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What’s Shaking? Not an Interlocutory Appellate Decision on Damages

The US Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit dismissed and remanded a district court certified interlocutory appeal concerning the standard for calculating a reasonable royalty under the Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA). The Court explained that the rate instruction issued by the district court was erroneous because the parties had not yet gone to trial and the plaintiff had not yet proven liability. Therefore, the issue of damages might never arise. Silverthorne Seismic, L.L.C. v. Sterling Seismic Servs., Ltd., Case No. 24-20006 (5th Cir. Jan. 3, 2025) (Smith, Clement, Higginson, JJ.) (Higginson, J., dissenting).

Silverthorne licensed seismic data to Casillas Petroleum Resource Partners II, LLC, an oil and gas exploration company. Under this arrangement, Silverthorne provided data to Sterling, a seismic data processer, which processed the data and sent it to Casillas. Because Sterling’s data processing required more data than what Casillas had paid for, Sterling was only permitted to forward the data that Casillas had licensed. However, Sterling sent Casillas unlicensed data, which Casillas allegedly showed to potential investors.

Silverthorne sued Sterling for trade secret misappropriation under the DTSA and sought reasonable royalties for Sterling’s improper disclosure. Shortly before trial, the district court issued an order adopting the Fifth Circuit’s definition of “reasonable royalty” in University Computing (1974), which, in this case, would have required Silverthorne to prove what the parties “would have agreed to for . . . use [of] the alleged trade secret.” University Computing predates the DTSA, which provides for reasonable royalties for “disclosure or use of a trade secret.” Silverthorne appealed the order, noting that it would not be able to prove what Sterling would have agreed to pay to use the data, since Sterling was a data processor and not an end user. The district court certified the following question for appeal:

[W]hether a plaintiff is entitled to prove reasonable royalty damages under the DTSA using willing buyer(s) detached from the parties to the litigation when willing buyers (here, oil and gas exploration companies) exist for plaintiff’s alleged trade secret (here, seismic data), but the defendant and comparable entities (here, seismic processors) do not buy or license that trade secret.

An administrative panel of the Fifth Circuit granted leave to appeal.

Majority Opinion

The Fifth Circuit dismissed the appeal as not involving a controlling question of law. The Court explained that interlocutory appeals are only permitted where an order involves a controlling question of law, the resolution of which would materially and immediately affect the outcome of litigation in the district court. The Fifth Circuit emphasized that a question is not controlling just because the answer would complicate a litigant’s ability to make its case or because the answer could save the parties from a post-judgment appeal. Applying these principles, the Court reasoned that damages issues generally do not control a case until the plaintiff establishes liability, unless the damages issue would be dispositive. Because Silverthorne had not yet established liability and was not barred from proving damages under the district court’s definition [...]

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Reasonable Royalty Available for Foreign Activities (But Not This Time)

The US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit affirmed a district court’s decision to preclude a patent owner from seeking damages based on method claims infringed outside of the United States but confirmed that reasonable royalties are available based on foreign activities. Harris Brumfield v. IBG LLC, Case No. 22-1630 (Fed. Cir. Mar. 27, 2024) (Prost, Taranto, Hughes, JJ.)

Trading Technologies International (TT), whose successor is Harris Brumfield, filed a lawsuit against IBG in 2010 alleging infringement of four patents directed to graphical user interfaces for commodity trading and methods for placing trade orders using those interfaces. During the underlying proceeding, the district court issued several orders. The district court granted IBG’s motion for summary judgment that the claims of two of the patents were invalid. The district court also excluded one of TT’s damages theories concerning foreign activities. Prior to trial, the district court found that two of the patents were invalid as patent ineligible and that the other two patents contained patent eligible subject matter. The district court also excluded one of TT’s damages theories concerning foreign activities.

The case proceeded to trial on the two remaining patents, and the jury found the asserted claims of those two patents infringed. IBG proposed $6.6 million in damages, which corresponds to the total demanded by IBG using IBG’s proposed royalty rate measured against domestic usage, rather than global users. By contrast, TT proposed damages of $962 million, which included all worldwide users of the accused product, regardless of whether they performed the claimed method. The jury agreed with IGB and awarded TT $6.6 million. the district court denied TT’s post-verdict motion for a new trial on damages, a motion in which TT alleged that IBG had misrepresented how it calculated the damages figures it presented to the jury. TT appealed.

Under the Supreme Court’s 2018 decision in WesternGeco v. Ion Geophysical, a patent owner can recover damages in the form of foreign lost profits when infringement is found under 35 U.S.C. § 271(f)(2) of the Patent Act. TT argued that under WesternGeco, it can seek damages in the form of a reasonable royalty based on IBG “making” the accused product in the US, even though the products were used overseas. The Federal Circuit engaged in a detailed description of WesternGeco, concluding that the Court must examine the particular acts alleged to constitute infringement under particular statutory provisions to determine if the allegations focus on domestic conduct. The Court explained that under § 271(a), the making, using, offering to sell and selling provisions are limited to domestic acts. The Court acknowledged that the WesternGeco framework applies to reasonably royalty awards (not just lost profits) and that a reasonable royalty would be the amount a hypothetical infringer would pay to engage in the domestic acts constituting the infringement.

Despite finding that reasonable royalties are permitted under WesternGeco, the Federal Circuit affirmed the district court’s exclusion of TT’s damages theory because TT’s infringement theory about making the accused product [...]

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