Spin Master, Ltd. v. E. Mishan & Sons, Inc., No. 1:2019cv09035 (S.D.N.Y. 2019)
Does a licensee have standing to bring an infringement action against an accused infringer, or does the patent owner have to be involved somehow?
It is possible, but not a given, that an exclusive licensee qualifies as a patentee and has standing under Section 281 to bring a civil action for patent infringement. For example, the exclusive licensee in this case brought an infringement action against an accused infringer without involving the patent owner. The accused infringer argued that the exclusive license was not a patentee and, therefore, did not have standing to bring the action. The accused infringer requested that the court throw the action to the curb.
The exclusive licensee, though, held an exclusive license without any field restrictions. The licensee had the power to sublicense. The licensee had the exclusive right to sue infringers with full control over any litigation. The district court from the Southern District of New York ruled that this exclusive licensee had all substantial rights under the asserted patent rights and, therefore, had standing as a patentee under Section 281. The litigation could proceed with the licensee as plaintiff. The patent owner was not a necessary party.
License parties do have the ability to avoid standing issues. The parties can use contract language that allocates litigation control to the licensee while obligating the patent owner to be named as a party to support standing. Even nonexclusive licensees can fight infringement battles in these circumstances.