A Guide To Intellectual Property Litigation - Legal Blog
A Guide To Intellectual Property Litigation - Legal Blog
A Guide To Intellectual Property Litigation - Legal Blog
legal.thomsonreuters.com/blog/guide-to-intellectual-property-litigation
A company’s intellectual property (IP) is among its most valuable holdings. In today’s market, a company will
either thrive or wither depending on the strength of its IP and how well the company protects it.
(for trade secrets and patents) use the IP to implement systems, strategies, and processes for
commercial or non-commercial reasons;
(in the case of copyright) utilize the IP commercially, such as selling copies of the IP or distributing it
publicly;
(for trademarks) use the IP to sell products and services.
Patents: An infringer creates a product or service based upon designs and processes that belong to the
patent holder.
Copyright: An infringer makes an unauthorized copy of a copyright-protected piece of music and sells it
to consumers.
Trademarks: An infringer attempts to sell its product using a logo that’s considered too similar to the
trademark holder’s.
Trade secrets: An infringer enters a new market sector, its strategy based upon client analyses
considered to be the exclusive property of the IP holder.
Attorneys who represent claims for patents and trademarks will need to register with the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office (USPTO). To do so, they must present evidence of their undergraduate studies in a relevant
field and pass the USPTO’s “entrance” exam. If an IP attorney chooses to focus instead on copyrights or trade
secrets, this registration usually won’t be necessary.
With IP covering four different areas, let’s take a look at what litigation in each sector entails.
Patent litigation
In patent litigation, plaintiffs allege direct infringement—in which the defendant has allegedly manufactured,
used, sold and/or imported the plaintiff’s patented invention, method, or service without permission—or indirect
infringement, in which the defendant allegedly enabled or induced a third party to commit the infringement.
Patent litigation occurs in civil court and takes on average three to five years. Median case costs are in the $4
million range. Cases are usually tried before a jury. If the defendant is found to have infringed, the court may
levy financial damages and injunctions preventing the defendant from using the infringed patent.
Copyright litigation
For copyright litigation, a copyright owner seeks to prohibit the defendant’s unauthorized use of the copyrighted
materials and to recover damages.
There is a “statute of limitations” on copyright infringement: a plaintiff has three years after discovering potential
copyright infringement in order to file a lawsuit. According to a 2017 American Intellectual Property Law
Association report, the average cost of litigating a copyright infringement case in federal court is $278,000 and
cases may take over a year to litigate. The newly created Copyright Claims Board handles copyright
infringement claims whose maximum statutory damages are $15,000 per work and $30,000 per claim.
A plaintiff alleging copyright infringement must establish in court that it owns a valid copyright (registered with
the U.S. Copyright Office) and that the defendant infringed upon it.
Copyright litigation may also entail criminal prosecution by the U.S. government. Here, federal prosecutors seek
to prove that the defendant acted willfully and/or sought commercial or financial gain via its infringement. If they
prove these charges, the defendant faces criminal penalties that include imprisonment for up to five years and
fines of up to $250,000 per offense.
Trademark litigation
In trademark litigation, a plaintiff typically makes the following claims concerning the infringement:
Likelihood of confusion. The trademark holder argues that the similarity of its trademark and the defendant’s
confuses customers as to who is providing the products or services in question. To establish likelihood of
confusion, a trademark holder argues that the competing trademarks have proximity (same geographic region,
for example) and similarity of design.
Trademark dilution. Plaintiffs argue that a rival, unauthorized trademark, similar in image or name, reduces their
trademark’s distinctiveness and thus dilutes its value.
Trademark infringement lawsuits that advance to trial typically cost between $375,000 to $2 million. If the
trademark owner proves infringement, remedies include injunctions to prevent the defendant from using the
trademark in the future, destruction of defendant’s products using the infringed-upon trademark, and monetary
damages.
The information must have “actual or potential independent economic value by virtue of not being
generally known;”
It must have value to other individuals who cannot “legitimately” obtain it; and
It must be subject to “reasonable efforts” to maintain the secrecy of that information.
The trade secret holder must also prove in court that the secret was “misappropriated or wrongfully taken.” A
2019 AIPLA report estimated the median cost to litigate cases involving financial risk between $10 million and
$25 million was $4.1 million.
As with copyright, there are more severe repercussions for trade secret infringement than in trademark or patent
violations. If a defendant is proved to have violated the 1996 Economic Espionage Act, they may be hit with a
$500,000 fine and receive up to 10 years in prison. Corporations found in violation of the Act may be fined as
much as $5 million and the government may seize any purported stolen secrets and property.
There are ways to make the process more cost-efficient and less complex. The use of technology can improve a
plaintiff’s research, speed up discovery, and enable attorneys to craft a more compelling and thorough argument
in court. A service like Practical Law is an all-in-one tool with practicing attorney-editors offering expert guidance
to help you through an intellectual property litigation case.