nard article will be published in the Georgetown L.J. later this year).

3. Mark H. Webbink, A New Paradigm for Intellectual Property Rights in Software, 2005 Duke L. & Tech. Rev. 0012 (2005). Webbink is deputy GC at Red Hat.  In this critique, Webbink presents a dissenting voice against a recent article by Microsoft’s GC Bradford Smith (71 U. Chi. L. Rev. 241 (2004)).  In that article, Smith, and his co-author Susan Mann (also of Microsoft) argued that growth in the software industry is a direct result of implementation of strong intellectual property regimes for software.  Webbink makes the case that many other developments were much more important to the explosion in the software industry in the 1980’s and 1990’s.  He lists the development of the personal computer as one such cause for the explosion in off-the-shelf software.  Webbink also gives Microsoft as a test-study — showing that Microsoft did not escalate its patent filings until 1994, “long after the company had become well established.” Read the Article.