Finding Reasonable Royalty Damages

Finding Reasonable Royalty Damages

Author: Daniel F. Spulber

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages: 86

ISBN-13:

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The article introduces a contract approach to patent infringement and develops a methodology for finding reasonable royalty damages. The contract approach complements approaches based on property and tort, thus providing a more complete understanding of damages. The article argues that the patent infringement case should specify an informed contract. The informed contract improves estimation of damages by taking into account information revealed during the period of infringement. The article introduces a market value method for calculating reasonable royalty damages based on patent transfer prices. The contract approach helps calculate reasonable royalty damages based on royalties in comparable patent licenses. The contract approach addresses various controversies over reasonable royalty damages.


A Structured Approach to Calculating Reasonable Royalties

A Structured Approach to Calculating Reasonable Royalties

Author: Daralyn J. Durie

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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A significant part of the problem with patent damage awards comes from the non-exclusive, fifteen-factor “Georgia-Pacific” test now taken as the gold standard for calculating reasonable royalty damages. Simply handing the question of reasonable royalty to the jury, without more, is not a recipe for precision in damages analysis. But the fifteen-factor test may actually be worse, because it overloads the jury with factors to consider that may be irrelevant, overlapping, or even contradictory. And because the jury's finding is the result of such a complex, multi-factor test, it is as a practical matter almost entirely immune from scrutiny by either district or appellate judges facing a deferential standard of review. We suggest a structured approach to calculating reasonable royalties. Most of the factors in the Georgia-Pacific test in fact boil down to three fundamental questions: (1) what is the marginal contribution of the patented invention over the prior art, (2) how many other inputs were necessary to achieve that contribution, and what is their relative value, and (3) is there some concrete evidence suggesting that the market has chosen a number different than the product of (1) and (2). By structuring the inquiry in this way, courts (or Congress) can not only simplify the question for the jury, but enable district courts and the Federal Circuit to easily review the factual basis for a jury award.


Patent Remedies and Complex Products

Patent Remedies and Complex Products

Author: C. Bradford Biddle

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2019-06-27

Total Pages: 379

ISBN-13: 1108426751

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Through a collaboration among twenty legal scholars from North America, Europe and Asia, this book presents an international consensus on the use of patent remedies for complex products such as smartphones, computer networks, and the Internet of Things. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.


Methodologies for Calculating FRAND Royalty Rates and Damages

Methodologies for Calculating FRAND Royalty Rates and Damages

Author: Anne Layne-Farrar

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Several federal district courts, as well as the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), have weighed in on the appropriate methodology for calculating either a reasonable royalty rate or reasonable royalty damages on a standard-essential patent (SEP) encumbered by a commitment to license on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory (FRAND) terms. Included in these decisions are determinations about hold-up, royalty stacking, the incremental value rule, the use of comparable licenses, and the appropriate base for royalty calculations. These issues have received a lot of attention not just in the patent law community, but also by foreign antitrust regulators in China and India, which have been pursing theories based on alleged “excessive” or “unreasonable” prices based on a patent holder's practice of charging royalties as a percentage of the end-user product as opposed to a component product such as the chipset. While the additional clarity on the appropriate method for calculating FRAND royalties that decisions like these can provide is welcome, likely to benefit industry stakeholders and consumers alike, we are still it the early days and the decisions are far from providing a consensus on FRAND licensing. Decisions to date include: Judge Posner in Apple v. Motorola; Judge Robart in Microsoft v. Motorola; Judge Holderman in In re Innovatio IP Ventures; Judge Davis in Ericsson v. D-Link, Wi-Lan v. Alcatel-Lucent, and CSIRO v. Cisco; Judge Whyte in Realtek v. LSI; Judge Koh in GPNE Corp. v. Apple, Inc.; and Magistrate Judge Grewal in Golden Bridge Techn. v. Apple Inc. These rulings exhibit a number of differences, as we discuss, but some common principles have emerged as well: • FRAND royalties must provide the patent holder with reasonable compensation; • FRAND royalties should limit the patent holder to a reasonable royalty on the economic value of the patented technology itself, apart from the value associated with the patent's incorporation into an industry standard; and • In determining a FRAND royalty rate, courts should consider comparable licenses. The primary disputed and open issues include questions regarding: • Whether methodologies for determining FRAND royalty rates or damages must take into account concerns about patent hold-up and royalty stacking or whether implementers must provide proof of actual hold-up or royalty stacking; • Whether courts should apply the incremental value rule in determining FRAND rates and damages; • What constitutes a “comparable license” for benchmarking purposes; and • Whether the appropriate royalty base is limited to the “smallest salable patent practicing unit,” and what that actually means (i.e., whether a patent is fully implemented by the end-user device such as the handset or a component part, such as the chipset). In this three-part series, we focus on these issues of FRAND royalty rates and damages in the context of patent infringement or contract litigation within the United States. We review the case law to date and discuss its implications. In this first installment, we focus on two of the most prominent debates over FRAND: the potential for market power abuses that lead to hold-up and royalty stacking. In part two, we turn to appropriate benchmarks and methods for determining FRAND terms. Finally, in part three, we analyze an issue that permeates the spectrum of FRAND issues: the appropriate base for royalty calculations.


Res'Q'ing Patent Infringement Damages After ResQNET

Res'Q'ing Patent Infringement Damages After ResQNET

Author: Layne Keele

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Almost everyone agrees that, when a patent owner seeks a reasonable royalty as patent infringement damages, prior patent licenses are useful in determining the reasonable royalty. But the use of licenses arising out of the settlement of litigation -- “litigation licenses”-- has met with mixed acceptance, with some courts admitting litigation licenses into evidence and other courts excluding the licenses under Rules 402, 403, or 408. Recently, some district courts have concluded that the Federal Circuit's 2010 decision, ResQNet.com, Inc. v. Lansa, Inc. resolves this question in favor of the use of these litigation licenses. This article shows, first, that this conclusion is inaccurate, and second, that litigation licenses should ordinarily be excluded from evidence.


Intellectual Property

Intellectual Property

Author: Russell L. Parr

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2017-03-27

Total Pages: 496

ISBN-13: 1119339766

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A comprehensive reference for valuation of intangible assets Intellectual Property, Valuation, Exploitation, and Infringement Damages provides in-depth, up-to-date guidance about the valuation of intangible assets. Covering patents, trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, and more, this book describes the standards, best practices, and case law relating to valuation, licensing, and infringement damages. Intellectual property strategies are examined from a business economic standpoint, and analytical models are provided to streamline the calculation of valuations, licensing royalty rates, and fair equity splits in joint venture arrangements. Designed to ease the task of attaching monetary value to intangible assets, this invaluable reference includes extensive practical guidance including sample royalty rate information, diffusion sales forecasting models, detailed treatment of investment rate of return, and the valuation of early-stage technology. Intellectual property is rapidly becoming a major profit center for an increasing number of companies, who may invest billions of dollars in development of an irreplaceable asset. This book provides an authoritative reference for exploiting this property to its fullest extent, and quantifying its actual economic value. Now that intangible assets are becoming the cornerstones of corporations, applying a logical, analytical approach to valuation has become more important than ever. Intellectual Property, Valuation, Exploitation, and Infringement Damages provides expert guidance for each stage of the asset's life cycle, with recommended procedures and strategies grounded in case law and real-world practice.


A Unified Framework for RAND and Other Reasonable Royalties

A Unified Framework for RAND and Other Reasonable Royalties

Author: Jorge L. Contreras

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 54

ISBN-13:

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The framework for calculating “reasonable royalty” patent damages has evolved over the years to a point at which, today, it is viewed by many commentators as potentially misleading and untethered from its original purpose. We offer a proposal to modify the framework for determining reasonable patent royalties that is based on recent scholarly and judicial analyses of standards-essential patents that are subject to commitments to license on terms that are reasonable and non-discriminatory (RAND). Litigated cases have applied the traditional Georgia-Pacific factors to assess RAND royalty rates with modifications to account for the circumstances of the RAND commitment. We propose that the reasonable royalty analysis should be conducted in essentially the same manner for all patents, whether or not they are encumbered by RAND commitments. We find considerable support for our approach in the historical development of U.S. patent law prior to the advent of the Georgia-Pacific test. Our approach focuses on the technical and economic characteristics of allegedly infringed patents and their incremental value to the overall product offering.


The Case For Patents

The Case For Patents

Author: Daniel F Spulber

Publisher: World Scientific

Published: 2021-03-02

Total Pages: 462

ISBN-13: 9811225672

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The Case for Patents offers an affirmative case for the many economic benefits of the patent system and shows how patents provide incentives for invention, innovation, and technological change. The discussion highlights the many contributions of patents to economic growth and development. The Case for Patents helps restore balance to public policy debates by recognizing the important contributions of the patent system.


Calculating and Proving Damages

Calculating and Proving Damages

Author: Kristopher A. Boushie

Publisher:

Published: 2016-04-28

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781588521705

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This book covers, determining the types of damages available; models for computing damages; evidence-gathering techniques; damages in tort, contract, intellectual property, and other types of cases.


Patent Infringement

Patent Infringement

Author: Bryan W. Butler

Publisher: Law Journal Seminars Press

Published: 2006

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9781588521378

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"A methodical seven-step approach to the estimation of patent compensation and damages." - Legal Information Alert When a patent has been infringed, there's usually a price to pay, whether it's the result of a trial verdict or a negotiated settlement. Even when compensation for patent infringement is a certainty,determining the right amount is a complex matter involving the interplay of many legal and financial variables. Patent Infringement: Compensation and Damages is a complete, concise and detailed guide. It explains each step, from a finding of infringement to a determination of damages. The process starts with determining the damages period and damages base, from both a product and a geographic perspective. Next, the appropriate theory--reasonable royalty or lost profits--is applied. Then enhancements or limitations are considered, as well as the likelihood and effect of an injunction. The book shows you the methods used, the possible variations, the unique patent law doctrines that may apply, and the strategies to consider in seeking terms most advantageous to your client. The book also examines how awards of damages are treated under accounting rules and discusses the admissibility of evidence from expert witnesses respecting damages. Patent Infringement: Compensation and Damages equips you with legal and practical insights that will keep you one step ahead of opposing counsel. Don't try or settle another case without it.