The case in Trustees of Columbia University v. Gen Digital Inc., precedential opinion by Judge
Dyk (joined by Judges Prost and Reyna), published this morning.
This is a very complicated matter, involving among other things an
inventorship dispute that devolved into a contempt order against trial counsel
for the defense (which contempt order is reversed in a separate appellate decision
also handed down today, which I need not address here), as well as two previous
appeals on claim construction and validity (which I also will not address). The current decision involves questions of
patent eligibility, claim construction, and damages; and as is my typical practice
for purposes of this blog, I will focus only on the last of these.
There are two patents
in suit, both of which related “primarily to protecting computer systems from viruses
and other malicious activity” (p.2). The
claims at issue consist of one system claim, two method claims, and a
computer-readable medium claim, all of which allegedly are infringed by
software marketed by the defendant under the Norton brand. The district court denied a motion to dismiss
for lack of patent eligibility. Then jury
then returned a verdict of willful infringement and awarded damages of $185,112,
727; the district court awarded enhanced damages and fees. On appeal, the Federal Circuit reverses and
remands for further proceedings on the issue of patent eligibility--but “[b]ecause
other issues may arise on the remand,” the court addresses one remaining issue
of claim construction as well as the issues pertaining to damages and
fees. As noted, I will address the
damages and fees issues only. The most
interesting of these—at least in my view, since I’ve written a fair amount now
about this topic—is whether, on the facts of this case and assuming the patents in suit are valid, the
patentee is entitled to damages reflecting foreign sales of Norton software.
As readers may be
aware, the general rule that seems to be emerging from Supreme Court, Federal Circuit,
and district court case law over the last few years is that, although U.S.
patents are territorial rights, if the defendant engages in the unauthorized
manufacture, use, or sale of patented products in the United States, and this domestic
infringement causes-in-fact and proximately causes either (1) the plaintiff to lose
sales that the plaintiff would have made to foreign customers, or (2) the defendant to
make sales abroad that the defendant otherwise would not have made, the plaintiff is entitled to recover, respectively, either its own
lost profit on its lost foreign sales, or a royalty reflecting some portion of
the profit the defendant would have expected to earn from the defendant's foreign
sales, as of the date of the hypothetical ex ante bargain. In view of this precedent, the district judge gave
the jury the following instruction:
Columbia is entitled to damages based on sales to
customers located outside of the United States if you find that the infringing product
sold to those customers was made in or distributed from the United States,
even if the infringing product is delivered to a customer and used by the
customer outside the United States (p.23; emphasis added by the Federal Circuit).
The jury found that the
defendant (referred to throughout the opinion as “Norton”) sold antivirus software
abroad, and that “the infringing product” was made in or distributed from the
United States. (The jury did not find that the sales to foreign customers “substantially
occurred in the United States,” (p.24 n.7)). The appellate panel nevertheless agrees with
Norton that “no reasonable jury could conclude that any infringing copies of
Norton’s software that were sold to customers outside the United States were
made in the United States or distributed from the United States” (p.24).
This seems correct to
me under the governing standards for determining what an infringing software
product is, principally Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp., 550 U.S.
437 (2006). As the panel explains:
Microsoft establishes that software in the
abstract—that is, software not physically encoded in a “tangible copy” like a
CD or hard drive—is akin to a “blueprint” or “a schematic, template, or
prototype.” Id. at 449–50. If someone abroad builds an infringing
product based upon a blueprint that exists in the United States, for example,
then the product was still made abroad. See id. at 442. So too, software is not
tangible—or capable of infringing the asserted claims—until tethered in a
particular copy of the software encoded in a computer-readable medium (p.25).
Applying this
principle:
The system claim, ’322 patent, claim 27, includes a “processor.”
Like the apparatus claim at issue in Microsoft, this claim is not
infringed until a particular instance of software is installed onto a computer
with a processor. See Centillion Data Sys., LLC v. Qwest Commc’ns. Int’l,
Inc., 631 F.3d 1279, 1288 (Fed. Cir. 2011). Because the instances of
software sold to customers located abroad are not installed on a computer in
the United States, those instances were not made in or distributed from the
United States.
The same conclusion follows as to the other claims asserted
here. A method claim is only infringed when the claimed process is performed;
it is not infringed by the mere existence of software that, if installed on a
computer, could perform the method. See Ericsson, Inc. v. D-Link Sys.,
773 F.3d 1201, 1219 (Fed. Cir. 2014). Because the infringing software is only
capable of performing either of the claimed methods once installed on a
computer, the versions installed abroad also cannot give rise to domestic
infringement. In any event, “[t]here is no established recognition in patent
law of direct infringement by ‘making’ a ‘method.’” See Brumfield, 97
F.4th at 879. The methods here were not “made” in the United States nor
“distributed” from the United States.
This leaves only claim 11 of the ’322 patent, the computer-readable
medium claim. Columbia argues that this claim must be treated differently,
because it does not require that a particular version of software be first
installed on a computer with a processor to be infringing. It is true that
claim 11 does not require software to be installed on a device with a
processor, but claim 11 does still require that the software be encoded in a
particular “non-transitory computer-readable medium.” ’322 patent, claim 11.
While a non-transitory computer-readable medium may be created on a server in
the United States, that medium is not exported abroad. The computer-readable
media sold to foreign customers are only created once the foreign computer encodes
the software on its hard drive, which occurs outside the United States. These
computer-readable media are—like the apparatuses in Microsoft—created
outside the United States and therefore cannot be domestically infringing.
Under the logic the Court applied in Microsoft, these cannot constitute
infringing products that were made in or distributed from the United States
(pp. 25-26).
Columbia tries a few
additional arguments on appeal, but none of them work. The one that might have worked, had it
been presented at trial, was that “the jury could have found that the domestic
infringement involved in creating its master copies, which enabled the foreign sales,
were the cause of the foreign sales damages. However, the jury was not
instructed, and Columbia did not seek an instruction, that they could grant a
reasonable royalty for foreign sales based on this theory. We cannot reform the
damages theory actually presented to the jury in favor of an alternative that
was not, even if the alternative would have been legally valid. . . . We thus
need not reach the question of whether Columbia’s theory of foreign damages was
proper under the causation theory of Brumfield.” (p.25). My initial reaction is that that theory probably
wouldn’t have worked either, because the causal connection between the domestic
manufacture of the master copies and the foreign sales is too tenuous to
satisfy proximate causation, though I would want to know more about the
underlying facts to assert that opinion with confidence. (Alternatively, if the domestic manufacture of the master copies could have been outsourced, then in my opinion outsourcing should count as a noninfringing
alternative, and any royalty awarded for the resulting foreign sales should reflect only the cost saving, if any, of domestic over foreign manufacture of the master copies. Whether the courts would agree with me on
this remains to be seen.) The appellate
court also rejects arguments that Norton could be liable as a joint infringer
with the foreign customers, or that Norton could be liable under an inducement
theory (pp. 27-28).
As for willfulness and
enhanced damages, the court affirms the finding of willfulness, primarily on
the basis of evidence that Norton was aware in advance of “‘the Columbia
professors’ designs and work before the patents issued’ including the
provisional application,” and the lack of evidence that, during the relevant
time period, Norton was aware of and acted upon its subsequently asserted objectively
reasonable defenses (pp. 21-22). The
court nevertheless vacates the district judge’s enhancement of actual damages (2.6 times the actual damages) and the award of attorneys’ fees, in part because the
amount awarded and the finding of exceptionality were based on the
vacated finding of contempt of court. In addition, the case was close (on
patent eligibility) and Norton’s assertion of allegedly “repetitive” arguments
did not amount to litigation misconduct.