*1238 OPINION
This is a suit for patent infringement; discovery is complete and the case has been set for trial. I dismissed another ease for patent infringement that had been assigned to me for trial last year because, as emerged shortly before the trial was scheduled to begin, the plaintiff had not owned the patent on which its claim for infringement was based when it had brought the suit.
Pinpoint, Inc. v. Amazon.Com, Inc.,
The plaintiff in a patent infringement suit has the burden of proving that when it filed the complaint it either owned the patent on which its suit is based or was an exclusive licensee, and hence the equivalent of an assignee of the patent.
Fieldturf, Inc. v. Southwest Recreational Industries, Inc.,
The patent at issue in this case is owned by a wholly owned subsidiary of DePuy, Inc., the plaintiff. DePuy argues that since it owns the patentee, infringement of the patent hurts it because it is entitled to the patentee’s profits. But by the same token someone who owned all the stock of a corporation could sue for redress of a tort committed not against him but against the corporation, and that is not permitted. E.g.,
Flynn v. Merrick
In
Schreiber Foods, Inc., v. Beatrice Cheese, Inc.,
Schreiber, a corporation, brought a suit for infringement of a patent that it owned, but in the course of the litigation transferred the patent to a wholly owned subsidiary for tax reasons — but then, after winning a verdict in the suit, caused its subsidiary to retransfer the patent to it. Subject-matter jurisdiction must continue throughout a litigation.
Arizonans for Offi
*1239
cial English v. Arizona,
On this basis might Depuy be permitted to add its subsidiary as an additional plaintiff and proceed to trial? A parent corporation, or for that matter an individual shareholder, employee, supplier, or even customer, could often show that the infringement of a corporation’s rights had caused him (or it, if the stakeholder were, as in this case, another corporation) an injury, and, conventionally, nothing more (so far as relevant to this case, or to Schreiber) is necessary to confer standing in the Article III sense. E.g.,
Association of Data Processing Service Organizations, Inc. v. Camp,
The Federal Circuit in
Schreiber
thought this rule of standing could be bent, however, just as the rule of complete diversity can be bent, because the requirement that one must have a legally protected interest in order to be allowed to sue is also not a requirement imposed by Article III. That at least is the conventional view. E.g.,
Warth v. Seldin, supra,
But it is difficult to take
Lujan’s
formulation at face value. An injury “in fact” is not, as the quoted statement implies, the same thing as the invasion of a legally protected interest, and most cases before and after
Lujan
place the requirement that a plaintiff have a legally protected interest on the “prudential” side of the standing ledger; that is, they treat it as a judicially created limitation on standing that Congress therefore can waive, e.g.,
Warth v. Seldin, supra,
But while the rule requiring continuous standing that was at issue in Schreiber could be abandoned without loss, the rule that confines the right to sue to one who claims that a right of his has been invaded cannot be, for it rests on a more compelling interest. Injuring a firm invariably causes eddies of further injury, and if all the injured can sue they will be treading on each other’s toes and swamping the courts. If a patentee’s owner can sue to enforce the patent, why not employees of the patentee who will lose their jobs unless the infringement is squelched? But we know they can’t sue. So I am not surprised to find no hint in Schreiber that the rule of standing that I have been describing, even if it is indeed (as I assume) just a rule of prudential standing, could be bent in the present case. For this is the garden-variety case (like Pinpoint) in which suit is brought by an entity that does not own the property right that it is suing to enforce. Schreiber, in contrast, was the exceptional case of a harmless, temporary lapse of standing after the suit was properly filed by the patentee.
So the suit must be dismissed. The defendants ask me to dismiss it with prejudice because they should not have to defend against a refiled suit (with the subsidiary that owns the patent at last substituted for the parent) at this late date. Such a ruling would be premature. I do not know whether the suit will be refiled, or when. If it is refiled and the defendants plead laches or some other basis for dismissal with prejudice because *1241 of delay caused by the plaintiffs jurisdictional error, I will consider at that time the question of whether to dismiss with prejudice.
