blog
IP2Innovate

Prof. Rafal Sikorski: Towards a More Orderly Application of Proportionality to Patent Injunctions in the European Union

Rafal Sikorski is a law professor, Chair of European Law at the Adam Mickiewicz University of Poznan in Poland. He is also a senior partner at the Polish law firm SMM Legal.

 

Throughout his career as an academic and a practising lawyer Rafal Sikorski has focused on protection and licensing of intellectual property. He graduated a decade after Poland’s communist era had ended but still several years before it joined the European Union.

 

“There was a lot of unfair competition particularly around trademarks back then. Copyright  issues were also common.

 

Poland has come a long way since those Wild East days after communism. Today, his interests moved to patent law as patent abuse has taken over from the pirates and wheeler dealers abusing trademarks. The reason is simple: technology.

 

“The rapid advances in technology have led to more and more complicated products often incorporating hundreds, thousands of patents. This has created patent thickets. I have seen a lot of patent abuse here, and it’s stifling innovation, instead of promoting it as patents are supposed to,” he said.

 

Europe is some way behind the US in addressing some of the imbalances that have inadvertently created a lucrative industry in patent abuse.

 

 “The abuse of patents by patent asserting entities (PAEs) is a problem in Europe. Less so in the US since the 2006 Supreme Court ruling in the eBay case,” said Sikorski.

 

That landmark ruling forced courts in the US to take a more balanced approach to disputes between patent owners and implementers. Before it, injunctions were often handed out automatically.

 

Since the ruling, US courts no longer presume that infringement results in irreparable harm to the patentee. This means that effectively, injunctions are no longer automatic in the US.

 

Europe will follow suit. “The US is usually 10-15 years ahead of Europe. The idea of taking a more flexible approach to patent disputes is still very new here.”

 

He described the reform of German patent law adopted in June of this year as “a very interesting development”.

 

“German judges may be reluctant to move away from handing out automatic injunctions, but it will become hard to claim that nothing has changed as a result of the reform,” Sikorski said.

 

He added that when judges do hand out automatic injunctions these cases will be referred to the Court of Justice of the EU, where the meaning of proportionality will be considered.

 

“Over time this will lead to a change towards a more flexible approach by patent courts,” he said.

 

Not just in Germany but across Europe. “Once the principle of proportionality is there it’s hard to say it isn’t relevant. Potential litigants will try to use it, that’s for sure,” Sikorski said.

 

In fact, the principle of proportionality has been there for some time. It was enshrined in the 2004 Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Directive (IPRED) – a law originally intended as a safeguard against pirates and counterfeiters from the new EU member states, including Poland.

 

And yet automatic injunctions – with no consideration of proportionality - are still common in many of the largest patent jurisdictions in Europe. “I am astonished what some judges in the EU say (in defence of automatic injunctions), in spite of what is written in IPRED,” Sikorski said.

 

The European Commission is well placed to help speed up the process of reform. “It would be useful now for the European Commission to provide guidelines on how to interpret article 3 (2) of IPRED, and to explain what proportionality could mean in regard to patent litigation,” he said.

 

In the paper below by Professor Sikorski, titled: Towards a more orderly application of proportionality to patent injunctions in the EU,he proposes changes needed to safeguard Europe’s patent system from abuse by opportunistic PAEs.

Share

Other blogs

IP2Innovate

Professors Hofmann and Raue: Taking proportionality seriously in the Unified Patent Court

Two German law professors, Dr Franz Hofmann and Dr Benjamin Raue have pooled forces to publish a joint paper this week on the delicate issue of injunctions and damages for the infringement of patents. The paper, entitled ‘Injunctions and Damages for the Infringement of Patents under the UPCA; an Analysis in the Light of the Principle of Proportionality’ calls for a more nuanced approach to patent infringement cases, and it urges judges of the recently launched UPC to consider damages instead of automatic injunctions as a remedy in their rulings.
IP2Innovate

UPC wrangling over transparency risks undermining Europe’s patent court ambitions

The launch of Europe’s long-awaited Unified Patent Court has been rocked by an internal argument over transparency. New rules proposed last month would make secrecy the default, not transparency, and industry is not happy.
IP2Innovate

Seeking a new balance point in Europe’s patent system that better suits innovation and society

How to ensure the patent system in Europe best serves the innovation process has been a hotly debated topic for decades. In recent years lawmakers in Germany and in Brussels have started to realise that the old status quo – where patent courts hand out injunctions almost always automatically – doesn’t work in a world where advances in technology constantly bring more and more complex products to market, and where thousands of patents could possibly be relevant. It has become too easy for patent assertion entities (PAEs) to leverage the threat of automatic injunctions and disrupt the market presence of established consumer products in Europe to extract excessive license fees. While the interest of PAEs is limited to monetary compensation and not to stop the sale of products, the mere threat of such automatic injunctions is enough to push most targets of such assertions to accept disproportionate settlement conditions. It’s a hugely profitable business model for PAEs but it does little for innovation or for society, and undermines Europe’s competitiveness. By allowing this abuse, the European patent system is tilted too far in favour of patent holders and needs to be re-balanced. That is why in spring this year IP2Innovate called for the Commission to adjust the EU’s Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Directive (IPRED), adopted in 2004. The law does require courts to apply proportionality when considering patent infringement cases, but this is not being applied in practice as injunctions continue to be granted effectively automatically even in cases where an alternative remedy would be more proportionate. An analysis of patent court rulings provided by Darts-ip, the leading source of global patent case data, for the period 2015-2020, shows that more than 99% of cases saw no proportionality assessment. Ensuring the equitable resolution of patent litigation in the EU through a targeted amendment of the IPRED is of even more importance with the establishment of the Unified Patent Court (UPC). Indeed, a recent study by Professor Sterzi of the Bordeaux School of Economics shows that PAEs initiated close to 30% of all infringement actions in the ICT sector – a key area for European competitiveness – in the UPC. If automatic injunctions become the norm in the newly established UPC, innovative companies would face UPC-wide automatic injunctions and not just ones at national level. The European Commission is evaluating this dynamic, and in 2023 commissioned a study to look at whether proportionality is being applied in Europe as well as looking into the role of PAEs in Europe. IP2I welcomes the European Commission’s initiative as Europe needs a properly functioning patent system fit for the modern age if it is to succeed in enhancing Europe’s competitiveness. The proportionality of remedies must be applied in patent litigation. Courts and parties need a clearer steer from Brussels to ensure it happens. Targeted revisions of the IPRED in relation to proportionality look set to be the next key challenge in patent policy in Europe. IP2Innovate hopes that the new attention being paid to the IPRED’s proportionality requirement will help to find a balance point in the European patent system that better suits the broader interests of innovation and society.
Back to overview

Subscribe to our newsletter

Privacy policy

© IP2Innovate 2024 - Website door Two Impress