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Monday, June 30, 2014

Can a Foreign Bankruptcy Upset the License Of a U.S. Patent? A Court of Appeals Says “No”

Thomas C. Carey
By Thomas Carey. Chair of the Business Practice Group

Since 1988, section 365(n) of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code has protected licensees of intellectual property from having their licenses rejected by an insolvent licensor. While this statute addresses certain contingencies and exceptions, the basic rule is that an insolvent licensor is not free to terminate (or ‘reject’) an intellectual property license the way it is free to shed itself of other contracts.

But what if the licensor is based overseas and licenses U.S. patents? In Jaffe v. Samsung Electronics Company, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals recently addressed that first-of-its-kind question.

Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code includes a procedure, based upon a model law promulgated by the UN, by which the administrator of a foreign bankrupt company can ask a U.S. bankruptcy court for permission to control the bankrupt company’s U.S. assets and for an array of other privileges, including the right to prevent creditors from taking actions that would frustrate the foreign proceeding and the right to examine witnesses and seek the production of documents. In weighing such a request, a U.S. bankruptcy court is authorized to consider the interests of the insolvent, its creditors, and others affected by the request.

In 2009, Qimonda AG, a large German semiconductor manufacturer, filed for bankruptcy in Germany. Its principal asset was a portfolio of about 10,000 patents, roughly 4,000 of which were U.S. patents. These patents were subject to cross-license agreements with other industry players. Dr. Michael Jaffe was appointed as the German bankruptcy administrator for Qimonda.

Dr. Jaffe applied to the U.S. bankruptcy court for recognition under Chapter 15 of the Bankruptcy Code and for powers within the U.S. that a bankruptcy trustee in a U.S. proceeding would ordinarily have. The court granted the request, but made it conditional on compliance with section 365.

With Qimonda basically out of business, it had nothing to gain from the incoming license rights that it had obtained in the cross-licenses. Dr. Jaffe undertook to monetize the patent portfolio by notifying all parties to the cross-license agreements that the licenses were being terminated under the German bankruptcy proceeding. Dr. Jaffe’s plan was to re-license these patents for the benefit of Qimonda’s creditors, replacing the in-kind cross-licenses with royalty-bearing licenses.(More)

Monday, June 23, 2014

Trademark Falsely Suggesting Connection to a Native American People is Denied Registration

Steven A. Abreu
By Steven Abreu. A member of the Trademark Practice Group
 
A word that primarily refers to a group of people may not be registrable as a trademark in the United States if the word falsely suggests to consumers an association between the applicant and the identified group.

This principle explains the Trademark Trial and Appeal Board’s affirmance of a refusal to register an application for the mark LAKOTA, applied for in connection with herbal remedies in Class 5. In re Kent Pederson, Serial No. 85328868 (TTAB Dec. 30, 2013).

In an opinion stretching 43 pages, the Board set out the reasons why registration of LAKOTA was impermissible under section 2(a) of the Lanham Act. That statute prohibits registration of a mark that may falsely suggest a connection with persons, institutions, beliefs or national symbols. The trademark office has the burden to show that a mark falsely suggests such a connection through the application of a four-part test:
  1. Is the mark the same as or a close approximation of a name previously used by another person or institution?
  2. Would the mark be recognized as such, because it points unmistakably to that person or institution?
  3. Is the applicant not connected with the person or institution named by the mark?
  4. Is the fame or reputation of the person or institution such that when the mark is used with the applicant’s goods or services, a connection with the person or institution is presumed?
On the first two points, the Board agreed with the examining attorney that Lakota referred to the Native American people who are part of the Sioux Indian tribe. The dictionary definition and evidence, showing countless uses of Lakota to refer to the western part of the Sioux tribe, easily carried the day over the applicant’s argument that Lakota also referred to the name of the language spoken by the Lakota people and so could not unmistakably refer only to the people.

As to the third prong of the test, the applicant, Kent Pederson, offered evidence that his organization, through a licensee, is philanthropically connected to the Lakota people. However, the Board considered this philanthropy not sufficiently connected to commercial interests between Pederson and the Lakota people, especially regarding the applied-for goods. An actual commercial connection between the applicant and the identified person or institution is necessary to show that a connection made in the mind of a consumer is not “false;” mere philanthropy in favor of the identified person is not sufficient. (More)

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

How Will the Supreme Court Decide the Aereo Case?

Timothy M. Murphy
By Timothy Murphy. Co-Chair of the Patent Practice Group
 
During oral argument last month for American Broadcasting Companies, Inc., et al. v. Aereo, Inc., Justice Scalia asked the attorney representing Aereo, “I mean, you could take HBO, right?” One had to wonder whether the Supreme Court has the time or the inclination to understand enough of the technology at issue to provide a well-reasoned opinion on whether Aereo is complying with copyright law.

The answer to Justice Scalia’s question is indisputably “no.” HBO is a cable channel and is not broadcast over the airwaves, as local television and radio stations are. Aereo’s business is a service that provides its customers with over-the-air broadcasts. Aereo uses arrays of small antennas, and each of its customers is assigned a separate antenna.

The television shows picked up by the customer’s antenna are made available by Aereo to the customer over the internet. Thus, the customer can watch a television show with a web browser, an iPad, or a similar device having an internet connection. Aereo also allows the customer to record television shows and saves the customer’s recorded shows in cloud storage dedicated to that customer. For this service, Aereo currently charges $8 a month, plus tax.

In short, Aereo is like a service provider that rents to each of its customers an antenna and a virtual, cloud-based DVR. Indeed, Aereo presents itself as a mere service provider when defending against the accusation of copyright infringement. If an individual set up an antenna and recorded onto a DVR a copyrighted show that was broadcast over the air, and that individual later watched the recorded show, it is well settled that that individual is engaged in a fair use of the copyrighted show and thus does not infringe the copyright in the television show.

In Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc. (1984), the Supreme Court ruled that recording television shows for the purpose of “time shifting,” that is, watching the show at a later time, is fair use. Although the recording medium in the Betamax case was a video cassette, the logic is widely accepted as completely applicable to the more advanced technology of the DVR.

Aereo’s position is that—by providing individual customers with a separate antenna and separate cloud-based storage for their recorded television programs—it is simply helping the customers do what they are perfectly entitled to do on their own.

More than a dozen television and other media companies disagreed with Aereo’s characterization of its business and brought a copyright infringement action against Aereo in the Southern District of New York. They alleged that Aereo was “publicly performing” their television shows and thus must pay for a license from the plaintiff content providers, just as cable companies do.

The district court found in favor of Aereo, and that decision was upheld by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals.

An important precedent for these lower court decisions was Cartoon Network LP, LLLP v. CSC Holdings, Inc. (2d Cir. 2008). In the Cablevision case, as it is known, the cable company—which had already paid for a license to transmit the Cartoon Network’s television shows to its customers—provided to its customers a remote storage digital video recording service (“RS-DVR”). The Second Circuit in the Cablevision case found that this RS-DVR service was not “public performing” and thus did not infringe the Cartoon Network’s copyright.

This RS-DVR service is similar to the cloud-based storage provided by Aereo, so the Second Circuit relied on its earlier precedent in finding in favor of Aereo.

The questions from the Supreme Court justices during the oral argument in the Aereo case showed that they are trying to determine whether Aereo’s characterization of its business—that it merely helps its customers do what they are entitled to do on their own—was accurate, or whether Aereo was more like a cable company and thus required to pay a license fee to the television stations being picked up by the Aereo antennas. (More)

Monday, June 2, 2014

Greater Than the Sum of Its Parts: Patent Protection is Available for Combinations

William R. Childs, Ph.D., J.D.
By William Childs, Ph.D., J.D.. A member of our Patent Practice Group
 
Someone walks into your office and asks: Is it possible to patent a combination of known compounds based on an unexpected synergy between them? The answer remains ‘yes,’ and you should consider citing Sanofi-Aventis v. Glenmark in support.

In Sanofi, decided last month by the Federal Circuit, the patentee discovered that a combination of two active ingredients in a single dosage provided longer-lasting control than previously known treatments. When generic drug makers submitted an Abbreviated New Drug Application seeking permission to market this combination before the expiration of the patent, the owner and licensees of the patent sued for infringement.

The accused infringers argued that the patent was invalid on grounds of obviousness: Each ingredient, they said, was known to be effective for treating hypertension such that the combination of these ingredients would have been “obvious to try.”

The defendants further contended that any advantages from the obvious combination were merely unknown benefits that were not recognized at the time of filing.

The Federal Circuit reasoned that “it would not be ‘obvious to try’ when ‘the prior art gave either no indication of which parameters were critical or no direction as to which of many possible choices is likely to be successful.’”

Regarding unexpected results, the Federal Circuit reiterated the principle that “patentability may consider all of the characteristics possessed by the invention, whenever those characteristics become manifest.” This means that unexpected results discovered after the filing date or even issue date of a patent can weigh against a finding of obviousness. (More)