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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)

Part III

APPLICABLE LAW

Introductory Note

These Principles are the first institutional endeavor to build a consensus for rules on

conflict of laws in intellectual property matters. Choice-of-law rules have traditionally

commanded little attention in intellectual property circles, principally because many

specialists thought them irrelevant. Multilateral agreements such as the TRIPS Agreement set

out uniform (or uniformizing) substantive rules; outside these bounds, each State legislates for

itself. It has simply been assumed that each State’s rules applied to anything transpiring

within its borders, and no further. But technological developments have increasingly called

those assumptions into question. With the advent, first of satellite and later of digital

communications, commentators began to question whether it remained desirable or workable

to apply a plethora of national laws to an infringement occurring simultaneously across the

globe. National legislatures have begun to respond with choice-of-law provisions designed to

accommodate conflict of laws in transborder intellectual property controversies. The time is

ripe, therefore, to essay a comprehensive treatment of choice-of-law problems that arise in the

international dissemination of intellectual property. In the future, substantive law may be

more thoroughly harmonized, or an international approach to choice of law may be forged;

these Principles are intended to fill the gap and stimulate longer-term efforts in this vein.

Although some solutions within the European Union or proposed by commentators

depart in significant ways from the dominant territorial approach, the Principles do not go so

far as to substitute a different general point of attachment, such as the right holder’s residence,

to resolve all multinational infringement claims. They seek to respect the principle of

territoriality and the consequent domestic cultural and industrial policies (including

exceptions and limitations on protection) that underlie that principle, and also to facilitate

international commerce in, and therefore redress for the infringement of, works of authorship.

These same policies pertain to other intellectual property rights as well, as these rights are

often even more territorially determined than are copyright and neighboring rights.

Territoriality thus remains the rule for most issues posed in most actions: existence,

infringement, validity, duration, attributes, and remedies. It is important to observe that, as

laws become better harmonized, for example by virtue of TRIPS compliance and adherence to

new multilateral intellectual property agreements, courts will have less difficulty identifying

and applying foreign laws because they will more closely resemble their own.

The Principles nonetheless propose several departures from strict territoriality. All of

these have some foundation in the case law of national courts. First, the Principles allow the

parties to choose the law that will apply to certain aspects of their relationship (§ 302).

Second, the Principles designate a single law to determine initial ownership of certain rights,

such as copyright, which do not arise out of registration (§ 313). Third, the Principles envision

the possibility that in cases where infringement is ubiquitous, circumstances may most closely

connect a case to a particular State, or to a small set of specific States, despite its apparently

multinational character (§ 321). In addition, in the interest of achieving efficient adjudication,

the parties may choose to forgo some claims within the scope of the alleged harm.

These departures remain limited in scope. It is possible, with the development of

transnational intellectual property litigation, that it will become appropriate to articulate

additional choice-of-law rules less tethered to territoriality. But at this initial stage, the

Principles endeavor to set a broad and open-ended framework, rather than, perhaps

prematurely, devising a full repertory of specific rules. In addition, because the Principles

address an international audience, they strive to avoid terminology familiar in particular States

but not adopted in others.

Any set of conflicts rules should be (and should be perceived to be) fair and neutral. The

rules should neither favor an intellectual property owner over an alleged infringer, nor should

they privilege users over owners. Moreover, the rules should put domestic and foreign law on

an equal footing; they should not systematically designate the application to local litigants of

domestic legislation in lieu of foreign law, nor should they otherwise discriminate between

local and foreign claimants. When the interests at stake implicate the forum’s basic public

policies, the court may have recourse to the public-policy exception (§ 322), or, where

appropriate, may apply local or even foreign mandatory rules (§ 323). But the initial inquiry

into the law otherwise applicable should not give pride of place to local legislative objectives.

The Principles on choice of law are addressed to the courts whose jurisdiction is

invoked to resolve the merits of a transnational intellectual property dispute within the

meaning of § 102. The court where enforcement is sought should, however, verify that the

law chosen was not inconsistent with these rules (§ 403(2)(b)). The reference to a foreign law

in Part III includes only substantive law and not the designated State’s administrative or

procedural law or its choice-of-law rules.

Illustrative Overview:

Assume the same facts as in the Illustrative Overview of Part II, adjudication of a

worldwide dispute involving the U.S. company MajorMovieCo and several file-sharing

enterprises, JCo (in Japan), USCo (in the United States), ICo (in India), and GCo (a German

company exploiting the European market), in a Japanese court. Assume also that JCo’s

software is regularly downloaded in Korea and other Asian countries and MajorMovieCo

asserts infringement claims regarding uses in these countries. The issue is what law applies to

MajorMovieCo’s claims. Assume that all of MajorMovieCo’s territorial claims against JCo

and its Asian licensees can be consolidated in Japan.

Under § 301, the court is instructed to apply the laws of each jurisdiction in which

infringements are alleged. It should be noted that in some jurisdictions, the defendants’

activities will be considered direct infringements, in others, contributory infringement.

If MajorMovieCo asserts claims concerning many territories, the concern may arise that

so many laws will apply as to make the litigation unmanageable. But the concern may not

always be justified. For example, the parties may choose to ignore territories in which the

economic impact of infringement is insignificant. For example, downloads in Myanmar may

be too few to warrant plaintiff’s pleading them, because they do not significantly impact

MajorMovieCo’s markets, and MajorMovieCo may therefore choose to disregard them.

Furthermore, injunctive relief within Asia may bring an end to infringement of these films

globally.

The Principles do not endeavor to propose an all-purpose set of rules for conflict of

laws. The forum should apply its own rules with respect to issues that are not related to

intellectual property or implicated by the application of the Principles. Examples include

general rules of procedure, such as raising and proving of foreign law, characterizing claims,

and determining when parties are in privity for purposes of claim and issue preclusion. Thus,

in the above Illustration, the court should apply its own jurisdiction’s approach to assigning

the burden of proving foreign law. For example, under Japanese practice, the court may

undertake the inquiry on its own motion, or the parties may make the showing.

REPORTERS’ NOTE

Choice-of-law rules for intellectual property litigation. Because the ALI project is the

first institutional endeavor to build an international consensus for rules on conflict of laws in

intellectual property matters, the ALI cannot restate existing law; until recently, there were

few domestic provisions of this kind. For examples of national law initiatives, see Swiss

Private International Law statute of 1987, arts. 109-111, 122; Belgian Code of Private

International Law, 16 July 2004, art. 93 (“Droit applicable à la propriété intellectuelle” [law

applicable to intellectual property]). See also Munich Convention on the Grant of European

Patents art. 60(1), Oct. 5, 1973, 1065 U.N.T.S. 199, available at

http://www.epo.org/patents/law/legal-texts/html/epc/1973/e/ma1.html (last visited Jan. 3,

2008) (EPC, providing for a choice-of-law rule regarding initial title to a European Patent).

The main thrust for the formation of a body of choice-of-law rules comes from scholars,

in particular, Alois Troller, Das internationale Privat- und Zivilprozeßrecht im gewerblichen

Rechtsschutz und Urheberrecht (1952); Eugen Ulmer, Die Immaterialgüterrechte im

internationalen Privatrecht (1975); Eugen Ulmer, Intellectual Property Rights and the Conflict

of Laws (1978); 3 Max Keller et al., Die Rechtsprechung des Bundesgerichts im

internationalen Privatrecht und in verwandten Rechtsgebieten: Eine systematische

Auswertung (1982); François Dessemontet, Transfer of Technology Under UNCTAD and

EEC Draft Codifications: A European View on Choice of Law in Licensing, 12 J. Int’l L. &

Econ. 1 (1977); Georges Koumantos, Sur le droit international privé du droit d’auteur, in: Il

diritto di autore, 616 (1979); Arpad Bogsch, The Law of Copyright Under the Universal

Convention (3d ed. 1968); Design Laws and Treaties of the World (Arpad Bogsch ed., 1960);

André Françon, Le droit d’auteur: aspects internationaux et comparatifs, (Cowansville Q.: Y.

Blais, 1992); Adolf F. Schnitzer, Handbuch des internationalen Privatrechts: einschließlich

Prozeßrecht, unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Schweizerischen Gesetzgebung und

Rechtsprechung (1957-1958); Jane C. Ginsburg, The Private International Law of Copyright

in an Era of Technological Change, 273 Recueil des cours 239 (1998); André Lucas & Henri-

Jacques Lucas, Traité de la propriété littéraire et artistique 813-893 (3d ed. 2006).

As applied to copyright disputes, these Principles endeavor to refine the connecting

factors derived from the Berne Convention and its art. 5(2), as interpreted by most scholars,

see, e.g., André Lucas & Henri-Jacques Lucas, Traité de la propriété littéraire et artistique

1314 (3d ed. 2006), that the law applicable to the existence and scope (infringement) of the

rights is the law of the State for which the protection is sought, that is, the State in which the

unauthorized use has occurred. See, e.g., Mireille van Eechoud, Choice of Law in Copyright

and Related Rights: Alternatives to the Lex Protectionis 178 (2003) (“law of the place where

the intellectual creation is used”). Art. 5(2) of the Berne Convention in fact provides that the

law of the State “where” protection is sought will govern matters of existence of protection, as

well as of infringement and remedies, but most scholars agree that “where” should be

understood as “for which.” See, e.g., André Lucas, Private International Law Aspects of the

Protection of Works and of the Subject Matter of Related Rights Transmitted Over Digital

Networks 4 (WIPO/PIL/01/1 Prov., 2001), available at

http://www.wipo.int/edocs/mdocs/mdocs/

en/wipo_pil_01/wipo_pil_01_1_prov.pdf (last visited Jan. 3, 2008).

Earlier drafts of the Principles proposed more aggressive departures from territoriality.

They envisioned a commercial environment in which the importance of national borders

would progressively wane. Given that impending future, the Principles offered an opportunity

to devise forward-looking rules of legislative competence. Earlier drafts emphasized

simplification of actions, not only with respect to judicial competence (still a hallmark of the

Principles), but also regarding the number of applicable laws in multinational cases. Today,

the subject matter of intellectual property is increasingly produced for worldwide markets,

and in many cases, users’ tastes are equally global. Moreover, far more than in the past,

dissemination can easily be realized on a global scale. While multinational distribution, of

course, implicates many countries, to view the dispute as a collection of local litigation sticks

in a worldwide bundle is to overlook the real scale of the enterprise.

Nonetheless, territoriality remains a powerful intuition. It is difficult to accept the

proposition that an act unlawful in one territory should give rise to liability in another, where

that same act is permissible, even where that territory is part of a global market. Furthermore,

territoriality is a safeguard for local cultural values and social policies. For example,

intellectual property rights control medicines, including medicines that cure contagious

diseases that could otherwise spread around the world. Informational use of trademarks

furnishes another example. These Principles thus retain the basic rule of territoriality, but

allow the parties to simplify the choice of applicable laws by agreement (§ 302), and when an

infringement is instantaneous and worldwide (§ 321). In the latter case, however, the parties

may also demonstrate that particular States’ laws depart from the chosen norm.