Are New Patent Marking Lawsuits Patent Trolling... Or Anti-Patent Trolling?
from the floodgates-now-open dept
Earlier this year, we had a long blog post about the sudden rush in patent marking lawsuits. You can read all the details there, but the quickish summary is that patent law says that you cannot falsely claim patent protection on something -- and goods that have expired patents, but still claim patent protection, fall into that category of "false marking." The law allows people to sue for $500 in cases of false marking, but a court ruling last December shook things up quite a bit, by saying that the $500 applied per product rather than (as many had assumed for years) per product line. That meant that in the famous case of Solo's plastic cup lids found on coffee cups around the world, suddenly it faced the potential not of a $500 liability but potentially a $10 trillion liability. Now, no court in the world would grant such an award, but it certainly increased the potential liability and caused lots of companies to start scrambling to get rid of any mention of expired patents on their products. And... at the same time, it led to a bunch of patent lawyers rushing around their local stores looking for just about any consumer product marked with an expired patent. Approximately 350 such lawsuits have been filed since the December ruling.Now it appears another shoe has dropped. One of the reasons why these patent lawyers (and a few others) went around searching for products is that the law is pretty clear that:
"Any person may sue for the penalty, in which event one-half shall go to the person suing and the other to the use of the United States."Yes. Basically, the law is setup such that, in the service of the US government, which doesn't want falsely marked goods, anyone who discovers such a false marking can so, so long as they split the proceeds 50/50 with the US government. But then... a District Court in NY put a halt to that, when a guy named Raymond Stauffer sued famed clothing retailer Brooks Brothers for selling bow ties with patents that expired decades ago. The District Court tossed out the case, agreeing with Brooks Brothers that Stauffer had no standing to bring the lawsuit. This put a bunch of those 350 other lawsuits on hold to determine if "any person" really meant "any person."
Well, open the floodgates, because the appeals court has said that any person does, in fact, mean any person, and thus Stauffer has standing to bring the lawsuit:
That said, it seems clear that the sudden goldrush mentality of patent attorneys suing all sorts of companies for false marking is a pure moneygrab, where there's little evidence of any real harm at times. It just seems like a way to tie up the courts in hopes of a golden lottery ticket (shared with the feds). That doesn't seem efficient or useful -- and actually has some unfortunate similarities to basic patent trolling.
Perhaps this sorts itself out, however. With the rush of cases, companies are scrambling to review all their product packaging and to remove expired patent markings as quickly as possible. After that initial scramble, the number of these lawsuits should drop pretty quickly. On top of that, the current version of the patent reform bill (which seems to get worse every time we hear about -- but may have already stalled out in Congress again) also would try to cut back on such false marking lawsuits. But, in the meantime, with this new ruling, expect a bunch more of these lawsuits to be filed.
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Filed Under: false marking, marking, patents
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What's the downside?
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Re: What's the downside?
Well, the downside is wasting court resources on issues that aren't clearly harming anyone.
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Re: What's the downside?
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Re: Re: What's the downside?
Making that illegal with a real penalty would be a real disincentive to collecting royalties where none are due. Right now the disincentive is to the asker for asking -- it's tempting just to proceed without asking and hope you don't get caught (a situation which is not desired long term -- you do want to make sure those that make the art you love can get fairly rewarded).
I really like this law in the patent system. I think it would do positive things for copyright. (But ultimately both need wholesale changes.)
Robb
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These are however just the first step in a legal process that requires numerous additional steps before a full-fledged suit can be filed and stand any reasonable chance of succeeding. As the court made it only too clear, the "anyones" have a steep uphill battle before whatever they eventually file will be deemed to be in a form suitable for a suit to proceed.
Personally, were I the attorney who filed this case I would not find much solace in the decision. My bottle of champagne would remain on ice and unopened for a long time (if ever).
BTW, as an attorney I am not supportive in any way of actions such as this since it appears to have all the hallmarks of ambulance chasing...something that the vast, vast, vast majority in my profession eschew.
California went through something like this by a few attorneys who looked upon California Business and Professions Code Section 17220 as an eacy path to riches. It came back to haunt them in ways they never imagined, including (IIRC) proceedings before the disciplinary section of the California State Bar.
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they call it “reform”
Just because they call it “reform” doesn’t mean it is. You can call a pig a cow, but it’s still a pig.
Patent reform is a fraud on America. It is patently un-American.
Please see http://truereform.piausa.org/ for a different/opposing view on patent reform.
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Really, if I have any intention of selling a product competing with a widget marked/covered with patent 0000 the first thing I do is go look at what patent 0000 really covers. It could be any portion of the item (the manufacturing process, the design, the materials in it, or a host of other things) and you never know w/o looking it up. The next thing you look at is the date, to see when it expires and when it was filed for prior art issues.
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Re: Re: What's the downside?
We've already got that, it's just that the bulk of the penalties are stacked against the accused infringer. I see no reason not to put some real risk in claiming to own something you don't.
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Re:
I know. I can accidentally cut myself with a saw and sue them for not implementing my patented safety mechanism.
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Re: Another proof of the anti-business Obama Administration
Darn shame they face potential closure as the very active (10 cases) Qui Tam and attorney pliantiffs in Ohio want $500 bucks per mis-marked suspender clip, their domain, and replacement of all suspenders marked with the expired patent number. They have 6 temp people filing off patent numbers this Labor Day weekend as the new replacement clip stock, with new patent #, is in limited supply. NIce move by the Obama small biz friendly administration and Eric Holder Attorney General to actually participate in suing these family run tax paying entrepenuers hopefully ranking in their life savings and forcing closure of their businesses.
Amazing... from Brooks Bros. Bow Ties to Holdup Suspenders the wannabee King with no clothes jumps ugly on every USA manufacturer who are inventive enough to have patented products. **Incidently every judge in every courtroom are using court reporting equipment and computer harddrives mis-marked with expired patent numbers so they should recuse themselves ... or get some common sense.
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False (expired) patent marking cases now exceed 927
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