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Intellectual Property: Principles Governing Jurisdiction, Choice of Law, and Judgments in Transnational Disputes, © 2008 by The American Law Institute. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved.

 Intellectual Property: Principles Governing Jurisdiction, Choice of Law, and Judgments in Transnational Disputes-Copyright 2008 by The American Law Institute

Copyright 2008 by The American Law Institute. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY:

PRINCIPLES GOVERNING JURISDICTION, CHOICE OF LAW,

AND JUDGMENTS IN

TRANSNATIONAL DISPUTES

(with Comments and Reporters’ Notes)

Introduction

This is a set of Principles on jurisdiction, recognition of judgments, and applicable law

in transnational intellectual property civil disputes, drafted in a manner that endeavors to

balance civil-law and common-law approaches. The digital networked environment is

increasingly making multiterritorial simultaneous communication of works of authorship,

trade symbols, and other intellectual property a common phenomenon, and large-scale piracy

ever easier to accomplish. In this environment, the practical importance of adjudicating

multiterritorial claims in a single court should be readily apparent. Without a mechanism for

consolidating global claims and recognizing foreign judgments, effective enforcement of

intellectual property rights, and by the same token, effective defenses to those claims, may be

illusory for all but the most wealthy litigants. The following illustrates the nature of the

problem:

E-pod is an online music-delivery service located in Freedonia. Any computer-equipped

member of the public with Internet access anywhere may purchase copies of sound recordings

of musical compositions from the E-pod website. E-pod has not, however, obtained

permissions from the authors, performers, or producers of the works it makes available.

Moreover, the one-click checkout system E-pod’s website employs may infringe patents

registered in various countries. Finally, E-pod has received a cease-and-desist letter from

Apple Inc., which holds worldwide trademark rights in iPod for online music-delivery

services.

The example demonstrates how technological developments have changed the nature of

intellectual property litigation. First, digital media may produce ubiquitous infringements of

intellectual property rights, and thereby create transnational cases that require courts to

interpret foreign law or to adjudicate the effect of foreign activities. Second, the rights at issue

may encompass the range of intellectual property regimes. While transnational copyright and

trademark claims are by now well known, this example shows that patent infringements are

no longer as territorially discrete as was once assumed. Third, the potential impact of the

alleged infringements in every State in the world may make effective enforcement (or

defense) elusive. There may be no single court with full adjudicatory authority over

worldwide copyright, patent, and trademark claims. Even if there were, the choice-of-law

issues may prove excessively complex (or, paradoxically, misleadingly simple, if a court

entertaining all or part of a worldwide dispute yielded to the temptation to apply its own law

to the entire case). In contrast, State-by-State adjudication may make the choice-of-court and

choice-of-law issues appear easier to resolve, but multiple adjudication could produce

uncertainty, inconsistency, delay, and expense. Moreover, multiple suits involving the same

claims and incidents strain judicial dockets.

The Principles alleviate these problems in a variety of ways. They endeavor to enhance

procedural and substantive fairness. They endorse the long-familiar territorial approach to

choice of law for most cases. As a result, those creating, using, and transacting in intellectual

property can predict which laws will apply to their activities. As to jurisdiction, the Principles

recommend bases of authority for transnational disputes that are appropriate for the creative

community as a whole. They protect intellectual property users from being summoned to

unexpected locations and allow producers to select a court capable of rendering a timely

decision. Adoption of the Principles would give the courts and the parties assurance that

judgments will be enforced and recognized in subsequent foreign litigation. The Principles

also create a mechanism for making worldwide adjudication more efficient. They use lis

pendens and forum non conveniens doctrines as organizational devices to coordinate

litigation, either by facilitating cooperation among courts where related actions are pending or

by aggregating worldwide claims into a single court, chosen (in most instances) by the court

first seized, on the basis of the relationship between the chosen court, the parties, and the

dispute. Furthermore, coordination brings the parties together and promotes settlement. For

example, in Japan, the Wakai judicial settlement procedure creates a mechanism to judicially

mediate settlement of multiterritorial patent claims. See Yukio Nagasawa, Settlement

Conferences at Japanese Courts, AIPPI Journal, Jan. 2007, at 3. Cf. Boosey & Hawkes Music

Publishers, Ltd. v. Walt Disney Co., 145 F.3d 481 (2d Cir. 1998) (retaining jurisdiction over

18 foreign copyright infringement actions; the parties then settled all claims).

From the judicial standpoint, although entertaining claims under multiple laws may

appear daunting, multilateral treaties, such as the 1994 TRIPS Agreement, have muted

differences in substantive patent, trademark, and copyright norms. Under the Berne

Convention, copyrights arise simultaneously in all 163 (as of December 2007) member States.

Furthermore, trademark and patent rights holders are increasingly relying on central

prosecution of their applications through the Madrid Protocol, the Patent Cooperation Treaty

(PCT), and the European Patent Convention (EPC). These parallel rights will often present

the courts with substantially the same issues in each State of registration.

This Project is of a piece with other international developments. With the adoption by

the World Trade Organization of the TRIPS Agreement, international approaches to various

aspects of intellectual property law, including piracy and famous marks, are converging. By

the same token, negotiations continue on harmonizing elements of patent law in order to

facilitate consolidated worldwide patent examination. Regional agreements on aspects of

intellectual property protection abound. The private sector is also finding its own global

solutions through mergers among intellectual property holders, the creation of patent pools

and standard-setting organizations, and resort to arbitration as well as choice-of-law and

choice-of-court clauses. The emergence of multijurisdictional law firms greatly facilitates

client representation in this new era.

Other projects at The American Law Institute evince similar interests in developing

modes of international cooperation in dispute settlement. The Transnational Insolvency

Project reflects the need to preserve the value of assets located in NAFTA members with a

mechanism for managing multinational bankruptcy cases; the ALI/UNIDROIT Principles of

Transnational Civil Procedure foster harmonization of the rules for resolving multinational

commercial disputes; and the recently adopted ALI Project on the Recognition and

Enforcement of Foreign Judgments: Analysis and Proposed Federal Statute proposes, as its

name suggests, a new law for enforcing foreign judgments in the United States. See generally

Conrad K. Harper, Foreign and International Law in The American Law Institute, The ALI

Reporter (Fall 2001).

Congruent developments are occurring abroad. The International Law Association

Committee on Civil and Commercial Litigation issued two reports on methods of streamlining

parallel litigation, one on Provisional and Protective Measures in International Litigation

(1996) and the other on Declining and Referring Jurisdiction in International Litigation

(2000). For over a decade, the Hague Conference on Private International Law worked on

problems of jurisdiction and recognition of judgments in multinational cases. In 1999, this

work yielded a Draft Convention on Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgments in Civil and

Commercial Matters (hereinafter Hague Judgments Draft). For commentary on and text of

this proposal, see Peter Nygh & Fausto Pocar, Report of the Special Commission on

Jurisdiction and Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters (Aug. 2000), available

at http://www.hcch.net/upload/wop/jdgmpd11.pdf (last visited Jan. 3, 2008). When this Draft

failed to attract broad support, the Conference shifted course, producing an agreement limited

to adjudications based on choice-of-court agreements in business-to-business contracts; see

Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements, June 30, 2005, 44 I.L.M. 1294, available

at http://www.hcch.net/index_en.php?act=conventions.text&cid=98 (last visited Jan. 3, 2008)

(hereinafter Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements).

Within the intellectual property community, the International Association for the

Protection of Intellectual Property (AIPPI) has recognized the need for a fairer and more

efficient method of resolving so-called “cross-border” cases, and has adopted a Resolution

proposing approaches to jurisdiction, choice of law, and enforcement of judgments that are

generally consistent with these Principles. See AIPPI, Resolution, Question Q174—

Jurisdiction and Applicable Law in the Case of Cross-border Infringement of Intellectual

Property Rights (Oct. 25-28, 2003), available at

http://www.aippi.org/reports/resolutions/Q174_E.pdf (last visited Jan. 3, 2008) (hereinafter

AIPPI, Q174 Resolution). The Max Planck Institutes for Intellectual Property (Munich) and

for Private International Law (Hamburg) are also working on an International Convention on

Jurisdiction and Enforcement of Judgments, which deals with many of the same issues that

are raised here. See European Max-Planck Group for Conflict of Laws in Intellectual

Property, Exclusive Jurisdiction and Cross-Border IP (Patent) Infringement: Suggestions for

Amendment of the Brussels I Regulation, [2007] EIPR 195. For more on the background of

the project, see Rochelle C. Dreyfuss and Jane C. Ginsburg, Draft Convention on Jurisdiction

and Recognition of Judgments in Intellectual Property Matters, 77 Chi-Kent L. Rev. 1065

(2002). For a singularly prescient analysis, see John R. Thomas, Litigation Beyond the

Technological Frontier: Comparative Approaches to Multinational Patent Enforcement, 27

Law & Pol’y Int’l Bus. 277 (1996).

This internationalist perspective informs the Principles. They occasionally depart from

standard expressions found in U.S. law because they are addressed to an audience that

includes lawyers and lawmakers from different analytical traditions who are accustomed to

different nomenclature and categories.

The internationalist perspective also requires the Principles to envision a future in which

coordination among courts evolves from the exceptional to the expected. This

forward focus distinguishes the Principles from some current positive law. For example, two

recent decisions of the European Court of Justice interpret the Brussels Convention on

Jurisdiction and the Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters, Sept. 27,

1968, 1972 O.J. (L 299) 32 (now Brussels Regulation on Jurisdiction and Enforcement of

Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters (EC Regulation No. 44/2001)) to prohibit the

aggregation of parties or the consolidation of multiple patent claims. See Case C-593/03,

Roche Nederland BV v. Primus, [2007] F.S.R. 5; Case C-4/03, Gesellschaft für

Antriebstechnik mbH & Co KG v Lamellen und Kupplungsbau Beteiligungs KG, [2006]

F.S.R. 45. Further, the U.S. Federal Circuit has also refused to permit consolidation of

multiple patent infringement claims. See Voda v. Cordis Corp., 476 F.3d 887 (Fed. Cir.

2007). Similarly, the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements excludes all disputes

involving the validity of registered intellectual property rights. Other developments in the

European Community may also perpetuate an atomized approach to international intellectual

property litigation: Regulation (EC) No. 864/2007 of the European Parliament and of the

Council of 11 July 2007 on the Law Applicable to Non-Contractual Obligations (Rome II),

available at http://eur-

lex.europa.eu/LexUriServ/site/en/oj/2007/l_199/l_19920070731en00400049.pdf (last visited

Jan. 3, 2008), prohibits the parties from choosing the law applicable to an infringement action

involving noncontractual obligations; see id. arts. 8(3), 13.

The incessant pan-national evolution of commerce and communications nonetheless

calls into question the present realities on which those outcomes repose. Indeed, their

territorialist impulse is already in tension with the WTO commitment to a globalized

marketplace in which intellectual goods move freely. The objectives of international trade

may be achieved both through harmonizing substantive intellectual property law and by

facilitating international adjudication. The free movement of goods propels the free

movement of disputes and judgments: emerging conditions call for a mechanism for effective

international coordination and recognition of judgments. The Principles address the related

components of an action, from choice of court to choice of law through to enforcement of

judgments. By ensuring that neither the exercise of judicial power nor the designation of

applicable law is exorbitant, the Principles endeavor to eliminate the problems underlying the

current skepticism regarding discrete proposals to simplify multinational litigation.

This is not to suggest that the Principles, if adopted at all, must be implemented in their

entirety; national authorities may in fact find the approach of particular Sections, such as the

provisions on personal jurisdiction and/or choice of law, distinctly conducive to local

realization, yet hesitate today to embrace every recommendation. While their overarching

conceptualization distinguishes the Principles from earlier attempts to respond to new needs

for international intellectual property adjudication, even piecemeal implementation can

contribute importantly toward efficient and effective international dispute resolution.