Showing posts with label Munich Higher Regional Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Munich Higher Regional Court. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2022

Judge Zigann will not (at least not initially) hear patent infringement cases in his new role as Presiding Judge of the Munich Higher Regional Court's 38th Civil Senate

Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann (until next Monday, the Presiding Judge of the Munich I Regional Court's 7th Civil Chamber) will serve on the Munich Local Division of the Unified Patent Court (UPC) (together with Judge Tobias Pichlmaier and other colleagues), but in his new role as Presiding Judge of the 38th Civil Senate of the Munich Higher Regional Court he will not hear patent infringement cases, at least not initially according to the court's official assignment of fields of law to his division. Of course, there could always be a situation in which the Munich appeals court's 6th Civil Chamber might be inundated with patent infringement appeals, in which case Judge Dr. Zigann would be the obvious choice for reassignment--if he isn't a full-time UPC judge by then.

In the post I just linked to, I pointed to a Juve Patent report on Judge Dr. Zigann's promotion. That article likened the creation of a second intellectual property-specialized division at the Munich appeals court to the two civil senates of the Dusseldorf Higher Regional Court that hear patent cases (the 2nd Civil Senate under soon-to-retire Presiding Judge Dr. Thomas Kuehnen ("Kühnen" in German) and the 15th Civil Senate under Presiding Judge Ulrike Voss ("Voß" in German)). But both the 2nd and 15th Civil Senates in Dusseldorf hear patent infringement appeals, which is not what the Munich Higher Regional Court's Presidium decided yesterday afternoon in the same session in which Judge Dr. Zigann was officially promoted to the higher court.

The relevant passage of the Munich appeals court's Local Rules refers to IP (including, but not limited to, copyright) and certain antitrust matters, and there is a passing reference to matters involving patent attorneys' liability (as a carve-out), but patent infringement cases are clearly not part of the new division's purview. This means Judge Dr. Zigann will normally hear patent infringement cases only when serving on the UPC's Munich Local Division (which will hold its hearings and trials at the courthouse of the Munich II Regional Court on Denisstrasse 3 (Munich I is for the city, Munich II for the surroundings), not when adjudicating appeals at the Munich Higher Regional Court on Prielmayerstrasse 5 (adjacent to the Palace of Justice).

Finally, here's the full text of that passage from the appeals court's Local Rules in German:

"Der 38. Zivilsenat übernimmt a) zur Entlastung der Senate im gewerblichen Rechtsschutz und in Ansehung der vom Gesetzgeber geforderten Konzentration (vgl. § 129 Abs. 1 VGG ) von den Geschäftsaufgaben des 6. Zivilsenats: i) Entscheidungen nach § 15 Abs. 1 (in der bis zum 31.12.2007 geltenden Fassung), § 16 Abs. 4 (in der bis zum 31.05.2016 geltenden Fassung) des Gesetzes über die Wahrnehmung von Urheberrechten und verwandten Schutzrechten, § 129 Abs. 1 und 4 des Gesetzes über die Wahrnehmung von Urheberrechten und verwandten Schutzrechten durch Verwertungsgesellschaften (VGG) und Entscheidungen, die nach der bis zum 31.05.2016 geltenden Verordnung über die Schiedsstelle für Urheberrechtsstreitfälle zu treffen sind, mit Ausnahme der Entscheidung über die gerichtliche Festsetzung der Kosten (bisher Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 4 des 6. Zivilsenats) sowie Rechtsstreitigkeiten, die Ansprüche über die Haftung von Rechtsanwälten im Zusammenhang mit der Bearbeitung von Sachen aus den Bereichen der vorstehenden Geschäftsaufgabe betreffen; dies gilt auch, wenn der Anspruch im Wege der Einwendung geltend gemacht wird (bisher Teil der Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 6 des 6. Zivilsenats). Dabei ist der 38. Zivilsenat in den Fällen aus den aufgeführten Bereichen (mit Ausnahme der Ansprüche über die Haftung der Rechtsanwälte und Patentanwälte) als Kartellsenat zuständig, bei denen im Falle der erstinstanzlichen Zuständigkeit eine ausschließliche Zuständigkeit nach § 87 GWB begründet wäre (bisher Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 8c des 6. Zivilsenats); ii) Die bis einschließlich 31.10.2022 beim 6. Zivilsenat unter den Az. 6 Sch …/…. WG geführten Verfahren zur weiteren Bearbeitung, ungeachtet des jeweiligen Verfahrensstandes, in dem sich diese zum Stichtag befinden und abweichend von den Regelungen in Nr. II. B der allgemeinen Bestimmungen auch in den dort genannten Konstellationen. b) zur Entlastung der Senate im gewerblichen Rechtsschutz von den Geschäftsaufgaben des 29. Zivilsenats: Rechtsstreitigkeiten nach § 1 Unterlassungsklagengesetz (UKlaG) und § 13 des früheren AGB-Gesetzes, soweit es sich nicht um eine Banksache gemäß Nr. II A 1 der allgemeinen Bestimmungen handelt oder eine Sonderzuständigkeit des 9. Zivilsenats (Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 2) oder des 32. Zivilsenats (Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 3) gegeben ist (bisher Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 3 des 29. Zivilsenats) sowie Rechtsstreitigkeiten, die Ansprüche über die Haftung von Rechtsanwälten im Zusammenhang mit der Bearbeitung von Sachen aus den Bereichen der vorstehenden Geschäftsaufgabe betreffen; dies gilt auch, wenn der Anspruch im Wege der Einwendung geltend gemacht wird (bisher Teil der Geschäftsaufgabe Nr. 5 des 29. Zivilsenats). - 4 - c) zur Entlastung der Turnussenate die weitere Geschäftsaufgabe: Rechtsstreitigkeiten aus den Landgerichtsbezirken München I und München II, die nicht unter die Verteilung nach Sachgebieten fallen, sowie Dieselsachen im Turnus der Eingänge gemäß Nr. II D der Allgemeinen Bestimmungen. Der 38. Zivilsenat nimmt bis auf weiteres an den Turnusdurchgängen I bis IX teil, wobei beim 38. Zivilsenat dessen neu eingehende Angelegenheiten aus den Geschäftsaufgaben Nrn. 1 und 3 bis 6 auf den Berufungsturnus anzurechnen sind. d) zur Entlastung des 25. Zivilsenats: Versicherungssachen, soweit sie Verfahren wegen Beitragserhöhung und/oder Auskunftsverlangen in der privaten Krankenversicherung betreffen. Der 38. Zivilsenat ist insoweit Spezialsenat i.S.v. § 119a Satz 1 Nr. 4 GVG."

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

New presiding judge for Munich Higher Regional Court's patent-specialized 6th Civil Senate: Judge Lars Meinhardt succeeds Judge Konrad Retzer

Munich is one of the world's most important patent litigation hotspots. Last month the new patent litigation division of the Landgericht München I (Munich I Regional Court)--the 44. Zivilkammer (44th Civil Chamber)--held its premiere hearing. Today I've been able to find out from the press office of the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) who will succeed retired Presiding Judge Konrad Retzer of the 6. Zivilsenat (6th Civil Senate), which hears patent appeals from the lower Munich court but also some other IP and competition matters: Judge Lars Meinhardt.

Judge Meinhardt has not been mentioned on this blog before. You can find a picture and short bio (in German) here. He presided over the lower Munich court's 33rd Civil Chamber from 2012 to 2018. The 33rd Civil Chamber hears cases involving trademark, copyright, design rights, and unfair competition claims--all of which fields are adjacent to patent law. He then joined the 29th Civil Senate of the Munich appeals court, which has a similar focus. Apparently he also dealt with matters involving the professional code governing the work of patent attorneys.

Actually, my contacts in the Munich patent litigation community largely thought Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann (who presides over the lower court's patent-specialized 7th Civil Chamber) was the logical successor to Judge Retzer (who presided over the 7th Civil Chamber before he got promoted to the appeals court). But for whatever reason, Judge Meinhardt, whose positions on patent enforcement are unknown, has been picked. Judge Zigann, however, will undoubtedly have a key role with the Unified Patent Court, which will commence its operation next summer or so. In a way, that will be an even greater opportunity for him, though for Munich as a patent venue it would have been the best decision to guarantee a high degree of consistency between the lower court and the appeals court going forward. That may, however, be the outcome under Presiding Judge Meinhardt, too, as he will undoubtedly find out (if he hasn't already) what makes Munich such a popular venue for patent enforcement.

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Thursday, June 17, 2021

Munich may become the circuit with the most consistent patent case law in Germany if Judge Zigann is promoted and Judge Werner succeeds him

In 2019, on the occasion of its 10th anniverary of its Patent Local Rules, the Landgericht München I (Munich I Regional Court) commissioned an evaluation by the Max Planck Institute. The results became known last year. For the most part, they were pretty positive, but in my view, the respondents underrated the legal and technical competence of the Munich judges as compared to other German patent infringement courts, and I said so at the time.

Many respondents to the survey criticized inconsistencies between the lower court's decisions and those handed down by the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court), the regional appeals court--comparable to a U.S. appeals court for a particular circuit, though regional and higher regional courts in Germany are run by the states, not the federal government.

Consistency may already be on its way.

At the end of my post on the promotion of Judge Dr. Georg Werner to Presiding Judge, I mentioned that "[Presiding] Judge Dr. [Matthias] Zigann might move up to the appeals court in the not too distant future, and then Judge Dr. Werner could replace him as the Seventh Civil Chamber's presiding judge."

That scenario is more than plausible. Presiding Judge Konrad Retzer of the patent-specialized senate of the Munich Higher Regional Court will--based on what I've heard--retire by the end of the year. German judges can't "go senior" and still serve. When they reach the statutory age limit, their judicial career comes to an end. Just like Judge Retzer used to preside over the lower Munich court's patent-specialized panel before he moved up to the appeals court, his most plausible replacement is Judge Dr. Zigann, who brings a great depth of patent law expertise to the table--almost a decade thereof as the Presiding Judge of the court's Seventh Civil Chamber.

It's the opposite of a daring assumption that this will happen. In that case, the Seventh Civil Chamber will need a new Presiding Judge, and the court won't have to look far now that Judge Dr. Werner--previously Judge Dr. Zigann's deputy--has been promoted.

Today I've seen a clear sign that many German patent litigators are preparing for this scenario: a webinar organized by Munich's Center for Intellectual Property Law Information and Technology (CIPLITEC) drew a pretty large audience. To be fair, Zurich-based Professor Peter Picht is a gifted speaker who always has interesting information to share. But many listeners presumably wnated to learn about Judge Dr. Werner's views. He's not hearing patent cases at the moment, as he is presiding over a commercial law chamber that deals with other issues (such as design rights, if I understand correctly), yet took the time to deliver today's speech. Presumably he knows he's going to be a patent judge again in the very near term.

Today's presentation was a chance to find out where Judge Dr. Werner stands. To be honest, that's what I was primarily trying to figure out when listening. And the answer is very simple: Judge Dr. Werner stands 100% behind the Munich approach to standard-essential patent (SEP) injunctions as well as anti-antisuit injunctions.

As a side, Judge Dr. Werner previously had voting rights when he was a member of a judicial panel, and quite often he was the judge-rapporteur who authored the per curiam. This includes last September's Nokia v. Daimler SEP injunction.

Every single time Judge Dr. Werner took a position today on SEP case law, not only in connection with Nokia v. Daimler but also the availability of anti-antisuit injunctions, that is not only materially, but totally, consistent with Judge Dr. Zigann's views.

Presiding Judge Tobias Pichlmaier of the Munich I Regional Court's Twenty-First Civil Chamber is perfectly aligned with Judges Dr. Zigann and Dr. Werner. He granted the first Munich anti-antisuit injunction, and I've seen how he approaches SEP cases. There was a time when plaintiffs viewed the Munich I Regional Court as a bit of a lottery: if their case got assigned to the Seventh Civil Chamber, they were optimistic and they knew the case would be decided within about a year; but if the Twenty-First Civil Chamber got the case, everything would take longer and patentees faced an uphill battle. Not so now. Both the Seventh and the Twenty-First Civil Chamber are consistent and comparably efficient.

Very soon, Munich will have a "triumvirate" between the appeals court (then under Presiding Judge Dr. Zigann) and the lower court (with Presiding Judges Pichlmaier and Dr. Werner).

On the appeals court, Judge Dr. Zigann could be outvoted by his two side judges. But presiding judges have a lot of influence and authority. Judge Dr. Zigann won't be bound by precedent shaped by Judge Retzer. If he gets at least one sidge judge to vote with him, he can simply overrule any earlier decisions, such as the amount of security deposits required for the provisional enforcement of patent injunctions. This works differently in the U.S., where it would require an en banc decision (full-court review).

Munich's popularity as a patent litigation venue is likely to grow as a result of these likely developments.

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Friday, March 19, 2021

Google left in the lurch: German government accepts Munich antitrust injunction over unfair treatment of health information portals as final decision

After the two spectacular preliminary injunctions that the Landgericht München I (Munich I Regional Court) entered on February 10 over the same issue (fair treatment of health information portals), both Google and the German federal government (specifically, the Federal Ministry of Health) had one month to appeal. What I've found out now from the regional appeals court, the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court), serves to validate the five-star rating two pre-eminent German antitrust experts gave the Munich court's decision:

While an appeal was filed in the Google case (appellate case no. 29 U 1317/21), the German government did not do so in its own case. A few days ago, Germany's leading news agency DPA reported that the Federal Ministry of Health had not responded to multiple inquiries concerning its plans. By now, about a week over the deadline, it's certain that Google has to go it alone.

I've also been able to find out in Germany that the government has formally accepted the preliminary injunction as final, meaning that the court order is now, in fact, a permanent injunction with respect to the government. There won't be a full-blown trial in the case against the government.

Google told the media a few days ago that it had merely filed a notice of appeal to buy itself more time to weigh its options. At the time of Google's notice of appeal, it wasn't clear yet what the government was going to do.

The monopolist now has to decide on whether to pursue this appeal, in which case it needs to file an opening brief soon. Otherwise its appeal will be dismissed automatically. Given that the Federal Ministry of Health is barred from this type of partnership with Google for the foreseeable future, and knowing that the government's acceptance of the preliminary injunction as the final ruling in the case lends additional credence to the lower court's ruling, Google might just abandon its appeal now. Of course, Google has the right to seek a review of the decision as a matter of principle, if only to demonstrate that it vigorously defends its conduct even though there's no more chance of an immediate commercial benefit.

For Hubert Burda Media, the owner of the NetDoktor.de health information portal, it's "mission accomplished." In my previous post on this dispute I already gave credit to the Hausfeld lawyers who made it happen. Of course, the government's decision to fold is in no small part attributable to the quality of the Munich I Regional Court's well-reasoned ruling (37th Civil Chamber; Presiding Judge: Dr. Gesa Lutz). My guess is that the government gave up because affirmance of the decision appeared rather likely and would have reflected unfavorably on Federal Minister of Health Jens Spahn.

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Thursday, December 17, 2020

BREAKING: Munich appeals court raises security amount in Nokia v. Daimler patent case from $22 million to more than $2 billion

Just as I predicted on Tuesday, the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) once again proved that the lower court's patent judges can't be trusted to hand down reasonable and responsible decisions. They're out of control and stop at pretty much nothing to please patentees, but at least there is an appellate process.

On October 30, the Landgericht München I (Munich I Regional Court) had granted Nokia a standard-essential patent (SEP) injunction against Daimler, and allowed it to be enforced during the appellate proceedings if Nokia had posted collateral to the amount of €18 million (a little over $20 million), which is a laughable amount when the nationwide sales (which effectively even includes exports going out of the country) of Mercedes vehicles are at stake. While Nokia, for purely tactical reasons, carved out Mercedes cars that come with a telematics control unit (TCU) made by Samsung subsidiary Harman Becker, the percentage of Daimler's sales that would be affected by the enforcement of this injunction is still very high. (And Nokia expressly reserved the right to bring a follow-on case to go after the remaining portion of Daimler's sales as well.)

The appeals court has raised the security amount by a factor of almost 100 to €1.673 billion for the enforcement of the injunction itself, and to €11 million for the costs incurred by Daimler to provide the accounting that would enable Nokia to quantify its damages claim.

It appears very unlikely that Nokia can afford making a $2B+ deposit. Nokia could also post a bond, but presumably a bank would require Nokia to put the amount at stake into an escrow-style account.

But even if Nokia provided the collateral, they wouldn't necessarily get to enforce the injunction. Not only did Daimler move for an adjustment for the security amount (which motion clearly succeeded) but there is also a motion to stay enforcement pending the appellate proceedings, with Daimler arguing it's going to win the appeal. If Nokia started to enforce, the appeals court might still stay enforcement on other grounds (technical merits or FRAND/antitrust considerations).

Nokia is desperately trying to gain leverage over Daimler and to prevent the Court of Justice of the EU from clarifying the entitlement of component makers to an exhaustive SEP license on FRAND terms.

What the Munich appeals court has delivered is quite the opposite of a Christmas present for the lower court. It should give the patent judges on the court below some pause. If they continue to interpret the law in absurd ways, they'll be overruled again and again and again. Their "forum selling" efforts deprive defendants of even their most basic rights, and that court's patent rulings have lately become a very serious threat to industry (not only--but also--the automotive sector). What Germany needs badly is patent injunction reform--a real reform that would also affect SEP cases like this one.

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Tuesday, December 15, 2020

Munich appeals court overrules lower court's shameless approach to security amounts: Conversant v. Daimler

As I already noted earlier this month, the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) fundamentally disagrees with the Munich I Regional Court's approach to setting the amounts of collateral to be posted in the form of a bond or a security deposit when patent injunctions are enforced while an appeal is pending.

Meanwhile I've obtained a copy of an order by the appeals court in Conversant v. Daimler, raising the security amount from 5.5 million euros to 146 million euros. That's an increase by more than a factor of 26--and a complete (with respect to this part of the dispute) victory for Daimler at this stage. It also means that Nokia-fed Conversant won't ever enforce a German injunction against Daimler over the patent-in-suit, as the troll probably can't afford this amount anytime soon and the patent is going to expire in about a month's time.

What the lower court had done in that case--and not only that one, as the appeals court will make a similar decision in a Nokia v. Daimler case on Thursday--was not just an error. It was an utter disgrace. It was what happens when judges prioritize "forum-selling" over their own professional honor. And the way in which they explained the "reasons" for their approach was so bad that even the term "nonsensical" would represent a euphemism.

Here's the fundamental problem, in a nutshell:

  • A plaintiff who prevailed in trial court often seeks to enforce an injunction even during the appellate proceedings.

  • But if the defendant prevailed on appeal, wrongful-enforcement damages would be owed.

  • Some kind of security (a bond or a deposit) is to be provided by a plaintiff for enforcement at this stage is to make sure that the defendant can be made whole in case it is later entitled to wrongful-enforcement damages, but the plaintiff can't pay at that point. The actual damages can only be determined later, but the security amount is set based on a reasonable estimate.

  • The purpose of such collateral is to enable a defendant to pursue an appeal--as opposed to being coerced into a settlement by the risk of early enforcement damages exceeding what the plaintiff would later be able to pay.

The lower Munich court hit a new low--which says something--when its "logic" simply defeated the purpose of such collateral:

  • They said that a defendant had an obligation to mitigate damages by taking a license, but

  • in that case it's over and there won't be an appellate decision.

It's not that the lower court wasn't aware of this contradiction. They even suggested that a defendant could make a licensing offer that would be tied to the outcome of the appellate proceedings (by which they probably meant a condition subsequent or similar structure). But as the appeals court noted in its December 3, 2020 partial final ruling (partial because it only corrected the security-related part of the decision, without looking at the underlying merits yet),

  • a patentee could simply reject a licensing offer on that basis (and insist on a license deal that would not be contingent upon any future decision),

  • Conversant was evasive at best when Daimler suggested such a contractual structure, and

  • making such an offer puts a defendant out of compliance with German SEP case law (this point is the least important aspect in my view, as it merely shows that such a deal structure would be unusual).

Simply put, the lower Munich court wanted to deprive defendants of their right to appeal its (sometimes totally wrong) decisions.

Fortunately, the appeals court restored sanity.

The amount of approximately $175 million for shutting down Daimler's German sales for a month (Conversant even won a recall and could have forced Daimler to destroy any "infringing" products) is actually low, but that's because, as the appellate decision notes, Huawei obtained an exhaustive component-level license from Conversant, which indirectly covers approximately 86% of Daimler's German sales. It's mostly the Mercedes truck business that doesn't benefit from that indirect license.

No similar arrangement exists with respect to Nokia's SEPs--and the patent-in-suit in that case isn't about to expire. In the Nokia case, Daimler cars that come with a telematics control unit (TCU) from Samsung subsidiary Harman Becker are excluded from the scope of the injunction, but the effect of that carve-out doesn't come close to the 86% coverage Daimler enjoys in the Conversant context because of Huawei's license. All things considered, a security amount in the billions of euros will likely be set on Thursday. The lower court had set it at only 18 million euros. The numbers don't tell the whole story, but they'll make it clear that the appeals court doesn't merely reverse the lower court in this context. It effectively rebukes it. And rightly so.

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Saturday, December 5, 2020

Desperate-defiant Nokia withdraws two Dusseldorf patent cases against Daimler, trollishly refiles in Munich--where it's losing ground as well

The Nokia v. Daimler standard-essential patent dispute that began in early 2019 with ten standard-essential patent (SEP) infringement cases filed in three German venues. In eight of these cases, some kind of decision was made this year: some got stayed (in one Munich case, the stay was of an informal nature as the court simply pushed back the trial date), some complaints were rejected (non-essential patents-in-suit), and Nokia won two injunctions (one each in Mannheim and Munich). But even those two injunctions have so far turned out to be of zero value:

  • The Mannheim injunction can't be enforced for a combination of two reasons: Nokia presumably couldn't afford providing security to the tune of $8.5 billion (which is its own fault--the collateral would be so much less if Nokia sued component makers, which it should actually license), and the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court got Nokia to commit to refrain from enforcement while the appeals court is weighing Daimler's motion for an enforcement stay.

  • In Munich, the determination of the amount of the security by the lower court is a total insanity--approximately $20 million--but the appeals court--in that case, the Munich Higher Regional Court--has recently made it clear that it's not inclined in the slightest to uphold the lower court's methodology.

    In a parallel Conversant v. Daimler case, the appeals court's patent-specialized division under Presiding Judge Konrad Retzer had already stayed enforcement until it has made a new determination of the prerequisite collateral. And more recently it has done the same with respect to Nokia v. Daimler. The new amount is slated to be set before the Holiday Season.

Nokia's litigation counsel can't be blamed--their "hit rate" is higher than the industry average in SEP enforcement, though an independent analysis showed this year that the quality of Nokia's aging SEP portfolio is average at best. But the purpose of litigation typically isn't to stick copies of symbolical courtroom victories to a wall. It's about leverage, and that's precisely what Nokia is still lacking.

Nokia's lobbying prowess (with Daimler and some of its suppliers failing miserably in that regard) has so far dissuaded the European Commission from letting its Directorate-General for Competition (DG COMP) do its job and investigate Nokia's SEP abuse. I'm sorry I temporarily blamed DG COMP for not taking action. Over time it became clearer and clearer that the problem has nothing to do with DG COMP. The main culprit is Thierry Breton (the EU's internal market commissioner). It's just not conducive to DG COMP's credibility (even with a non-competition commissioner being the one to blame). Whenever the Commission does or does not decide to investigate a high-profile complaint, a displeased party may insinuate protectionism. Just last month I expressed my fundamental skepticism concerning claims that certain antitrust complaints over SAP's software licensing terms (and as an app developer I am sympathetic to software makers who want to maintain a reasonable degree of flexibility, especially in the business-to-business segment, as to the scope of what users may do with the licensed products) don't get traction just because of SAP's importance to Europe's digital economy. It actually appears those complaints are contrived and unpersuasive. Still, some try to leverage an allegation of protectionism in a context like that, and by not taking action against Nokia, the Commission harms its own reputation as a competition enforcer at a time when that function is more important than ever (not only--but also--in the SEP context).

The issue of component-level SEP licensing is, however, basically in the process of bypassing Brussels and heading straight to Luxembourg. Late last month, the Dusseldorf Regional Court decided to refer to the top EU court two sets of legal questions--the first one being all about component-level access to SEP licenses and the second one, which may not even be reached, relating to the interpretation of the CJEU's Huawei v. ZTE framework. Whatever that court decides is binding on the Commission, not the other way round (though the Commission's input bears considerable weight with the Advocate General, whose recommendations the court adopts in about two thirds of its cases).

Nokia's lobbying machinery will try to influence the court process. They'll try to influence each and every EU member state government, and with the automotive industry being so bad and weak at this, it's possible that even some countries that have a strong automotive industry and virtually no SEP holders are going to make submissions that favor Nokia. But Nokia would rather gain decisive leverage over Daimler before a Luxembourg ruling.

Next week, the Dusseldorf Regional Court was scheduled to hold trials in two more Nokia v. Daimler cases. While the referral to the CJEU was decided by the division headed by Presiding Judge Sabine Klepsch, next week's trials would have been conducted by a panel under Presiding Judge Dr. Tim Crummenerl.

Within less than a week of the trial date, however, Nokia withdrew both cases--and simultaneously notified counsel for Daimler and its suppliers that it simultaneously refiled the same complaints in Munich.

The Dusseldorf withdrawal will result in an award of court fees, which Nokia is apparently happy to pay just to escape from a court it used to love and has apparently learned to hate. Refiling in troll-friendly Munich is a logical choice, but with what I wrote further above as well as in connection with Nokia v. Lenovo, it remains to be seen just for how much longer that venue is going to be a SEP abuser's preferred battleground.

The practice of bringing patent infringement complaints only to withdraw them at a procedural stage where that's a highly unusual thing to do is reminisicent of the most disreputable patent trolls. In fact, Apple and Intel are suing Softbank-owned Fortress Investment in the Northern District of California, and one Fortress front named Uniloc has made such procedural moves in the United States. Such behavior is obviously abusive and vexatious. Nokia has no class, at least not anymore. This Dusseldorf-Munich maneuvering is almost childish. It's an act of defiance after the CJEU referral, and a transparent effort to show to other courts that Munich gets Nokia's business because of its patentee-friendliness.

The Munich court will likely set a somewhat accelerated schedule for those two refiled Nokia v. Daimler cases as the parties are already very familiar with the issues. But a Dusseldorf decision would probably have come down in January, at which point there won't even have been an early first hearing in the refiled cases.

By the way, Nokia can't run from that Dusseldorf judge forever. Dr. Tim Crummenerl will serve on the Federal Court of Justice starting next year.

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Monday, November 2, 2020

Lenovo wins, Nokia loses in Munich appeals court: patent-in-suit most likely invalid, FRAND issues *may* exist on top

On Friday (October 30), the Munich I Regional Court (Landgericht München I) ordered its third standard-essential patent (SEP) injunction in the same calendar month, and the second against car maker Daimler over the course of eight days. Each of these decisions was based on the same clearly erroneous application of the Court of Justice of the EU's Huawei v. ZTE guidance, and each came with a determination of a negligible security amount that is an insult to human intelligence and calls into question whether the rest of the world should take any Munich patent decision seriously anymore or just attribute it to some judges' burning desire to attract patent infringement complaints to their venue, no matter the damage to device makers and to innovation itself.

But the tide may turn. At least there is hope based on certain dicta of an order by the Munich appeals court.

Today Lenovo's public relations agency sent out a press release (which others have already quoted) according to which the Munich Higher Regional Court (Oberlandesgericht München) has granted the computer maker's motion to stay the enforcement of the H.264 video codec SEP injunction Nokia had obtained on October 1 and which the Finnish company (whose products were way too bad to stay competitive in the consumer electronics market) had recklessly started to enforce a couple of weeks ago.

What is known about the Munich appeals court's decision is that the panel (Presiding Judge: Konrad Retzer) concluded unusually quickly that the lower court's ruling most likely cannot stand. Unlike in the United States, where the enforcement of an injunction may be stayed if the defendant establishes irreparable harm and generates significant doubt about whether the court below got it right, the standard in Germany is pretty one-dimensional: short of the possibility of a company going bankrupt, only the likelihood of success on the merits determines whether a motion for an enforcement stay is granted.

The lower Munich court even states in a document outlining its Patent Local Rules that it strives to satisfy patentees' demand for swift injunctions without previously staying case pending a parallel validity determination in another forum. But in this Nokia v. Lenovo case, the patent-in-suit appears to extremely likely to be invalidated that the Munich appeals court based its decision to stay the enforcement of the injunction just on the lower court's abuse of discretion with respect to its ignorance of the high likelihood of invalidation.

The appeals court no longer had to reach any other questions (infringement and FRAND) in order to resolve the motion for an enforcement stay. But as the same court has done in some other contexts, it did elect to comment on infringement and, which has ramifications for various automotive SEP cases, write a few more pages about FRAND.

I haven't been able to obtain a copy of the decision yet (will keep on trying, of course). What I have found out is that the Munich appeals court is full well aware of that its counterparts further up north--the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court (which hears all patent appeals originating from Mannheim) and the Dusseldorf Higher Regional Court--have applied Huawei v. ZTE to the effect that a SEP holder who fails to make a FRAND-compliant licensing offer is not entitled to injunctive relief regardless of the implementer's counteroffer. By contrast, the Munich I Regional Court's recent SEP injunctions were all based on a holding that the respective implementer was an unwilling licensee, without a full-blown assessment of the SEP holder's original offer.

The Munich appeals court has not indicated whether it intends to overrule or affirm the lower court in that particular regard. But it does realize that affirmance would result in what is called a circuit split in U.S. appellate law.

Even if the Munich Higher Regional Court opted for a circuit split, it might still reverse the lower court's FRAND stance in one or more other respects, which could open the door to successful FRAND defenses.

The question now when and in what case the Munich appeals court will ultimately have to address the questions it outlined in Friday's order:

  • Lenovo can avert the continued enforcement of Nokia's injunction by posting security to the amount of approximately $5 million, affording the computer maker the opportunity to further litigate this case. But there is a potential risk of any of the four other Nokia v. Lenovo cases forcing the latter into a settlement. Nokia lost its first case (of six) in Mannheim, now won in Munich, and has four more cases pending, with decisions expected in the coming months.

  • Daimler is seeking an enforcement stay of both Conversant's and Nokia's Munich injunctions. Presumably, the two patent trolls (Nokia is one with respect to Daimler as it never made cars and isn't even in the user equipment business anymore) will soon enforce their injunctions against Daimler. The car maker will then depend on the Munich court acting about as swiftly as it did in the Lenovo case. If those cases can be stayed on other grounds (such as validity), FRAND won't be reached, but at some point it probably will be--unless Daimler settles again, like it did with Sharp.

Nokia is now sitting on two injunctions it can't currently enforce: one against Daimler that it won in Mannheim in August but with respect to which the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court is weighing a motion for an enforcement stay, and the Munich injunction against Lenovo.

Nvidia intervened in support of Lenovo, and one of Lenovo's defenses is that Nokia owes Nvidia an exhaustive component-level SEP license, which would cover Nvidia's customer Lenovo by extension. Component-level licensing wasn't relevant at this procedural juncture, but may become key further down the road in the Nokia-Lenovo dispute. It certainly does play a major role in the Daimler SEP cases, and on next week's Thursday the Dusseldorf Regional Court will most likely (based on what Presiding Judge Sabine Klepsch indicated at the trial in early September) refer to the Court of Justice of the EU certain questions concerning component-level access to SEP licenses. That may make it much harder for Nokia and Conversant to enforce their SEP injunctions against Daimler, depending on how the various regional appeals courts will rule on motions for enforcement stays once such fundamental questions have been submitted to the Luxembourg-based top court of the EU.

Apart from the FRAND defense, another problem badly needs to be addressed in Munich: the lower court has recently determined security amounts based on the patentee's royalty demands as opposed to the actual harm to a defendant's business. In this particular Nokia v. Lenovo case, the appeals court no longer needs to deal with that part as the injunction has been stayed for the duration of the appellate proceedings.

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Thursday, December 12, 2019

Nokia's winning streak continues: Munich Higher Regional Court surprisingly affirms anti-antisuit injunction

A few hours after Judge Lucy H. Koh of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California granted Avanci, Nokia et al.'s motion to transfer Continental's U.S. FRAND/antitrust lawsuit to the Northern District of Texas, the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) surprisingly affirmed the Munich I Regional Court's Nokia v. Continental anti-antisuit injunction. At the hearing held four weeks ago, the court actually indicated an inclination to reverse.

The reasons for the decision are unknown. Maybe Nokia's modified wording of the injunction played a role.

After the U.S. venue transfer decision, it would have been difficult at any rate to obtain in the very short term a U.S. antisuit injunction against the Nokia v. Daimler (as well as Sharp v. Daimler and Conversant v. Daimler) patent infringement cases pending in Germany. But it might still have happened just in time before Nokia will secure its first German SEP injunction. Now, with the German anti-antisuit injunction in place, a new U.S. antisuit motion would have to have a narrower scope.

All appeals have been exhausted as far as the preliminary injunction is concerned. Conti could insist on clarification of the same matter in a regular proceeding, which would take a while, but then a further appeal would be possible (either if permitted by the court of second instance, or by bringing the equivalent of a U.S. cert petition). The question of whether German courts can order anti-antisuit injunctions--while arguing that antisuit injunctions are unavailable under German law--requires clarification at the highest level.

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Friday, November 15, 2019

Munich appeals court schedules ruling on Nokia's anti-antisuit injunctions against Continental for December 12

Just a quick follow-up to yesterday's report on the appellate hearing in Munich on Nokia's anti-antisuit injunctions against Continental:

The Munich I Higher Regional Court's press office told me today that a ruling has been scheduled for December 12.

I still predict the same outcome: reversal. The court's position on the irreconcilability of an antisuit--including anti-antisuit--injunction with German law didn't appear to change at any moment during the hearing that lasted well over two hours. What I attribute the delay to is simply that this appeals court--at least when it comes to patent cases--tends to write very comprehensive opinions. Those judges won't necessarily address each and every argument they don't have to reach. But unlike their U.S. counterparts, they do cover a lot of ground beyond the shortest path to a particular outcome when fundamental questions are at stake. Earlier this year, an injunction Qualcomm had won and enforced against Apple in Germany was tossed on three independent grounds, any single one of which would have been self-sufficient.

The practical effect of this target date is that Continental can't make a third attempt at a U.S. antisuit injunction for another four weeks. Meanwhile, on December 10, the first Nokia v. Daimler trial will be held in Mannheim (there have been first hearings in three Munich cases, but the second hearings there are the actual trials and the soonest one of them will take place in February). In all those years I've seen only one bench ruling in Mannheim, so realistically, there won't be any German patent injunction in place against Daimler before sometime in January. Meanwhile, a renewed motion for an antisuit injunction in the U.S. could be resolved if a motion to shorten time succeeded--which it might if a Mannheim injunction loomed large after the December 10 trial, especially since the issues have been briefed before, even if not by Sharp and Conversant.

The Mannheim Regional Court is more likely than the one in Munich to be receptive to the argument that Nokia shouldn't be granted injunctive relief against an end-product maker (Daimler) only because of a refusal to extend an exhaustive license to upstream companies in the supply chain. I'm cautiously optimistic it may work out that way (or Nokia's Mannheim case might also fail on the merits and be rejected or stayed). In that case, a U.S. antisuit injunction won't even be needed before the first final Nokia v. Daimler judgment is entered in Munich.

Nokia may lose everything in the end. Huawei is probably going to win its private antitrust lawsuit against Nokia in Dusseldorf. The European Commission might launch formal investigations anytime. And if Nokia can't gain decisive leverage over Daimler in the short term, it will probably end up paying tens of millions of euros under Germany's "loser pays" rule as there's an army of intervening companies on Daimler's side and Nokia has to pick up the bill for all those legal entities if it loses. Statistically, most of those types of complaints don't go anywhere, so Nokia needs a lucky punch, but it faces some hurdles. I was less optimistic about Daimler and its suppliers' ability to fend off Nokia's patent assertions, but Huawei's Dusseldorf action is a game changer: even if Nokia could force Daimler to take a license (be it from Nokia or from the Avanci pool as a whole), Huawei's lawsuit would continue unabatedly.

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Thursday, November 14, 2019

Munich appeals court likely to reverse Nokia's anti-antisuit injunction against Continental: Judge Koh may have to rule on third antisuit motion soon

Before we go to today's Munich appellate hearing, let me just say that this week's Component-Level SEP Licensing conference in Brussels exceeded expectations, which applies to the quality of the presentations of those who strongly advocate component-level licensing obligations under antitrust and contract law as well as of those who are skeptical of, or even adamantly opposed to, at least one of those legal bases--everyone I invited was terrific. I'll publish the slides no later than this coming weekend. Now, the latest from Nokia v. Continental.

3 1/2 months ago I voiced a concern over what appeared to be a contradiction in the Munich I Regional Court's decision to grant Nokia an ex parte (i.e., without notice or hearing) anti-antisuit injunction against Continental, barring the automotive supplier from shielding Daimler from Nokia's numerous German patent infringement actions:

There's something odd about the anti-antisuit-injunction injunction. The order notes that antisuit injunctions of the kind that exists in the U.S. are not known in Germany. But then the court somehow threads the needle and actually does issue an antisuit injunction for the purpose of thwarting a potentially-upcoming antisuit injunction from overseas.

A month later, when the Munich court entered another such injunction (against a different Continental legal entity), I wrote "[t]he appeals court may very well find that two wrongs don't make a right."

That's precisely what's most likely to happen this evening by Central European Time (morning by Pacific Standard Time), though it won't become known until tomorrow morning local time.

To be fair, Presiding Judge Tobias Pichlmaier of the 21st civil chamber of the lower court--in a speech delivered a couple of weeks ago--as well as the late-August decision (which came after briefing and hearing, unlike the ex parte in July) were definitely more nuanced than the first, hastily-prepared decision. Still, Presiding Judge Konrad Retzer of the 6th Civil Senate of the Oberlandesgericht Muenchen (Munich Higher Regional Court) started today's appellate hearing with a summary of the factual and legal issues that included two grounds of reversal:

  1. A preliminary injunction might not be warranted as no Continental antisuit motion against Nokia is currently pending in the United States. But Nokia's lead counsel, Arnold Ruess's Cordula Schumacher, accurately pointed out that Judge Lucy H. Koh of the United States District Court for the Northern District of California had not resolved the issue on a definitive basis: Continental could refile. I would file under lawyer's hyperbole that she said Judge Koh had twice "invited" Continental to refile. Once: yes. Twice: well, the denial of Continental's motion for an anti-anti-antisuit temporary restraining order merely noted that Continental had been told they could bring another motion for a preliminary injunction, but it's in the eye of the beholder whether that's an invitation.

  2. Judge Retzer appeared to be unconvinced by the attempt to distinguish the German anti-antisuit injunction from a U.S. antisuit injunction only because of a narrower scope (relating to a motion rather than an entire litigation). While he credited the lower court for its diligent analysis of some other aspects of the matter, he appeared to view this part as reversible error. Also, being the incarnation of equanimity, he did not appear receptive to an equality-of-arms argument (U.S. court can issue antisuit injunctions, so--Nokia said--German courts should provide a countermeasure). Neither did Nokia's self-defense argument get much traction: Judge Retzer explained that self-defense is when a court can't help you before it's too late, and not when you can still go to or defend yourself in court. The analogy he used was somewhat similar to Second Amendment activists' "when seconds count but the cops are minutes away" argument.

    Recent anti-antisuit decisions in Paris and London didn't bear any non-negligible weight with the German appeals court either as they didn't (because they couldn't) address the questions to be resolved under German law.

The court declared its intent to reach a decision today, but it would be late, so Judge Retzer asked parties, counsel, and the general public (like me) to go home and call his chambers tomorrow morning.

The decision will be final as preliminary-injunction rulings cannot be appealed to the Federal Court of Justice.

Affirmance of Nokia's anti-antisuit injunction would be a major surprise. Also, while the presiding judge's initial outline also mentioned the intermediary or complicit liability of Continental AG with its indirect U.S. subsidiary Continental Automotive Systems as a potentially outcome-determinative issue with respect to one of the two injunctions, that question wasn't discussed in the hearing--presumably because it won't have to be reached.

Nokia voluntarily joined two U.S. standard-setting organizations--ATIS and TIA--and made U.S. FRAND declarations. In doing so, Nokia submitted to U.S. in personam and in rem jurisdiction, which entails, ínter alia, the possibility of antisuit injunctions. Continental couldn't have enforced its rights as a third-party beneficiary in any other jurisdiction than the U.S., where the automotive supplier has significant business activity in the Wolverine State as well as the Golden State. Assuming that Nokia's anti-antisuit injunction (which was in any event a brilliant tactical move and definitely had an impact, though probably a short-lived one) gets lifted, Continental is likely to refile in the U.S.--where the standard for an antisuit injunction is fairly high and may not be met in this case.

In a related development, Judge Koh canceled the hearing on the Avanci-Nokia venue transfer motion, which she often does when the parties' briefs constitute a sufficient basis for adjudication. But there may be a hearing--in a week from today--on the defendants' joint motion to dismiss.

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Friday, October 4, 2019

Continental tries again to add Sharp to Avanci FRAND/antitrust case in California -- Munich court affirms original anti-antisuit decision

I have three procedural updates relating to the Avanci v. Daimler/Continental v. Avanci automotive patent wars:

  1. On Wednesday (October 2), the Munich I Regional Court held a hearing and, hours later, affirmed its original anti-antisuit-injunction injunction (AAII) against Michigan-based Continental Automotive Systems. That is no surprise; in fact, anything else would have been a huge surprise, given that the same court recently granted an additional AAII--after briefing and a hearing, unlike in the first case--against Continental AG, the German group parent. The case against the German entity involved an additional hurdle for Nokia to overcome (complicit or intermediary liability), so given that Nokia prevailed even on that one, it was to be expected that the court wasn't going to lift its original AAII.

  2. The second AAII was appealed to the Munich Higher Regional Court, which has scheduled the appellate hearing for Halloween. Considering that the first AAII involves only a subset of the issues in the other case, and knowing the appeals court's efficiency-oriented case management, it appears fairly probable that both AAIIs will be addressed on Halloween.

    I believe reversal is about three times as likely as affirmance. The appeals court will probably be far more receptive than the lower court to certain fundamental concerns. However, Nokia may hope that even the appeals court has a strong desire to prevent U.S. antisuit injunctions from interfering with German cases. In this case, the appeals court might even adopt a test similar to the one used in the U.S. for antisuit injunctions. If the appeals court doesn't rule out AAIIs categorically, then the chronology of events favors Nokia in this particular case (its German infringement cases were filed way earlier than Continental's U.S. FRAND complaint, and the fact that Nokia didn't immediately seek injunctive relief--but did provide a Huawei v. ZTE FRAND analysis that is relevant only when a SEP holder moves for an injunction--doesn't have a bearing on when the case per se was filed; also Continental's U.S. antisuit motion relates to any pursuit of infringement litigation against Continental customer Daimler in Germany, regardless of remedies sought).

  3. Continental may refile its U.S. antisuit motion. It had withdrawn it in part further to the Munich AAIIs. What played a role in Judge Lucy H. Koh's decision to deny the motion without prejudice was confusion about whether Continental meant to enjoin Sharp, another contributor to the Avanci patent pool. While Sharp also sued Daimler a while ago (the first complaint was filed in mid-April), Continental brought its amended complaint adding Sharp only in late July--and Sharp argued in the defendants' joint motion to dismiss that Sharp's Japanese group parent hadn't been properly served.

    Yesterday Continental's lawyers filed two declarations of service on Sharp Japan, which constitute another set of attempts to serve Sharp Japan through U.S. entities (as opposed to cross-border service of process under the Hague Convention). In one of those cases, Sharp's lawyers served a Sharp entity in New Jersey, and in the other case, they served on a Sharp Electronic Corporation office in Los Angeles. We'll see whether Sharp is now satisfied or still complaints about improper service. The motion-to-dismiss hearing will be held on November 21 (though Judge Koh might just take the matter under advisement, as she frequently does in such situations).

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Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Anatomy of a patent case gone awry: appeals court's order to stay enforcement of Munich fake injunction published

This is a long-overdue follow-up to a post of two months back on an order by the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) granting a motion by Apple to stay the enforcement of Qualcomm's illegitimate (for multiple reasons) Germany-wide injunction over EP2724461 on a "low-voltage power-efficient envelope tracker"--a patent that an opposition panel of the European Patent Office revoked last month because it shouldn't have been granted in the first place, not even in a narrower form (Qualcomm can and likely will appeal that decision). And Judge Lucy H. Koh's landmark FTC v. Qualcomm antitrust ruling came down that same week.

Of all the cases I've watched since I started this blog nearly a decade ago, what went wrong in this Munich case makes it the worst non-standard-essential patent case by a wide margin, just like the district court's Oracle v. Google rulings were the worst in any software copyright case and the Mannheim Regional Court, in 2012, set a negative example for how to handle a standard-essential patent (SEP) case when it totally failed to recognize Motorola Mobility's blatant antitrust violation by seeking to enforce SEPs after initially making bad-faith out-of-this-world royalty demands (a royalty on computers that was effectively more than a 100% royalty rate since Microsoft would have had to pay Motorola more than it typically earned per copy of Windows sold to an OEM). Apart from that, I've certainly seen--and keep seeing--very bad stuff coming out of the Eastern District of Texas on various occasions, but those weren't cases I followed closely.

The regional government of the state of Bavaria published the December 2018 fake injunction ruling, but I still haven't been able to find a public redacted version of the appeals court's order that tears the fake injunction into pieces, so I'm going to publish it here and now (this post continues below the document):

19-04-09 OLG München Ausset... by on Scribd

There's a host of reasons any single one one of which would have been sufficient for the appeals court to conclude that Apple was more likely than not to get the lower court's ruling overturned at the end of the appellate procedings (which were cut short by the Apple-Qualcomm settlement). The likelihood of success of an appeal is also extremely key to obtaining a stay in the U.S., but even more so in Germany, where irreparable harm is just a requirement and given less weight. When Apple brought its motion in December (one day after the lower court's ruling), there would have been a stronger irreparable-harm argument than after a workaround involving Qualcomm's baseband chipsets became known, but again, what mattered here was just the likelihood of success of the appeal.

Apple requested not only a stay for the duration of the appellate proceedings (which was granted) but also a stay for the period during which the appeals court considered the motion for a stay. The latter was denied. The order explains that such a short-term stay is granted only under the most egregious of circumstances, and the unavailability of products due to the enforcement of a patent injunction is insufficient to justify such a short-term stay in its own right.

The order does not make reference to antitrust or invalidity arguments. I suspect that Apple did pursue its antitrust defense (which the appeals court didn't have to reach, however, after granting the stay on an infringement-related basis), while it is possible that the invalidity defense was not stressed in the motion for a stay. At the time the lower court handed down the injunction, the EPO's preliminary opinion was that the patent was valid, though the preliminary opinion did mention that certain issues would have to be discussed (and indeed, the patent got invalidated in May).

As the injunction had been granted on an agnostic basis (without an actual infringement having been ascertained), the appeals court's order to stay enforcement does not--because it does not have to--provide clarity as to whether or not there was an infringement. The stay was ordered because the appeals court concluded that the original reasoning of the Landgericht München I (Munich I Regional Court) could not stand, and in that situation the patent holder no longer has a legitimate interest in enforcement regardless of whether (such as on remand) an infringement might be identified later on. In other words, there was no right-for-the-wrong reasons analysis. But it's highly unlikely at any rate that there was an infringement, given that the United States International Trade Commission (first its most experienced Administrative Law Judge and then the Commission, which is the six-member decision-making body at the top of the U.S. trade agency) and the United States District Court for the Southern District of California (on summary judgment, which is relatively unusual on the factual aspects of an infringement) had all the evidence and testimony before them and agreed with Apple's primary non-infringement argument.

The standard of review for the different parts of the lower court's decision to deem Apple's non-infringement defense insufficiently substantiated (which is why it allowed Qualcomm to prevail even without actual proof of infringement) is either the equivalent of "clear error" or "abuse of discretion" under U.S. law--and since the appeals court adjudicated a motion for a stay as opposed to a full-blown appeal, the hurdle for Apple was to show clear error or an abuse of discretion in such a convincing way that the appeals court was enabled to reach such conclusion on a basis comparable to a summary judgment.

The combination of the standard of review and the limited scope of the analysis is the reason why some of Apple's attack vectors didn't succeed. They might have succeeded under the framework of full-blown appellate proceedings, but not at this stage.

While I can understand that the appeals court afforded the lower court some deference, there is one argument that Apple made in its motion that really should have succeeded even under the given circumstances. The lower court should not have condoned Qualcomm's German lawyers' refusal to submit to the protective order that the same firm had negotiated with Qorvo, the maker of the accused envelope-tracker chip, in the Middle District of North Carolina. The appeals court cites to an unpublished ruling it made in an earlier case, and apparently the Munich Higher Regional Court is uncomfortable with the implications of a plaintiff's lawyers being precluded from discussing a piece of evidence (here, the chipset schematics obtained through a U.S. discovery proceeding for the stated purpose of using them--though it never happened due to Qualcomm's about-face--in the Munich litigation) with their clients' engineers. There wouldn't have been a contempt-style sanction if Qualcomm had refused to do so, but the lower court could and in my view should have drawn an adverse inference.

Between the lines of the related passages the Munich appeals court appears to be concerned about U.S. discovery rules and the related opportunities for access to documents, but also the restrictions that are imposed by protective orders, playing too big a role in German patent infringement proceedings. What I find disappointing is that the appeals court would even have that concern in a situation in which the relevant party (here, Qualcomm) itself initiated a U.S. discovery proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 for the specific purpose of presenting the material so obtained in Munich, and negotiated a protective order there, but then deems it opportune to keep such critical evidence out of the German case by way of the German lawyers declining to enter into the protective order. This is a matter of legal culture, of course, and I could name a number of federal judges in the U.S. (outside the Eastern District of Texas, obviously) of whom I'm sure they would never ever tolerate such extreme and obvious gamesmanship. Again, the appeals court might have decided differently at the end, but my reading of the passage relating to Qualcomm's about-face (regarding the presentation of the chipset schematics) is that there was, at a minimum, a rather strong tendency on the appeals court's part to accept Qualcomm's conduct.

Nevertheless, the outcome was the right one: the injunction got lifted. The key to this result was that the appeals court concluded Apple's initial defense (we're basically talking about the answer to the complaint) was good enough that Qualcomm would have had to do more to prove an infringement. The appeals court identified two errors on the lower court's part in this regard:

  • The court-appointed expert, the narrow scope of whose engagement was just a kind of plausibility check, had opined in the November 2018 trial that an alternative solution (without an "offset," which was the claim limitation at the heart of Apple's primary non-infringement contention) would be less efficient than the method covered by the patent. But inferior or suboptimal efficiency is separate from whether Apple met its burden of showing that an "offset" wasn't necessarily required. The lower court, however, erroneously concluded from the expert's opinion on inferiority that Apple had failed to show that the desired effect could possibly be achieved in the absence of an "offset."

  • Qualcomm's infringement theory, based on an inherently unreliable teardown report, involved the presence of a digital-analog converter (DAC). While Apple conceded that there was one around, its lawyers also stressed that it was not used in the mode of operation relevant to the alleged infringement. The appeals court has thankfully corrected the lower court's plaintiff-friendly error that consisted in a misreading and misapplication of the Rangierkatze (Shunting Trolley) ruling by the Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice; the highest court in Germany for the substantive aspects of patent infringement and patent validity cases). In September 2018 I discussed Shunting Trolley in connection with another Munich Qualcomm v. Apple infringement case.

    In 2016, Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann (for whom this envelope tracker case here is really an outlier!) gave a great presentation (PDF) at a Federal Patent Court conference on predicting and applying the guidance provided by the Federal Court of Justice.In that one he discussed the difficulties involved, including threshold questions where the top court agreed with a defendant in one case and with a plaintiff in a structurally similar case. No doubt about those troublesome issues--but when it comes to Shunting Trolley, I really think it's a pretty straightforward one to understand to apply:

    In the narrowest sense, Shunting Trolley said that a manual containing a recommended mode of operation cannot cure an infringement that occurs regardless, be it by a user choosing a different mode, by environmental conditions, or even happenstance. The guidance resulting from that narrow issue is admittedly a bit broader. But even the German equivalent of a SCOTUS syllabus here still makes it clear that an infringement requires each claim limitation to be practiced. So whenever a patentee or a court suggests (as Qualcomm did in a different Apple case involving the Spotlight search) that Shunting Trolley provides a substitute for the infringement of each and every claim limitation, I would like to ask them: "Which part of 'each' don't you understand?"

    In the envelope-tracker case (unlike the Spotlight case), the issue was not the "each" but the question of whether a user could modify the product as to render it infringing. The Munich Higher Regional Court convincingly explains that Shunting Trolley does not have scope for an infringement in that Qualcomm v. Apple case, where the DAC would only come into play in the relevant mode of operation if an iPhone user modified the firmware (program code) executed by Intel's baseband chip, which then controls the Qorvo envelope-tracker chip in a certain way. Unlike the "each" question, this isn't a binary one. However, Shunting Trolley was about the manual operation of a brake, or even totally automatic events, and, therefore, lightyears away from reverse engineering and tampering with the firmware of a baseband chip (which presumably consists of millions of lines of code, by the way).

Against the background of those errors, the appeals court found that Apple's non-infringement argument was sufficiently substantiated; that Apple's request to reopen the proceedings should have been granted; and that the lower court should have allowed Mike Kay, the chief designer of the accused Qorvo chip (who waited outside the courtroom for 12 hours, in vain and possibly even in pain), to testify.

I submitted information on this extreme case of wrongful enforcement of a Germany-wide patent injunction to the government officials working on what may be an injunction-centric German patent reform bill, and I was positively surprised that they acknowledged my unsolicited input (I was not among the recipients of a related questionnaire) with a rather thoughtful answer.

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Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Prior to settlement, Apple got Qualcomm's German fake patent injunction lifted: appeals court deemed it likely flawed

Days before the sudden settlement between Apple and Qualcomm, a German appeals court had preliminarily annulled the latter's most significant courtroom victory over the former, as I found out today. After months of briefing and in-depth analysis, the Oberlandesgericht München (Munich Higher Regional Court) granted a motion by Apple to stay the enforcement of a Germany-wide patent injunction Qualcomm had obtained from the Landgericht München I (Munich Regional Court). Apple had worked around that injunction anyway, and its effects were as minimal as they were short-lived. But the implications for patent enforcement in Germany--a sizable market in which injunctions have so far (change may be coming soon) been granted as a near-automatic legal remedy.

Blogs are opinion platforms, and my outspokenness and willingness to make sometimes daring predictions position me as a particularly opinionated blogger on patent matters. In fact, patent professionals sometimes share my posts on LinkedIn saying that they disagree with my views but find useful information here--which is perfectly fine, and it would be a surprise if a former anti-software-patent campaigner's positions were perfectly congruent with those of people whose job it is to prosecute or enforce patents.

Nevertheless, I try hard to disagree respectfully when I disagree, and judges deserve particular respect for all intents and purposes. So only under the most egregious of circumstances would I refer to a decision as a "fake injunction," but I carefully chose that term for the injunction the Landgericht München I (Munich Regional Court) had granted to Qualcomm against Apple on December 20, 2018 on an agnostic basis, creating what I called a "defendant's dilemma": give up your secrets by letting a competitor's engineers learn about the inner workings of a chipset--or lose your case.

At first I just called it an "agnostic" injunction because the court had made clear (not only at the oral announcement of the ruling but also in a written press release) that the question of whether or not a Qorvo enveloper tracker chip in the iPhone 7, the iPhone 8 and the iPHone X actually infringed Qualcomm's patent-in-suit. The decision was based on the court's determination that Qualcomm's infringement assertion, though based on an inherently unreliable (as the court-appointed expert acknowledged) teardown report, was deemed more substantiated than Apple's denial. Apple had brought along the Qorvo engineer who designed the chip. Heroically, but in vain, Mr. Mike Kay waited on a hard wooden seat outside the courtroom for about 12 hours.

In early February, after a summary judgment ruling by a U.S. district judge here in San Diego (Judge Dana M. Sabraw) agreed with Apple's primary non-infringement contention (after looking at evidence and hearing testimony the Munich court never got to, and consistently with what the ITC found last year), I replaced "agnostic" with "counterfactual" or simply "fake." I did so despite truly (and still) considering Presiding Judge Dr. Matthias Zigann a leading German patent judge. And I harshly criticized, with words like "worse than the worst troll," Qualcomm (a great mobile tech innovator) and Quinn Emanuel's Dr. Marcus Grosch (a phenomenal patent litigator) for enforcing a fake injunction, which I considered unethical. Not only did Qualcomm enforce that injunction but they also obtained another one over allegedly deceptive advertising because Apple assured customers they'd still find the iPhone 7 and the iPhone 8 everywhere. That one also got lifted, but by the lower court itself (and a different panel of judges; not Judge Dr. Zigann's patent-specialized panel).

Now, after almost four months, there's justice. Apple's lead counsel in this action, Hoyng Rokh Monegier's Klaus Haft, who is regarded as one of Germany's best patent litigators, brought a motion back in December asking the appeals court, the Munich Higher Regional Court, to stay the enforcement of Qualcomm's injunction pending the appeal. That appeal won't be resolved anymore after yesterday's global settlement. But I've been able to receive official confirmation from a spokeswoman (an appellate judge in her main capacity) for the Munich Higher Regional Court that Mr. Haft's motion had been granted because Presiding Judge Konrad Retzer's panel of three appellate judges determined (on a preliminary basis since a final appellate opinion would require full-blown appellate proceedings) that the lower court had erred in three ways:

  • The lower court erroneously rejected Apple's infringement defense as insufficiently substantiated.

  • The lower court erroneously dismissed Apple's infringement defense (I would compare this to a successful motion to dismiss in a U.S. case, or a summary judgment to that effect).

  • The lower court erroneously deemed some of Apple's contentions to have been brought out of time. (On that basis, as I recall, the Munich I Regional Court denied Apple's motion to reopen the record, which would have allowed it to discuss new evidency and hear testimony on an additional trial day.)

Due to a workaround, the injunction had no more impact on consumers anyway--but other injunctions on a smilar "damned if you do, damned if you don't" basis could have harmed consumers and innovation. Sanity has been restored. That's excellent news.

There still are some patent-related issues with respect to which we need sanity. One of them is the question of global FRAND rate determinations by UK courts.

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