This order addresses two motions. First, Rambus moved on January 5, 2007 to confirm withdrawal of its jury demand with respect to Hynix’s fraud claim in case 00-20905, pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 39(a)(2). Hynix opposed the motion. The court has reviewed the papers and considered the arguments of counsel heard on February 16, 2007. For the reasons set forth below, the court denies without prejudice Rambus’s motion to withdraw its jury demand for Hynix’s fraud claim.
Second, Rambus moved on September 24, 2007 to strike all jury demands of Hynix Micron, and Nanya (“Manufacturers”) with regard tot he trial set to commence on January 22, 2008. While Ram-bus’ motion to withdraw its jury demand with respect to Hynix’s fraud claim was under submission, the court consolidated the following cases: 00-20905, 05-00334, 05-02298, and 06-00244. See April 24, 2007 Order at 1. In a joint case management conference statement filed on July 31, 2007, the parties in all four cases identified which claims are to be tried in the consolidated action set for trial commencing on January 22, 2008 and stated whether they claimed entitlement to a jury on those claims. See Joint Case Management Conference Statement of July 31, 2007 (“JCMCS”), at Attachments 1-3. On September 7, Rambus filed its motion to strike the jury demands with respect to all of the claims to be tried in the January 22, 2008 Trial. The Manufacturers jointly opposed the motion. The court has reviewed these further papers and considered the arguments of counsel heard on October 26, 2007. For the reasons set forth below, the court denies Rambus’s motion to strike/withdraw jury demands as to the antitrust claims and denies Rambus’ motion without prejudice as to the fraud claims. The court grants Rambus’s motion to strike/withdraw jury demands with respect to the contract and declaratory judgment claims and affirmative defenses.
I. BACKGROUND
On June 16, 2006, Rambus moved to withdraw its jury demand for the third phase of trial in 00-20905 pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 39(a)(2). Rambus argued that Hynix had disclaimed all damages other than the litigation costs incurred in defending Rambus’s infringement claims. As to litigation costs, Rambus submitted that because its use of the courts to enforce its patents is protected petitioning activity pursuant to the Noerr-Pennington doctrine and the privilege under Cal. Civ. Code § 47(B), Hynix could not claim its litigation expenses as damages. The court denied the motion, holding that Noerr-Pennington immunity does not immunize an alleged fraudulent scheme to obtain an improper patent monopoly in violation of the antitrust laws. See August 2, 2006 Order at 5:3-11, 6 n. 2, 10:3-7. Accordingly, Hynix could still claim its attorneys’ fees as damages for its antitrust claims, and therefore was still entitled to legal relief, and to a jury that can provide it at trial. Id. at 9-10.
On January 5, 2007, Rambus moved to confirm withdrawal of its jury demand with respect to Hynix’s fraud claim (Hy-nix’s eighth claim for relief in its Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”) in 00-20905 asserts a claim for actual fraud). In support of its claim, Hynix alleges,
inter alia,
that Rambus misrepresented its patents and patent applications to JEDEC mem
Meanwhile, Rambus sued both Hynix and Nanya in the 05-00334 case and Micron in the 06-00244 case. These cases have been consolidated with 00-20905 for a joint trial on common claims on January 22, 2008. In a Joint Case Management Conference Statement filed July 31, 2007, the parties listed on which claims they assert entitlement to a jury. Hynix submitted that the following claims should be heard by the jury: monopolization, attempted monopolization and fraud. See JCMCS at Attachment 1. Micron also submitted that the monopolization, attempted monopolization, and fraud claims should be heard by the jury, as well as its unenforce-ability, declaratory judgment of unenforce-ability, breach of contract, negligent misrepresentation, and damages offset claims and waiver defense. See id. at Attachment 2. Nanya too wants a jury to hear the monopolization, attempted monopolization, and fraud claims. See id. at Attachment 3.
Rambus now moves to strike the jury demands with respect to all of these claims. Rambus argues that none of the Manufacturers has a valid damages claim, leaving only requests for equitable relief which do not entitle the Manufacturers to a jury. This is the same argument Ram-bus made with respect to Hynix’s antitrust claims and Hynix’s fraud claim.
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Right to Jury Trial
The Seventh Amendment provides in relevant part: “in Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed $20.00, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved.” U.S. Const., amend. VII. This language “defines the kind of cases for which jury trial is preserved, namely suits at common law.”
Tull v. United States,
B. The Monopolization and Attempted Monopolization Claims
On August 2, 2006, the court ruled in 00-20905 that Rambus could not withdraw its jury demand because Hynix had alleged a claim for legal relief which entitled it to a jury. Hynix’s sole basis for monetary damages on its antitrust claims was that it had incurred attorneys’ fees defending Rambus’ patent claims. The court held that these attorneys’ fees from patent litigation could be awarded as antitrust damages. Upon reflection and the additional briefing provided regarding the same issue in the 05-00334 and 06-00244 cases, the court believes its prior order is correct. The Manufacturers are entitled to a jury on their antitrust claim because their patent litigation attorneys’ fees are cognizable damages where the patent litigation itself was part of an unlawful scheme.
1. Choice of Law
Whether a patentee’s conduct in procuring or enforcing a patent is “sufficient to strip a patentee of its immunity from the antitrust laws” is a question of Federal Circuit law.
Nobelpharma AB v. Implant Innovations, Inc.,
From one angle, the question posed by the pending set of motions is one of damages, and would appear to be controlled by Ninth Circuit law. However, the Manufacturers may only recover their attorneys’ fees as antitrust damages to the extent that the fees arise from litigation that itself violates the antitrust laws, and whether a patentee’s litigation activities can give rise to an antitrust claim is an issue of Federal Circuit law. Accordingly, Federal Circuit law controls the viability of the Manufacturer’s allegations of anticompeti-tive conduct to the extent they arise from Rambus’ patent litigation. If Federal Circuit law permits an antitrust claim premised on Rambus’ litigation conduct, the question of whether the Manufacturers can recover their attorneys’ fees as damages will be decided as a matter of Ninth Circuit law.
2. Protected Litigation and Unlawful Schemes
The Manufacturers’ antitrust claims arise from “Rambus’ scheme of anticom-petitive conduct, including its fraudulent activities at JEDEC.” Opp. at 6. While the court assumes general familiarity with the allegations, briefly recounting the details of the alleged scheme sheds light on the court’s narrow holding. Rambus filed a patent application disclosing features of RAM technology in 1990.
See, e.g.,
Hy-nix’s First Amended Answer ¶ 199.3, Docket No. 142 C-05-00334 (N.D.Cal. Feb. 22, 2007).
1
In 1991, Rambus attended the Joint Electronic Devices Engineering Council (“JEDEC”) Solid State Technology Association, the semiconductor engineering standardization body of the Electronic Industries Alliance.
Id.
¶ 199.10. Rambus joined the standards organization in 1992.
Id.
¶ 199.14. While developing standards, JEDEC strived to exclude patented technology unless the technology was essential and available on reasonable licensing terms.
Id.
¶ 199.16. To that end, JEDEC required its members to disclose
The Manufacturers allege that this “overall course of conduct” — including Rambus’ patent litigation against the Manufacturers — violated the antitrust laws, as described in a line of cases beginning with
Kobe, Inc. v. Dempsey Pump Co.,
The Supreme Court’s last treatment of the doctrine balancing these interests occurred in the context of a copyright infringement case.
Professional Real Estate Investors, Inc. v. Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc.,
The Court’s holding clarified the definition of “sham” litigation, but it did not pass on any broader basis for liability. In a footnote, the Court explained that its review was limited to “whatever antitrust injury Columbia inflicted [stemming] from the attempted enforcement of copyrights.”
Id.
at 54, n. 2,
While the Court has recognized the dilemma, it has not held whether petitioning activity protected by the First Amendment can be an element of an “unlawful scheme” or “overall course of conduct” which violates the antitrust laws. Justice Stevens’ concurrence in
PREI,
however, urges flexibility in applying the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine to “more complicated cases.”
In the absence of Supreme Court authority, the Federal Circuit’s law controls whether patent litigation may be included as part of an anticompetitive scheme. The Federal Circuit has previously suggested that “patent owners may incur antitrust liability for enforcement of a patent known to be obtained through fraud or known to be invalid, where license of a patent compels the purchase of unpatented goods, or where there is an overall scheme to use the patent to violate antitrust laws.”
Atari Games Corp. v. Nintendo of America, Inc.,
The court has not found, and the parties have not shown, any case in which the Federal Circuit has held whether patent litigation can be included as part of an anticompetitive scheme. Statements in ISO and Q-Pharma suggest the Federal Circuit might limit liability for patent enforcement to two situations, but dictum in Atari Games suggests otherwise. Hence, to determine whether the Federal Circuit would recognize a “scheme” claim premised on an infringement suit brought as “an integral part of an agreement or plan to violate the antitrust laws,” the court finds it helpful to review the holdings of the various courts of appeals prior to the creation of the Federal Circuit.
3. Three Approaches to Whether Patent Litigation Can Be Unlawful
As Hynix suggested in opposition to Rambus’ first motion to withdraw its jury demand, this “fact pattern is relatively rare.” Nevertheless, various federal courts have examined the issue of whether patent litigation can be an element of a broader scheme to violate the antitrust laws, reaching back much earlier than the Supreme Court’s Noerr-Pennington jurisprudence. From these cases, the court discerns three possible approaches to whether patent litigation can be an anti-competitive act in violation of the antitrust laws.
i. The Second Circuit’s Absolute Bar
The first case to grapple with whether patent litigation can violate the antitrust laws is
Straus v. Victor Talking Machine Co.,
Never was it more necessary than now to preserve unimpaired this right so vital to the public welfare and so thoroughly a part of our theory of government. [... ] it would be a negation of the principle and right of free access to the courts to hold that the submission of rights to judicial determination involved a dangerous gamble which might subject the loser to heavy damage.
Id. at 799. Accordingly, the court held that the Victor Company’s unsuccessful patent litigation could not be a “step” in an unlawful scheme to violate the antitrust laws.
The Second Circuit revisited the issue of whether patent litigation can be part of a monopolistic scheme in 1971.
Ansul Co. v. Uniroyal, Inc.,
In short, the Second Circuit’s jurisprudence creates a rule similar to the one suggested in ISO and Q-Pharma, namely that only frivolous patent suits can be anti-competitive and part of an unlawful scheme.
ii. The Kobe Claim
On the opposite end of the spectrum from
Straus
is the
Kobe
line of cases.
See, e.g., Kobe, Inc. v. Dempsey Pump Co.,
On these facts, the Tenth Circuit noted that “if there was nothing more than the bringing of the infringement action, resulting damages could not be recovered.”
Id.
The court stated that “although Kobe believed some of its patents were infringed, the real purpose of the infringement action and [notifying customers of the suit] was
The result of Kobe’s infringement action, its verbal and written statements to the trade, was disastrous to the defendants. There was almost a complete boycott of their products. To hold that there was no liability for damages caused by this conduct, though lawful in itself, would permit a monopolizer to smother every potential competitor with litigation before it had an opportunity to be otherwise caught in its tentacles and leave the competitor without a - remedy.
Id. The Tenth Circuit also considered the Second Circuit’s ruling in Straus, and rejected it. The court opined that “the right of those who conduct their business in a lawful manner and who do not misuse their patent rights to bring infringement suits and to notify others of the consequences of infringement will in no way be impaired by this ruling.” Id.
Seven years later, the Seventh Circuit held that “defendants [in a patent suit] are entitled to have their reasonable attorneys’ fees and expenses included as an element of damages in the antitrust action.”
Clapper v. Original Tractor Cab Co.,
While the Ninth Circuit went on to discuss the interface between the
Noerr-Pen-nington
doctrine and the patent and antitrust law at great length in
Handgards, Inc. v. Ethicon, Inc.,
Formulating a consistent rule from these cases is difficult. Nonetheless, the Ninth Circuit’s synthesis in
Rex Chainbelt
held that patent litigation constituted anti-competitive conduct if “Rex merely had a good faith belief in the validity of its patent, but was intentionally using its patent
iii. The “Causal Connection” Middle Ground
The Eighth Circuit considered the viability of whether patent litigation costs could be awarded as treble damages resulting from an antitrust scheme to monopolize in 1966.
Am. Infra-Red Radiant Co. v. Lambert Indus., Inc.,
The Sixth Circuit applied the Eighth Circuit’s “causal connection” test to an alleged
Walker Process
fraud antitrust claim.
Kearney & Trecker Corp. v. Cincinnati Milacron Inc.,
iv. If Presented With the Issue, the Federal Circuit Would Choose the “Causal Connection” Test
Summarizing these cases, the court draws the following conclusions. First, no court addressed the viability of a “scheme” claim based on patent litigation protected by the
Noerr-Pennington
doctrine. While many cases agonize over the patentee’s freedom to bring suit, none address it in the context of constitutionally protected activity. Only
Handgards
acknowledged the existence of the Supreme Court’s
Noerr-Pennington
jurisprudence. The Ninth Circuit again discussed the issue in
Clipper Exxpress v. Rocky Mountain Tariff Bureau, Inc.,
The jurisprudence contains a debate between the need to keep courts open for good faith litigation and a desire to prevent “smothering” and “aggressive weapon” patent litigation. At one end is
Kobe
court’s “smothering” reasoning, which appears unconcerned that its hypothetical “potential competitor” was an infringer with no legal right to be competing in the product market.
Kobe,
With these considerations in mind, the court believes that the Federal Circuit and the Supreme Court would recognize some “scheme” antitrust allegations that include constitutionally protected liti
In reaching this conclusion, the court acknowledges the apparently contrary opinions of respected commentators. For example, Professors Hovenkamp, Janis, and Lemley suggest that:
Some allegations of anticompetitive litigation are made as part of a broader pattern of alleged anticompetitive conduct, including more traditional antitrust theories. In such a case, the logical approach is to consider the anticompeti-tive litigation allegations under the standards set forth [in PREI and Walker Process ]. If the antitrust plaintiff can prove the existence of sham litigation, the litigation conduct can be included in the mix of things alleged to violate the antitrust laws. If not, the antitrust claim can still be heard on the merits, but without the sham litigation allegations. In this way, courts avoid the risk of such mixed allegations being used as a subterfuge to avoid the stringent requirements of Walker Process or Noerr immunity.
Herbert Hovenkamp, Mark D. Janis, & Mark A. Lemley, IP and Antitrust § 11.4f (2007). A district court opinion also endorsed this conclusion when considering an alleged scheme of antitrust misconduct including patent litigation.
Abbott Laboratories,
Having laid out a rule for when patent litigation may be included among a plaintiffs section 2 scheme allegations, the court turns to the present case. The Manufacturers have alleged that Rambus participated in a standards-setting organization, understood its intellectual property disclosure policy, withheld information about its patent applications, waited until the industry was irreversibly “locked in” to the standard, and then began a litigation campaign to extract royalties. Rambus’ alleged conduct before JEDEC can be considered anticompetitive conduct under the Sherman Act.
See Broadcom Corp. v. Qualcomm, Inc.,
Because Rambus’ alleged conduct at JE-DEC can independently qualify as an anti-competitive harm under section 2, the court finds that Rambus’ current patent litigation is “causally connected” to that behavior and therefore properly included in an “anticompetitive scheme” allegation. To be clear, the causal connection is that a patent “ambush” or “hold-up” is ineffective without the threat of litigation.
As clear as the causal connection is in this case, the court notes further policy considerations that militate in favor of finding such a connection. The recent FTC/DOJ report suggests that “market participants often may have little incentive to complain about hold up because they can pass on the hidden costs of hold up to consumers or because there is no venue for resolving complaints.” Enforcement Report, at 40. Contributors to the report commented that “to the extent that the people paying royalties are competing against each other and are all — or believe that they’re all paying roughly the same royalty, there’s a lot of pass-through, so it’s the final consumer rather than these competitors who end up paying.” Id. They also explained that those in the best position to challenge the anticompetitive holdup will not because “[it] may be a tax on the industry, and ... it doesn’t hurt me worse than anybody else.” Essentially, the standard-setting patent hold-up presents an example of the classic free rider problem. A licensee who chooses to challenge the hold up risks losing in court and incurring substantial legal expenses. On the other hand, a licensee who does not challenge the hold up is no worse off competitively because every licensee is paying the same royalty and passing costs onto consumers, while remaining in a position to free ride and reap all of the benefits if another licensee successfully challenges the hold up. The market failure thus results in an under-supply of challenges to patent hold ups. See id. By allowing a successful challenger of a patent holdup to recover a “workable minimum” of damages, the antitrust laws can help alleviate this market failure.
As discussed, the Manufacturer’s “anti-competitive scheme” allegations lay out an independent “traditional antitrust theory” of anticompetitive harm and demonstrate the causal connection between Rambus’ patent litigation and that harm. Accordingly, the patent litigation is properly included as an element of the alleged unlawful scheme. If proven, this scheme would entitle the Manufacturers to at least their legal expenses incurred in defending the patent litigation. Because the Manufacturer’s antitrust claims include a claim for legal relief, they are entitled to a jury trial. Rambus’ motions to withdraw/strike the jury demands as to the antitrust claims are therefore denied.
Rambus argues that the Manufacturers cannot recover any monetary damages on their fraud claim, and hence have no right to a jury. The Manufacturers claim they are entitled to three types of monetary damages — attorneys’ fees as compensatory damages, nominal damages, and punitive damages.
The Manufacturers cannot claim their attorneys’ fees as compensatory damages for a fraud claim. The “American rule” requires each party to bear its own legal fees.
See
Cal. Civ.Code § 1021. The California Supreme Court closely guards this principle, and is loathe to expand the contexts in which a party can recover its attorneys’ fees unless authorized by a statute.
Gray v. Don Miller & Associates, Inc.,
The Manufacturers’ argue that Rambus’ alleged fraud has caused them to incur the costs of this litigation, and that they must be reimbursed these attorneys’ fees to be made whole. Generally, the measure of tort damages in California is “the amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused.” Cal. Civ.Code § 3333. The goal of section 3333 is “to make the successful plaintiff whole.”
Overgaard v. Johnson,
The Manufacturers support this interpretation by turning to a decision based on Virginia law.
See Rambus, Inc. v. Infineon Tech. AG,
Finally, the Manufacturers cite to California case law that attorneys’ fees may be awarded against an insurer who has forced the insured to pursue litigation in order to obtain benefits wrongfully withheld.
See Brandt v. Superior Court,
The Manufacturers next premise their right to a jury on the availability of nominal damages. Rambus argues that the Manufacturers are not entitled to a jury because they cannot prove nominal damages.
5
Fraud requires proof of injury.
See
Cal. Civ.Code § 1709;
Furia v. Helm,
Rambus maintains that the Manufacturers have not suffered any actual damage. Rambus points to the absence of any expert report quantifying damages other than attorneys’ fees to support this proposition. Perry Decl. ¶¶ 2, 3. Rambus also submits that Hynix stated that it “will not claim damages for lost profits” and that Nanya seeks only attorneys’ fees. Perry Decl. ¶¶ 4, 5, Ex. A. Rambus’ declaration contains no purported disclaimer from Micron. Rambus conflates the Manufacturers’ failure to quantify damages with a lack of actual damages. The basis for nominal damages in this instance is that the Manufacturers cannot prove the amount of the actual damage they have suffered. Given this, the Manufacturers’ failure to submit damages calculations is both logical and expected, not a basis for depriving the Manufacturers of their constitutional right to a jury.
Nonetheless, to prove the actual damages required for a fraud claim, the Manufacturers must submit something. Recognizing this, the Manufacturers list two examples of the “specific unquantifla-ble ways” in which they have been damaged. The Manufacturers first point to paragraph 172 of “Micron’s Answer.” The Manufacturers do not specify whether this
Rambus’s conduct threatens to thwart the development of any non-Rambus standard. Rambus’s anticompetitive actions threaten to suppress industry acceptance of anything but Rambus’s proprietary technology. The uncertainty created by Rambus over alternatives to its own technology poses the potential for raising the costs of rival standards and reducing the likelihood that those standards will be adopted.
The Manufacturers next point to an interrogatory responses dated September 4, 2001, in which Hynix claimed that it suffered unquantifiable harm from lost sales, reduced prices, and delayed chipsets “due to fear, uncertainty and doubt spawned by Rambus’ patent threats.” The Manufacturers submit nothing on Nanya’s behalf.
The Manufacturers’ inability to point to evidence substantiating their claims for damages raises the question of what material the court should consider on a motion to strike a jury demand. This is an issue the Supreme Court has expressly declined answering in the past.
Curtis v. Loether,
If it becomes clear prior to trial that no genuine issue exists as to any material facts, a district court can grant summary judgment as to some or all issues. This standard can operate to eliminate merit-less damages requests and thus moot a jury demand. Under this standard, the district court is free to examine all of the record and not just the pleadings. If a demand for damages is so insubstantial that it cannot meet the standard contained in Rule 56, then it should not be allowed to convert equitable issues into legal ones.
Hildebrand v. Board of Trustees of Mich. St. Univ.,
The court holds that if, after the close of discovery, the party requesting a jury cannot produce evidence supporting its claim to monetary damages, then the party no longer has a right to a jury. On the basis of the Manufacturers’ opposition, the Manufacturers have not demonstrated that they are entitled to legal relief on their fraud claim. The court is hesitant, however, to effectively enter partial summary judgment that the Manufacturers are not entitled to monetary relief. First, summary judgment motions on these claims are currently pending. Second, the law is unclear regarding at what stage of the proceedings a party requesting a jury must produce evidence of actual injury. Third, Rambus’ briefing did not call attention to the
Hildebrand
case until its reply, foreclosing the Manufacturers’ ability to respond with contrary authority or more concrete evidence of actual damages. Ac
Finally, even if the Manufacturers may recover nominal damages, Ram-bus points out that the Seventh Amendment only preserves the right to jury trial “where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars.” U.S. Const., amend. VII;
see also Van Wie v. Pataki,
D. The Breach of Contract Claim
Rambus also moves to strike the jury demand with respect to Micron’s breach of contract claim, arguing that Micron cannot recover any damages, and hence is not entitled to a jury. Micron argues that its attorneys’ fees are recoverable as damages under its contract claim. As in tort cases, California applies the American Rule to contract cases. The only case law permitting the recovery of attorneys’ fees for breach of contract limits recovery to reasonably foreseeable attorneys’ fees incurred against third parties.
See De La Hoya v. Slim’s Gun Shop,
E. Declaratory Judgment and Affirmative Defenses
Rambus also moves to strike jury demands with respect to various affirmative defenses and requests for declaratory judgment asserted by Nanya and Micron. The parties do not appear to dispute that an affirmative defense does not entitle a party to a jury trial.
See Burlington Northern R. Co. v. Nebraska Public Power Dist.,
Whether a declaratory judgment actions entitles a party to a jury trial depends on the nature of the claim from which it arises.
See Pacific Indem. Co. v. McDonald,
III. ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, the court DENIES Rambus’s motion to strike/withdraw jury demands as to the antitrust claims and as to its fraud claims without prejudice to renewal, but GRANTS Ram-bus’s motion to strike/withdraw its jury demands with respect to the Manufacturers’ contract and declaratory judgment claims and affirmative defenses.
Notes
. The allegations described, here comes from Hynix's counterclaims. Micron and Nanya make similar monopolization and attempted monopolization allegations.
. Such claims are further described in Eugene Crew, The Use of Patent Litigation to Violate the Antitrust Laws, 11 Intell. Prop. L. Bull. 69 (Fall 2006). The court notes, however, the timing of the article and the relationship between the author and Hynix.
. The
PREI
decision did not address how the
Noerr-Pennignton
doctrine applies to fraudulent conduct.
. The Supreme Court affirmed in part and reversed in part this decision.
Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
. Rambus also argues that Hynix and Nanya did not request nominal damages in their prayer for relief. Both Hynix and Nanya request "such other and further relief as the Court may deem appropriate.” This general prayer suffices here to provide for nominal damages, if proven at trial.
See Basista v. Weir,
. The court notes that many of the facts underlying the fraud claim will be decided by the jury in deciding the antitrust claims. Even if the Manufacturers are not entitled to a jury, the court will be required to decide the merits of the fraud claim in accord with the jury’s factual findings.
See Beacon Theatres, Inc. v. Westover,
