Lead Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge LINN.
Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge NEWMAN.
This appeal concerns the personal jurisdiction of a U.S. district court over a Taiwanese company in a suit for declaratory judgment of non-infringement and invalidity of two U.S. patents owned by that Taiwanese company. Because the plaintiffs failed to allege that the Taiwanese company purposefully directed any activities beyond merely sending notice letters at residents of the forum and that the declaratory judgment action arose out of or related to those activities, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of all claims for lack of personal jurisdiction.
I. BACKGROUND
Avocent Huntsville Corp. (“Avocent Huntsville”) and Avocent Redmond Corp.
Avocent and Aten International compete in the manufacture and sale of keyboard-video-mouse switches (“KVM switches”), which allow a computer user or users to share a single keyboard, video device, and mouse, or multiple sets of keyboards, video devices, and mice. It is undisputed that various Aten International products are available for sale within Alabama. Avo-cent has alleged that Aten International purposefully directed these products to Alabama both by injecting them into the stream of commerce and through direct sales activities. Specifically, Avocent has alleged the sale and delivery to Alabama of a product purchased through the “Clearance Center” webpage of the ATEN-USA. com website published by Aten International, the existence of products manufactured by Aten International and offered for sale at Best Buy and CompUSA retail stores in Alabama, the availability of Aten International products through nationwide and Internet retailers, and the availability of these products through a government contractor located in Alabama.
Aten International is the assignee of U.S. Patent Nos. 6,957,287 (“the '287 patent”) and 7,035,112 (“the '112 patent”), both of which relate to KVM switches. This appeal relates to Aten International’s attempts to enforce these patents against Avocent.
Aten International’s enforcement efforts are reflected in three letters. The first is a letter dated May 28, 2004, from counsel for Aten Technology to John Cooper, the CEO and President of Avocent Corporation, stating:
Pursuant to Section 154(d) of the U.S. Patent Act, please be advised that the U.S. Patent Office has published a patent application owned by our client Aten Technology, Inc. A copy of the published patent application is attached. We suggest that you review the claims as we believe they are relevant to a product your company is making, using, selling, offering to sell and/or importing.
J.A. at 473.
In reaction to these letters, on April 6, 2007, Avocent filed a complaint against Aten International in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama for declaratory judgment of non-infringement and invalidity of the '287 and '112 patents. The complaint also presented claims of unfair competition under the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125, and intentional interference with business or contractual relations under Alabama law. Aten International subsequently moved, inter alia, to dismiss the entire action for lack of personal jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, or in the alternative, to transfer the case under 28 U.S.C. § 1404(a) to the Western District of Washington where Avocent Redmond had sued Aten International for patent infringement related to three KVM patents owned by Avocent Redmond.
The district court granted Aten International’s motion to dismiss the entire action without prejudice for lack of personal jurisdiction. Avocent Huntsville Corp. v. Aten Int’l Co., No. 07-CV-625, slip op. at 13 (N.DAla. Aug. 30, 2007). The district court held that it could not exercise specific jurisdiction over Aten International based on the letters asserting infringement, id. at 8, concluding that under Red Wing Shoe Co. v. Hockerson-Halberstadt, Inc.,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
Personal jurisdiction is a matter of law that we review de novo. Genetic Implant Sys., Inc. v. Core-Vent Corp.,
In this case, “[b]ecause the parties have not conducted discovery, [Avocent] needed
B. Analysis
“Determining whether personal jurisdiction exists over an out-of-state defendant involves two inquiries: whether a forum state’s long-arm statute permits service of process, and whether the assertion of personal jurisdiction would violate due process.” Inamed Corp. v. Kuzmak,
1.
“[D]ue process requires only that in order to subject a defendant to a judgment in personam, if he be not present within the territory of the forum, he have certain minimum contacts with it such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.” Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington,
While it may be argued that “a nonresident corporation should expect ... amenability to suit in any forum that is significantly affected by the corporation’s commercial activities,” Helicopteros Nacionales de Colombia, S.A. v. Hall,
Consistent with these principles, the Supreme Court has drawn a distinction between “specific” jurisdiction and “general” jurisdiction. To establish specific jurisdiction, a plaintiff must demonstrate that “the defendant has ‘purposefully directed’ his activities at residents of the forum, Keeton v. Hustler Magazine, Inc.,
To establish the minimum contacts necessary to establish general personal jurisdiction, plaintiffs bear a higher burden. Specifically, where a plaintiffs claims do not arise out of or relate to the defendant’s contacts with the forum State, “[w]e ... must explore the nature of [the defendant’s] contacts with the [forum State] to determine whether they constitute ... continuous and systematic general business contacts.” Helicopteros,
In addition to the foregoing general principles of “specific” and “general” jurisdiction, the Supreme Court has also commented on the amenability to suit of persons engaged in activities that result in the flow of goods in commerce. The Court has explained that
if the sale of a product of a manufacturer or distributor ... is not simply an isolated occurrence, but arises from the efforts of the manufacturer or distributor to serve, directly or indirectly, the market for its product in other States, it is not unreasonable to subject it to suit in one of those States if its allegedly defective merchandise has there been the source of injury to its owner or to others. The forum State does not exceed its powers under the Due Process Clause if it asserts personal jurisdiction over a corporation that delivers its products into the stream of commerce with the expectation that they will be purchased by consumers in the forum State.
World-Wide Volkswagen,
The Supreme Court has also instructed that personal jurisdiction may be “proper because of [a defendant’s] intentional conduct in [another State] calculated to cause injury to [the plaintiff] in [the forum State].” Calder,
Finally, “[o]nce it has been decided that a defendant purposefully established minimum contacts within the forum State, these contacts may be considered in light of other factors to determine whether the assertion of personal jurisdiction would comport with ‘fair play and substantial justice.’ ” Burger King,
2.
Against this backdrop of Supreme Court authority, we have held in the context of patent infringement litigation that an assertion of general jurisdiction “requires that the defendant have ‘continuous and systematic’ contacts with the forum state,” and that such activity will “confer[ ] [general] personal jurisdic
[t]his court employs a three-prong test, in which we determine whether: (1) the defendant purposefully directed its activities at residents of the forum, (2) the claim arises out of or relates to those activities, and (3) assertion of personal jurisdiction is reasonable and fair. With respect to the last prong, the burden of proof is on the defendant, which must present a compelling case that the presence of some other considerations would render jurisdiction unreasonable under the five-factor test articulated by the Supreme Court in Burger King.
Breckenridge,
a.
In the ordinary patent infringement suit, the claim asserted by the paten-tee plaintiff is that some act of making, using, offering to sell, selling, or importing products or services by the defendant constitutes an infringement of the presumptively valid patent named in suit. See 35 U.S.C. § 271(a). Thus, for purposes of specific jurisdiction, the jurisdictional inquiry is relatively easily discerned from the nature and extent of the commercialization of the accused products or services by the defendant in the forum. See Red Wing Shoe,
In many patent declaratory judgment actions, the alleged injury arises out of the threat of infringement as communicated in an “infringement letter,” and the patentee may have little contact with the forum beyond this letter. See generally Red Wing Shoe,
b.
Because declaratory judgment actions raise non-infringement, invalidity, and/or unenforceability issues central to enforcement of the patents in question, we have looked beyond the “arises out of’ inquiry and have found jurisdiction where such “other activities” in some identifiable way “relate to” enforcement of those patents in the forum. Recently, in Breckenridge, we summarized our precedent regarding what “other activities” in addition to cease and desist letters would suffice to meet the “relate to” requirement for specific personal jurisdiction.
[T]he crux of the due process inquiry should focus first on whether the defendant has had contact with parties in the forum state beyond the sending of cease and desist letters or mere attempts to license the patent at issue there. Where a defendant-licensor has a relationship with an exclusive licensee headquartered or doing business in the forum state, the inquiry requires close examination of the license agreement. In particular, our case law requires that the license agreement contemplate a relationship beyond royalty or cross-licensing payment, such as granting both parties the right to litigate infringement cases or granting the licensor the right to exercise control over the licensee’s sales or marketing activities.
While exclusive licensing agreements and other undertakings that impose enforcement obligations on a patentee or its licensee reflect the kind of “other activities” that support specific personal jurisdiction in a declaratory judgment action, the defendant patentee’s own commercialization activity does not. What the paten-tee makes, uses, offers to sell, sells, or imports is of no real relevance to the enforcement or defense of a patent, because “the federal patent laws do not create any affirmative right to make, use, or sell anything.” Leatherman Tool Group Inc. v. Cooper Indus., Inc.,
Thus, it is not surprising that several district courts have held that a defendant patentee’s sales, even of products covered by its own patents in the forum state, do not necessarily relate to the patentee’s amenability to specific personal jurisdiction in actions for declaratory judgment of non-infringement and invalidity of those patents. See, e.g., Polymers, Inc. v. Ultra Flo Filtration Sys., Inc.,
Similarly, we have held that mere evidence of sales within the forum of products covered by the relevant patent(s) is insufficient to guarantee specific personal jurisdiction over the patentee. For example, in Breckenridge we noted that specific personal jurisdiction is not proper where the patentee “has successfully licensed the patent in the forum state, even to multiple non-exclusive licensees, but ... has no dealings with those licensees beyond the receipt of royalty income.”
In short, a defendant patentee’s mere acts of making, using, offering to sell, selling, or importing products — whether covered by the relevant patent(s) or not — do not, in the jurisdictional sense, relate in any material way to the patent right that is at the center of any declaratory judgment claim for non-infringement, invalidity, and/or unenforceability. Thus, we hold that such sales do not constitute such “other activities” as will support a claim of specific personal jurisdiction over a defendant patentee. While such activities may in the aggregate justify the exercise of general jurisdiction over the patentee, they do not establish a basis for specific jurisdiction in this context.
c.
While we are bound by our precedent, it is not without controversy. Even a paten-tee’s exclusive licensing and enforcement activities in the forum raise questions as to the propriety of an assertion of personal jurisdiction over a non-resident defendant. As previously discussed, the Supreme Court has declined to address the exact contours of the “arise out of or related to” language of the specific jurisdiction analysis. See Inamed,
3.
a.
Here, Avocent primarily argues that Aten International should be subject to personal jurisdiction in Alabama based on the alleged availability of various Aten International products for sale in the forum state. See Viam,
Aten International does not dispute that products it manufactures may be purchased in Alabama but contends that it has never conducted any business in Alabama; that there is no evidence that Aten International controls the distribution of its products, acted in concert with distributors, or had any knowledge that the likely destination of its products was Alabama; and that Avocent failed to establish that any products sold in Alabama relate to this case or even to the underlying patents. It argues that any sales activity in the United States is attributable to its subsidiary, Aten Technology. Aten International cites several regional circuit cases for the proposition that a corporate subsidiary’s contacts in the forum state cannot be imputed to the parent corporation absent clear and convincing evidence that the parent controls the subsidiary’s activities. See, e.g., Negron-Torres v. Verizon Commc’ns, Inc.,
As an initial matter, Avocent makes no attempt to establish that Aten International’s contacts with Alabama, whether through the “stream of commerce” or otherwise, rise to the level of “continuous and systematic” activity sufficient to confer general jurisdiction. The district court rejected Avocent’s assertion of general jurisdiction under a “stream of commerce” theory, Avocent, slip op. at 13, and Avocent apparently abandoned that argument on appeal as it pertains to general jurisdiction. See Appellants’ Reply Br. at 16 (arguing that Aten International’s reference to the “continuous and systematic general business contact” jurisdictional standard is not relevant to this appeal). Accordingly, we focus our analysis on specific jurisdiction, under which Avocent must make a prima facie showing that Aten International “purposefully directed its activities at residents of the forum,” and that Avocent’s declaratory judgment action “arises out of or relates to those activities.” Breckenridge,
The “purposefully directed” prong of the “minimum contacts” analysis requires us to critically examine the roles of Aten International, Aten Technologies, and 10-GEAR. In that regard, Avocent’s complaint is fatally deficient. Avocent’s complaint does not explicitly identify Aten Technologies or IOGEAR, or explain the relationship between these corporate entities. It merely alleges that Aten International engages in unspecified sales and marketing activity “directly or through their agents or affiliates.” Compl. ¶ 4. But as we have held supra, the mere sale of defendant’s products — whether covered by the patents in suit or not — is not sufficient to establish specific personal jurisdiction in a declaratory judgment suit. Thus, Avocent has failed to allege “sufficient activities related to the claim of patent non-infringement and invalidity” as to support the assertion of specific personal jurisdiction. Silent Drive,
Avocent attempts to draw a distinction between manufacturing and non-manufacturing patentees for purposes of personal jurisdiction. However, this distinction is not helpful. As previously explained, the only contacts between Aten International and Alabama that are relevant are those that relate in some material way to the enforcement or defense of the patents at issue. Regardless of how Aten International’s products got to Alabama, and regardless of who sold them there, Avo-cent’s complaint and the declarations it submitted to the district court — even when construed in the light most favorable to Avocent — fail to allege any connection to the patents at issue, let alone the enforcement thereof. See Compl. ¶ 4 (alleging that Aten International “transacts business in this District and elsewhere by making, using, selling, and/or offering for sale products in this District” and that these products are “KVM switch products that enable workstations to communicate with, and switch between, remote computers”); id. ¶ 7 (alleging that Aten International “has transacted business within the State of Alabama”). Nowhere in these documents does Avocent identify activities purposefully directed at the forum and related in any material way to the enforcement or defense of the validity of the patents at issue. This critically undermines its assertion of specific personal jurisdiction.
Avocent’s reliance on Viam is unavailing. In that case, the patentee’s relevant jurisdictional activity included enforcement proceedings involving the same patent in the same court against other alleged in-fringers — a significant contact with the fo
Although we expressed concerns in Viam regarding improper attempts by foreign patentees to shield themselves from domestic litigation, e.g., id. (expressing concern that foreign patentees “would be able to set up domestic fronts through which they could do business without subjecting their patents to the rigorous scrutiny demanded by United States patent law”), we cannot ignore the framework for determining jurisdiction within a given forum, see World-Wide Volkswagen,
may file in the Patent and Trademark Office a written designation stating the name and address of a person residing within the United States on whom may be served process.... If the person designated cannot be found ... or if no person has been designated, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia shall have jurisdiction.... The court shall have the same jurisdiction to take any action respecting the patent or rights thereunder that it would have if the patentee were personally within the jurisdiction of the court. In addition to having personal jurisdic-
tion over Avocent’s patent claims under 35 U.S.C. § 293, and contrary to the dissent’s suggestion, post at 1348-49, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia would have pendent personal jurisdiction over Avocent’s non-patent claims to the extent they form part of the “same case or controversy” as the patent claims. 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a); see Coyle,
Accordingly, Avocent’s allegation that Aten International products may be purchased in Alabama fails to establish either that Aten International “purposefully directed its activities at residents of the forum” or that this action “arises out of or relates to those activities.” Breckenridge,
b.
As an independent basis for personal jurisdiction over Aten International, Avo-cent also argues that jurisdiction is proper under Calder. Avocent contends that the letters sent by Aten International to Avo-cent Huntsville and to Amazon provide personal jurisdiction because the intended effect of the letters was to slow the sale of Avocent’s allegedly infringing products. This argument presumably relates to Avo-cent’s Lanham Act claim for unfair competition, which alleged that Aten International made infringement allegations directly to Avocent’s customers “knowing that each patent is invalid, unenforceable and/or not infringed” by Avocent’s products. Compl. ¶ 19.
Here, as in Breckenridge, “the question of infringement is a critical factor in determining liability under the non-patent claims. * * * [Aten International’s] letters would neither be unjustifiable nor unfair if the implication of infringement contained therein is true. Accordingly, because the non-patent issues in this case are ‘intimately linked to patent law,’ Federal Circuit law regarding due process must be applied to the question of personal jurisdiction over [Aten International] with respect to all claims.”
c.
Finally, because the district court did not have personal jurisdiction over Aten International with respect to the patent and Lanham Act claims, it correctly dismissed Avocent’s state law claim for intentional interference with business or contractual relations. Cf. Coyle,
III. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we conclude that the district court properly dismissed Avo-cent’s claims against Aten International for lack of personal jurisdiction. Thus its judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We note that while the letter states that Aten Technology owned the patent application, the published application attached to this letter shows the assignee as Aten International.
. This inquiry should not be confused with the “case or controversy” requirement of the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a). While the Supreme Court recently altered the subject matter jurisdiction landscape by rejecting the "reasonable apprehension of suit” test, see. SanDisk Corp. v. STMicroelectronics, Inc.,
In Viam we noted that the question of personal jurisdiction ... is a question of the power of a judicial forum to decide the issues brought before it. A patentee who seeks to enforce its patent may bring an infringement action in a proper forum, and issues regarding the validity and enforceability of the patent may be raised by the defendant. Under our law, a potential defendant in an infringement suit may, in a proper case, preempt the patentee and initiate a suit challenging the enforcement of the patent. The issues on the merits are essentially the same in either situation; the test for personal jurisdiction, for the forum's power to hear the issues, should be the same.
. The dissent's comparison of this case to Campbell Pet is, with all due respect, inapt. The patentee's extra-judicial enforcement activities in Campbell Pet were directed at the forum state, where the trade show was being held. Here, by contrast, IOGEAR sent the second letter to Amazon in Seattle, Washington — not the Alabama forum. Moreover, what the dissent has generalized as a paten-tee's "commercial-type contact,” post at 1343, amounting to the mere sale of products, had no bearing on the question of specific personal jurisdiction in Campbell Pet. There, the patentee's twelve sales to forum residents were analyzed only with regard to general personal jurisdiction — not specific personal jurisdiction.
. The dissent draws "[a]nalogy” to Akro but fails to recognize the absence of any exclusive license or other enforcement obligation in the present case. Post at 1343.
. The dissent states that the majority is "ruling that the commercial activity of a nonresident company in the forum is always irrelevant to personal jurisdiction.” Post at 1344. We make no such sweeping ruling. With all due respect, the dissent’s statement is not only incorrect, but fails to appreciate, inter alia, the distinction between general and specific personal jurisdiction.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I cannot agree that personal jurisdiction is absent. The entirety of the contacts with the forum, as to both plaintiff and defendant, adequately supports the exercise of personal jurisdiction in the Northern District of Alabama, comporting with the principles of personal jurisdiction as elaborated by the Supreme Court. From my colleagues’ contrary ruling I must, respectfully, dissent.
This is not merely the forum to which Aten International sent its notice of infringement; it is also the forum in which Aten International conducts regular retail sales of its products, and in direct competition with Avocent’s products; the forum in which the accused infringing activities occur and in which Aten International’s threatened suit would be brought; and the forum whose state and common laws apply to the complaint’s counts of disparagement of Avoeent’s products and tortious interference with commercial relations. In further distinction from the cases cited in the majority’s opinion, there is no other forum in which all of the counts of the complaint can be resolved as of right. Indeed, in the closest precedent on similar facts, where the foreign patentee had no place of business in the United States but charged a domestic company with infringement, that foreign patentee was held subject to personal jurisdiction in the state in which the declaratory plaintiff resided and the foreign patentee did business through a distributor. Viam Corp. v. Iowa Export-Import Trading Co.,
As this court stated in Viam,
My colleagues on this panel state that the law is that a patentee that moves its goods into a forum through a licensee is subject to the jurisdiction of the forum, but a patentee that moves its goods into a forum through a subsidiary and distributors is not subject to the jurisdiction of the forum. No basis for this delicate distinction can be found in precedent. Indeed, the principles that characterize precedent negate such a distinction. The overarching criteria of precedent are Due Process and fairness; requiring some minimal contacts between the forum and the defendant, but evaluating those contacts in the context of fairness to both parties, and recognizing circumstances such as here prevail, where there is no other forum for this complaint.
With all respect to the panel majority, they err in their analysis, for they simply take in isolation each factor that can contribute to jurisdiction and find such factor inadequate, occasionally finding that some other factor plucked from a prior ruling is
Avocent brought this declaratory action in the forum of its corporate residence and principal place of business, the forum in which the accused infringing activities are conducted, the forum to which Aten International directed its notice of infringement, the forum in which Aten International products are regularly sold in large retail stores, the forum in which the effects of the asserted unfair competition and commercial torts are most directly felt, the only forum whose state and common law apply to the commercial counts of the complaint. I shall discuss each of these contributing factors as they relate to the forum and the exercise of personal jurisdiction.
The considerations for personal jurisdiction
Plaintiff Avocent Huntsville Corp. is a corporation of the state of Alabama located in Huntsville, Alabama, and is a manufacturing and sales subsidiary of Avocent Corporation, a Delaware corporation having its headquarters and principal place of business in Huntsville, Alabama. Co-plaintiff Avocent Redmond Corp. is also a subsidiary of Avocent Corporation, incorporated in the state of Washington. (Plaintiffs herein collectively “Avocent.”) The defendant, Aten International Co., Ltd., is a corporation of the Republic of China, with its headquarters in Taipei, Taiwan. Aten International has no registered office and no official address in the United States, and sells and distributes its products through a United States subsidiary identified as Aten Technology, Inc., and an entity called IOGEAR.
Aten International, through a lawyer in California, wrote to the President of Avo-cent Corporation in Alabama, giving notice of a patent publication that the letter stated would be infringed by certain Avocent products. An Aten lawyer also wrote to customers of Avocent, including Amazon.com, stating that certain products that Amazon purchases from Avocent infringe designated patents of Aten International. Aten International is the patentee of the two patents that are the subject of these letters, as well as the manufacturer of the competing products.
Avocent filed suit in the Northern District of Alabama, with declaratory counts of patent invalidity and also counts for unfair competition under federal law and for various commercial torts under Alabama state law. The standard for the exercise of personal jurisdiction in a forum in which the defendant is not resident, is a matter of Due Process; that is, whether it is reasonable and fair to cause the defendant to appear and defend in that forum. The relevant considerations are summarized by the Court as “the burden on the defendant, the forum State’s interest in adjudicating the dispute, the plaintiffs interest in obtaining convenient and effective relief, the interstate judicial system’s interest in obtaining the most efficient resolution of controversies, and the shared interest of the several States in furthering fundamental substantive social policies.” Burger King Corp. v. Rudzewicz,
The reasonableness of exercise of personal jurisdiction is determined by weighing all relevant factors, including the interests of all parties, the state’s interest, and the collective interest in the overarching considerations of due process and fairness.
I identify seven general factors that contribute to the relationship between the disputants and involve the Alabama forum. Applying the criteria of precedent to the societal interest in resolution of controversy through judicial process, I conclude that the exercise of jurisdiction in the Alabama forum is not only reasonable, but necessary.
I start with the direct contact with the Alabama forum by Aten International, in which it sent notice of patent infringement to an Alabama resident:
(1) Aten International’s infringement letter to Avocent Corporation’s President in Alabama
Aten International’s lawyer in California wrote to Mr. John Cooper, the President and CEO of Avocent Corporation, at the corporate headquarters in Huntsville, Alabama, enclosing a copy of Aten International’s published United States patent application entitled “Automatic Switch”, which issued as Patent No. 7,035,112. The letter stated: “we believe that [the claims] are relevant to a product your company is making, using, selling, offering to sell and/or importing,” and referred to 35 U.S.C. § 154(d) which provides for damages for infringement of a published application. Letter from attorney George G.C. Tseng dated May 28, 2004.
We need not decide whether this letter, without more, would provide personal jurisdiction over the sender in the forum of the recipient, for here several additional factors provide this weight, including Aten International’s products distributed in Alabama and sold in Alabama retail stores, and Aten International’s contacts with Avocent’s customers that are the subject of the counts of unfair competition, disparagement, and interference with commercial relations in Alabama and under Alabama law. Also relevant is the apparent absence of any other forum as to these counts.
This court has recognized personal jurisdiction in circumstances no less remote than those here. In Campbell Pet Co. v. Miale,
Analogy is also seen in Akro Corp. v. Luker,
All considerations must be weighed, not in isolation, but together, in deciding whether the forum can, and should, entertain the suit. Thus Aten International’s commercial activity in the forum is highly relevant:
(2) Aten International’s contacts with the Alabama forum include sale of Aten’s products through distributors and at retail in Alabama
My colleagues are mistaken in their statement that “the plaintiffs failed to allege that the Taiwanese company purposefully directed any activities beyond merely sending notice letters at residents of the forum”, maj. op. at 1326, and in their ruling that the commercial activity of a non-resident company in the forum is always irrelevant to personal jurisdiction. Aten International products are sold in the Best Buy and CompUSA stores in Huntsville and in Birmingham, which is also in the Northern District of Alabama. Declaration of Joseph Hallman ¶ 5 (Jul. 19, 2007); Declaration of Michael R. Casey ¶ 4 (Jul. 20, 2007). In World-Wide Volkswagen Corp. v. Woodson,
The facts of this case are similar to those in Viam, supra, where this court held that the Central District of California had personal jurisdiction of the two nonresident defendants: the Italian corporation SPAL, and SPAL’s United States distributor Iowa ExporNImport. The defendants’ only activity involving California was the sale of goods made in Italy by SPAL and on which SPAL had a United States patent. SPAL’s Iowa-based distributor wrote to Viam Corporation in California, stating that Viam’s product infringes SPAL’s patent. On receiving the letter, Viam filed a declaratory judgment action in the Central District of California.
This court, reversing the district court’s dismissal for lack of personal jurisdiction, held that the sale of SPAL’s products in California, plus the letter to Viam in California, established that “SPAL purposefully directed its activities at the forum State, and Iowa Export, acting as SPAL’s agent, purposefully initiated the interaction with Viam that resulted in the instant suit.”
The analogy is direct: both Aten International and SPAL are foreign owners of United States patents who do business in the forum through United States entities, and who caused letters to be sent to the asserted infringer at its principal place of business, which was the forum in which the recipient filed suit. This court’s holding that SPAL is subject to personal jurisdiction in California requires the same result here. Precedent is that when the patentee’s products reach the forum through the stream of commerce initiated by the patentee, this contact, together with letters directed to the accused in-fringer in the forum, are sufficient to support personal jurisdiction of the patentee in the forum. This is the holding in Beverly Hills Fan Co. v. Royal Sovereign Corp.,
In direct affront to these general rules of precedent, the panel majority holds that sales of Aten International products in Alabama stores, whether or not the products are covered by the patents in dispute, cannot be considered in establishing “minimum contacts” with the forum, for the majority opinion states: “We hold that such sales do not constitute such ‘other activities’ as will support a claim of specific personal jurisdiction over a defendant pat-entee.” Maj. op at 1336. This holding is contrary to this court’s own precedent and that of the Supreme Court. The panel majority postulates that Aten International does not know that its goods are being sold in the Best Buy and other stores in Huntsville and Birmingham, Alabama, and concludes that Avocent must prove that knowledge at this pleading stage. My colleagues refer to Aten International’s representation that its business is done in the United States through its subsidiaries and distributors, and rule that “Avocent’s complaint is fatally deficient [because it] does not explicitly identify Aten Technologies or IOGEAR or explain the relationship between these corporate entities.” Maj. op. at 1338. My colleagues ignore that the sole listed owner of the patents is Aten International of Taiwan, and the products on sale in Alabama are marked as manufactured by Aten International, thus prima facie placing Aten International atop the chain of commerce. Indeed, Aten International is the plaintiff in infringement suits being prosecuted in Texas and California on these same patents. At the pleading stage, without discovery, Avocent cannot be charged with a “fatally defective” complaint simply because it has not shown the detailed relationship between the parent corporation and its United States affiliates.
(3) Aten International’s contacts with Avocent’s customers are the focus of the commercial tort counts under Alabama law
Aten International not only informed Avocent in Alabama that its products infringe an Aten International patent, but also contacted Avocent’s customer Amazon.com and suggested that it “discontinue selling the [accused Avocent] products.” Declaration of Christopher Thomas ¶ 8 (Jul. 13, 2007). The letter to Amazon.com is from the VP of Operations/General Counsel of IOGEAR in Hubble, California, identifying the Aten International '112 patent here in suit.
It is not disputed that the products of Aten International and Avocent are in competition. Competitive relationships are of significance to the commercial tort and unfair competition counts. Avocent describes Aten International’s actions as “intentionally directed at a[n] [Alabama] resident,” and cites Colder v. Jones,
In general, the courts tend to allow personal jurisdiction when the injury to the plaintiff has been manifested in the forum, and when fairness is not compromised thereby. See, e.g., Dudnikov v. Chalk & Vermilion Fine Arts, Inc.,
The commercial tort counts, which arise under Alabama law, provide additional support for the exercise of jurisdiction in the Alabama forum.
(4) Avocent’s manufacture of the accused infringing products is conducted in Alabama
Avocent states that the products referred to in Aten International’s letter are Avocent’s SwitchView line of KVM switches (K for keyboard, V for video display, M for mouse), which are manufactured in Huntsville, Alabama. Infringement is a compulsory counterclaim for the declaratory judgment action, and Avocent states that the witnesses and evidence with respect to the charge of infringement are centered in Alabama.
Alabama is a focal point for harm to Avocent, should Avocent succeed in its challenge to Aten International’s actions directed at Avocent and Avocent’s customers. Similarly, Alabama is a focal point for Aten International’s proofs of infringement
(5) Aten International has brought infringement suits in other United States tribunals on the same patent on which it wrote to Avocent in Alabama
Aten International has initiated litigation against several other United States companies for infringement of the same patent about which it notified Avocent and Avocent’s customers. Infringement suits have been filed by Aten International in the Eastern District of Texas and the Northern District of California, and Aten International and its U.S. subsidiary Aten Technology filed a complaint with the International Trade Commission. These actions dissipate any possible unfairness in subjecting Aten International to the jurisdiction of a United States tribunal far from home, for it is apparent that Aten International is not unwilling to invoke the United States tribunals for enforcing its patents.
As this court stated in Viam,
The panel majority states that it would make a difference if Aten International had brought its infringement suits against third parties in the Alabama forum, instead of in Texas and California, apparently on the theory that Aten International would thereby have subjected itself to the jurisdiction of an Alabama court. Perhaps it would add to the contacts with Alabama. However, my reason for referring to Aten International’s other litigation is to show that Aten International, although a corporation of Taiwan, is not a stranger to litigation in the United States, and is invoking judicial assistance in enforcing its patent rights — whereas, according to the panel majority, there is no tribunal in which Avocent can seek full relief under its complaint against Aten International. The concern is Due Process of law, not hypertechnical avoidance of the processes of the law.
The purpose of the declaratory action is to permit an accused party to clear the air of potential liability, by bringing its accuser to court. The accuser Aten International is the owner of the patents in suit, and is the only potential defendant in this declaratory action. In Viam the foreign patent owner had in fact sued others in the California forum, but this court in Viam did not hold that this was the reason for accepting jurisdiction in the declaratory action.
The issue on this appeal is whether Aten International can be brought before the Northern District of Alabama on this complaint. The vast majority of the cases on which the panel majority relies, which insulate a “non-resident defendant” from personal jurisdiction, are cases in which there is an alternative forum in which the defendant can be reached, and in which considerations of Due, Process favor the alternative forum. One of the Burger King factors recites the assumption that there is an alternative forum available elsewhere than in the forum in dispute. See
Aten International is a corporation of the Republic of China, with its address shown on the patents as Shijr, Taiwan. The record shows no corporate residence or formal place of business in the United States. Indeed, Aten International relies on its foreign residence as grounds for negating jurisdiction in the Alabama forum, as to not only the patent counts of the complaint, but also the counts of unfair competition and violations of Alabama commercial law. The patents in suit identify Aten International Co., Ltd. of Taiwan as the assignee. The patent owner is a necessary party to this action. Although the panel majority proposes that “they can sue in the district of DC,” that is far from clear. After searching, we have found no case in which the District Court for the District of Columbia, in receiving an action “respecting the patent or rights thereunder,” the words of 35 U.S.C. § 293, also adjudicated state law tort claims and unfair competition claims. Although the panel majority cites Electronics for Imaging, Inc. v. Coyle,
Another case cited by the panel majority is Silent Drive, Inc. v. Strong Industries, Inc.,
Contrary to the panel majority’s hypothesis of the jurisdictional reach of the District Court of the District of Columbia, that court recently granted a foreign pat-entee defendant’s motion to dismiss a breach of contract claim for lack of personal jurisdiction, explaining that “[mjere reference to provisions contained in defendant’s patents does not transform what is essentially a contract dispute into a dispute affecting the rights under defendant’s patents.” Purdue Research Found, v. Sanofi-Synthelabo, S.A.,
The bare fact that defendant is a nonresident patent owner does not authorize the Court to assert personal jurisdiction over defendant under Section 293 for all matters. Moreover, plaintiffs contention that defendant is attempting to “duck” jurisdiction in United States courts, even if true, does not relieve plaintiff of its burden to establish personal jurisdiction over defendant.
Id.; see, e.g., National Patent Dev. Corp. v. T.J Smith & Nephew Ltd., 877 F.2d 1003, 1010 (D.C.Cir.1989) (“35 U.S.C. § 293 authorizes the assertion of personal jurisdiction by the United States District Court for the District of Columbia over a nonresident patentee in a suit over patent ownership.”); Gianelli v. Chirkes,
Thus, although I assume that for the patent validity and infringement issues there is statutory jurisdiction in the District of Columbia, that is an inadequate reason to foreclose jurisdiction elsewhere on the facts that here exist. Compare Financial Gen. Bankshares, Inc. v. Metzger,
Transfer to the District of Columbia was not proposed by either party. In Burger King the Court emphasized that “where a defendant who purposefully has directed his activities at forum residents seeks to defeat jurisdiction, he must present a compelling case that the presence of some other considerations would render jurisdiction unreasonable.”
(7) Due process and fairness
The plaintiffs traditional right to choose the forum is tempered by the defendant’s right to defend in a reasonably accessible forum. In Cheney v. U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia,
Avocent argues that Alabama is the only forum in which all of its concerns can be resolved. Aten International does not argue that it is unfair to impose the Alabama forum; Aten International argues simply that there is not personal jurisdiction. For the combination of reasons I have set forth, it is apparent that subjecting Aten International to the Alabama forum’s jurisdiction would be neither unreasonable nor unfair. It is shown that Aten International’s contacts with the Alabama forum are not “random, fortuitous, or attenuated”, Burger King,
This case is not an abstruse attack on a distant manufacturer, as the panel majority suggests. In Beverly Hills Fan,
Although there may indeed be circumstances in which a foreign company should properly be permitted to avoid process, here the foreign company owns United States patents, is conducting business in the United states through its United States companies and distributors, is obtaining the benefits of commerce in the United States, is threatening its United States competitors with liability, is disparaging and interfering with the business of its United States competitors in United States commerce, and is itself invoking the power of United States courts to enforce its United States patents, the same patents that Avocent is here attempting to challenge. The majority’s authority is on quite different facts, and in the rare case in which the facts are similar, as in Viam,
In sum, I would hold that personal jurisdiction lies in the Alabama forum. From my colleagues’ contrary holding, I respectfully dissent.
