The role of injunctions in FRAND proceedings – a UK perspective

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS © ETSI All rights reserved ETSI Seminar 2012.
Advertisements

Standard Essential Patents in Infringement Litigations - Orange-Book-Approach and latest developments Conference on Information Technology, Innovation.
What You Need to Know About Biosimilars: Products, Recent Deals, IP Issues and Licensing August 2, 2012 Madison C. Jellins 1.
1 S.Tronchon Legal Considerations when drafting a standard.
C-342/10 Commission v. Finland Failure of a Member State to fulfil obligations – Free movement of capital – Article 63 TFEU – EEA Agreement – Article 40.
Seeking, and enforcing, an injunction by a patent-holder as an antitrust abuse ? The emerging picture in the EU Alison Jones University of Toronto Patent.
Mediation and the Trial Civil Procedure Reforms practice direction Law Society of the Northern Territory Steve Walsh QC Alistair Wyvill SC.
6228v2 Grounds for refusing recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards Justin Williams.
1 Is there a conflict between competition law and intellectual property rights? Edward Whitehorn Head, Competition Affairs Branch Carrie Tang Assistant.
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP Andrew Thomases: Consequences of RAND Violations | 1 Consequences of RAND Violations Andrew Thomases.
European Ombudsman Access to environmental information Task Force on Access to Information Geneva, 4 December 2014.
Dr. Thomas W. Reimann IP Practice in Japan AIPLA Midwinter Meeting Las Vegas, January 2012 Latest Patent Development in the European Union.
Case COMP/ – ENI (Abuse of Dominant Position) International Competition Law Dushanka Dovichinska 24 Nov 2010.
Revenue Enforcement Legal Strategies Lawrence K. Nodine Ballard Spahr December 16, 2009.
© 2013 Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton LLP. All rights reserved. Throughout this presentation, “Cleary Gottlieb” and the “firm” refer to Cleary Gottlieb.
Implementation of EU Electronic Communication Directives.
The ECJ's Huawei/ZTE judgment (C-170/13) Thomas Kramler DG Competition, European Commission (The views expressed are not necessarily those of the European.
1 FRAND COMMITMENTS AND EU COMPETITION LAW Thomas Kramler European Commission, DG Competition (The views expressed are not necessarily those of the European.
© OECD A joint initiative of the OECD and the European Union, principally financed by the EU Private sector interests in legal protection Tomaž Vesel First.
Two Case Studies involving intra-EU BITs Christer Söderlund, Vinge, Stockholm, Sweden London, 4 December 2008 EUROPEAN LAW AND INVESTMENT TREATIES: EXPLORING.
Law in the Global Marketplace: Intellectual Property and Related Issues Hosted by: FRAND in Europe: Huawei vs ZTE decision.
ABA China Inside and Out September , Beijing The interface between competition law and intellectual property Nicholas Banasevic, DG Competition,
Session 30: FRAND Licensing Disputes NJA Advanced Course on Commercial Matters Bhopal, India January 23, 2016 Richard Tan, Chartered Arbitrator, Singapore.
The East African Court of Justice. Discussion What is the East African Court of Justice? Is it a human rights court? Has it considered human rights cases?
Recent Japanese Cases Regarding Standard Essential Patents and FRAND Licensing Declaration AIPLA-IPHC Meeting April 11, 2013 Shinji ODA Judge, Intellectual.
Patent Pools – Issues of Dominance and Royalty Setting Marleen Van Kerckhove ABA Brown Bag Presentation March 20 th, 2007.
Patent Remedies in Global Perspective Thomas F. Cotter Briggs and Morgan Professor of Law University of Minnesota Law School February.
Standards and competition policy EU-China Workshop on Application of Anti-monopoly Law in Intellectual Property Area Changsha, 11. – 12. March 2010 Peter.
Paris Lyon Litigating standard essential patents: Huawei v. ZTE The ECJ ruling Young Eplaw Conference – 18 April Brussels Amandine Métier.
EU-China Workshop on the Chinese Patent Law 24/25 September 2008 Topic IV: Legal Consequences of Invalidity of a Patent Prof. Dr. Christian Osterrieth.
The Community Trade Mark (CTM) System. The Legal Framework Council Regulation (EC) No 40/94 of 20 December 1993 on the Community trade mark Council Regulation.
THE ROLE OF COURTS AND TRIBUNALS IN ENHANCING ACCESS TO JUSTICE IN ENVIRONMENTAL LITIGATION SEVENTH ANNUAL COLLOQUIUM OF THE IUCN ACADEMY OF ENVIRONMENTAL.
Compulsory Licence Defence in Patent Infringement Proceedings presented at the 2009 International Conference on Judicial Protection of IPR 11 September.
Adverse Inferences From the Failure to Call Witnesses.
Article 4 [Obligations of Applicant] 4.1. As a sole and exclusive owner of the Application, Applicant warrants that.
Latonia Gordon Microsoft NJTIP 10 th Anniversary Symposium Chicago, March 7-8, 2013 The views expressed herein are solely those of the author; they should.
Stephen S. Korniczky Anti-Suit Injunctions – Leveling the Playing Field When Seeking a FRAND License to Standard-Essential.
ICC roundtable Istanbul, 30 April 2010 Procedural Fairness: Update on Recent OECD Activities Antonio Capobianco OECD Competition Division
ANTISUIT INJUNCTIONS AND ARBITRATION Gazprom, Case C-536/13 ECLI:EU:C:2015:316 AG: ECLI:EU:C:2014:2414.
Cross-border merger and final losses (C-123/11 A Oy, KHO 2013:155)
Dialogue on Competition Policy and Intellectual Property *
Europe’s ‘Highly Competitive Social Market’ Economy
Legal Considerations ETSI Seminar © ETSI All rights reserved.
Competition Law and Cellphone Patents
Update on SDO IPR Policy Debates
European Union Law Week 10.
EU Sanctions on Individuals
Consequences of the Huawei decision for licensing practices
EU Competition Rules for Technology Transfer Agreements
International IP Roundtable UNLV, 8 April Seizure of Goods in Transit
Dispute Resolution Between ICT Service Providers in Saudi Arabia
International Conference on Judicial Protection of IPR
IP Licensing and Competition Policy: Guidelines and the Cases in Japan
Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments and arbitral awards in Russia Roman Zaitsev, PhD, Partner 05/09/2018.
SPCs and the unitary patent package
International Conference on Judicial Protection of IPR
Voluntary Codes and Standards
Legal English and the Common Law AY 2017/2018
Facts which need not be proved by evidence
National remedies and national actions
Dr Christopher Stothers Developments in the UK case law
Giles S. Rich Inn of Court September 26, 2018
Huawei – broader context and implications
Standards and Patents in the CEN and CENELEC system
Professor, dr.jur., PhD Jens Schovsbo
“Use-by-periods and proportionality in German law” Injunctions and Flexibility in Patent Law – Civil Law and Common Law Perspectives Ludwig Maximilian.
“The View From the Corner of U.S. Competition Law and Patents”
Injunctions in SEP cases: current practice and innovative models
Update on IP and Antitrust
LECTURE No 6 - THE EUROPEAN UNION’s JUDICIAL SYSTEM I (courts)
Presentation transcript:

The role of injunctions in FRAND proceedings – a UK perspective David Kitchin Justice of the UK Supreme Court

Recent UK jurisprudence Unwired Planet v Hauwei [2018] EWCA Civ 2344 Hauwei v Conversant [2019] EWCA Civ 38 TQ Delta v ZyXEL [2019] EWHC 745 (Pat)

Key features of the FRAND framework Telecommunications standards The FRAND undertaking to: “grant irrevocable licences on fair, reasonable and non-discriminatory terms” Hold-up Hold-out

The tools available to the court Injunction Competition law – do proceedings infringe Article 102 TFEU because they amount to an abuse of a dominant position?

Unwired Planet v Huawei – the trials UP alleged infringement of five SEPs Huawei denied infringement: contended SEPs were not essential and invalid, and claim infringed Art 102 TFEU Issues decided in a series of trials Held: two SEPS valid and infringed Judge settled terms of a global FRAND licence; no abuse by UP

Principal arguments on appeal Ground 1: The imposition of a global licence was wrong in principle Ground 2: Licence was discriminatory - Huawei ought to have been offered the rates agreed with Samsung Ground 3: UP’s conduct infringed Art 102 TFEU in light of decision in Case C-170/13 Huawei v ZTE

Global licensing – decision of Birss J Only one set of terms could be FRAND UP’s portfolio was much smaller than those of Huawei, Samsung and Ericsson but this did not justify a difference in treatment UP’s portfolio covered a substantial part of the world UP’s portfolio was still large enough to make it impractical to litigate over every patent Willing licensor and licensee would agree a global licence Since Huawei had refused to take a global licence on FRAND terms, an injunction would be granted (subject to the competition law defences and any appeal)

Global licensing - Huawei’s arguments in the Court of Appeal These were UK proceedings in respect of UK SEPs only Other countries have adopted different approaches Judge failed to respect the principal of comity Judge presumed infringement of foreign SEPs Decision was contrary to public policy and disproportionate Decision creates significant practical problems There is no single set of FRAND terms

Global licensing - decision of the Court of Appeal SEPs are national but the FRAND undertaking is global A willing licensor and a willing licensee may negotiate a global licence The concept of a global licence does not offend any principle of comity, nor is it contrary to public policy A global licence may be FRAND There is no single set of FRAND terms; the obligation on the SEP owner is to offer a FRAND licence An implementer who refuses to take a global FRAND licence will face an injunction, but only in respect of the national SEPs in issue

Unlawful discrimination? What does the “non-discriminatory” limb of FRAND require? “Hard edged” and “general” non-discrimination Most-favoured licensee? Or: Must offer a fair and reasonable licence to every implementer? Samsung had been granted a licence with a very low royalty rate which did not reflect the value of the portfolio

General non-discrimination – the Court of Appeal The objective is not to level down, but to ensure all implementers can secure a licence on terms which reflect the true value of the portfolio Differential pricing is not of itself objectionable, unless it causes competitive harm No purpose in constraining SEP owner to offer licences at less than a fair rate

Had UP abused a dominant position? Was UP in a dominant position? What was the market? UP had 100% of the market for licences of its SEPs FRAND undertaking and the possibility of hold-out Had UP abused its dominant position? Failure to make a FRAND offer before commencement of proceedings? Depended on the proper interpretation of the decision of the CJEU in Huawei v ZTE

The key facts relevant to abuse allegation 2009: Huawei took licence under Ericsson patents, including the SEPs January 2013: UP acquired an Ericsson portfolio, including the SEPs June to November 2013: Discussions between UP and Huawei By end of 2013: Huawei knew or ought to have known it needed a licence under the SEPs March 2014: UP issued proceedings in UK and Germany April 2014: UP made its first licensing offer

Huawei v ZTE (1) [60]   … the proprietor of an SEP which considers that that SEP is the subject of an infringement cannot, without infringing Article 102 TFEU, bring an action for a prohibitory injunction or for the recall of products against the alleged infringer without notice or prior consultation with the alleged infringer, even if the SEP has already been used by the alleged infringer. (Emphasis added)

Huawei v ZTE (2) [71] … the proprietor of an SEP … does not abuse its dominant position … by bringing an action for infringement seeking an injunction prohibiting the infringement of its patent … as long as: –        prior to bringing that action, the proprietor has, first, alerted the alleged infringer of the infringement complained about by designating that patent and specifying the way in which it has been infringed, and, secondly, after the alleged infringer has expressed its willingness to conclude a licensing agreement on FRAND terms, presented to that infringer a specific, written offer for a licence on such terms, specifying, in particular, the royalty and the way in which it is to be calculated, and –        where the alleged infringer continues to use the patent in question, the alleged infringer has not diligently responded to that offer, in accordance with recognised commercial practices in the field and in good faith, this being a matter which must be established on the basis of objective factors and which implies, in particular, that there are no delaying tactics. (Emphasis added)

Are these mandatory conditions? The Court of Appeal said “no”: Account must be taken of all the circumstances The use of permissive language (cf para 60) Consonance with the purpose of FRAND regime Procedural rules relating to injunctions vary from state to state Consistent with decisions in other Member States: Pioneer v Acer (2016) St Lawrence v Vodafone (2016) Sisvel v Haier (2017)

TQ Delta v ZyXEL SEP found valid and infringed Inconsistent behaviour by implementer Refusal to commit to FRAND terms settled by court – whether global or national SEP would expire in three months Injunction granted

Huawei v Conversant Forum shopping? Promotion of disputes as to the appropriate forum? Is the claim justiciable? Forum non conveniens: How is the dispute to be characterised? Can the claim be tried more suitably elsewhere?