IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

86
IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4

Transcript of IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Page 1: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

IP CASES TO WATCH

2014Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4

Page 2: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Agenda

Introduction Shannon Jost

Nautilus, Inc. v. Biosig Instruments, Inc. Shannon Jost

Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd v. CLS Bank Int’l Tim Seeley

Highmark, Inc. v. AllCare Health Mgmt. Sys.; Icon Health & Fitness, Inc. v. Octane Fitness, LLC

Paul Leuzzi

Limelight Networks, Inc. v. Akamai Tech., Inc.

David Binney, Antoine McNamara

POM Wonderful LLC v. The Coca-Cola Co., B&B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

Alina Morris Carmen WongStacie Foster Julianne HenleyLisa Finkral

Lighting Ballast Control v. Phillips Elec. Kirk Johns

Petrella v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc. Tonya GisselbergJ. Bowman Neely

Wrap-Up and Questions

Page 3: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus v. Biosig Instruments

Subject Technology: Heart rate monitor that measures heart rates by processing ECG signals. Claimed invention included electronic circuitry.

Claim 1 is representative and recites, in relevant part:

A heart rate monitor for use by a user in association with exercise apparatus and/or exercise procedures, comprising:

an elongate member;

electronic circuitry including a difference amplifier having a first input terminal of a first polarity and a second input terminal of a second polarity opposite to said first polarity;

said elongate member comprising a first half and a second half;

a first live electrode and a first common electrode mounted on said first half in spaced relationship with each other;

a second live electrode and a second common electrode mounted on said second half in spaced relationship with each other;

said first and second common electrodes being connected to each other and to a point of common potential . . . .

Page 4: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus – “spaced relationship”?

Page 5: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus- Indefiniteness Standards

35 U.S.C. § 112 ¶ 2: “the specification shall conclude with one or more claims particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the inventor or a joint inventor regards as the invention.”

Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc.: “[t]he limits of a patent must be known for the protection of the patentee, the encouragement of the inventive genius of others and the assurance that the subject of the patent will be dedicated ultimately to the public.” Otherwise, a “zone of uncertainty which enterprise and experimentation may enter only at the risk of infringement claims would discourage invention only a little less than unequivocal foreclosure of the field,” and “[t]he public [would] be deprived of rights supposed to belong to it, without being clearly told what it is that limits these rights.”

517 U.S. 370, 390 (1996) (quoting General Electric Co. v. Wabash Appliance Corp., 304 U.S. 364, 369 (1938); United Carbon Co. v. Binney & Smith Co., 317 U.S. 228 (1942); Merrill v. Yeomans, 94 U.S. 568, 573 (1877).

Page 6: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus – Lower Courts

• District Court: Claim element requiring electrodes to be in a “spaced relationship” with each other was indefinite

• Federal Circuit: Although the claim term wasn’t expressly defined in the specification, the “claim language, specification and figures” of the asserted patent “provide[d] sufficient clarity to skilled artisans as to the bounds of this disputed term.”

• A claim term is indefinite only when it is “not amenable to construction” or “insolubly ambiguous.”

• A claim is not indefinite under § 112 so long as a court can find that the claim has some discernable meaning, and is not “insolubly ambiguous” even when the claim is capable of multiple reasonable interpretations.

Page 7: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus – Questions Presented

(1)  Whether the Federal Circuit’s acceptance of ambiguous patent claims with multiple reasonable interpretations – so long as the ambiguity is not “insoluble” by a court – defeats the statutory requirement of particular and distinct patent claiming; and

(2) Whether the presumption of validity dilutes the requirement of particular and distinct patent claiming.

Page 8: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Nautilus – Representative Petitioner and Amici Arguments

• Under Federal Circuit standard, scope of patent may not be known until claim is construed by court. Claim did not provide clear notice, on its face, of what it covered. Shouldn’t the public know what a patent covers at the time of issuance? Must we wait for appeal?

• If “reasonable persons [may] disagree” about the proper scope of a patent claim, how should the public proceed?

• If a claim may be definite where the court can discern its function, without clearly claiming how to perform that function, does the patent claim preempt all solutions which address that function?

• Unclear and overbroad patents are key contributor to ballooning expense and frequency of patent litigation.

Page 9: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Predictions – What will SCOTUS do?

Page 10: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Alice Corp. Pty. Ltd. v. CLS Bank Int’l

• 35 U.S.C. § 101: “Whoever invents or discovers any new and useful process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter, or any new and useful improvement thereof, may obtain a patent therefor, subject to the conditions and requirements of this title.”

Page 11: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

CLS – Claimed Invention and Lower Court Ruling

• Asserted claims generally directed to a computerized method for performing a “form of escrow” designed to mitigate the risk that only one party to a financial transaction will perform its contractual obligations at settlement.

• Claims recite computer-implemented methods of settling financial transactions, as well as computer-readable media capable of storing, and generic computer systems capable of running, programming instructions for performing the claimed method.

• The patents do not disclose or claim the specific programming required to implement the claimed methods.

• District Court: No patentable claims.

Page 12: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

CLS – Questions before en banc CAFC

(1) “What test should the court adopt to determine whether a computer-implemented invention is a patent ineligible ‘abstract idea’; and when, if ever, does the presence of a computer in a claim lend patent eligibility to an otherwise ineligible abstract idea?” and

(2) “In assessing patent eligibility under 35 U.S.C. § 101 of a computer-implemented invention, should it matter whether the invention is claimed as a method, system, or storage medium ...?”

Page 13: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

CLS –en banc CAFC

• 6 separate opinions, none endorsed by a majority.• 5-5 split as to whether Alice’s claims to computer

system inventions were patentable (leaving in place the lower court’s SJ that they were non-patentable).

• Alice’s remaining claims held non-patentable, but based on different, conflicting reasons.

• No clear legal standard emerged as to whether, and when, computer-implemented inventions are patentable.

Page 14: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

CLS – Question Presented - SCOTUS

Whether claims to computer-implemented inventions—including claims to systems and machines, processes, and items of manufacture—are directed to patent-eligible subject matter within the meaning of 35 U.S.C. § 101 as interpreted by this Court?

Page 15: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Predictions – What will SCOTUS do?

Page 16: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Paul W. LeuzziWeyerhaeuser CompanySeattle IP Inn of Court - February 20, 2014

The Fee-Shifting DashCongress vs Courts

Page 17: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Brief History

35 U.S.C. §285 The court “in exceptional cases may award reasonable attorney fees to

the prevailing party” Exceptional

Willful infringement or inequitable conduct Otherwise, only if both:

The litigation is brought in subjective bad faith, and The litigation is objectively baseless

Clear and convincing evidentiary standard Standard of Review on Appeal

Exceptional determination – abuse of discretion/clear error Award of attorney fees – abuse of discretion

Page 18: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

§285 Under Pressure Today

Abusive Litigation Difficult to end case early, even when weak Bad actors seek to increase litigation costs to pressure settlements Deadweight to economy

Rarity of Fee Awards Only about 1% of cases

Supreme Court Deciding two cases, oral argument on February 26th

Congressional Activity At least 12 bills introduced relating to patent litigation 4 have fee provisions and 3 seek to amend Rule 11

Judicial Pronouncements Chief Judge Radar’s Op-Ed in the New York Times (June 4, 2013)

States §285 gives judges authority to curtail abusive litigation Directs District Judges to seek out more opportunities to award fees

Page 19: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

OctaneOctane Fitness v Icon Health & Fitness

District Court Icon (a large company) sued Octane (a start-up) for infringement of its

patented linkage system for elliptical machines. After claim construction Octane was granted summary judgment, finding multiple claim limitations missing from the accused device.

District court denied Octane’s motion for fees under §285 as not being objectively baseless.

Federal Circuit Affirmed judgment and denial of fees. No reason to revisit standard for exceptionality. Rehearing en banc denied.

Page 20: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

OctaneOctane Fitness v Icon Health & Fitness

Question Presented: Whether a district court, in exercising its discretion to award attorney fees in

exceptional-cases under §285, should use traditional equitable factors…rather than the Federal Circuit’s rigid test requiring both objective baselessness and subjective bad faith?

Equitable Factors: Consistent with Supreme Court rulings and Copyright and Lanham Acts. District courts discretionary authority should not be improperly appropriated

by federal Circuit. Goverment supports return to pre-Brooks “totality of circumstances” test. Need to address litigation abuse.

Brooks Test: Courts should require misconduct. Fee shifting implicates First Amendment.

Page 21: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

HighmarkHighmark Inc. v. Allcare Health Management Systems, Inc.

District Court Ruled for Highmark on its DJ of non-infringement, invalidity and

unenforceability of Allcare’s patents covering heath management system. Allcare, a patent assertion entity, counterclaimed for infringement of 3

claims, 1 of which was subsequently withdrawn. Federal Circuit

Affirmed without written opinion. District Court

Granted motion for exceptional case and award for fees and sanctions under Rule 11.

Federal Circuit Held objective baselessness is a question of law subject to de novo review. Affirms for withdrawn claim but reverses asserted claim objectively

baseless and that Allcare’s actions, when considered separately, amount to misconduct.

Rehearing en banc denied.

Page 22: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

HighmarkHighmark Inc. v. Allcare Health Management Systems, Inc.

Question Presented: Whether a district court’s exceptional-case finding under §285, based on

its judgment that a suit is objectively baseless, is entitled to deference?

Deferential Review: Consistent with Supreme Court precedent under EAJA and Rule 11 District courts best suited to evaluate entire record and make decision. Preserves resources by discouraging appeals.

De Novo Review: Consistent with de novo review of claim construction on which

objectively baselessness will depend. Federal Circuit has expertise to make a legal determination Enhances uniformity and therefore predictability.

Page 23: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Congressional Activity

12 Bills Pending in Congress.

4 Have Fee Provisions.

3 Seek to Amend Rule 11.

Page 24: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

The Federal Circuit

Chief Judge Rader’s 2013 Op-Ed.

Kilopass. December, 2013 Panel Decision. Court not persuaded that objective baselessness imposes too great of a

burden. Bad faith determination is based on the “totality of the circumstances”. Bad faith can be inferred. Questions whether

bad faith should be a requirement clear and convincing standard but as a panel decision is unable to change.

Page 25: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

QUESTIONS?

Page 26: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

2014: Eye on the Supreme Court

Akamai vs. Limelight

Can patent infringement be induced if no single entity is liable for direct infringement?

Page 27: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

1. A method for . . . comprising:• generating . . . ;• transmitting . . . ;• receiving . . . ;• playing . . . .

A

Direct Infringement

Page 28: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

1. A method for . . . comprising:• generating . . . ;• transmitting . . . ;• receiving . . . ;• playing . . . .

A

Induced Infringement

B

35 U.S.C. § 271(b): “Whoever actively induces infringement of a

patent shall be liable as an infringer”

Page 29: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

1. A method for . . . comprising:• generating . . . ;• transmitting . . . ;• receiving . . . ;• playing . . . .

A

B

No single entity performs all of the limitations. No one is liable for direct infringement.

Divided Infringement

Page 30: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

1. A method for . . . comprising:• generating . . . ;• transmitting . . . ;• receiving . . . ;• playing . . . .

A

B

What if B induces A to perform all of the method steps that B does not itself perform?

Divided Infringement w/ InducementLimelight

Page 31: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Before Akamai

• “Indirect infringement requires, as a predicate, a finding that some party amongst the accused actors has committed the entire act of direct infringement.”– BMC Resources, Inc. v. Paymentech, LP, 498 F.3d 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2007)

Page 32: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — Majority

• BMC Resources overruled– “[T]hat there can be no indirect infringement without

direct infringement . . . is well settled.”– “[But] [r]equiring proof that there has been direct

infringement . . . is not the same as requiring proof that a single party would be liable as a direct infringer.”

• “[A]ll the steps of a claimed method must be performed . . . to find induced infringement, but . . . it is not necessary to prove that all the steps were committed by a single entity.”

Page 33: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — Majority (cont’d)

• Policy argument– “It would be a bizarre result to hold someone liable for

inducing another to perform all of the steps of a method claim but to hold harmless one who goes further by actually performing some of the steps himself.”

• Textual argument– 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) (“Whoever actively induces

infringement of a patent shall be liable as an infringer”).

Page 34: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — Linn Dissent

• How can there be direct infringement if there is no direct infringer?

• Vicarious liability is sufficient to protect patent holders and prevent gamesmanship

• Even if vicarious liability were not sufficient, it is the job of Congress, not the Court, to fix the law

Page 35: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — Newman Dissent

• Agrees with Judge Linn that inducement cannot occur unless a single entity directly infringes

• But Newman would find direct infringement even where no single entity performs all of the steps– “Infringement is not a question of how many people it

takes to perform a patented method.”

• Under Newman’s approach, Limelight could be liable for both direct and induced infringement

Page 36: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — SG’s amicus brief

• Fed. Circuit majority opinion has “intuitive force” – “As a matter of patent policy, there is no obvious reason why a

party should be liable for inducing infringement when it actively induces another party to perform all the steps of the process, but not liable when it performs some steps and induces another party to perform the rest.”

• Also agrees that vicarious liability is insufficient– Reversing the Fed. Cir. “will likely permit vendors such as

Limelight to avoid liability altogether”• But fixing the mess in Congress’ job, not the Court

– “That statutory gap is unfortunate, but it reflects the better reading of the current statutory language in light of established background principles of vicarious liability.”

Page 37: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Akamai — Other Amici

• This is really bad for us because…• Altera

– Fed. Cir. decision introduces uncertainty in business; potential liability despite apparent non-infringement

– Intent requirement could be met by defendant continuing activity post-suit

• Google– Federal Circuit decision gives trolls a new weapon– Permits liability for practicing prior art

• CTIA– Federal Circuit decision encourages bad claims-drafting

Page 38: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Wonderful LLC v. The Coca Cola Company

Case Summary by:Julianne Henley & Carmen Wong

Presented by:Stacie Foster

Page 39: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Background: Coca Cola’s Product–Coca Cola released a

MINUTE MAID branded drink labeled “Pomegranate Blueberry Flavored Blend of 5 Juices” (“Juice Drink”).

Page 40: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Background: Coca Cola’s Product Ingredients–99.4% Apple & Grape

Juices– .3% pomegranate juice – .2% blueberry juice– .1% raspberry juice

Page 41: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Background: Coca Cola’s Product Ingredients– Product named “Pomegranate

Blueberry Flavored Blend of 5 Juices

– The word “pomegranate” and “blueberry” were in larger font than the rest of the name

– All 5 fruits were prominently illustrated on the label of Coca Cola’s Juice Drink

Page 42: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Background: POM’s Product–POM sells POM

WONDERFUL branded drinks including pomegranate and pomegranate blueberry juices.

Page 43: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• 11/26/08: POM sues Coca Cola in C.D. Cal.

– False advertising (Lanham Act & Cal. BPC)

– Statutory Unfair Competition (Cal. BPC)

–POM: Coca Cola’s product misled consumers into believing it was mostly made of pomegranate and blueberry juices

Page 44: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• District Court & 9th Circuit:– The District Court & 9th Circuit held that the

Federal Food, Drug, & Cosmetic Act (FDCA) preempted POM’s Lanham Act claims against Coca Cola’s Juice Drink (as well as state law claims to the extent they conflicted with the FDCA).

Page 45: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• SCOTUS: whether 9th Circuit Court erred in holding that a private party cannot bring a Lanham Act claim challenging a product label regulated under the Federal Food, Drug, & Cosmetic Act.

Page 46: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• POM’s Arguments: – The Lanham Act and FDCA are

not in “irreconcilable conflict”• Circuit Split: – 3rd, 8th, and 10th recognize false

labeling & advertising claims under the Lanham Act

– 9th: FDCA preempts these claims

Page 47: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Coca Cola’s Argument: – Circuits are not in conflict -- the

cases POM relies on outside the 9th Circuit did not address the FDCA’s preemption of the Lanham Act.

– Government has adequate resources to regulate food and beverage labels and should be permitted to do so.

Page 48: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

POM Case

• Solicitor General’s Amicus Brief:

– Urged the Supreme Court not to grant Certiorari

– FDCA is not “privately enforceable” and permits manufacturers to use truthful flavoring names on food and beverage labels.

Page 49: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware, Inc. v.Hargis Industries Inc.

Presented by:Stacie Foster and Alina Morris

Page 50: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• B & B Hardware:

– Mark: SEALTIGHT– Goods: industrial fasteners for the

aerospace industry– Use: 1990– Registered: 1993

Page 51: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• Hargis Industries:

– Mark: SEALTITE– Goods: self-drilling, self-taping screws

for use in the metal-building industry

– Use: 1992– Filed: 1996– Refused: B&B, and merely descriptive

Page 52: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• 1997: Hargis petitions to cancel B&B – Abandonment– Priority

• 1998: B&B sues Hargis in Arkansas• Cancellation suspended• 2000: Arkansas Court – B&B’s mark descriptive and unregistrable– Didn’t reach likelihood of confusion

Page 53: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• 2001: Cancellation resumes, Hargis amends B&B to include descriptiveness claim

• 2001: Hargis’ Examiner withdraws refusal over B&B registration– Hargis submitted Ark. descriptiveness decision

• 2002: Hargis’ Examiner withdraws descriptiveness refusal – Hargis submitted acquired distinctiveness claim

Page 54: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• 2002: Hargis app publishes• 2003: B&B opposes Hargis app• 2003: Hargis’ amended petition to cancel B&B

deemed untimely by TTAB– Petition amended 5+ years post registration– Knew/should have known basis for descriptiveness

claim from the outset• 2003: Hargis’ cancellation of B&B dismissed

Page 55: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• 2006: B&B sues Hargis in Arkansas again• 2007: TTAB sustains B&B’s opposition – Likelihood of confusion– Priority– No issue preclusion from Arkansas• Ark. didn’t consider likelihood of confusion• B&B’s mark is now incontestable

Page 56: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• B&B’s Second Arkansas Suit Continues!– B&B argues 2007 TTAB decision should have

preclusive effect– B&B argues 2007 TTAB decision should at least

have deference and be part of evidence• Ark. Court: no preclusion or inclusion• Ark. Jury: no likelihood of confusion• 8th Circuit: TTAB not preclusive on LoC

Page 57: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• B&B: TTAB preclusion or deference:– LoC Factors– Facts found– Market considered– Same ultimate issue– TTAB experts– Enforce repose

Page 58: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

B & B Hardware v. Hargis Indus.

• Hargis: no preclusion or deference: – Messy history– 4 different tribunals– Different info.– LoC standards– Article I vs. Article III Ct.

Page 59: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 60: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 61: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 62: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 63: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 64: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 65: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 66: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 67: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 68: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 69: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 70: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 71: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 72: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.
Page 73: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Petrella v. MGMor

Don’t be that lame, then tell me laches doesn’t apply.

Tonya Gisselberg and J. Bowman Neely

Page 74: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Case time line• 1963 & 1973 – Frank Peter Petrella and boxer Jake LaMotta create a

book and 2 screen plays based on LaMotta’s life.• 11/19/1976 – Copyrights assigned by Petrella and LaMotta.• 1980 – United Artists released Raging Bull.• 1981 – Frank Petrella died.• 1991 – Paula Petrella filed a renewal application for the 1963 screen

play.• 7 year gap.• 1998 – Petrella’s attorney informed the defendants of their copyright

infringement.• 1998 – 2000 Letters exchanged regarding the infringement.• 9 year gap.• 2009 – Petrella sued MGM, UA and others for copyright

infringement.

Page 75: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Ninth Circuit Ruling

We hold that Petrella’s copyright, unjust enrichment and accounting claims are barred by laches, and we therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants.

Petrella v. MGM, 695 F.3d 946, 957 (2012).

Petrella abandoned her non-copyright claims on appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Page 76: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Relief requested by Petrella from the U.S. Supreme Court

• Petrella filed suit on 1/6/2009.• In light of the three-year statutory limitations

period, Petrella sought damages and injunctive relief for acts of infringement occurring on or after January 6, 2006.

Page 77: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Copyright Act civil statute of limitations

No civil action shall be maintained under the provisions of this title unless it is commenced within three years after the claim accrued. 17 U.S.C. §507(b).

Page 78: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Laches

Laches is an equitable defense that prevents a plaintiff, who with full knowledge of the facts, acquiesces in a transaction and sleeps upon his rights.Elements of the defense:(1) the plaintiff delayed in initiating the lawsuit; (2) the delay was unreasonable; and(3) the delay resulted in prejudice.

Page 79: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Circuits Split re Laches in Copyright Cases

• Fourth Circuit – no laches.• Eleventh Circuit – strong presumption of timeliness if

suit filed within the statutory period. Laches available only in extraordinary circumstances.

• Second Circuit - laches is available as a bar to injunctive relief but not to money damages.

• Sixth Circuit – laches is available in only “the most compelling of cases.”

• Ninth Circuit - laches can bar all relief, both legal and equitable

Page 80: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Petrella frames the issue before the U.S. Supreme Court

Whether the nonstatutory defense of laches is available without restriction to bar all remedies for civil copyright claims filed within the three-year statute of limitations prescribed by Congress, 17 U.S.C. § 507(b).

Page 81: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Petrella’s Arguments

• Petrella’s claims for relief should not be completely barred. • Congress has prescribed the time allowed for bringing copyright

infringement suits and courts may not impose additional timeliness doctrines, such as laches.

• Laches cannot bar either injunctive relief or damages for copyright infringement, as it would result in uncompensated compulsory licenses and laches cannot limit legal, as opposed to equitable, remedies.

• Precluding laches provides the benefits of preventing evidentiary concerns from trumping heirs’ copyrights, reducing needless litigation by copyright holders and protecting against financial prejudice through the equitable estoppel doctrine.

Page 82: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

MGM’s Arguments

• Federal courts have the inherent equitable power to apply laches in all civil actions.

• Congress intended that federal courts would apply laches in copyright cases.

• Laches may bar an entire claim regardless of the relief sought.

• Petitioner’s entire claim is barred by her unreasonable delay and the resulting prejudice.

Page 83: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Justices’ Comments

Justice Alito – The copyright statute of limitations says you can’t do it (bring a claim) unless it’s within 3 years. It doesn’t say that if it’s within 3 years, you’re home free.Justice Sotomayor – In terms of injunctive relief, given their reliance on your failure to act for 18 years, they shouldn’t be put out of business and told that they can’t continue in their business.

Page 84: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Justices’ Comments cont.

Justice Kagan – You don’t have very many cases where courts have applied laches as against the statute of limitations, but that’s because you can’t think of many instances in which it would be considered unfair to take the entire statute of limitations to bring a suit.Justice Breyer – Who in their right mind would go ahead and make this year after year if a huge amount of money is going to be paid to this copyright owner who delayed for 30 years and didn’t even seem to own it.

Page 85: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Justices’ Comments cont.

Justice Kennedy – Estoppel applies. Why isn’t laches just a first cousin of estoppel? Estoppel is an affirmative misrepresentation. Why isn’t laches here almost a misrepresentation?Justice Sotomayor – Your complaint is not against the witness dying. Your complaint is about what Congress does, which is to give a person the right to keep a copyright or renew it when the individual with whom you probably dealt with is dead. That’s always going to be the case.

Page 86: IP CASES TO WATCH 2014 Seattle IP Inn of Court – Group 4.

Justices’ Comments cont.

Justice Ginsburg – Why is it unreasonable for the plaintiff to wait to see if the copyright is worth anything?