The Proper Royalty Base for Patent Damages

J. Sidak
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引用次数: 24

Abstract

How should a court determine the proper royalty base when calculating either reasonable-royalty damages for patent infringement or fair, reasonable, and nondiscriminatory (FRAND) royalties for infringement of, or licensing disputes over, standard-essential patents (SEPs)? This determination is particularly challenging in the context of a multi-component device, such as a smartphone. It is established patent jurisprudence that a reasonable royalty should reflect the terms of a hypothetical license resulting from a voluntary negotiation between a willing licensor and a willing licensee at the moment just before first infringement. In real-world patent negotiations, firms often calculate royalties with reference to the retail price of the downstream product. Therefore, using that downstream retail price as the royalty base is the most authentic assumption about the royalty base that a court could use for a hypothetical negotiation between a willing licensor and a willing licensee. Nonetheless, as a result of a recent series of confusing and contradictory opinions, the Federal Circuit in all but exceptional cases now decidedly favors using, for purposes of the hypothetical negotiation, a royalty base equivalent to the price of the infringing product’s “smallest salable patentpracticing component” instead of the “entire market value” of the product. In cases where the downstream product is the “smallest salable patent-practicing component” and unpatented features constitute a substantial proportion of the product, the Federal Circuit favors subtracting the value of these unpatented elements from the royalty base. This development in the law of the entire market value rule (EMVR) has perverse consequences that the Federal Circuit has yet to recognize. Using the price of the smallest salable patent-practicing component as the royalty base risks undercompensating the patent holder, because it ignores (1) the effects that the patented technology has on the value of the downstream product and (2) the value that synergies between complementary technologies create. A more complete economic approach would account for such complementarity effects by permitting the use of the retail price of the downstream product as the royalty base. The Federal Circuit’s choice of royalty base in its EMVR jurisprudence seems based on a theory that juries tend to overcompensate patent holders due to cognitive bias. However, the Federal Circuit fails to explain
专利损害赔偿的适当权利金基础
在计算专利侵权的合理版税损害赔偿或计算标准必要专利(sep)侵权或许可纠纷的公平、合理和非歧视(FRAND)版税时,法院应如何确定适当的版税基础?在多组件设备(如智能手机)的背景下,这种确定尤其具有挑战性。专利法理学认为,合理的特许权使用费应该反映出假设许可的条款,该条款是在第一次侵权之前,由自愿的许可人与自愿的被许可人之间自愿协商产生的。在现实世界的专利谈判中,公司经常参照下游产品的零售价格来计算版税。因此,使用下游零售价格作为版税基础是法院在自愿许可人和自愿被许可人之间进行假设谈判时可以使用的关于版税基础的最真实的假设。尽管如此,由于最近一系列令人困惑和相互矛盾的意见,联邦巡回法院现在在除例外情况外的所有案件中都坚决倾向于在假设的谈判中使用相当于侵权产品“最小可销售专利实施组件”的价格的版税基础,而不是产品的“整个市场价值”。如果下游产品是“最小的可销售的专利实施组件”,并且非专利特征构成了产品的很大一部分,联邦巡回法院倾向于从版税基础中减去这些非专利元素的价值。整个市场价值规则(EMVR)法律的这种发展产生了联邦巡回法院尚未认识到的反常后果。使用最小的可销售专利实施组件的价格作为权利金基数有可能对专利权人补偿不足,因为它忽略了(1)专利技术对下游产品价值的影响以及(2)互补技术之间协同作用创造的价值。允许使用下游产品的零售价格作为特许权使用费基数,一种更完整的经济方法可以解释这种互补性效应。联邦巡回法院在EMVR判例中选择的版税基础似乎是基于一种理论,即由于认知偏见,陪审团倾向于过度补偿专利持有人。然而,联邦巡回法院未能解释
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