Patent Damages Law & Practice


Book Description

Focuses on the current law of damages in utility patent cases, evaluating damages in such cases, enhancing or limiting damages, and techniques and tips for conducting the prosecution or defense of a patent damages case. Discusses only the current state of the law with reference to the historical roots of some doctrines where appropriate. Seven chapters present a primer on patent law and discuss lost profits, reasonable royalty damages, enhancement of damages, limitations on damage awards, litigation case study, and pre-filing issues and forms.







Patent Law and Practice


Book Description




Intellectual Property Law


Book Description

This book addresses two crucial concerns of intellectual property owners--how to recover monetary compensation when an infringement has occurred and how to prevent further infringement.




Infringement of the United States Patent Right


Book Description

Dr. Holzmann introduces the manager and technologist as well as the student and the foreign patent practitioner to the United States Law of Patent Infringement. Dr. Holzmann directly addresses what to do when a patent is being infringed. The author explains and interprets the intricacies of the patent law and provides a strong basis of understanding future changes in patent law. This valuable volume should appeal to academics and students of law, attorneys specializing in corporate law, patent attorneys, CEOs in technical firms, and CEOs of foreign corporations.




Patent Infringement


Book Description

"A methodical seven-step approach to the estimation of patent compensation and damages." - Legal Information Alert When a patent has been infringed, there's usually a price to pay, whether it's the result of a trial verdict or a negotiated settlement. Even when compensation for patent infringement is a certainty,determining the right amount is a complex matter involving the interplay of many legal and financial variables. Patent Infringement: Compensation and Damages is a complete, concise and detailed guide. It explains each step, from a finding of infringement to a determination of damages. The process starts with determining the damages period and damages base, from both a product and a geographic perspective. Next, the appropriate theory--reasonable royalty or lost profits--is applied. Then enhancements or limitations are considered, as well as the likelihood and effect of an injunction. The book shows you the methods used, the possible variations, the unique patent law doctrines that may apply, and the strategies to consider in seeking terms most advantageous to your client. The book also examines how awards of damages are treated under accounting rules and discusses the admissibility of evidence from expert witnesses respecting damages. Patent Infringement: Compensation and Damages equips you with legal and practical insights that will keep you one step ahead of opposing counsel. Don't try or settle another case without it.




Intellectual Property Litigation


Book Description

Intellectual Property Litigation: Pretrial Practice, Third Edition offers up-to-date, comprehensive case analysis and a clear framework for streamlining the procedural requirements and issues involved in resolving patent disputes. You'll find unparalleled analysis of crucial procedures and guiding case law on key phases of pretrial litigation practice including: preliminary injunction, bifurcation, discovery, summary judgment, and more. With Intellectual Property Litigation, youand’ll learn cutting-edge, evidence-based practices to establish facts, test the sufficiency of your opponentand’s case, commit your opponent to a position, and focus the issues toward your advantage. This must-have resource provides expert guidance and in-depth case analysis to pave your way through complex intellectual property litigation, including: How to use injunctive relief, bifurcation, discovery, and summary judgment to resolve disputes The best methods for protecting sensitive information from discovery Recognizing and using the claims and defenses commonly encountered in patent litigation Recent Federal Circuit and Supreme Court cases on the evolving standards for invalidating patents And much more!




Intellectual Property Law and Litigation


Book Description

Provides an overview of intellictual property law, with a special emphasis on patent litigation.




Aspen Treatise for Patent Law


Book Description

Succinct and timely, Patent Law, Sixth Edition demystifies its subject as it explores and explains important cases, judicial authorities, statutes, and policy. Approachably written for law students, attorneys, inventors, and laypersons alike, this text stands on its own and may be used alongside any patent or IP casebook to support more in-depth study of patent law. New to the Sixth Edition: Coverage of the Supreme Court’s ongoing, intensive scrutiny of the America Invents Act (AIA), the most significant change to U.S. patent law in 70 years, including: Helsinn (definition of prior art under the AIA) Cuozzo (non-reviewability of institution decisions) Oil States (Constitutionality of AIA) SAS Institute (rejecting partial institution) Return Mail (federal government not a “person” entitled to post-grant review) Dex Media (cert. granted, reviewability of Board’s time-bar decisions) The burgeoning landscape of patent-eligibility jurisprudence under 35 U.S.C. §101, including Federal Circuit decisions in: Vanda, Cleveland Clinic, Genetic Techs., Endo, Athena Diagnostics (laws of nature) Enfish; Thales Visionix (abstract ideas) Berkheimer, Aatrix, Cellspin (role of fact questions in the Mayo/Alice Step Two “inventiveness” inquiry) Disparate viewpoints for analyzing the bedrock requirement of nonobviousness, including the Federal Circuit’s first en banc obviousness decision in thirty years: Apple v. Samsung The continued vitality of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents, as illustrated in a spate of Federal Circuit decisions including: Lilly v. Hospira Supreme Court decisions examining patent infringement remedies, including: WesternGeco (offshore lost profits) NantKwest (cert. granted, attorney fee-shifting in §145 civil actions) Supreme Court decisions cabining long-standing defenses to patent infringement, including: Impression Products (patent exhaustion) SCA Hygiene (laches and equitable estoppel) Professors and students will benefit from: Thorough coverage and clear writing that clarifies principal legal doctrines, key judicial authorities, governing statutes, and policy considerations for obtaining, enforcing, and challenging a U.S. patent In-depth treatment and comparison of pre- and post-America Invents Act regimes for novelty and prior art with numerous hypotheticals Timely statistics on patent trends Succinct analysis of multi-national patent protection regimes Helpful visual aids, such as figures, tables, and timelines A sample patent and breakdown of a prosecution history Boldfaced key terms and a convenient Glossary




Compensatory Damages Issues in Patent Infringement Cases - Second Edition


Book Description

Several years ago, then-Chief Judge Paul R. Michel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit brought together a diverse group of lawyers, judges, academics, and experts to develop a guide for trial courts to consult when faced with issues of compensatory damages in patent infringement cases. The goal was to bring to bear the participants' collective experience on how best to address and resolve patent damages issues, all within the overarching framework of achieving the "just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action and proceeding."1 The first edition of this pocket guide, published in 2011, was the result. As that initial publication recognized, however, patent infringement damages is a continuously evolving area of law. In the intervening years, the courts not only have continued to refine the legal principles that govern the determination of patent infringement damages, but also have implemented a variety of case-management techniques that focus on patent damages. Judge Jeremy Fogel, director of the Federal Judicial Center, therefore requested a revised patent damages guide to reflect the current state of the law and the courts' evolving case-management efforts. This second edition is the result. As with the original, this revised guide does not attempt to provide a comprehensive explication of substantive damages law or to predict its future evolution. Rather, it is intended to focus on case-management practices that may be helpful to the courts in the adjudication of patent infringement damages. Because judges have requested inclusion of more substantive damages law, however, we have added more detail in this regard, but we have stopped well short of presenting a patent damages treatise.