No Standing and No Vacatur for Patent Licensee Seeking Review of IPR Decisions

| December 28, 2021

Apple Inc. v. Qualcomm Incorporated

Decided on November 10, 2021

Newman, Prost, and Stoll.  Opinion by Prost. Dissent by Newman.

Summary

For a second time involving the same parties who had entered a license agreement as part of settlement of global patent litigation, the Federal Circuit denied standing to appeal from the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) where the underlying facts were identical to those in the previous case, except for the identity of patents at issue.  The Federal Circuit also rejected the licensee’s request to vacate the PTAB decision which was found unappealable for lack of standing.  The dissent argued that the mere existence of a license should not negate the licensee’s right to challenge the patent validity in Article III court.

Details

“Flashback” to Apple I

The Opinion begins by referring to Apple Inc. v. Qualcomm Inc., 992 F.3d 1378, 1385 (Fed. Cir. 2021) (“Apple I”), where Qualcomm sued Apple in a district court for infringement of patents; Apple sought an inter partes review (“IPR”) of those patents; the two companies settled all their litigation and entered a license agreement, leading to dismissal of the infringement action with prejudice; thereafter, Apple appealed a final decision of the IPR issued in favor of Qualcomm.

At issue in Apple I was Apple’s standing before the Article III court.  There, Apple was found to lack standing because:

  1. No sufficient evidence or argument was presented that invalidity of any specific patent would change any aspect of the contractual relationship or royalty imposed on Apple.
  • Apple’s evidence failed to identify any particular patent or potentially infringing activity that is tied to a risk of litigation after the license has expired.
  • Apple’s invocation of the estoppel provision was insufficient to warrant standing.

Rehearing was denied en banc in Apple I.

No Standing in Deference to Apple I

The Federal Circuit dismissed for lack of standing following the precedent.  Since “the operative facts are the same,” the difference in the patents between the two cases was “irrelevant.”  Further, the court rejected Apple’s assertion that the previous case did not articulate the reason why a threat of litigation that would potentially result from Apple’s failure to pay the license fee and termination of the agreement does not suffice to establish standing.

Vacatur Denied

Apple asserted that if it lacks standing, the PTAB decisions should be vacated, which would otherwise frustrate future litigation involving the same patents.  In so doing, Apple relied on the principle in United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., which allows vacatur of a judgement below where the case has become moot on appeal.

The Federal Circuit disagreed.  First, Munsignwear was distinguished because it concerns mootness, rather than standing.  The difference between the two doctrines resides in the timing: Standing relates to existence of controversy “at the outset” of the appeal whereas mootness considers existence of controversy “throughout the proceedings.”  To the extent the dispute between the parties had disappeared before the appeal was filed, the case cannot “become moot.”  Second, even if the mootness doctrine were applicable, the court stated that vacatur would still not be appropriate. Because the alleged mootness was caused by Apple’s own voluntary action (i.e., settlement), it could not claim the equitable remedy of vacatur. 

Dissent

The dissenting opinion noted that continuing controversy existed where Apple, although agreeing to settlement and license, still disputed the validity of the licensed patents, and the potentially infringing products will likely remain on the market after the termination of the contract, which does not cover the entire life of the patents as a result of Qualcomm’s refusal of Apple’s request otherwise.  The dissent also argued that denial of the standing is contrary to the statutory purposes of estoppel and right of appeal provisions under the AIA.  Furthermore, citing United States v. Arthrex, Inc., 141 S. Ct. 1970 (2021) (see Cindy Chen’s previous report), which required vacatur of PTAB decisions that are unreviewable by a principle agency officer, the dissent argued that the IPR decisions in the present case should be vacated if Apple is denied the constitutional right of judicial review.

Takeaway

  • In addition to confirming that the patent licensee seeking appeal from the IPR lacks Article III standing in the circumstances of the case, the Federal Circuit found that such a party also forfeited its right to vacatur of the underlying IPR decision.
  • Potential consequences of settlement and license where an IPR is pending could be grave; not only could it limit the party’s ability to prove a requisite injury for standing to appeal, but also it could foreclose the remedy of vacatur, thereby affecting future re-litigation.

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