Welcome to
Skilled in the Art
. I'm Law.com IP reporter
Scott Graham
. Sometimes you can listen to an hourslong hearing and not have any idea how a judge is singing in the sun myrtle beach scgoing to rule. Other times, you have the answer in the first 10 seconds. Thursday was one of the latter.
Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo
was not coy at all about a high-profile FRAND royalty dispute that's caught the eye of the Justice Department. I've got some blow-by-blow below. Plus, a second opinion on Unified Patents' HEVC royalty study, and some thoughts on two
Oil States
aftermath cases. As always you can
email me
your thoughts and follow me
on Twitter
.
David Steuer, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati partner
First Round in New FRAND Battle Goes to InterDigital
Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo
got right to the point Thursday morning. "I have to say I'm unimpressed with the motion,” is how she kicked off a hearing in San Diego in
the latest high-profile dispute over FRAND royalties
.
Thirty minutes later, the movant in question—
u-blox
, a Swiss developer of cellular modules for connected devices—had
lost its bid to enjoin InterDigital Inc
. from contacting its customers while the court determines a fair, reasonable and nondiscriminatory rate.
"You just want to practice the patents without a license in the hope that you'll reach a deal later," Bencivengo told
Sheppard, Mullin, Richter & Hampton partner Steve Korniczky
, who represents u-blox.
Ninety miles up Interstate 5, Korniczky's team enjoyed a big success in
Judge James Selna
's courtroom in the 2017 FRAND case
TCL Communication v. Ericsson
. But on Thursday they ran into a buzzsaw, as Bencivengo resoundingly sided with InterDigital and
Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati
—not to mention the Justice Department, which submitted not one but two filings critiquing u-blox's position.
U-blox sued InterDigital on New Year's Day as its license to InterDigital's 2G, 3G and 4G patents expired. The company stresses it will accept whatever rate Bencivengo determines to be FRAND. But the last time u-blox's license expired, InterDigital coerced it into accepting supra-FRAND rates by warning two of its suppliers that they were no longer covered by u-blox's license. Without an injunction, the company will again be forced to choose between paying “exorbitant” rates and risking the loss of customers, Korniczky argued Thursday.
Wilson Sonsini partner David Steuer
has argued that InterDigital has a
constitutional right to truthfully tell u-blox’s customers they may no longer be licensed
. The Justice Department's antitrust division, led by
FRAND skeptic
Makan Delrahim
, cautioned that u-blox was misapplying antitrust law. U-blox tried to shake off DOJ by withdrawing its antitrust claim, but DOJ filed another statement.
This time it said
“it is the United States’ view that it would unhelpfully distort licensing negotiations if patent implementers like u-blox could effectively negate the statutory right to exclude under patent law through court order whenever a patent holder makes a FRAND commitment.”
That's about where Bencivengo ended up. She said she saw “zero evidence” in the record of any campaign of harassment. InterDigital's outreach to a couple suppliers might make u-blox uncomfortable, “but I don't know that that's a legal ground to stop them from enforcing their patents,” she said.
And just as u-blox doesn't want to pay supra-FRAND rates, InterDigital shouldn't have to forgo payments to which it's entitled during the two or three years it takes to litigate the rate. “Hold-up or hold-out, either way you're both in the same position,” she told Korniczky.
The judge said she'll issue a written order denying the injunction based on all four
eBay
elements
. She invited the parties to jointly propose a special master to take evidence on the FRAND royalty issue and submit a report and recommendation.
Wilson Sonsini's winning team included partners partners
Michael Levin
and
Maura Rees
and of counsel
Natalie Morgan
.
Story continues
Unified Tries to Lower the Ceiling on HEVC Royalties
Also on the FRAND front,
Unified Patents
has commissioned
a study of standard-essential patent royalties
in the
video codec space
. Unified engaged
Sheppard partner Martin Bader
, who helped Korniczky litigate the
TCL Communications
and
u-blox
cases, and
Edgeworth Economics consultant Mario Lopez
to develop “a methodology grounded in economic theory, real-world data, and recent legal decisions.”
They concluded that the total per-unit royalty on HEVC patents should most likely fall between $0.08 and $0.28 per unit. That's much less, Unified says, than the $0.20 to $1.50 that HEVC/H.265 patent pools such as MPEG-LA, HEVC Advance and Velos Media charge.
I would expect nothing less from Unified, which zealously represents the interests of technology implementers. So I reached out to
Jay Jurata of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe
, whose firm has staked out a middle ground position
for amicus Panasonic
in the
TCL
case.
“I do think it's an important contribution,” Jurata said of the Unified study. “Right now we don't have much out there to assist companies in assessing royalties in HEVC.”
Jurata said Unified's estimate of the aggregate royalty for all HEVC SEPs will help provide some framework for licensing discussions. Within that aggregate, values will vary depending on, among other things, whether the patented technology was “a crown jewel” or just one of many available alternatives. “Quality does matter,” Jurata said. “This is not a simple counting exercise.”
The previous H.264 standard was adopted more quickly because MPEG-LA controlled some 80 percent of the patents essential to that standard, Jurata said. “The fracturing of the pools is kind of holding HEVC back,” he said. “There's just not a lot of information out there.”
Oil States Follow-Up Fizzles Out
It was just one year ago that half of the patent bar was freaking out and the other half fantasizing about what the Supreme Court might do to the Patent Trial and Appeal Board
in the
Oil States
case
. The court, as we now know, held that
patents are a public right
that the government can cancel without an Article III proceeding.
But the decision also came with a few big caveats
.
Justice Clarence Thomas
' opinion emphasized “the narrowness of our holding” and explicitly reserved the issue of retroactive application of the America Invents Act. Employing a triple negative, Thomas added that “our decision should not be misconstrued as suggesting that patents are not property for purposes of the Due Process Clause or the Takings Clause.”
This week the
Court of Federal Claims
took one of the first stabs at deciphering those caveats, and next week the Federal Circuit will get a chance to do the same.
In
Christy v. United States
,
COFC Chief Judge Margaret Sweeney
dismissed a putative class action
alleging the government had breached its contracts with patent owners and taken their property without just compensation.
Sweeney observed that the Supreme Court
ruled in 1894
that a patent is not property for purposes of the Takings Clause, and that the Federal Circuit affirmed that that decision “remains the law”
as recently as 2006
. “In short, patents are public franchises, not private property,” Sweeney wrote. Therefore, patent rights “are not cognizable property interests for Takings Clause purposes.”
As for the contract claims, the Federal Circuit's predecessor court has held that
“a patent is not a contract”
and that any notion to the contrary is
“a popular myth.”
Neither the Federal Circuit nor the Supreme Court in
Oil States
overruled those decisions, Sweeney wrote.
Ropes & Gray partner Matt Rizzolo
, who wrote about the Takings issue
here
last spring, called it “a nuanced and difficult question.” He said the
Christy
decision “arguably runs contrary to a number of Supreme Court cases—some of which characterize patents as private property, and others addressing the application of the Takings Clause to public franchise rights like taking tolls and distributing electricity.”
Meanwhile, the Federal Circuit will hear a series of appeals next week that raise similar issues.
Trading Technologies Inc.
, which holds patents on user interfaces for electronic securities trading, argues that the America Invents Act violates the Fifth Amendment by retroactively depriving the company of its property in a non-Article III forum without a jury.
The Federal Circuit certified the constitutional challenge to the Justice Department last summer. DOJ argues that the AIA didn't “newly expose patents to the prospect of post-issuance patent review.” When Trading Technologies obtained its patents in the early 2000s, they were already subject to ex-parte reexamination, the government says.
Baker & Hostetler partner Michael Gannon
will make Trading Technologies' case to the Federal Circuit.
Byron Pickard of Sterne Kessler Goldstein & Fox
represents PTAB petitioner
Interactive Brokers
.
Katherine Twomey Allen
of DOJ's civil division will argue for the United States.
Donaldson Firm Brings in Superman's Lawyer
NELSON
Warner Bros. senior IP counsel Dale Nelson
is joining
Donaldson + Callif
as a partner after 27 years with the studio. L.A.-based Donaldson represents independent producers of film, television and web-based content, with a focus on clearance.
“Dale’s longevity and expertise in the intellectual property space will be an invaluable asset to our practice,” partner
Michael Donaldson
said in a written statement.
Nelson was legal counsel for some of Warner Bros.' best-known properties, including H
arry Potter, Looney Tunes, Lord of the Rings
, and
DC Comics
properties such as
Superman
and
Batman
. “I’m grateful to be joining this talented team and be a part of the independent film industry’s massive growth,” she said.
Womble Walks Into Houston
Womble Bond Dickinson
has launched a new office in Houston. IP transactions lawyer
Jeffrey Whittle,
who is joining the firm from
Hogan Lovells
, will serve as managing partner of the office, my ALM colleague
Brenda Sapino Jeffreys reports
. IP litigator
Joshua Davis
is among a group of four attorneys who have joined the office from
Reed Smith
.
Houston is Womble Bond’s 27th location. The firm expects the office to grow to 20 lawyers this year.
“I’ve been across deals and litigation with Womble attorneys, and I have a lot of respect for them and their talent set and capabilities,” Whittle said.
McKool Lawyer Joins Noroozi
Santa Monica IP shop
Noroozi PC
has added patent litigator
Karly Valenzuela
from
McKool Smith
.
Kayvan Noroozi
reports that Valenzuela already has four trials under her belt in five years of practice. She was a member of Rovi's trial team in a recent ITC investigation, and represented ContentGuard and BMC Software in trials before the Eastern District of Texas.
“Karly's passion for trials and extensive trial experience positions the firm to expand its trial practice,” Noroozi said in an emailed announcement. “I am thrilled to welcome Karly as a colleague.”
Latham Wraps Up Biotech Win
Earlier this week
I reported
that
Janssen Biotech
and a team of
Latham & Watkins
attorneys invalidated three patents that had been asserted against the company's $2 billion blood cancer biologic drug
Darzalex
.
U.S. District Judge Leonard Stark
granted summary judgment on Jan. 25. On Thursday, the parties formally settled all remaining claims, including Janssen's counterclaim for inequitable conduct.
Latham's team was led by
Michael Morin
, global co-chair of the firm's IP litigation practice.
That's all from Skilled in the Art for this week. I'll see you all again on Tuesday.
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【singing in the sun myrtle beach sc】Skilled in the Art: Judge Busts Novel FRAND Theory | Unified Weighs In on Video Codec Royalties | Still No Gusher From Oil States
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