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Patent Reform: Judicial Developments in
Areas of Legislative Interest

John R. Thomas
Visiting Scholar
March 2, 2010
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
R41090
CRS Report for Congress
P
repared for Members and Committees of Congress

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Patent Reform: Judicial Developments in Areas of Legislative Interest

Summary
Legislative interest in the patent system has been evidenced by the introduction of reform
legislation in the 111th and predecessor Congresses. These bills would amend existing patent law
in numerous respects. None has yet been enacted.
Although the patent system has been the subject of congressional interest over the past few years,
the courts have also been active in making changes to important patent law principles. Many
changes introduced by the judiciary have concerned topics that are also the subject of
congressional consideration. In particular:
• The Supreme Court issued an important decision in 2007 concerning the availability of
injunctive relief against adjudicated patent infringers in eBay v. MercExchange.
• In 2008, the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”) reached its
ruling in In re TS Tech concerning the standards for deciding which venue is appropriate
for conducting a patent trial.
• In 2009, the Federal Circuit handed down its opinion in Lucent Technologies. v. Gateway
with respect to the assessment of damages in patent infringement cases.
• The Federal Circuit issued a decision in 2007 concerning the availability of enhanced
damages for willful patent infringers in In re Seagate Technology.
• The 2007 Supreme Court opinion in Microsoft v. AT&T addressed the scope of
extraterritorial protection afforded to U.S. patents.
• The litigation currently pending in the Supreme Court in In re Bilski concerns the issue of
patentable subject matter.
Some observers believe that several of these opinions have addressed the very concerns that had
motivated legislative reform proposals, thereby obviating or reducing the need for congressional
action. However, other commentators believe that these decisions have not fully addressed
perceived problems with principles of patent law.



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Patent Reform: Judicial Developments in Areas of Legislative Interest

Contents
Introduction ................................................................................................................................ 1
Patent Fundamentals ................................................................................................................... 2
Patent Reform Legislation........................................................................................................... 3
Judicial Reforms to Patent Doctrine ............................................................................................4
Injunctions ............................................................................................................................ 4
Venue.................................................................................................................................... 6
Assessment of Damages........................................................................................................ 9
Willful Infringement ........................................................................................................... 12
Extraterritorial Patent Protection ......................................................................................... 13
Tax Planning Methods......................................................................................................... 14
Observations ............................................................................................................................. 15
Conclusion................................................................................................................................ 17

Contacts
Author Contact Information ...................................................................................................... 18

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Patent Reform: Judicial Developments in Areas of Legislative Interest

Introduction
Legislative interest in the patent system has been evidenced by the introduction of reform
legislation in the 111th Congress.1 These bills would amend existing patent law in numerous
respects, including changes to the right of a patent owner to obtain compensatory damages,2 the
standard for judicial award of enhanced damages for willful infringement,3 the ability of patent
owners to select the court in which they will bring suit,4 and the willingness of courts to accept
appeals of orders interpreting a patent.5 Patent reform legislation introduced in earlier Congresses
would have made additional changes, including modifications to the doctrine of inequitable
conduct, that might possibly be reintroduced in the 111th Congress.6
Although the patent system has been the subject of congressional scrutiny over the past few years,
the courts have also been active in making changes to important patent law principles. Many
changes introduced by the judiciary have concerned topics that are also the subject of
congressional consideration. For example, the Supreme Court issued an important decision
concerning injunctive relief in eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C.7 at the same time legislation
before Congress would have addressed that issue.8 Some experts believe that as a result of the
eBay decision, legislative reform of the principles of injunctive relief in patent law became
unnecessary.9 Indeed, the patent reform bills placed before the 111th Congress currently do not
address this issue.
Review of pertinent judicial developments relating to selected patent law topics is timely for
several reasons. First, an awareness of recent judicial opinions may assist understanding of the
context of current legislative reform proposals. Second, some observers believe that several of
these opinions have addressed the very concerns that had motivated legislative reform proposals,
thereby obviating or reducing the need for congressional action.10 Third, a review of legislative
and judicial developments provides an instructive historical narrative and allows for a comparison
of relative institutional capabilities of these two branches of government.
This report reviews the relationship between Congress and the courts in patent reform. It begins
by offering a summary of the patent system. The report then discusses a number of topics that
have been the subject of both judicial and legislative consideration. The current state of the law is

1 In the 111th Congress, pending bills H.R. 1260, S. 515, and S. 610 are each titled “The Patent Reform Act of 2009.”
2 H.R. 1260 at § 5; S. 515 at § 4; S. 610 at § 4.
3 H.R. 1260 at § 5; S. 515 at § 4; S. 610 at § 4.
4 H.R. 1260 at § 10; S. 515 at § 8; S. 610 at § 8 (pertaining to venue).
5 H.R. 1260 at § 5; S. 515 at § 4 (pertaining to interlocutory appeals). S. 610 does not include a comparable provision.
6 For example, in the 110th Congress, section 12 of H.R. 1908 included provisions directed towards the doctrine of
inequitable conduct. H.R. 1908 passed the House on September 9, 2007, but was not enacted.
7 547 U.S. 388 (2006).
8 See CRS Report RL33429, Availability of Injunctive Relief in Patent Cases: eBay, Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., by
Brian T. Yeh (May 19, 2006).
9 See William C. Rooklidge & Alyson G. Barker, “Reform of a Fast-Moving Target: The Development of Patent Law
Since the 2004 National Academies Report,” 91 Journal of the Patent and Trademark Office Society (2009), 153 (“The
legislative effort to reform injunctions is finished, at least for the foreseeable future.”).
10See F. Scott Kieff & Kevin Rivette, “Congress—Let U.S. patent law ‘marinate’ before taking action,” Great Falls
Tribune
(March 31, 2009).
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then contrasted with legislative reform proposals now before the 111th Congress. The report
closes with observations concerning the subtle interaction between legislative, administrative, and
judicial actors within the patent system and their impact upon the U.S. innovation environment.
Patent Fundamentals
The U.S. Constitution confers upon Congress the power “To promote the Progress of ... useful
Arts, by securing for limited Times to ... Inventors the exclusive Right to their ... Discoveries....”11
In accordance with the Patent Act of 1952,12 an inventor may seek the grant of a patent by
preparing and submitting an application to the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO).
USPTO officials known as examiners then determine whether the invention disclosed in the
application merits the award of a patent.13
USPTO procedures require examiners to determine whether the invention fulfills certain
substantive standards set by the patent statute. To be patentable, an invention that constitutes a
“process, machine, manufacture, or composition of matter” may be patented.14 It must also be
novel, or different, from subject matter disclosed by an earlier patent, publication, or other state-
of-the-art knowledge.15 In addition, an invention is not patentable if “the subject matter as a
whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary
skill in the art to which said subject matter pertains.”16 This requirement of “nonobviousness”
prevents the issuance of patents claiming subject matter that a skilled artisan would have been
able to implement in view of the knowledge of the state of the art.17 The invention must also be
useful, a requirement that is satisfied if the invention is operable and provides a tangible benefit.18
In addition to these substantive requirements, the USPTO examiner will consider whether the
submitted application fully discloses and distinctly claims the invention.19 In particular, the
application must enable persons skilled in the art to make and use the invention without undue
experimentation.20 In addition, the application must disclose the “best mode,” or preferred way,
that the applicant knows to practice the invention.21
If the USPTO allows the patent to issue, its owner obtains the right to exclude others from
making, using, selling, offering to sell or importing into the United States the patented
invention.22 Those who engage in those acts without the permission of the patentee during the
term of the patent can be held liable for infringement. Adjudicated infringers may be enjoined

11 Article I, Section 8, Clause 8.
12 Pub. L. No. 82-593, 66 Stat. 792 (codified at Title 35 of the United States Code).
13 35 U.S.C. § 131 (2006).
14 35 U.S.C. § 101 (2006).
15 35 U.S.C. § 102 (2006).
16 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) (2006).
17 See KSR International Co. v. Teleflex Inc., 550 U.S. 398 (2007).
18 See In re Fischer, 421 F.3d 1365, 1371 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
19 35 U.S.C. § 112 (2006).
20 See Invitrogen Corp. v. Clontech Labs., Inc., 429 F.3d 1052, 1070-71 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
21 See High Concrete Structures, Inc. v. New Enterprise Stone and Lime Co., 377 F.3d 1379, 1382 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
22 35 U.S.C. § 271(a) (2006).
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from further infringing acts.23 The patent statute also provides for an award of damages “adequate
to compensate for the infringement, but in no event less than a reasonable royalty for the use
made of the invention by the infringer.”24
The maximum term of patent protection is ordinarily set at 20 years from the date the application
is filed.25 At the end of that period, others may employ that invention without regard to the
expired patent.
Patent rights do not enforce themselves. Patent owners who wish to compel others to respect their
rights must commence enforcement proceedings, which most commonly consist of litigation in
the federal courts. Although issued patents enjoy a presumption of validity, accused infringers
may assert that a patent is invalid or unenforceable on a number of grounds. The Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit (Federal Circuit) possesses nationwide jurisdiction over most patent
appeals from the district courts.26 The Supreme Court enjoys discretionary authority to review
cases decided by the Federal Circuit.27
Patent Reform Legislation
Since 2005, a number of bills titled “The Patent Reform Act” have been introduced before
Congress. To varying degrees, each of the bills would work substantial changes to the current
patent system. The bills have differed in the specific reforms that they have proposed. The many
proposed reforms have included a shift to a first-inventor-to-file priority system, allowance of
assignee filing, changes to the law of patent damages, introduction of post-grant opposition
proceedings, and modifications to the principle of venue as it applies to patent cases.28
None of this legislation has yet been enacted. One of the bills in the 110th Congress, H.R. 1908,
passed the House of Representatives on September 7, 2007, but did not advance in the Senate.
Three bills titled “The Patent Reform Act of 2009” remain pending in the 111th Congress. They
are H.R. 1260, introduced on March 3, 2009, by Representative Conyers; S. 515, introduced on
March 3, 2009, by Senators Hatch and Leahy; and S. 610, introduced by Senator Kyl on March
17, 2009. On April 2, 2009, the Senate Judiciary Committee voted 15-4 to bring S. 515 before the
full Senate.
Even as Congress has contemplated patent reform legislation, the courts also have been active in
issuing patent decisions. Many of these rulings relate to the same legal topics that proposed
legislation would address, and several made significant changes to existing law. As attorneys Bill
Rooklidge and Alyson Barker observe, “through a variety of important decisions, the courts have

23 35 U.S.C. § 283 (2006). See eBay Inc. v. MercExchange L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388 (2006).
24 35 U.S.C. § 284 (2006).
25 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(2) (2006). Although the patent term is based upon the filing date, the patentee obtains no
enforceable legal rights until the USPTO allows the application to issue as a granted patent. A number of Patent Act
provisions may modify the basic 20-year term, including examination delays at the USPTO and delays in obtaining
marketing approval for the patented invention from other federal agencies.
26 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1) (2006).
27 28 U.S.C. § 1254(1) (2006).
28 See CRS Report R40481, Patent Reform in the 111th Congress: Innovation Issues, by Wendy H. Schacht and John R.
Thomas.
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Patent Reform: Judicial Developments in Areas of Legislative Interest

embarked on their own patent reform.”29 This paper next reviews a common phenomenon in
patent reform: Judicial changes to legal doctrines that are the subject of pending congressional
legislation.
Judicial Reforms to Patent Doctrine
Numerous patent substantive and procedural doctrines have fallen under legislative scrutiny in
recent years. A recent, recurring trend is that the courts have contemporaneously reviewed a
number of the same principles. Among them are the availability of injunctions in patent cases,
selection of the appropriate venue for trying a patent case, the assessment of damages against
adjudicated infringers, the standards governing determinations of willful infringement,
extraterritorial patent enforcement, and the availability of patents for tax planning methods. This
report reviews each of these episodes in turn.
Injunctions
Section 283 of the Patent Act allows courts to “grant injunctions in accordance with the principles
of equity to prevent the violation of any right secured by patent, on such terms as the court deems
reasonable.”30 In practice, for much of its history the Federal Circuit routinely granted injunctions
to patent owners that prevailed in infringement litigation. Only in rare instances, when the
patented invention pertained to an important public need, would an injunction be denied.31 An
injunction prevents the adjudicated infringer from practicing the patented invention until the
patent expires.32
Some observers criticized injunction practice as encouraging speculation by entities that do not
engage in research, development, or manufacturing, but rather acquire and enforce patents against
companies with commercialized products.33 These speculators were sometimes termed “patent
trolls,” an arguably pejorative term that referred to creatures from folklore that would emerge
from under a bridge in order to waylay travelers.34 Some manufacturers were concerned that the
Federal Circuit’s injunction practice provided non-manufacturing entities with too much leverage
during patent licensing negotiations.
In view of industry concerns, the 109th Congress contemplated amending section 283 of the
Patent Act. Under a proposal included within H.R. 2795, the Patent Reform Act of 2005, courts
would have been required to “consider the fairness of the remedy in light of all the facts and the
relevant interests of the parties associated with the invention.” This legislation was not enacted.
As discussion of legislative proposals with respect to injunctions continued, the judiciary reached
a number of rulings on this topic. One of them resulted from the well-known patent litigation

29 Rooklidge & Barker, supra, at 155.
30 35 U.S.C. § 283 (2006).
31 MercExchange, L.L.C. v. eBay, Inc., 401 F.3d 1323, 1328 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
32 See Roger E. Schechter & John R. Thomas, Principles of Patent Law (2d ed. 2005), 330.
33 See Elizabeth D. Ferrill, “Patent Investment Trusts: Let’s Build a Pit to Catch the Patent Trolls,” 6 North Carolina
Journal of Law and Technology
(2005), 367.
34 See Lorraine Woellert, “A Patent War Is Breaking Out on the Hill,” BusinessWeek 45 (July 4, 2005).
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concerning the BlackBerry handheld device and communication service. In that litigation, a
federal district court ruled that the BlackBerry infringed patents held by New Technology
Products, Inc. (NTP).35 When the Federal Circuit affirmed this judgment,36 many BlackBerry
subscribers faced the unsettling prospect of an immediate interruption of service due to a court-
ordered injunction. A subsequent settlement between the litigants ensured that an injunction
would never come into effect.37 The BlackBerry patent litigation led to increasing discussion over
the availability of injunctions in patent cases, perhaps in part because NTP did not commercialize
the patented invention itself.
Shortly after the BlackBerry litigation concluded, the Supreme Court issued an important
decision concerning injunctive relief in eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C.38 The patent at issue in
the eBay case concerned “a system for selling goods through an ‘electronic network of
consignment stores.’”39 The district court explained that the patent proprietor, MercExchange,
“does not practice its inventions and exists merely to license its patented technology to others.”40
Although a jury concluded that eBay infringed the MercExchange patent, the district court
refused to issue an injunction. The district court in part reasoned that MercExchange had licensed
its patents to others, did not practice its invention, and had made comments to the media that it
desired to obtain royalties from eBay rather than obtain an injunction.
On appeal, the Federal Circuit rejected the district court’s reasoning and ruled that MercExchange
was entitled to an injunction. The appellate court explained that “[b]ecause the right to exclude
recognized in a patent is but the essence of the concept of property, the general rule is that a
permanent injunction will issue once infringement and validity have been adjudged.”41 The
Federal Circuit did recognize that in rare cases a court should decline to issue an injunction, such
as “when a patentee’s failure to practice the patented invention frustrates an important public need
for the invention.”42 In this case, however, the Federal Circuit concluded that the district court had
not offered “any persuasive reason to believe this case is sufficiently exceptional to justify the
denial of a permanent injunction.”43
The Supreme Court subsequently granted certiorari and issued an opinion vacating the Federal
Circuit’s judgment. According to Justice Thomas, the author of the unanimous opinion of the
Court, neither lower court had followed the correct rules in deciding whether to issue an
injunction or not. The Supreme Court explained that the district court had incorrectly reasoned
that injunctive relief was unavailable where patent proprietors chose to license their patents rather
than commercialize the patented invention themselves. Justice Thomas further explained that
although the Patent Act requires that injunctions issue “in accordance with the principles of

35 NTP, Inc. v. Research in Motion, Ltd., 261 F. Supp. 2d 423 (E.D. Va. 2002).
36 NTP, Inc. v. Research in Motion, Ltd., 418 F.3d 1282 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
37 See CRS Report RL33429, Availability of Injunctive Relief in Patent Cases: eBay, Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., by
Brian T. Yeh.
38 547 U.S. 388 (2006).
39 MercExchange, L.L.C. v. eBay, Inc., 401 F.3d 1323, 1327 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
40 MercExchange, L.L.C. v. eBay, Inc., 275 F. Supp. 695, 712 (E.D. Va. 2003).
41401 F.3d at 1339.
42Id.
43Id.
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equity,” the Federal Circuit had ignored long-established equitable standards in following a
“general rule” that injunctions issue.44
The Supreme Court directed lower courts to consider four traditional factors for deciding whether
an injunction should issue or not in patent infringement cases. Those factors are:
(1) whether the patent owner would face irreparable injury if the injunction did not issue; (2)
whether the patent owner possesses an adequate legal remedy, such as monetary damages;
(3) whether granting the injunction would be in the public interest; and (4) whether the
balance of hardships tips in the patent owner’s favor.45
Expressing no opinion about how these factors applied to the dispute between the litigants, the
Supreme Court then remanded the case to the district court.46 In the wake of eBay, some courts
have declined to issue injunctions against adjudicated infringers of valid and enforceable
patents.47
Opinions upon the impact of the eBay ruling upon legislative reform of patent injunctions have
varied. Some observers believed that “the Supreme Court failed to meaningfully restructure the
injunctive grant process in its eBay rejection of the automatic injunction rule” and opined that
“the need for legislation ... is renewed rather than removed.”48 Others viewed the Supreme
Court’s ruling more favorably. For example, attorneys Bill Rooklidge and Alyson Barker describe
eBay as a “solution to the perceived injunction problem” that satisfied the concerns of different
constituents in the patent filed in an “elegant” manner. 49 The latter view appears to have
prevailed, however, as no subsequent versions of the Patent Reform Act have incorporated
proposed reforms to injunction practice. Rooklidge and Barker have therefore concluded that the
“legislative effort to reform injunctions is finished, at least for the foreseeable future.”50
Venue
Patent reform legislation also has proposed changes to the rules governing the doctrine of venue
in patent litigation. Venue principles decide which court, out of those that possess personal and
subject matter jurisdiction, may most conveniently hear a particular lawsuit.51 Patent cases are
governed by a specialized venue statute codified at 28 U.S.C. § 1400(b). That statute provides
that in patent litigation, venue is proper either: (1) in the judicial district where the defendant

44 547 U.S. at 392-94.
45 Id. at 391.
46 Chief Justice Roberts issued a concurring opinion observing that courts have granted injunctive relief to the patent
proprietor in “the vast majority of patent cases” and opining that this historical practice should be maintained. Id. at
394. Justice Kennedy also issued a concurring opinion. According to Justice Kennedy, the emergence of non-practicing
patent holders and the “suspect validity” of business method patents were appropriate considerations for courts to “bear
in mind” when deciding whether to issue an injunction or not. Id. at 395.
47 See Jaideep Venkatesan, “Compulsory Licensing of Nonpracticing Patentees After EBay v. MercExchange,” 14
Virginia Journal of Law and Technology (2009), 26.
48 Robin M. Davis, “Failed Attempts to Dwarf the Patent Trolls: Permanent Injunctions in Patent Infringement Cases
Under the Proposed Patent Reform Act of 2005 and EBay v. MercExchange,” 17 Cornell Journal of Law and Public
Policy
(2008), 431.
49 Rooklidge & Barker, supra, at 160.
50 Id.
51 See Wachovia Bank v. Schmidt, 546 U.S. 303 (2006).
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resides, or (2) where the defendant has committed acts of infringement and has a regular and
established place of business.
An important question under this provision is where a corporation is deemed to “reside.” Prior to
1988, a corporation was viewed as residing in its state of its incorporation.52 In 1988, Congress
adopted a new definition of “reside” as it applies to venue for corporate defendants.53 Under the
new definition, a corporation is presumed to reside in any judicial district to which it could be
subject to personal jurisdiction at the time the litigation commences. Congress codified this
change in a separate provision found at 28 U.S.C. § 1391. Although Congress arguably did not
contemplate that these reforms would hold consequences for the specialized patent venue statute,
the Federal Circuit nonetheless held that this amendment should also be read into § 1400(b).54
The result of the 1988 amendments has been significant for corporate defendants, which
constitute the majority of defendants in patent litigation. Although § 1400(b) still governs venue
in patent cases, few, if any plaintiffs rely upon the restrictive second prong of that section. Instead
they base venue upon the “residence” requirement of the first prong—which now is entirely
conterminous with personal jurisdiction, and which for larger corporations is likely to include
every federal district in the country. For corporate defendants, then, the venue statute has
essentially become superfluous, for the same standards governing personal jurisdiction also
dictate whether a court may provide an appropriate venue or not.
Some observers allege that the liberal venue statute promotes forum shopping, allowing patent
proprietors to bring suit in courts that they believe favor patent owners over accused infringers.
One such “magnet jurisdiction” is said to be the rural Eastern District of Texas, and in particular
the Marshall, Texas, federal court. According to one account, many observers “wonder how a
East Texas town of 25,000—even if it was named after Supreme Court Justice John Marshall—
came to harbor an oversized share of intellectual property disputes.”55 In addition, reportedly
“many of the local lawyers who once specialized in personal injury cases are turning their
attention to intellectual property law.”56 Others believe that the existence of a single appellate
court for patent cases, the Federal Circuit, minimizes forum shopping concerns, and that certain
district courts attract patent cases due to their expertise and timeliness, rather than an inherent
favoritism for patent holders.57
While the 110th Congress was considering legislative changes, the Federal Circuit also addressed
the venue laws. In its December 29, 2008, decision in In re TS Tech USA Corp.,58 the Federal
Circuit held that the District Court for the Eastern District of Texas abused its discretion in
denying a motion to transfer to another venue. Some observers believe that the TS Tech decision

52 See Fourco Glass Co. v. Transmirra Prods. Corp., 353 U.S. 222 (1957).
53 Judicial Improvements and Access to Justice Act, P.L. 100-702, tit. X, § 1013(a), 102 Stat. 4642, 4669 (1988).
54 VE Holding Corp. v. Johnson Gas Appliance Co., 917 F.2d 1574 (Fed. Cir. 1990).
55 Allen Pusey, “Marshall Law: Patent Lawyers Flood to East Texas Court for Its Expertise and ‘Rocket Docket’,”
Dallas Morning News (March 26, 2006), 1D.
56 Id.
57 See Xuan-Thao Nguyen, “Justice Scalia’s ‘Renegade Jurisdiction’: Lessons for Patent Law Reform,” 83 Tulane Law
Review
(2008), 111.
58 551 F.3d 1315 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
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eliminated the need for legislative intervention,59 while others suggest that one current
congressional proposal would codify its holding.60
In TS Tech, Lear Corporation brought a patent infringement suit in the Eastern District of Texas
against TS Tech, which operated principal places of business in Ohio, Michigan, and Canada. The
district court denied TS Tech’s request for transfer to Ohio, in part reasoning that the Eastern
District of Texas possessed a local interest in resolving patent infringement disputes involving
products sold there. The district court also held that the district presumptively was convenient for
one of the litigants because Lear had chosen to file suit there.61
In its review of the issue, the Federal Circuit granted TS Tech’s petition to transfer the litigation
to Ohio. Several factors were central to the Federal Circuit’s holding. The appellate court
reasoned that the district court had given too much weight to Lear’s choice of venue.62 It further
explained that the district court had not given sufficient weight to the cost of attendance for
witnesses, as well as the inconvenience associated with physical and documentary evidence
located distant from Texas.63 Finally, the Federal Circuit observed that the alleged infringing
products were sold throughout the United States. As a result, the Eastern District of Texas had no
greater connection to the dispute than any other venue.64 Some observers believe that these
factors are present in many patent cases brought before the Eastern District of Texas, and possibly
other magnet jurisdictions. As a result, TS Tech may mean that motions to transfer venue will be
granted with greater frequency.65 Other observers are less impressed, believing that TS Tech did
not work a “sea change” in transfer motion practice and observing that the patent dockets of the
Eastern District of Texas remain active.66
Subsequent to TS Tech, several different versions of the Patent Reform Act have proposed
changes to the venue provisions governing patent cases. In the 111th Congress, H.R. 1260 and S.
610 generally call for venue to exist (1) where the defendant has its principal place of business,
(2) where the defendant has committed a substantial portion of its acts of infringement and has an
established physical facility, (3) if the plaintiff is an institution of higher education, individual, or
small business, the plaintiff’s residence, or (4) the place of the plaintiff’s established physical
facility devoted to research, development, or manufacturing. In addition, H.R. 1260 stipulates that
“a party shall not manufacture venue by assignment, incorporation, or otherwise to invoke the
venue of a specific district court.”
In contrast, S. 515 does not present new substantive rules for venue for patent cases. Rather, it
succinctly provides that “[f]or the convenience of parties and witnesses, in the interest of justice,
a district court shall transfer any civil action arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents

59 Rooklidge & Barker, supra, at 185.
60 See Intellectual Property Owners Association, “Patent Reform (111th Congress)” (May 4, 2009) (available at
http://www.ipo.org).
61 Lear Corp. v. TS Tech, No. 2:07-CV-406 (E.D.Tex. Sept. 10, 2008).
62 551 F.3d at 1320.
63 Id. at 1320-21.
64 Id. at 1321.
65 See Douglas C. Muth et al., “The Local Patent Rules Bandwagon,” 21 Intellectual Property & Technology Law
Journal
(Aug. 2009), no. 8 at 19.
66 See Elizabeth Durham, “Will All Roads Lead to the Eastern District of Texas? Transfer Practice After Volkswagen
and TS Tech,” 21 Intellectual Property & Technology Law Journal (July 2009), no. 7 at 12.
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upon a showing that the transferee venue is clearly more convenient than the venue in which the
civil action is pending.” Some observers believe that S. 515 essentially codifies the holding in the
TS Tech case.67
Assessment of Damages
Commencing with the introduction of the Patent Reform Act of 2005 in the 109th Congress,68
each version of omnibus reform legislation has proposed amendments to the damages provisions
of the Patent Act. These proposals have been, in the eyes of some observers, the most contentious
issue within the debate over the modern patent system.69 This difference in views may arise from
divergent conceptions over the fairness of damages awards levied against infringers.
Some commentators believe that current damages standards have resulted in the systemic
overcompensation of patent owners. Such overcompensation may place unreasonable royalty
burdens upon producers of high technology products, ultimately impeding the process of
technological innovation and dissemination that the patent system is meant to foster.70 Others
believe that current case law appropriately assesses damages for patent infringement. These
observers are concerned that this reform might overly restrict damages in patent cases, thereby
discouraging voluntary licensing and promoting infringement of patent rights. Limited damage
awards for patent infringement might prevent innovators from realizing the value of their
inventive contributions, a principal goal of the patent system.71
This debate, at least in part, is fueled by the fact that marketplace circumstances often make the
determination of an appropriate damages award in patent litigation very difficult. In some cases,
the product or process that is found to infringe may incorporate numerous additional elements
beyond the patented invention. For example, the asserted patent may relate to a single component
of an audio speaker, while the accused product consists of the entire stereo system. In such
circumstances, a court may apply “the entire market value rule,” which “permits recovery of
damages based upon the entire apparatus containing several features, where the patent-related
feature is the basis for consumer demand.”72 On the other hand, if the court determines that the
infringing sales were due to many factors beyond the use of the patented invention, the court may
apply principles of “apportionment” to measure damages based upon the value of the patented
feature alone.73
As discussion of damages reform has proceeded before Congress, the courts have also been
active. One of the more notable cases on patent damages principles arose from the efforts of
Lucent Technologies, Inc., to enforce its so-called “Day patent,” which related to a method of
entering information into fields on a computer screen without using a keyboard.74 In 2002, Lucent

67 See Intellectual Property Owners, supra.
68 H.R. 2795, 109th Congress, § 6(a).
69 See Rooklidge & Barker, supra.
70 Amy L. Landers, “Let the Games Begin: Incentives to Innovation in the New Economy of Intellectual Property
Law,” 46 Santa Clara Law Review (2006), 364-65.
71 William C. Rooklidge, “Reform of the Patent Laws: Forging Legislation Addressing Disparate Interests,” 88 Journal
of the Patent and Trademark Office Society
(2006).
72 State Indus., Inc. v. Mor-Flo Indus., Inc., 883 F.2d 1573, 1580 (Fed. Cir. 1989).
73 Dowagiac Mfg. Co. v. Minn. Moline Plow Co., 235 U.S. 641 (1915).
74 Lucent Technologies, Inc. v. Gateway, Inc., 580 F.3d 1301 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
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brought an infringement suit against computer manufacturer Gateway, Inc. Lucent asserted that
Gateway infringed the Day patent because certain software developed by Microsoft
Corporation—Microsoft Money, Microsoft Outlook, and Windows Mobile—were pre-installed in
Gateway computers. More particularly, Lucent asserted that the software infringed because it
enables the user to select a series of numbers corresponding to a day, month, and year using
graphical controls. Microsoft subsequently intervened in order to defend the “date-picker tool”
found in its software.75
At trial, the jury found the Day patent not invalid and infringed. Lucent sought damages of
$561.9 million based on 8% of Microsoft’s infringing sales, while Microsoft asserted “that a
lump-sum payment of $6.5 million would have been the correct amount for licensing the
protected technology.” The jury then awarded Lucent a single lump-sum amount of
$357,693,056.18 for all three Microsoft products. Microsoft subsequently pursued an appeal.76
The litigation in Lucent Technologies, Inc. v. Gateway, Inc. captured the attention of many
observers. In a March 3, 2009, letter addressed to Senator Patrick Leahy, Chairman of the
Judiciary Committee, Senator Arlen Specter requested a delay in Senate action on the Patent
Reform Act of 2009 until the Federal Circuit heard oral argument in the case.77 Observing a
“symbiotic relationship between the judicial and legislative branches with regard to changes to
the patent system,” Senator Specter believed that “oral argument has the potential to facilitate a
compromise or clarify the applicability of damages theories in various contexts.”78
The Federal Circuit heard oral argument in the Lucent appeal on June 2, 2009, and issued its
opinion on September 11, 2009.79 In its decision, the Federal Circuit upheld the lower court’s
determination that the Day patent was not invalid and infringed. In the most anticipated portion of
the opinion, the appellate court also struck down the jury’s damages award as not supported by
substantial evidence.80 A lengthy portion of the Lucent opinion undertook a detailed review of the
numerous elements—the so-called Georgia-Pacific factors—that were before the lower court
when it reached its damages determination. The Federal Circuit ultimately concluded that the
“evidence does not sustain a finding that, at the time of infringement, Microsoft and Lucent
would have agreed to a lumpsum royalty payment subsequently amounting to approximately 8%
of Microsoft’s revenues for the sale of Outlook (and necessarily a larger percentage of Outlook’s
profits).”81
Some observers believe that the Federal Circuit has placed renewed emphasis upon the use of
reliable evidence of damages in patent trials. For example, patent attorney Johnathan Tropp
reportedly viewed Lucent as “an important signal to district courts that they have a responsibility
to ... ensure that damages verdicts are appropriate and based on substantial evidence.”82 In

75 Id. at 1308.
76 Id. at 1309.
77 The letter is available at http://specter.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?FuseAction=NewsRoom.NewsReleases&
ContentRecord_id=CE8F4C18-970E-54D1-84DD-1D25F0BE2FCB.
78 Id.
79 580 F.3d at 1301.
80 Id. at 1335.
81 Id.
82 Steven Seidenberg, “Into the Fray: Lucent Ruling Makes It Harder to Prove Patent Damages,” InsideCounsel (Dec. 1,
2009).
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addition, Lucent discussed the controversial issue of apportionment. Under the facts of the case,
the Federal Circuit concluded that the entire market value rule did not apply:
[T]he only reasonable conclusion supported by the evidence is that the infringing use of the
datepicker tool in Outlook is but a very small component of a much larger software program.
The vast majority of the features, when used, do not infringe. The date-picker tool’s minor
role in the overall program is further confirmed when one considers the relative importance
of certain other features, e.g., email. Consistent with this description of Outlook, Lucent did
not carry its evidentiary burden of proving that anyone purchased Outlook because of the
patented method.83
The Federal Circuit went on to speak in a more general way:
Although our law states certain mandatory conditions for applying the entire market value
rule ... the base used in a running royalty calculation can always be the value of the entire
commercial embodiment, as long as the magnitude of the rate is within an acceptable
range.... [E]ven when the patented invention is a small component of a much larger
commercial product, awarding a reasonable royalty based on either sale price or number of
units sold can be economically justified.84
Some disagreement has reportedly resulted from this language. As legal journalist Steven
Seidenberg explains:
Some say the ruling allows damages to be calculated based on an infringing product’s entire
market value, provided the calculation realistically reflects the patent’s importance in the
infringing product. Others assert that entire market value can be used only when a plaintiff’s
patented feature drives consumer demand for the infringing product, and that any damage
calculations must reflect the relative importance of the infringing product.85

Each of the three patent reform bills in the 111th Congress was introduced prior to the issuance of
the Lucent opinion. At least one observer, patent lawyer Kevin McCabe, reportedly opined that
“the Lucent decision is the Federal Circuit’s way of showing Congress that damage reform is
unnecessary.”86 In any event, H.R. 1260, S. 515, and S. 610 each address monetary remedies in
patent cases. In brief, both H.R. 1260 and S. 515 call for a court to select one of the following
methods for determining a “reasonable royalty” as the measure of damages: (1) the economic
value that is properly attributable to the patented invention’s specific contribution over the prior
art, (2) the entire market value rule, or (3) other factors, such as terms of the nonexclusive
marketplace licensing of the invention. Both bills also stipulate that courts may receive expert
testimony as an aid to the determination of the appropriate royalty.
In contrast, S. 610 does not expressly address apportionment and the entire market value rule. It
instead allows courts to “consider any factors that are relevant to the determination of a
reasonable royalty.” However, S. 610 stipulates that the amount of royalties paid for patents other
than the patent subject to litigation may only be considered in particular circumstances, and
further that the financial condition of the infringer is not relevant to the reasonable royalty

83 580 F.3d at 1337.
84 Id. at 1339.
85 Seidenberg, supra.
86 Id.
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determination. S. 610 also requires damages experts who intend to present testimony to provide
data and other information from which they draw their conclusions, and also mandates that trial
judges determine whether such testimony is based upon legally sufficient evidence before
allowing it to be considered by a jury.
Willful Infringement
The patent statute currently provides that the court “may increase the damages up to three times
the amount found or assessed.”87 An award of enhanced damages, as well as the amount by which
the damages will be increased, falls within the discretion of the trial court. Although the statute
does not specify the circumstances in which enhanced damages are appropriate, the Federal
Circuit has limited such awards to cases of “willful infringement.” The appellate court has
explained that willful infringement occurs when “the infringer acted in wanton disregard of the
patentee’s patent rights” based upon such circumstances as copying, closeness of the case, the
infringer’s concealment of its conduct, and the infringer’s motivations.88 In its 1992 opinion in
Read Corp. v. Portec, Inc.,89 the Federal Circuit explained that:
Willfulness is a determination as to a state of mind. One who has actual notice of another’s
patent rights has an affirmative duty to respect those rights. That affirmative duty normally
entails obtaining advice of legal counsel although the absence of such advice does not
mandate a finding of willfulness.90
As framed in Read v. Portec and numerous other judicial opinions issued prior to 2007, the
willful infringement doctrine has proved controversial. Some observers believe that this doctrine
ensured that patent rights will be respected in the marketplace. Critics of willful infringement
believed that the possibility of trebled damages discourages individuals from reviewing issued
patents. Out of fear that their inquisitiveness will result in multiple damages, innovators might
simply avoid looking at patents until they are sued for infringement. To the extent this
observation was correct, the law of willful infringement discouraged the dissemination of
technical knowledge, thereby thwarting one of the principal goals of the patent system. Fear of
increased liability for willful infringement might have also discouraged firms from challenging
patents of dubious validity.
In view of these critiques, Congress considered legislative amendments to the law of willful
infringement as early as 2005.91 However, in its 2007 decision in In re Seagate Technology,92 the
Federal Circuit made significant changes to the law of willful infringement itself. The appellate
court overturned two decades of its precedent by opting to “abandon the affirmative duty of due
care.”93 The Federal Circuit instead explained that accused infringers possessed no obligation to
obtain an opinion of counsel.94 Rather, “proof of willful infringement permitting enhanced

87 35 U.S.C. § 284.
88 See Transclean Corp. v. Bridgewood Services, Inc., 290 F.3d 1364 (Fed. Cir. 2002).
89 970 F.2d 816 (Fed. Cir. 1992).
90 Id. at 828.
91 H.R. 2795, 109th Congress, at § 6(b).
92 497 F.3d 1360 (Fed. Cir. 2007) (en banc).
93 Id. at 1371.
94 Id.
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damages requires at least a showing of objective recklessness.”95 Under this view, the “state of
mind of the accused infringer is not relevant to this objective inquiry.”96
Many observers believe that Seagate significantly limited the circumstances under which courts
will conclude that an infringer acted willfully.97 Due to the Seagate opinion, some commentators
believe that congressional reform of willful infringement principles is not needed at this time.98
Others are more skeptical, believing that the “new objective recklessness standard will result in
little practical change because potential infringers will likely continue to seek opinions of
competent counsel to protect against a charge of willful infringement.”99
In the 111th Congress, H.R. 1260 and S. 515 include identical language that would add several
clarifications and changes to the law of willful infringement. First, a finding of willful
infringement would be appropriate only where (1) the infringer received specific written notice
from the patentee and continued to infringe after a reasonable opportunity to investigate; (2) the
infringer intentionally copied from the patentee with knowledge of the patent; or (3) the infringer
continued to infringe after an adverse court ruling. Second, willful infringement cannot be found
where the infringer possessed an informed, good faith belief that its conduct was not infringing.
Finally, a court may not determine willful infringement before the date on which the court
determines that the patent is not invalid, enforceable, and infringed. No comparable language
appears in S. 610.
Extraterritorial Patent Protection
U.S. patents are generally effective only in the United States. They normally do not provide
protection against acts that occur in other nations. However, one provision of the Patent Act, 35
U.S.C. § 271(f), provides U.S. patent owners with a limited measure of extraterritorial protection.
Specifically, § 271(f) prohibits “supplying” a “component” of a patented invention abroad
knowing that such components would be combined in a manner that would infringe the patent if
such combination occurred within the United States. Congress enacted § 271(f) in order to
prevent individuals from avoiding infringement liability under U.S. law by manufacturing parts
domestically before shipping them abroad to be assembled into a patented device.100
Some observers had expressed concerns that § 271(f) had been interpreted overly broadly. In
particular, the Federal Circuit had ruled that software designed in the United States, and then
transmitted abroad for copying and sale, fell within § 271(f).101 Some commentators believed that
this holding would “impose liability for software developed in America and sold overseas,” with

95 Id.
96 Id.
97 See Siraj Husain, “The Willfulness Pendulum Swings Back: How Seagate Helps Level the Playing Field,” 28 Loyola
of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review
(2007-2008), 239.
98 See Rooklidge & Barker, supra, at 167; IPO, supra.
99 Christopher C. Bolten, “In re Seagate Tech., LL.C., Is the Objective Recklessness Standard a Practical Change?,” 49
Jurimetrics Journal (Fall 2008), 90.
100 See Dariush Keyhani, “Patent Law in the Global Economy: A Modest for Proposal for U.S. Patent Law and
Infringement Without Borders,” 54 Villanova Law Review (2009), 291.
101 Eolas Techs. Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 399 F.3d 1325 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
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the result that “American software developers would have faced a competitive disadvantage vis-
à-vis their foreign counterparts.”102
Proposals before Congress would have addressed this concern. In the 109th Congress, S. 3818,
titled the Patent Reform Act of 2006, would have repealed 35 U.S.C. § 271(f).103 However, the
courts were the first to address the controversy regarding extraterritorial patent protection. In
2007, the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp.104 The issue before
the Court was whether § 271(f) applied to a “master disk” of software that Microsoft sent from
the United States to a foreign manufacturer. The foreign manufacturer then used the disk to create
multiple copies of the software that was then installed on computers that were made and sold
abroad. The Supreme Court held that sending the master disk abroad did not constitute
“supplying” a “component” of the foreign computers within the meaning of § 271(f).105 This
“narrowing reading of § 271(f)” limited the liability of software firms accused of patent
infringement based upon overseas activity.106
Possibly as a result of Microsoft v. AT&T, proposals to eliminate § 271(f) did not reappear in
subsequent versions of the Patent Reform Act. As Senator Patrick Leahy explained on April 18,
2007, shortly before Microsoft v. AT&T was decided:
The Patent Reform Act of 2007 is also significant for what is not included.... [W]e do not
inject Congress into the ongoing litigation over the extra-territorial provision, section 271(f).
S. 3818 would have repealed the provision in its entirety; the Patent Reform Act of 2007
does not, while the interpretation of the provision is currently pending before the Supreme
Court. If the Court does not resolve that issue, we will revisit it in the legislative process.107
Although debate has continued over the soundness of the Microsoft v. AT&T ruling,108 the lack of
legislative interest in amending or eliminating § 271(f) may suggest that concerned actors believe
the Supreme Court addressed perceived problems with that statute.
Tax Planning Methods
Controversy over the newly recognized phenomenon of patents on tax planning methods resulted
in proposals to limit or prohibit them. For example, in the 110th Congress, the Patent Reform Act
of 2007 stipulated that a patent may not be obtained on a tax planning method, which was defined
as “a plan, strategy, technique, or scheme that is designed to reduce, minimize, or defer, or has,
when implemented, the effect of reducing, minimizing, or deferring, a taxpayer’s tax liability, but
does not include the use of tax preparation software or other tools used solely to perform or

102 Rachel Krevans & Daniel P. Muino, “Restoring the Balance: The Supreme Court Joins the Patent Reform
Movement,” 9 Sedona Conference Journal (2008), 15.
103 S. 3818, §5(f).
104 550 U.S. 437 (2007). See CRS Report RS22670, Exporting Software and the Extraterritorial Reach of U.S. Patent
Law: Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp.
, by Brian T. Yeh.
105 Id. at 453.
106 See James Ernstmeyer, “Does Strict Territoriality Toll the End of Software Patents?,” 89 Boston University Law
Review
(2009), 1267.
107 U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy, “Leahy, Hatch, Berman And Smith Introduce Bicameral, Bipartisan Patent Reform
Legislation” (April 18, 2007) (available at http://leahy.senate.gov/press/200704/041807a.html).
108 See Ernstmeyer, supra.
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model mathematical calculations or prepare tax or information returns.”109 This proposal has not
been reintroduced in any of the different versions of the Patent Reform Act of 2009 in the 111th
Congress, however.
Judicial activity provides one possible explanation for the absence of this reform proposal in more
recent versions of these bills. A number of recent court decisions have explored the topic of
patentable subject matter—that is to say, what sorts of advances are eligible for patenting.110 Most
notably, the 2008 Federal Circuit opinion in In re Bilski held that a patent on a particular “method
of hedging risk in the field of commodities trading” was not eligible for patenting because the
invention was neither (1) tied to a particular machine or apparatus nor (2) transformed a particular
article into a different state or thing.111 This holding has been widely viewed as narrowing the
range of patentable subject matter, and may place significant limits upon whether tax planning
methods may be patented at all.112
The Federal Circuit’s “machine-or-transformation” test may be modified, however. On June 1,
2009, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the Bilski case.113 Supreme Court disposition of this
matter is expected by the spring of 2010.114 The impact of the Court’s ruling may in turn influence
legislative involvement with respect to tax patents. As Linda Beale, a member of the faculty of
the Wayne State University Law School, explained, “[w]hen the Supreme Court hears the case, it
may reverse Bilski and leave Congress no choice but to enact legislative exclusions to the patent
laws. It is likely, however, that [the Court] will instead affirm Bilski and it may even announce
new guidance that clarifies the nonapplicability of patent law to legal methods.”115 The Bilski
holding and the possibility of legislative intervention regarding tax planning method patents
remains to be seen.
Observations
This discussion of injunctions, venue, damages, willful infringement, extraterritorial patent
protection, and tax strategy patents suggests that the courts have modified a number of patent law
doctrines that were previously subject to congressional consideration. Of course, many of these
principles had been developed through judicial opinions. To that extent, congressional interest in
patent reform was itself a reaction to earlier developments in the courts. This interaction between
different branches of government has become a hallmark of the recent patent reform process.

109 H.R. 1908, 110th Congress, § .
110 See Judy Naamat, “The State of the Patent Street: Does Statutory ‘Matter’,” 91 Journal of the Patent and Trademark
Office Society
(2009), 229.
111 549 F.3d 943 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (en banc). See CRS Report R40803, Patent-Eligibility of Process Claims Under
Section 101 of the Patent Act: Bilski v. Kappos
, by Brian T. Yeh, Patent-Eligibility of Process Claims Under the Patent
Act: Bilski v. Kappos., by Brian T. Yeh (Sept. 9, 2009).
112 See Linda M. Beale, “Is Bilski Likely the Final Word on Tax Strategy Patents? Coherence Matters,” 9 John
Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law
(Summer 2009), 110.
113 129 S.Ct. 2735 (June 1, 2009).
114 Tony Zeuli et al., “Business Unusual: What’s Needed to Own a Business Patent?,” 66 Bench and Bar of Minnesota
(Nov. 2009), 27.
115 Beale, supra.
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Notably, the Supreme Court and Federal Circuit have not reacted to every proposal in the various
Patent Reform Acts in this manner. For example, Congress has considered legislation that would
permit interlocutory appeals of claim construction rulings.116 The Federal Circuit has not altered
its general practice of disfavoring such appeals, however.117
It also should be appreciated that judicial opinions have worked significant changes to a number
of patent principles that were not expressly the target of proposed legislative reforms. For
example, some observers believe that the 2007 Supreme Court opinion in KSR v. Teleflex118
resulted in significant changes to the law of nonobviousness.119 Of course, judicial changes to one
component of the patent system may have an impact upon other doctrines, including those subject
to congressional scrutiny.
A number of reasons may explain this pattern of judicial involvement in areas of legislative
interest. First, Congress considered the initial Patent Reform Act in 2005.120 During the years that
legislation has been pending, many patent infringement cases have been tried and appealed. The
courts have therefore had many opportunities to address core patent doctrines.
Second, the Federal Circuit hears all appeals from district courts across the United States in both
patent acquisition and infringement cases.121 This concentration of appellate jurisdiction provides
one court with the ability to change patent doctrine relatively quickly. Further, although the
rulings of other federal courts of appeal bind only a limited portion of the country, Federal Circuit
patent precedent has effect throughout the United States.122
Some additional factors suggest judicial interest in legislative scrutiny of the patent system. The
Federal Circuit’s location in Washington, DC,123 may imply an awareness of legislative activity
involving patents. That several Federal Circuit judges formerly served as members of
congressional staff may also suggest interest in patent reform efforts on the Hill.124
Whatever the reasons for the persistent interaction between Congress and the courts in the patent
reform process, these circumstances raise a number of issues pertaining to institutional
competence. The longstanding debate over whether legislatures or courts comprise the most
appropriate body to work particular legal reforms has been renewed in this setting. Law
professors Dan Burk and Mark Lemley side with the courts, asserting that “Congress has spent
the last four years, from 2005 to 2008, in an ultimately futile effort to reform the patent

116 In the 111th Congress, see H.R. 1260, § 10 and S. 515, § 8. S. 610 does not address interlocutory appeals of claim
construction rulings.
117 See Kelly C. McKinney, “The Patent Reform Act of 2007 and International Patent Law Harmonization,” 31
Houston Journal of International Law (2008), 125.
118 550 U.S. 398 (2007). See CRS Report RS22669, The Obviousness Standard in Patent Law: KSR International Co. v.
Teleflex Inc.
, by Brian T. Yeh.
119 See Rebecca S. Eisenberg, “Pharma’s Nonobvious Problem,” 12 Lewis & Clark Law Review (2008), 375.
120 H.R. 2795, 109th Congress (introduced on June 8, 2005).
121 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a) (2006).
122 See Chris J. Katopis, “The Federal Circuit’s Forgotten Lessons?: Annealing New Forms of Intellectual Property
Through Consolidated Appellate Jurisdiction,” 32 John Marshall Law Review (1999), 581.
123 28 U.S.C. § 48(a) (2006).
124 See U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, Judicial Biographies (available at http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/
judgbios.html).
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system.”125 They further contend that “[d]uring the period in which Congress tried and failed to
reform the patent system, courts were actively involved in fixing many of the very same problems
Congress was ultimately unable to resolve.”126 In their view the “fact that courts proved capable
of solving many of the problems on which Congress ultimately foundered” indicates that the
courts are the most appropriate institution for working needed reforms to the patent laws.127
On the other hand, legislatures are frequently seen as possessing superior resources to investigate
and develop factual evidence. Compared to the courts, Congress possesses greater research
capabilities and superior means for obtaining information from informed third parties. The
legislative decision-making process may better reflect the views of a wide range of stakeholders
and offers the advantage of superior democratic accountability.128
It should also be appreciated that the judiciary does not oversee a number of significant
components of the patent system. For example, the courts cannot directly influence the budget or
internal operations of the USPTO.129 In contrast, Congress possesses authority to determine such
matters as the scope of USPTO rule-making authority, the level of fees the USPTO may charge,
and the agency’s budget.130
Conclusion
As with previous Congresses, the 111th Congress continues to consider enacting a Patent Reform
Act. To the extent legislative deliberations are believed to alert the courts to perceived problems
with a particular doctrine, however, Congress may be seen as already having prompted a great
deal of change to the patent system. Our recent experience highlighting the interaction between
the different branches of government during the patent reform process suggests the importance of
legislative awareness of judicial developments. It also reminds us that although courts often
possess a range of options in interpreting statutory language that the legislature has chosen,
authority to alter the Patent Act itself ultimately resides with Congress.



125 Dan L. Burk & Mark A. Lemley, The Patent Crisis and How the Courts Can Solve It (University of Chicago Press
2009), 100.
126 Id. at 102.
127 Id.
128 See generally Robert B. Schapiro, “Judicial Deference and Interpretive Coordinacy in State and Federal
Constitutional Law,” 85 Cornell Law Review (2000), 656.
129 Rooklidge & Barker, supra.
130 See generally Arti K. Rai, “Growing Pains in the Administrative State: The Patent Office’s Troubled Quest for
Managerial Control,” 157 University of Pennsylvania Law Review (2009), 2051.
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Author Contact Information

John R. Thomas

Visiting Scholar
jrthomas@crs.loc.gov, 7-0975


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