Archive for the ‘Licensing’ Category

Custom merchandise patents suit – last settlements

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

Over the summer months, Quark Images LLC (Longview, TX) entered into a compound arrangement to have two patents assigned from the Jones Soda Co. (Seattle, WA).  In the middle of August, Quark Images sued Adidas AG, which offers custom-designed athletic shoes through its NikeID program, and more than 25 other defendants claiming infringement of those two patents for a “method of creating customized branded merchandise over a computer network.”

The complete list of defendants targeted in the suit gathers global players in the apparel industry and several financial institutions, well beyond the original “Soda Company” field of the invention:   Adidas AG, Adidas America, Inc., Adidas International, Inc., America First Federal Credit Union, BBVA Compass Bancshares, Inc., BBVA USA Bancshares, Inc., BMW Bank of North America, BMW Financial Services NA, LLC, Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria, S.A., Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, Capital One Financial Corporation, Capital One Services, L.L.C., Capital One, National Association, CardLab, Inc., Discover Financial Services, L.L.C., Hallmark Cards, Inc., Mars, Inc., Nike, Inc., Oakley, Inc., PAYjr, Inc., Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation, Ralph Lauren Media, L.L.C., Reebok International Ltd., Serverside Group, Limited, Shoreline Busines Solutions, Inc., Sole Technology, The Topps Company, Inc., Wescom Credit Union, Zions Bancorporation, and Zions First National Bank.

As initially reported, the IP community saw potential flaws in the patents (issued in December 10, 2002 and January 18, 2005, respectively), which fail to reference several published pieces of prior art, along with the usual caveats of business method patents.  In essence, one could ask if it should matter at all in issuing a patent that even medieval craftspeople were known to make “custom merchandise,” and whether adapting this to eCommerce would be obvious the one “skilled in the art.”  At the time of the filing a Patently Obvious report concluded a significant amount of prior art, not all of it via patents, existed and could be part of a potential defensive strategy.  One example could be Hallmark which introduced customized greeting cards as far back as 1994.  There was a clear sense of the danger that if the plaintiff prevailed, “… licensing fees could be demanded from any entity, large or small, that provides customized products via the internet…”

Curiously enough, denoting the lack of independence between Quark Images and Jones Soda,  in the week following the filing the patents (numbers 6,493,677 and 6,845,365) were assigned back to Jones Soda under a “Security Agreement.”

The first answers to the complaint were filed by Adidas and Reebok in early October.  A month later, the first unopposed dismissal with prejudice was ordered with regards to 18 defendants, including the BMW and Capital One entities. Soon thereafter,  Oakley, Adidas, and Reebok joined the “License and Settlement Agreement” dated December 20, 2010, which has been the basis for the subsequent dismissal orders for the rest of the defendants.

Finally, Hallmark settled two days ago and Discover Financial Services settled today.  According to our count, all defendants have now settled.  So unless one of the parties involved discloses the information, we are left in the dark as to the forced license fees extracted in this litigation.

Case: Quark Images LLC v. Adidas AG,2:10-cv-00293, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Texas (Marshall).

Can a non-exclusive patent licensee sue?

Monday, January 3rd, 2011

Recently, the Court of Appeals for the Federal District clarified this question in its ruling regarding the 2009 WiAV v. Motorola, et al case.

In that case, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia had dismissed the counts of WiAV’s complaint concerning the Mindspeed Patents for lack of constitutional standing.  The Defendants’ position, with which the District Court agreed, was that WiAV (which owns 2  US Patents and is the exclusive licensee in a specific field of use of seven patents owned by Mindspeed Technologies) lacked constitutional standing to assert the Mindspeed Patents because WiAV was not an exclusive licensee of the patents.  Their argument pointed to the fact that some of the other defendants in the overall lawsuit had limited rights to the same patents.

The Federal Circuit found that, on the question of standing, the analysis should be focused on whether WiAV has shown that it has the right under the patents to exclude the Defendants from engaging in the alleged infringing activity.  If that is the case, then its patent rights under the license  are infringed and, consequently, the Defendants’ conduct causes damages.  The court concluded that WiAV situation satisfies this condition.

As Speedy Federal Circuit Briefs blogger C. Allen Black, Jr. points out in his recent post on the matter, “The ability to sue comes from the ability of the licensee to prevent the infringement and subsequent injury, not the label attached to [the] contract that controls the license.”

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Case: WIAV SOLUTIONS LLC, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. MOTOROLA, INC., et al. Defendant-Appellee, 2010-1266, Appeal from the the Eastern District of Virginia in case No. 09-CV-0447, Senior Judge Robert E. Payne. (Decided: December 22, 2010), Before RADER, LINN and DYK.