Both Motorola
and Microsoft are members of the standard setting organisations Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers ("IEEE") and the International
Telecommunication Union ("ITU"). Motorola owns numerous patents that
are essential to the IEEE 802.11 wireless local area network ("WLAN")
Standard ("802.11 Standard") and the ITU H.264 advanced video coding
technology standard ("H.264 Standard").
Motorola
has submitted several Letters of Assurance to the IEEE in connection with the
802.11 Standard stating that it "will grant" or "is prepared to
grant" a license under RAND [Reasonable And Non Discriminatory] terms for
its patents essential to the 802.11 Standard. A typical Motorola Letter of
Assurance to the IEEE provides, in relevant part:
The Patent
Holder will grant [or is prepared to grant] a license under reasonable rates to
an unrestricted number of applicants on a worldwide, non-discriminatory basis
with reasonable terms and conditions to comply with the [Proposed] IEEE
Standard.
Similar
letters were issued to ITU in connection with the H.264 Standard. Microsoft
makes use these standards in some of its products, notably the XBox.
On October
21 and 29, 2010 Motorola sent letters to Microsoft offering to license its
standards-essential patents (SEP) for the 802.11 Standard and H.264 Standard.
The offer asked for a 2.25% royalty rate on the price of all end products
Microsoft sold utilizing the technologies protected by these patents. Microsoft
regarded these terms as blatantly unreasonable and responded by filing a breach
of contract case against Motorola in the Western District Court of Washington,
claiming that Motorola had violated its agreement with the IEEE and ITU to
provide reasonable and non-discriminatory terms of licensing to all potential
licensees on a global scale.
During the
pending US litigation, Motorola sued Microsoft in Germany for infringement of
two of its SEP, EP 0 538 667 and EP 0 615 384. This was a grave problem for
Microsoft, because its European distribution center was located in Germany, and
a German injunction would have prevented distribution in the whole of Europe.
In anticipation of the German injunction, Microsoft moved its distribution
center to the Netherlands, at the cost of approximately USD 11.5 million.
On 2 May
2012, the Landgericht Mannheim granted the injunction. Shortly before,
Microsoft had requested, and obtained, a temporary restraining order and
preliminary injunction from the US District Court to enjoin Motorola from
enforcing any German injunctive relief it might obtain.
Subsequently
the District Court, and the 9th Circuit Court on appeal, held that
Motorola’s letters of assurance constituted a contract with the standard
setting organizations that barred Motorola from seeking injunctive relief based
on its standard essential patents. Microsoft was a third party beneficiary
entitled to rely on these contracts (Microsoft Corp. v Motorola, Inc.,Motorola Mobility, Inc., and Gen. Instrument Corp, 696 F.3d 872 [2012]).
Microsoft sought
damages in connection with Motorola’s German injunction (which was never
enforced), notably the cost for the relocation of its distribution center (USD
11.5 million) and attorney fees (USD 3 million). After a jury trial, the jury
found that Motorola had indeed breached its contractual obligations and
Microsoft was entitled to damages in the amount of USD 14.5 million for its expenses in connection with the
German injunction.
In an
opinion filed 30 July 2015, the 9th Circuit affirmed the decision.
Notably, the 9th Circuit Court rejected Motorola’s reliance on the Noerr-Pennington
doctrine, which shields individuals from, inter alia, liability for engaging in
litigation. The Court held that the doctrine does not immunize a party from
actions that amount to a breach of contract. Enforcing a contractual commitment
to refrain from litigation does not violate the First Amendment. The Noerr-Pennington
doctrine did not immunize Motorola from liability for breach of its promise not
to seek injunctive relief.
This
decision comes on the heels of the European Commission finding Motorola abusing
a dominant market position for failing to license its standard essential
patents relating to the European Telecommunications Standardisation Institute's
(ETSI) GPRS standard on RAND terms to Apple. On 29 April 2014, the Commission
announced “that it was abusive for Motorola to both seek and enforce an
injunction against Apple in Germany on the basis of an SEP which it had
committed to license on FRAND terms and where Apple had agreed to take a
licence and be bound by a determination of the FRAND royalties by the relevant
German court. The Commission also found it anticompetitive that Motorola
insisted, under the threat of the enforcement of an injunction, that Apple give
up its rights to challenge the validity or infringement by Apple's mobile
devices of Motorola SEP.” The Commission did not, however, impose a fine on
Motorola.
"This was a grave problem for Microsoft, because its European distribution center was located in Germany, and a German injunction would have prevented distribution in the whole of Europe. In anticipation of the German injunction, Microsoft moved its distribution center to the Netherlands, at the cost of approximately USD 11.5 million."
ReplyDeleteI wonder if this really was the reason for the move, not tax or other reasons?
Surely most distribution of Microsoft products is by internet download anyway, so what is the distribution center? Is it a data center? I note that Samsung, which has real physical products to ship, appears to have weathered the Apple litigation without moving its distribution center.
from what I understand, one of the infringing products was the XBox, which is a physical product. I would assume that the US court would not have accepted costs of USD 11.5 million for the move of the distribution center if it was just a server for downloading software.
ReplyDelete