Four Principles for Calculating Reasonable Royalties in Patent Infringement Litigation

Four Principles for Calculating Reasonable Royalties in Patent Infringement Litigation

Author: Thomas F. Cotter

Publisher:

Published: 2011

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In recent years, juries in some patent infringement suits have awarded prevailing patentees "reasonable royalty" damages in the eight-, nine-, and even ten-figure range. Though not all of these awards have been upheld following postjudgment motions or on appeal, concern over the magnitude and frequency of such awards has led to calls for the reform of various practices relating to the calculation of patent damages. Other voices, not surprisingly, have either defended the current system or, at the very least, expressed reservations over the need for significant changes. Underlying some of these debates are fundamental differences of opinion concerning the risks of so-called "patent holdup" resulting from the discovery, ex post, that a firm has infringed (often inadvertently) a patent reading on one of perhaps thousands of components embodied in a complex end product. Moreover, ever since the Supreme Court's decision in eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C. freed district courts from the requirement of automatically awarding injunctions to prevailing patent owners, damages law has taken on a new twist as courts have struggled to define the proper methodology for calculating royalties not only for past infringement but, in some instances, for the prospective, postjudgment use of a patented invention. In this Essay, I will argue that a rational system for awarding reasonable royalties for patent infringement would be premised on four related principles: (1) that in awarding retrospective damages (damages for past acts of infringement) courts should take the scope of substantive patent law as fixed; (2) that the baseline damages recovery for prevailing patent owners should be the amount that restores them to the position they would have enjoyed, but for the infringement; (3) that courts should depart from this baseline when doing so is necessary to attain optimal deterrence; and (4) that, in attempting to replicate the license the parties would have negotiated ex ante but for the infringement, subject to some exceptions courts should authorize the consideration of factors that the parties realistically would have used, and should exclude consideration of certain other factors that lack a sound basis.


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.


Reasonable Royalties and the Calculation of Patent Damages

Reasonable Royalties and the Calculation of Patent Damages

Author: Chung-Lun Shen

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Among the substantive issues of patent law, patent enforcement has received increasing focus in the global community. Owing to the intangibility of patents, and in view of the symmetry of exclusive rights with damages, courts and juries have difficulty calculating appropriate damages for patent infringement. Compared with the traditional calculation of patent damages, which rests upon the patentee's losses or infringer's profits, the basis of reasonable royalties provides a flexible concept for accommodating damages when the patentee cannot adequately prove damages, especially, when the patented or infringing products were not available in the market at the time of infringement. Until the amendment of Taiwan's Patent Act in 2011, the authority of reasonable royalties as patent damages was not officially codified. China's Patent Act had recognized the remedy of patent infringement subject to reasonable royalties since 2000. In light of the development of comparative patent laws and original jurisprudence guiding patent law, the provisions of Taiwan's Patent Act and China's Patent Act concerning reasonable royalties as patent damages still have room for refinement. Consequently, this article attempts to establish an optimal model for applying related provisions in future judicial practice. The proposed model could contribute a common guideline for the determination of reasonable royalties to the regional harmonization of patent laws in Taiwan and China. Reprinted from the Chicago-Kent Journal of Intellectual Property, [12 CHI.-KENT J. INTELL. PROP. 156 (2013)].


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 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.


Model Jury Instructions for Reasonable Royalty Patent Damages

Model Jury Instructions for Reasonable Royalty Patent Damages

Author: Jorge L. Contreras

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 24

ISBN-13:

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Consistent, accurate and understandable jury instructions are critical to the determination of damages in patent cases. In January 2016 the Federal Circuit Bar Association (“FCBA”) amended its popular model jury instructions. Among other things, the 2016 amendments substantially reframed the instructions regarding the calculation of reasonable royalty damages in patent cases, replacing the fifteen “Georgia-Pacific” factors with a streamlined set of three factors emphasizing the value contribution of the patented technology to the overall product and comparable license agreements. This Essay discusses the history and implications of the FCBA instruction change for reasonable royalty damages. It assesses the adherence of the reformulated damages analysis to the Federal Circuit's rulings regarding damages calculations in Ericsson v. D-Link and other recent case law, and compares the FCBA instruction with corresponding instructions developed by the American Intellectual Property Law Association (“AIPLA”) and the Northern District of California. We also present new empirical data regarding the use and adoption of model jury instructions in cases in which reasonable royalty damages are adjudicated. We find that a wide variety of instructions are used, partially defeating the goals of consistency and efficiency that model instructions seek to achieve. We conclude by recommending that the Federal Circuit endorse a single set of model jury instructions for patent cases, and that it consider the new FCBA instructions for this purpose. We also urge the FCBA and other organizations developing model jury instructions to continue to emphasize the traditional incremental value approach to patent valuation, and to develop additional jury instructions addressing issues raised by standards-essential patents.


Using Reasonable Royalties to Value Patented Technology

Using Reasonable Royalties to Value Patented Technology

Author: David O. Taylor

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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In the last several years, commentators have expressed serious concerns with the state of the law governing awards of reasonable royalties as damages in patent infringement cases. Given these concerns, the proper assessment of royalties has been a recent, frequent topic for debate among economists and legal scholars. At the same time, all three branches of the federal government have studied ways to improve the law governing reasonable royalties. In this Article, I reframe the ongoing debate by identifying and exploring two basic paradigms for calculating reasonable royalties: valuing patent rights and valuing patented technology. The traditional paradigm, valuing patent rights, reflects a tort law make-whole conception of compensatory damages. Notably, however, the alternative paradigm, valuing patented technology, in various respects explains the course of the common law governing the method for calculating reasonable royalties, comports with the public policies identified by courts as guiding the award of reasonable royalties, and, moreover, if fully adopted may have significant benefits. I therefore consider several reforms that would tie the law governing reasonable royalty determinations even closer to the value of patented technology, and I highlight several open questions related to full adoption of this alternative paradigm.


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.


Intellectual Property Infringement Damages

Intellectual Property Infringement Damages

Author: Russell L. Parr

Publisher:

Published: 1993-05-06

Total Pages: 360

ISBN-13:

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An easy-to-understand explanation of a complex subject which is often beyond the scope of most attorneys' expertise. Focuses on quantifying lost profits and reasonable royalties. Cites established methods of calculating damages for patents, trademarks and copyrights. Describes how to use formal damages reports and offers detailed analyses of landmark infringement cases. Includes accessible checklists, sample calculations and practical tips. Supplemented annually.


A New Framework for Determining Reasonable Royalties in Patent Litigation

A New Framework for Determining Reasonable Royalties in Patent Litigation

Author: Norman Siebrasse

Publisher:

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 58

ISBN-13:

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Conventional analysis often assumes that there are only two theoretical options for calculating a reasonable royalty in patent disputes: a “pure ex ante” approach, under which a court reconstructs the hypothetical bargain the parties would have struck prior to infringement, based on the information available to them at that time; and a “pure ex post” approach, under which the court considers the bargain the parties might have reached as of some later date such as the date of judgment. The first approach avoids patent holdup -- basing the royalty partly on the infringer's sunk costs -- but cannot easily explain other longstanding features of how royalties are calculated, and can lead to awards that reflect the parties' erroneous ex ante expectations. By contrast, the pure ex post approach uses more accurate information about the invention's actual value, but it also enables the patentee to capture some of the patent's ex post holdup value. In this Article, we show that a “contingent ex ante” framework, under which the court reconstructs the bargain the parties would have reached ex ante, based on all relevant information that is available ex post, is superior to both of the conventional approaches. More specifically, our framework enables courts to base the royalty on the most accurate information available of patent value while avoiding the holdup risk arising from the pure ex post approach. We analyze how courts can apply our approach in various settings, including cases involving SEPs, sequential infringement, regulatory uncertainty, and unexpected exogenous events.