December 28, 2015

Injunctive relief - is a re-assessment of Ebay on the way?


In its Ebay vs. MercExchange ruling of 2006 ("Ebay"), the US Supreme Court basically concluded that injunctive relief shouldn't be automatically granted for patent infringement. Monetary damages was ruled to always constitute adequate compensation unless the patent holder could demonstrate that a rigorous four-factor test was fulfilled on all points. As a practical consequence of Ebay, it became more complicated for a patent holder to obtain injunctive relief or exclusion orders against infringing products in US courts after 2006.

While the gist of Ebay may perhaps have been to minimize NPEs' possibilities of obtaining unreasonable compensation, it may well have been blunt enough to negatively affect also true innovators as well as true competitors.

In wireless SEP FRAND licensing for example, the reverse patent hold-up behaviour seen among infringers in recent times may at least partly have been fueled by Ebay. And for non-SEPs, we can look at Apple. Since launching its iPhone in 2007, the Ebay ruling arguably hasn't made Apple's struggle to protect its patented smartphone-related inventions any easier.

However, a potential re-assessment of injunctive relief in US patent cases may now be on its way, incidentally in relation to an Apple case. On September 17, 2015, the US Federal Circuit overturned a district court's denial of injunctive relief in Apple vs. Samsung.  The original request was for a feature-based injunction against multi-function products, to which mobile phones arguably belong, and the overturn could actually be seen as a slight softening of Ebay. The main point of discussion related to the first Ebay factor concerning "irreparable harm" and establishing a "causal nexus" between the patented feature and consumers' decision to purchase the multi-function product in question. 

Interestingly, on December 16, 2015, the Federal Circuit denied Samsung's request for an en banc revisit of the issue, and issued a revised opinion along with the order. This seems to indicate that the Federal Circuit's stance is becoming solidified. On the "causal nexus" requirement, it says:

"In short, the record establishes that the features claimed in [the patents] were important to product sales and that customers sought these features in the phones they purchased. While this evidence of irreparable harm is not as strong as proof that customers buy the infringing products only because of these particular features, it is still evidence of causal nexus for lost sales and thus irreparable harm. Apple loses sales because Samsung products contain Apple’s patented features.The district court therefore erred as a matter of law when it required Apple to show that the infringing features were the reason why consumers purchased the accused products. Apple does not need to establish that these features are the reason customers bought Samsung phones instead of Apple phones–it is enough that Apple has shown that these features were related to infringement and were important to customers when they were examining their phone choices." (emphasis in original),

and in the conclusion part of the opinion one can almost sense some underlying "frustration" with Ebay: 

"If an injunction were not to issue in this case, such a decision would virtually foreclose the possibility of injunctive relief in any multifaceted, multi-function technology.".

The Federal Circuit's stance seems quite reasonable to me. If a company invents a feature for a multi-function product that's attractive to consumers and implements that feature in its own multi-function products, shouldn't it have the legal right to, for a limited time-period, prevent others from implementing that very feature in their directly competing multi-function products? I don't really see such a right as being too far-fetched, given the definition of what a patent really is.

If Samsung wants to avoid an injunction, it now looks like a Supreme Court petition would be needed. This story will surely be interesting to follow.