Section 271(b) of the
U.S. Patent Act states that “[w]hoever actively induces infringement of a
patent shall be liable as an infringer.” Earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court issued
its decision in Hikma v. Amarin, a case that elaborates on what it means
to induce an act of patent infringement under U.S. law. As summarized by Justice Jackson in her
unanimous opinion in Hikma, previous case law has established that a plaintiff
asserting a claim under § 271(b) must prove (1) that there was “direct
infringement by a third party”; (2) that the defendant knew that “the induced
acts constitute patent infringement”; and (3) that the defendant took “active
steps . . . to encourage direct infringement.”
Hikma, slip op. at 4-5 (internal citations omitted). In this specific case, Hikma had obtained authorization
from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to market a generic drug,
subject to a carve-out for Amirin’s patented method of using the drug “to
reduce cardiovascular risk in hypertriglyceridemia patients who already take
statins” (id. at 5). Hikma then
marketed the drug with a so-called “skinny label” that included only the
indication for a different use of the drug, but which otherwise (in accordance
with FDA requirements) was identical to Amarin’s label. Himan also described its product as “generic”
Vascepa (the brand-name drug) in press releases, and its website “listed the
drug’s therapeutic category as ‘[h]ypertriglyceridemia’, a category that includes
but is broader than” the unpatented method of use (id. at 6). The Federal Circuit held that this conduct
was sufficient to sustain a finding of inducement, because it was “at least
plausible that a physician could read the label, website, and press releases ‘as
an instruction or encouragement to prescribe’” the generic drug for any approved
use, including the use that still remained under patent. The Supreme Court reversed, however, holding
that a defendant can be liable for inducement only if it expressly or implicitly
provides clear and affirmative encouragement to infringe. It is not enough that it may be “plausible”
or “possible” that third parties might read the defendant’s statements
in such a way that will cause them to infringe; for liability to attach, the
statute requires active, not passive, inducement. See id. at 8-12.
The reversal was not
surprising, especially in view of the Court’s recent restrictive reading of indirect
infringement in the context of copyright law in Cox v. Sony, also
decided this term; and in my view the Hikma decision is correct as a
matter of policy as well. For purposes
of this blog, however, I want to highlight a couple of remedies-related questions
pertaining to induced infringement that may deserve further attention.
First, there is the
question of how damages should be assessed when a defendant is found liable for
induced (or contributory) infringement.
To my knowledge, the late Dmitri Karshtedt’s article Damages for
Indirect Patent Infringement, 91 Wash.
U. L. Rev. 911 (2014), previously noted on this blog here, remains the
leading piece addressing the conflicting case law on whether royalties for
induced infringement should be limited to “proven, enumerated acts of direct infringement of the
asserted patents (‘the atomistic approach’),” or instead whether “the extent of
directly infringing use of the patent should be viewed as one of many pieces of
evidence for measuring the extent of damages (‘the evidentiary approach’).” Professor Karshtedt argued in favor of the
latter standard, noting inter alia that, but for the infringement, practical
evidentiary considerations might motivate the hypothetical bargainers to agree,
ex ante, to a royalty that depends on estimates of third parties’ direct use of
the patented technology, rather than atomistic, ex post calculation of such use. I am inclined to think he was right, for
reasons Norman Siebrasse and I discussed in our New Framework article in
evaluating Federal Circuit cases such as Hanson v. Alpine Valley Ski Area
(a case Professor Karshtedt cited with approval in his article as well). But given the renewed focus on matters
relating to indirect infringement, I would like to give the matter some more
thought over the coming weeks, and may have more to say about it then.
Second, a question
that I am planning to address in my current paper on extraterritoriality is the
following. Suppose that an entity outside
the U.S. induces an entity within the U.S. to infringe a U.S. patent, and that
the patentee wants to sue the inducer for damages. The Federal Circuit has held on more than one
occasion that an extraterritorial act that induces the domestic infringement of
a U.S. patent is actionable under U.S. law, notwithstanding the general
presumption against extraterritorial application of U.S. law. The court has yet to address, however,
whether this rule is consistent with the Supreme Court’s WesternGeco v. ION decision, under which (absent a clear indication that Congress intended to displace
the presumption against extraterritoriality) a court should consider whether
the “conduct relevant to the focus” of the statutory provision at issue is
domestic conduct. Here—though I am still
thinking through the issue—my initial take is that it seems more natural to think
of the “focus” of § 271(b), and conduct relevant to that focus, as the inducing
act, rather than the direct infringement.
But if that is right, then it would seem to follow that extraterritorial
inducement is not actionable after all, notwithstanding the Federal Circuit
case law to the contrary. See Robert
H. Stier, Jr., Extraterritoriality and the Active Inducement of Infringement,
19 UIC 204 (2024) (essentially making this argument). And yet this result seems kind of odd. In WesternGeco, although the infringing
conduct was domestic (the act of supplying a component from the United States),
the sales the plaintiff lost were foreign; nevertheless, because the conduct
relevant to the focus was the domestic act of supplying components, the
plaintiff could recover the profits it lost on those sales outside the
U.S. (I happen to think this was the
correct outcome, for reasons I have explained on numerous occasions elsewhere,
but I also can understand how someone might reach the opposite conclusion.) The hypothetical with which I began this
paragraph can be thought of as the mirror image of WesternGeco, in that the financial impact, if any, would be domestic, while the relevant conduct would be foreign
activity that had (and was intended to have) effects within the United States; but
if the conduct relevant to the focus of § 271(b) is that foreign conduct, then those
effects might not be sufficient to render the foreign actor liable under U.S.
law. (Of course, the patentee could, in
principle, seek to recover from the domestic direct infringer(s); but that is
not always a practical option, which is precisely why indirect liability
exists.) This thought experiment makes
me wonder whether, in such a case, excluding the foreign actor from liability
would amount to an overly wooden interpretation of WesternGeco. One way to avoid such an interpretation would
be to consider the inducing act and the direct infringement to be coequal focuses
of § 271(b), though I wonder whether that would be a plausible extension of the
Supreme Court’s current extraterritoriality jurisprudence.
The preceding analysis
also calls to mind the UPC Court of Appeal’s recent decision, also handed down
while I was away earlier this month, in Kodak GmbH v. Fujifilm Corp. I should probably blog about this decision at
length sometime soon, but for now I will note only that one of the questions presented
was whether the UPC could find the German defendant Kodak Graphic Communications
GmbH liable for infringing the U.K. portion of the European Patent at issue. Under the CJEU’s 2025 decision in BSH v. Electrolux, the Court holds, the lower court had jurisdiction to consider
this issue—but under U.K. substantive law, there could be no liability
unless the German defendant was a joint tortfeasor with the relevant (non-party)
U.K. entity, Kodak Ltd. For this to be
the case, the Court of Appeal states:
Under UK law, merely supplying outside the
jurisdiction goods to a party in the UK who later sells them within the
jurisdiction is not enough for joint tortfeasorship, even if the supplier knows
his customer intends so to sell in the UK (Generics v Lundbeck [2006]
EWCA Civ 1261, para. 25). As Fujifilm acknowledges, joint tortfeasorship arises
when multiple entities jointly commit a tort by acting pursuant to a common
design.
. . . [E]ven though liability for patent infringement
is strict and does not require any awareness of its unlawfulness, for a person
to be liable as a joint tortfeasor it is necessary to show (1) that he had
procured the company to infringe or been joined in common design with the
company; and (2) knew of the essential facts which make the act done wrongful (because
a person cannot be allowed to escape liability by relying on ignorance of the
law it, knowledge of patent infringement cannot be required). As such,
knowledge of the existence of the UK designation of the Patent and that the
attacked embodiments disclose all the features of the claim(s) of the Patent
would be required. . . . [I]t is not evident – and Fujifilm has not shown –
that such knowledge actually existed with any of the Kodak companies prior to
Fujifilm’s allegation that the attacked embodiment infringes the UK designation
of the Patent (paras. 326-27).
For these reasons,
among others, the lower court erred in granting an injunction against the German
defendants with respect to sales within the U.K.
Assuming that the
above interpretation of U.K. substantive law is accurate (which it appears to
be, based upon the cited cases), the standards for indirect liability under U.K.
and U.S. law post-Hikma seem not so far apart. Moreover, if I am understanding correctly, in
a case (unlike the present one) in which the prerequisites for liability under U.K.
substantive law were present neither the UPC nor the U.K. would have a problem
in finding a German entity liable for inducing a U.K. entity to infringe a U.K.
patent within the U.K. In this respect,
then, the UPC and U.K. case law would seem to align with the Federal Circuit’s current
understanding of § 271(b) of the U.S. Patent Act. Whether that current understanding itself aligns
with WesternGeco is nevertheless unclear, though as suggested above
perhaps the “conduct relevant to the focus” test should be applied with some
degree of flexibility to the tort of induced infringement, in view of the potentially
substantial domestic effects of foreign inducement.
If readers have any thoughts they would like to share on these issues, please let me know.