A myriad of law and fact circumstances create implied licenses. Scholars have commented that the law is a morass of doctrines that overlap and/or conflict.1 Nonetheless, a substantial majority of implied license cases fall into one or more of the following categories:
[A]n implied license cannot arise out of the unilateral expectations or even reasonable hopes of one party. One must have been led to take action by the conduct of the other party.
Met-Coil Systems Corp. v. Korners Unlimited, Inc.,3 and Bandag, are early Federal Circuit cases addressing when authorized sales of patented items trigger implied licenses. These cases were decided in the early 1980s but remain good law. The principles of these two early cases were endorsed and expanded in the Anton/Bauer case seventeen years later. The Supreme Court’s Quanta decision from 2008 endorses the law set forth in these cases, too. Several recent cases apply the law in interesting ways. Met-Coil is an optimum place to begin discussion.
1. Met-Coil Systems Corp. v. Korners Unlimited, Inc.
Met-Coil and its affiliates (collectively Met-Coil) developed and commercialized a duct fabrication system. The product line included three main products that Met-Coil intended to sell to its customers:
Met-Coil protected the equipment and a method of using the equipment to make ductwork from the equipment, duct sections, and corners. The corners themselves were unpatented.4
Importantly, the Met-Coil equipment had only one reasonable and intended use, namely to be used to roll form duct sections in the patented method.
Contrary to Met-Coil’s expectations, its equipment customers did not purchase its corners. The customers bought corner pieces from Korners Unlimited, presumably at lower prices.
Korners defended that purchasers of the equipment had an implied license to use that equipment to practice the patented method using the third party corners obtained from Korners.
Consequently, there was no direct infringement and, hence, no induced or contributory infringement.
The Federal Circuit affirmed summary judgment in favor of Korners on grounds that purchasers of the Met-Coil equipment enjoyed an implied license. As a consequence of the license, those equipment purchasers could buy unpatented corners from any third party. The decision clearly thwarted the business model and desiccated an intended revenue stream of the patent owner, Met-Coil.
In reaching its decision, the Federal Circuit relied on these factors:
The Met-Coil analysis is circular: an implied license exists legally when an implied license exists factually. This is not much guidance. The rule begs the question as to when facts plainly indicate a license.
Not surprisingly, Met-Coil leaves open several questions:
2. Anton/Bauer Inc. v. PAG Ltd.5
The Federal Circuit decided Met-Coil nearly 30 years ago, back in 1984. In 2003, the Federal Circuit endorsed Met-Coil and extended the reach of implied license law even further in Anton/Bauer.
Anton/Bauer invented a battery connection system that is a combination of a male (M) and female (F) plates. The two plates can be connected mechanically and electrically. The plates are used to couple battery packs to cameras. The F plate is attached to a camera, while the M plate is integrated into a battery housing.
Anton/Bauer patented the combination of the M and F plates; the M and F plates individually were not patented. The F plate sold by Anton/Bauer had one and only one use, namely, to be used in combination with an M plate.
Anton/Bauer sold both F and M plates, but only separately. Anton/Bauer never sold the F and M plates together. Clearly, the Anton/Bauer business model contemplated that revenue would be generated from the individual sales of M and F plates.
PAG disrupted Anton/Bauer’s business model. PAG manufactured and sold M plates specifically designed to be used in combination with the F plates of Anton/Bauer. To the chagrin of Anton/Bauer, customers who bought F plates directly or indirectly from Anton/Bauer bought M plates from PAG,6 not Anton/Bauer. PAG customers thus practiced under the Anton/Bauer patent claims protecting the M-F combination while obtaining only F plates from the patent owner.
PAG thereby usurped M plate sales and the corresponding revenue from Anton/Bauer. Not happy at all about this, Anton/Bauer believed that only customers who bought both F and M plates from Anton/Bauer had authority to practice the patented combination. Consequently, Anton/Bauer alleged that PAG customers directly infringed the Anton/Bauer combination claims when a PAG M plate was combined with an Anton/Bauer F plates. Because PAG customers were the alleged direct infringers, Anton/Bauer sued PAG for inducing or contributing to the direct infringement.
PAG defended that Anton/Bauer’s F plate customers had an implied license to use a properly obtained F plate in combination with an unpatented M plate to practice the patented combination using PAG’s M plates. Consequently, PAG asserted there was no direct infringement and, hence, no induced or contributory infringement.
The Federal Circuit agreed with PAG and held that purchasers of Anton/Bauer’s F plates, indeed, were impliedly licensed to make the patented combination of M and F plates, even when using unpatented M plates obtained from any third parties.
In reaching its decision, the Federal Circuit relied on these factors:
Note that the Anton/Bauer decision arguably both narrowed and expanded the Met-Coil rule. In a narrowing sense, the court expressly required the authorized sale item to be a material part of the claimed combination; this materiality requirement may or may not have been integral to the earlier Met-Coil decision, but certainly was not expressly stated there like it was in the Anton/Bauer case. The Anton/Bauer case broadens the Met-Coil rule by extending the rule to patented combinations based on the sale of material, unpatented portions of the combination.8
Additionally, the Anton/Bauer court explained in dicta how the outcome under an implied license theory might have been different if there had been sale restrictions or if the M plate had been patented. This suggests that sale restrictions may appropriately negate an implied license. This also suggests that patenting components of a combination would be sufficient to negate an implied license if a customer were to buy patented components from a third party.9
3. Other Recent Developments in Implied License Law.
Implied licenses can be derived from an express license where the implied license is necessary for the express license to be practiced. Zenith Electronics Corp. v. PDI Communications Systems Inc., 522 F.3d 1348, 86 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 2008).10
Implied licenses cannot be obtained from a licensee who has no authority to confer a right to use. Monsanto Co. v. Scruggs, 459 F.3d 1328, 79 USPQ2d 1813 (Fed. Cir. 2006).
Proof of no non-infringing uses is required when an implied license is derived from an authorized sale but is not required when an implied license is derived from an express license. Zenith Electronics Corp. v. PDI Communications Systems Inc., 522 F.3d 1348, 86 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
Granting an express license to speakers included an implied license to use the speakers with any compatible television based on the grant language. Zenith Electronics Corp. v. PDI Communications Systems Inc., 522 F.3d 1348, 86 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
No implied license was found with respect to remote controls based upon speaker sales, because the speakers had non-infringing uses relative to the patented remotes. Zenith Electronics Corp. v. PDI Communications Systems Inc., 522 F.3d 1348, 86 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
Existence of an implied license and its scope are separate issues. Quanta Computer Inc. v. LG Electronics Inc., 553 US 617, 86 USPQ2d 1673, 1678 (2008); Zenith Electronics Corp. v. PDI Communications Systems Inc., 522 F.3d 1348, 86 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
A license under a patent as to certain products carries an implied license under narrower or broader continuation patents having the same disclosure absent a clear indication to the contrary in the license. General Protecht Group Inc. v. Leviton Mfg., 651 F.3d 1355, 99 USPQ2d 1275 (Fed. Cir. 2011).
1 See, e.g., Nimmer & Dodd, Modern Licensing Law, §§4:2-4:3 (2007).
2 750 F.2d 903, 925, 223 USPQ 982, 998 (Fed. Cir. 1984).
3 803 F.2d 684, 231 USPQ 474 (Fed. Cir. 1984).
4 Even though the decision refers to the corners as “special,” they were special in terms of their shape but not their patented status.
5 329 F.3d 1343, 66 USPQ2d 1675 (Fed. Cir. 2003).
6 PAG never sold F plates. Thus, any M plate sold by PAG, presumably at a price that was better than M plates sold by Anton/Bauer, was used only in combination with F plates obtained from Anton/Bauer.
7 See footnote 3, 66 USPQ2d at 1680.
8 Met-Coil involved implied licenses under method claims triggered by a sale of equipment used to practice that method.
9 In contrast to the appropriateness of post-sale restrictions in an implied license analysis, post-sale restrictions are quite ineffective at negating exhaustion, a separate legal theory. Also, intent with respect to downstream customers is relevant to implied license, but had not been relevant to exhaustion per Transcore LP v. Electronic Transaction Consultants, 563 F.3d 1271, 90 USPQ2d 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2009). However, the Lifescan decision, discussed above, announced that intent is now relevant to exhaustion.
10 See also Jacobs v. Nintendo of America, Inc., 370 F.3d 1097, 71 USPQ2d 1055 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (the scope of an implied license derived from an express grant clause cannot be construed to render the express grant meaningless, however).