Solving the Patent Settlement Puzzle

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Texas Law Review Pub Date : 2012-12-21 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2125456
E. Elhauge, Alexander Krueger
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

Courts and commentators are sharply divided about how to assess “reverse payment” patent settlements under antitrust law. The essential problem is that a PTO-issued patent provides only a probabilistic indication that courts would hold that the patent is actually valid and infringed, and parties have incentives to structure reverse payment settlements to exclude entry for longer than this patent probability would merit. Some favor comparing the settlement exclusion period to the expected litigation exclusion period, but this requires difficult case-by-case assessments of the probabilities of patent victory. Others instead favor a formal “scope of the patent” test that allows such settlements for nonsham patents if the settlement does not delay entry beyond the patent term, preclude noninfringing products, or delay nonsettling entrants. However, the formal scope of the patent test excludes entry for longer than merited by the patent strength, and it provides no solution when there is either a significant dispute about infringement or a bottleneck issue delaying other entrants. This Article provides a way out of this dilemma. It proves that when the reverse payment amount exceeds the patent holder’s anticipated litigation costs, then under standard conditions the settlement will, according to the patent holder’s own probability estimate, exclude entry for longer than both the expected litigation exclusion period and the optimal patent exclusion period, and thus will both harm consumer welfare and undermine optimal innovation incentives. Further, whenever a reverse payment is necessary for settlement, it will also have those same anticompetitive effects according to the entrant’s probability estimate. This proof thus provides an easily administrable way to determine when a reverse payment settlement is necessarily anticompetitive, without requiring any probabilistic inquiry into the patent merits. We also show that, contrary to conventional wisdom, patent settlements without any reverse payment usually (but not always) exceed both the expected litigation exclusion period and the optimal patent exclusion period, and we suggest a procedural solution to resolve such cases.
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解决专利和解难题
法院和评论人士在如何根据反垄断法评估“反向支付”专利和解问题上存在严重分歧。关键问题是,专利商标局颁发的专利只提供了一个概率指示,即法院会认为该专利实际上是有效的,并且受到了侵犯,而当事人有动机构建反向支付协议,以排除专利进入的时间超过该专利可能性所应得的时间。一些人倾向于将和解排除期与预期的诉讼排除期进行比较,但这需要逐个评估专利获胜的可能性。另一些人则支持正式的“专利范围”测试,如果和解不会延迟专利期限以外的进入,排除非侵权产品,或延迟非和解进入者,则允许对非虚假专利进行和解。然而,专利测试的正式范围排除了超过专利实力所应有的进入时间,并且当存在重大侵权纠纷或瓶颈问题延迟其他进入者时,它无法提供解决方案。本文提供了一个摆脱这种困境的方法。证明当反向支付金额超过专利权人的预期诉讼成本时,在标准条件下,根据专利权人自己的概率估计,和解排除进入的时间将超过预期诉讼排除期和最优专利排除期,从而既损害消费者福利,又破坏最优创新激励。此外,只要需要反向支付结算,根据进入者的概率估计,它也将具有相同的反竞争效应。因此,这种证明提供了一种易于管理的方法来确定何时反向支付结算必然是反竞争的,而不需要对专利优点进行任何概率调查。我们还表明,与传统观点相反,没有任何反向支付的专利和解通常(但并非总是)超过预期的诉讼排除期和最佳专利排除期,我们建议采用程序解决方案来解决此类案件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Texas Law Review is a national and international leader in legal scholarship. Texas Law Review is an independent journal, edited and published entirely by students at the University of Texas School of Law. Our seven issues per year contain articles by professors, judges, and practitioners; reviews of important recent books from recognized experts, essays, commentaries; and student written notes. Texas Law Review is currently the ninth most cited legal periodical in federal and state cases in the United States and the thirteenth most cited by legal journals.
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