Yesterday, a jury returned a verdict finding that Fujitsu had breached its standard-setting obligations to offer its declared ‘737 Patent (now expired) to Tellabs on reasoanble and non-discriminatory terms (RAND). Judge Holderman then issued an order to show to cause why the patent should not be held unenforceable as to Tellabs. This case presents many
Litigation
Belkin dismissed with prejudice pursuant to settlement agreement in Ericsson v. D-Link (E.D. Tex.)
Last summer, we reported on a jury verdict and post-trial rulings in favor of SEP patent holder Ericsson in its infringement suit against several manufacturers of WiFi-compliant products. As we noted, the jury awarded several million dollars for infringement of Ericsson’s 802.11-essential patents. Thereafter, several defendants took an appeal to the Federal Circuit, which is…
Judge Holderman rules on motions in limine and issues preliminary jury instructions and verdict form to shape RAND trial in Fujitsu, Ltd. v. Tellabs, Inc.
Last week, Judge Holderman issued several orders on various motions in limine filed by Fujitsu and Tellabs in advance of the jury trial of the case, which began this past Monday. The jury will decide whether Fujitsu breached its alleged obligation to offer Tellabs a license to Fujitsu’s ‘737 patent on reasonable and non-discriminatory terms…
Court dismisses “standards conspiracy” case against table-saw manufacturers (SawStop)
The Eastern District of Virginia recently dismissed SawStop’s suit against a number of table-saw and power-tool manufacturers, finding SawStop failed to sufficiently plead its antitrust and “standards conspiracy” claims.
As you may recall from our February 7, 2014 post, SawStop’s complaint alleged that the manufacturers collectively convinced Underwriters Laboratories, Inc. (“UL”) not to adopt…
Federal Circuit reverses district court order denying motion to stay pending a PTAB post-grant review
Last week the Federal Circuit reversed the decision by Judge Gilstrap of E.D. Texas to proceed with litigation, rather than stay the litigation pending the U.S. Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“PTAB”) review of the asserted patents under the Transitional Program for Covered Business Method Patents (“CBM”). This is the first time the Federal Circuit…
InterDigital Update: No FRAND breach where respondents failed to first seek a license or follow SSO procedure if license not granted (337-TA-868)
The U.S. International Trade Commission (“ITC”) recently issued the public version of ALJ Essex’s Initial Determination in Inv. No. 337-TA-868 finding that InterDigital had not violated any FRAND obligation and that ZTE and Nokia had not infringed the patents-in-suit (see our June 19, 2014 post). Although the patents were found not to be essential…
Federal Circuit stays infringement action against product retailers while case proceeds against product manufacturer
Today, in In Re Nintendo involving an infringement complaint against Nintendo and eleven retailer’s of the Nintendo DS video game device, the Federal Circuit (Newman, Rader and Hughes) granted mandamus and ordered Judge Gilstrap of E.D. Texas to (1) sever the claims against Nintendo the manufacturer from the claims against the video game…
InterDigital Update: ALJ Essex finds no FRAND violation by InterDigital
Yesterday, the ITC issued a notice regarding conclusions of law and corresponding correction showing that no FRAND violation was found in ALJ Essex’s June 13, 2014 Initial Determination that ZTE and Nokia did not infringe InterDigital’s patents alleged to be essential to 3G/4G standards (see our June 17, 2014 post). Specifically, Conclusion of Law…
InterDigital Update: ALJ Essex issues an initial determination of no violation in ITC action against ZTE, Nokia
Judge Essex issued a Notice Regarding Initial Determination in InterDigital’s ITC action against ZTE and Nokia (Inv. No. 337-TA-868) on Friday, indicating that there has been a finding of no violation with respect to any of the 3G and 4G devices at issue. The notice is sparse on details, indicating only that no violation of…
Apple does not infringe Golden Bridge’s alleged WCDMA standard essential patent (Golden Bridge v. Apple)
Yesterday a jury returned a verdict finding that Apple does not infringe Golden Bridge’s patent alleged to be essential to the WCDMA standard. The verdict thus did not reach the royalty-rate issue that was interesting for a few reasons.
Excluded FRAND Expert Testimony. As discussed in our May 30, 2014 post, Magistrate Judge…
