Factual background
LG Electronics (LGE) owned several patents on methods and systems for processing information. It entered into two contracts with Intel. In the License Agreement, LGE authorized Intel to make and sell microprocessor products using the patented inventions. Moreover, the License Agreement expressly stated that no license was granted to any third party for combining licensed products with other products (for example, for combining Intel microprocessor products with other parts of a computer). The License Agreement also provided, however, "Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in this Agreement, the parties agree that nothing herein shall in any way limit or alter the effect of patent exhaustion that would otherwise apply when a party hereto sells any of its Licensed Products." In the Master Agreement, LGE required Intel to give its customers notice that the patent license does not extend to any product made by combining a licensed Intel microprocessor product with any other product (for example, a computer). The Master Agreement also provided that its breach would have no effect on the License Agreement and would not be grounds for its termination. Apparently, LGE was willing to allow Intel's customers to combine the microprocessor products with products not licensed by LGE, but only upon payment of a further royalty to LGE for the right to do so. This point is not discussed in the Court's opinion, which recites the facts only in very limited terms because the record was under seal to protect trade secrets.''Mallinckrodt'' background
In ''Supreme Court opinion
The Supreme Court unanimously reversed, in an opinion by Justice Clarence Thomas.Method claims
First, the Court said, the distinction between method and product claims is insupportable. In ''Exhaustion and related patents
The Court then turned to the extent, if any, to which exhaustion of the patent rights on the microprocessor products exhausted patent rights relating to the combination products on which LGE had patents. In the ''Univis'' case the sale that exhausted patent rights was a sale of an unpatented semifinished lens blank, which subsequent processing turned into a patented finished lens. The Intel microprocessor products were finished commercial articles of commerce, but in this case the trial court had found as a fact that the microprocessor products had no noninfringing use, just as in the ''Univis'' case the semifinished lens blanks had no use but to be finished into the patented finished lens blanks. Therefore, the Court found ''Univis'' dispositive. In the ''Quanta'' Court's language, in ''Univis'' "exhaustion was triggered by the sale of the lens blanks because their only reasonable and intended use was to practice the patent and because they 'embodie essential features of hepatented invention.'" LGE did not challenge the claim that the intended and reasonable use of the microprocessor products was to incorporate them into computers, but it claimed that some noninfringing uses existed: they could be sold overseas, as repair parts, or by disabling the features that made them patented. The Court dismissed these arguments. As for disablement, the Court asserted that the disabled device aspects ("features") rather than the device that remained must have a noninfringing use, so that disabling them would cause them to have "no real use." As for foreign or replacement use, the legal test to be looked to was whether the product would perform the patented method or embody the patented product, not whether the use gave rise to infringement liability. A further reason why sales of the microprocessor products exhausted LGE's patent rights was that "everything inventive about each patent is embodied in" the licensed Intel products, which "embody the essential features of the icensedpatents because they carry out all the inventive processes when combined, according to their design, with standard components." Any point of novelty—that is, respect in which the claimed invention departs from the prior art—is found in the licensed microprocessor products rather than in the combination product of which they are components. This last aspect of the ''Quanta'' opinion is similar to theLicensing a limited field
LGE's argument for non-exhaustion sought to invoke the doctrine of '' General Talking Pictures Corp. v. Western Electric Co.'' In that case, the patentee had granted no license for "commercial" amplifiers. Therefore, when a manufacturer licensed only in the "non-commercial"The License Agreement authorized Intel to sell products that practiced the patents. No conditions limited Intel's authority to sell products substantially embodying the patents. ... Intel's authorized sale to Quanta thus took its products outside the scope of the patent monopoly, and as a result, LGE can no longer assert its patent rights against Quanta.Thus, the exhaustion doctrine governed what Quanta could lawfully do with what it bought from Intel. The failure to give third parties a license to combine Intel microprocessor product with other products had no legal significance, because the exhaustion doctrine obviated any need for such a license. Having bought the products from an authorized seller, Quanta didn't need any license.
No contract issue
The Court added a final note pointing out that the case did not raise, and the Court did not rule on, whether LGE could have enforced a contractual restriction. In footnote 7, the Court commented:We note that the authorized nature of the sale to Quanta does not necessarily limit LGE's other contract rights. LGE's complaint does not include a breach-of-contract claim, and we express no opinion on whether contract damages might be available even though exhaustion operates to eliminate patent damages.By the same token, the Court said nothing as to specific performance or whether contract rights, if any, could be enforced against Quanta.
Impact and issues that the court did not consider
The impact of ''Quanta'' is problematic, largely because the decision avoided deciding many issues, presumably in the interest of maintaining consensus. (The decision was unanimous.) One academic commented:It is a very disappointing decision from the Court. It decided so little, and it was such an important case. You are left reading tea leaves.The Court's failure to approve or reject the precedent on which the Federal Circuit had relied in its decision in ''Quanta'', ''
The Supreme Court, in ''Quanta'', was widely expected to rule on whether ''Mallinckrodt'' was good law. But the Court sidestepped the issue by narrowly interpreting the license agreement so that it was not a conditional license. ... Because the Supreme Court sidestepped the issue, it remains unclear to what extent a patentee can use a conditional license to impose restrictions on downstream purchasers.The Court held that " e longstanding doctrine of patent exhaustion provides that the initial authorized sale of a patented item terminates all patent rights to that item." But what constitutes "authorization"? The Court did not address the issue of "constructive" authorization—that is, authorization as a matter of law in certain circumstances, whether or not the patentee or licensor likes it or tries to avoid it. Accordingly, it is uncertain to what extent ''Quanta'' undoes ''Mallinckrodt''. That seems to be the unstated message in ''Quanta'', but the Federal Circuit may take an impenitent view, in defiance of the Solicitor General's views as ''amicus''.
Other transactional forms
The Court left important issues addressed in ''Quanta''. One issue is that the Court did not say anything about the other possible forms this transaction could have employed—such as a sale by a manufacturing licensee with a limitation on its grant, or (alternatively) a sale by the patentee or its licensee with explicit restrictions imposed on the buyer's freedom to dispose of the product. The Court did not explain whether or in what circumstances these other formats would be legally effective. The first of these possible formats follows the pattern of the '' General Talking Pictures'' case. The second format follows the pattern of the '' Mallinckrodt'' case. Under the former, a patentee may limit the scope of a manufacturer-licensee's license to a defined field—such as microprocessors not incorporated into computers—and then the use of those micropressors as computer components is a patent infringement. This is the format that LGE thought it was using. Under the ''Mallinckrodt'' doctrine, sale of a patented product subject to a restriction—such as this microprocessor cannot be sold for use as a computer component—is a "conditional," rather than "unconditional," sale. If the condition is violated the conduct is patent infringement. The exhaustion doctrine does not apply under the rule stated in ''Mallinkrodt''. However, as ''Quanta'' seemingly holds, when a restriction is not ''clearly and explicitly stated'' the exhaustion doctrine applies.Resolving the "anomaly"
In a brief to the Supreme Court (at its request) when the petition for writ of certiorari was pending, the Solicitor General observed that a curious "anomaly" existed between the exhaustion doctrine and ''General Talking Pictures'' doctrine:ere is a seeming anomaly in allowing a patentee to achieve indirectly –- through an enforceable condition on the licensee –– a limitation on use or resale that ecause of the exhaustion doctrinethe patentee could not itself impose on a direct purchaser, etthe distinction is a necessary and explicable result of the Court's decision in ''General Talking Pictures''.For reasons that so far have not been explained in any publicly available document, the Government deleted this passage from its subsequent brief on the merits. As the Government brief suggested, on the one hand, the exhaustion doctrine prohibits post-sale restraints on a patentee's (or its licensee's) sale of goods, while on the other hand ''General Talking Pictures'' permits a patentee to place post-sale limitations on its manufacturing licensee's sale of goods if the license to manufacture uses the right, wording. Nothing in the ''Quanta'' opinion addresses this, much less attempts to resolve it or synthesize the competing doctrines.
Contract vs the exhaustion doctrine
The Court's note 7 expressly refrained from stating any of the following: whether contractual language could overcome, or prevent triggering, the exhaustion doctrine; if so, what language would accomplish that; and whether the context would be relevant. To the extent that the exhaustion doctrine is grounded in considerations of public policy, and to the extent that the interests of the public and third parties (such as Quanta in the ''Quanta'' case) are to be considered as well as those of the contracting parties, the courts may be more likely to place limits on whether the parties can by contract make the doctrine inapplicable to the goods that are the subject of their contract. On the other hand, if the policy of the exhaustion doctrine is merely a rule to make sure that downstream purchasers get fair notice that their use of such goods will be restricted, courts may be more likely to uphold such restrictions unless they collide with other policies, such as those of competition or antitrust law. The Court explicitly refused to consider this issue in ''Quanta''. The ''Quanta'' court did make clear, however, that it recognized the fundamental difference in law between a sale of patented goods by a patentee and a patentee's license of another to manufacture the patented goods, which the Supreme Court had explained in '' United States v. General Electric Co.'' At the same time, the Court made it clear that LGE had failed to license Intel in language that complied with the ''General Talking Pictures'' doctrine, which could have changed the outcome. The House of Lords considered whether contract could defeat the similar doctrine against derogation from title in ''Subsequent decisions
''Static Control''
In ''Static Control Components, Inc. v. Lexmark Int'l, Inc.'', the district court reconsidered its decision in this case and granted a judgment as a matter of law (JMOL) in favor of the alleged infringer. The court said that the Supreme Court's ''Quanta'' decision had "changed the landscape of the doctrine of patent exhaustion generally, and specifically" required a reversal of the judgment, so that SCCI was not liable to Lexmark for patent infringement. Lexmark had sought to restrict the refilling of its toner cartridges by relying on the ''Mallinckrodt'' doctrine. However, it did not enter into any conventional bilateral contract selling the toner cartridges to the public on a "conditional sale" basis. Instead, Lexmark relied on "shrinkwrap licenses," and restrictive notices accompanying the products. The court considered these ineffective to prevent application of the exhaustion doctrine, despite ''Mallinckrodts approval of their use. The court acknowledged that, " Lexmark points out, the Supreme Court did not expressly overrule ''Mallinckrodt'' in its ''Quanta'' opinion." Nonetheless, the court concluded:After reviewing ''Quanta'', ''Mallinckrodt'', and the parties' arguments, this Court is persuaded that ''Quanta'' overruled ''Mallinckrodt sub silentio''. The Supreme Court's broad statement of the law of patent exhaustion simply cannot be squared with the position that the ''Quanta'' holding is limited to its specific facts. Further, the Federal Circuit relied in part on ''Mallinckrodt'' in reaching its decision in ''LG Electronics, Inc. v. Bizcom Electronics, Inc''., 453 F.3d 1364, 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2006), the decision the Supreme Court reversed in ''Quanta''. It is also worth noting that the ''Quanta'' decision did not mention a single Federal Circuit case.However, the court did not consider ''Quanta'' to have foreclosed the enforcement of the shrinkwrap restrictions under state contract law. The contract law aspects of the case became moot, however, because Lexmark voluntarily dismissed its claims of Static Control's tortious interference with contract.
''Impression Products''
In April 2015, the Federal Circuit '' sua sponte'' called for briefing and ''In light of ''Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc.'', 553 U.S. 617 (2008), should this court overrule ''Mallinckrodt, Inc. v. Medipart, Inc.'', 976 F.2d 700 (Fed. Cir. 1992), to the extent it ruled that a sale of a patented article, when the sale is made under a restriction that is otherwise lawful and within the scope of the patent grant, does not give rise to patent exhaustion?''Lexmark Int'l, Inc. v. Impression Prods., Inc.'', Order of April 14, 2015 (Fed. Cir.).
References
External links
* {{caselaw source , case = ''Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc.'', {{Ussc, 553, 617, 2008, el=no , cornell =https://www.law.cornell.edu/supct/html/06-937.ZS.html , courtlistener =https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/145800/quanta-computer-inc-v-lg-electronics-inc/ , googlescholar = https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8144419637375231952 , justia =https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/553/617/ , oyez =https://www.oyez.org/cases/2007/06-937 United States Supreme Court cases United States Supreme Court cases of the Roberts Court United States patent case law LG Electronics 2008 in United States case law Quanta Computer United States misuse law