The U.S.
Supreme Court's unanimous backing on Monday of a ruling by the country's top
patent court was a rare instance of agreement with a body whose decisions in
that
specialized area it regularly overturns.
specialized area it regularly overturns.
Tellingly,
Monday's decision related to trademarks, not patents. Since its term began last
October, the Supreme Court has thrown out all six patent-related decisions by
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which was set up to handle
such cases.
Since 2014,
the high court has upheld the patent court in only two of 16 patent cases, a
Reuters review showed.
The lack of
agreement between the high court and the patent court reflects a basic conflict
at the top of the U.S. legal system over intellectual property rights, which
are critical to many industries.
The high
court's pattern on patent law is part of a wider trend, under Chief Justice
John Roberts, of the court siding with business in legal disputes that come
before it.
Business
interests have won a string of victories in the current term, which is
scheduled to end next week.
Through its
repeated reversals of the patent court, the Supreme Court is making it harder
to sue companies using patents. That helps major technology firms such as
Google, Apple and Samsung, all frequent targets of patent infringement lawsuits
by "patent trolls."
Other
industries, including drug and medical diagnostics companies, have warned
against weaker patent rights.
"The
patent system has been weakened, and as far as I'm concerned the Supreme Court
is unaware of that," said Paul Michel, who retired as Federal Circuit
chief judge in 2010.
A general view of the U.S. Supreme Court
building in Washington, U.S., November 15, 2016. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Michel said
the high court's decisions had created huge uncertainty for companies and
investors over patent rights and could affect research and development and
innovation.
Reached by
Reuters, a representative for the Federal Circuit declined to comment.
The Supreme
Court's patent cases this term have been significant, including one involving
Apple and Samsung over smartphones. In that case, the justices said the Federal
Circuit misinterpreted the law on design patents.
In another
major case, the Supreme Court repudiated a 27-year-old Federal Circuit
precedent and tightened where patent lawsuits may be filed, a blow to the
"trolls," or entities that generate revenue by suing over patents.
"It’s
pretty safe to say that it's one of the most impactful decisions of the
term," said Allyson Ho, a business lawyer, at a U.S. Chamber of Commerce
event on Friday.
In an
exception that perhaps proves the rule, the high court on Monday upheld the
Federal Circuit's decision to strike down a law that prevents disparaging names
from being trademarked. The Federal Circuit also handles some trademark cases.
CONDESCENDING
TONE
The justices
have sometimes adopted a condescending tone toward the Federal Circuit's patent
rulings.
During
arguments in a 2014 case, Roberts suggested the Federal Circuit was failing at
streamlining patent law, one of the reasons for its creation in 1982.
Supreme
Court Justice Samuel Alito wrote in an opinion that same year that the Federal
Circuit "fundamentally misunderstands what it means to infringe"
certain patents.
When the
patent court was founded, the judges "saw their mission as making patents
stronger, and the Supreme Court thought it went too far and started to reel
them in," said Rochelle Dreyfuss, a professor of law at New York
University who has studied the court. "Now the question is whether the
pendulum has swung too far in the other direction."
She said the
patent court was doing a better job explaining its rulings. It recently seated
several new judges, and Sharon Prost, viewed as less pro-patent than her
predecessor, became chief judge in 2014.
Duke
University law professor Arti Rai said the high court seemed to disapprove of
treating patent law differently from other areas of law.
The
situation could spark further debate over the future trajectory of the
specialist court, Rai said. For several years, attorneys, judges and professors
have sparred over whether the court should retain exclusive control over patent
cases.
Some
observers note that other appeals courts also go through periods of high
reversal rates.
Carter
Phillips, who frequently argues patent cases, said that since the Federal
Circuit was the sole appeals court to decide patent issues, the Supreme Court
was more likely to review only those rulings it thinks are wrong.
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