Lead Opinion
Kelley Company appeals from a decision of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, awarding damages for the infringement of U.S. Patent 4,373,847, owned by Rite-Hite Corporation. Rite-Hite Corp. v. Kelley Co.,
BACKGROUND
On March 22, 1983, Rite-Hite sued Kelley, alleging that Kelley’s “Truk Stop” vehicle restraint infringed Rite-Hite’s U.S. Patent 4,373,847 (“the ’847 patent”).
Rite-Hite distributed all its products through its wholly-owned and operated sales organizations and through independent sales organizations (ISOs). During the period of infringement, the Rite-Hite sales organizations accounted for approximately 30 percent of the retail dollar sales of Rite-Hite products, and the ISOs accounted for the remaining 70 percent. Rite-Hite sued for its lost profits at the wholesale level and for the lost retail profits of its own sales organizations. Shortly after this action was filed, several ISOs moved to intervene, contending that they were “exclusive licensees” of the ’847 patent by virtue of “Sales Representative Agreements” and “Dok-Lok Supplement” agreements between themselves and Rite-Hite. The court determined that the ISOs were exclusive licensees and accordingly, on August 31, 1984, permitted them to intervene.
On remand, the damage issues were tried to the court. Rite-Hite,
Of the 3,825 infringing Truk Stop devices sold by Kelley, the district court found that, “but for” Kelley’s infringement, Rite-Hite would have made 80 more sales of its MDL-55; 3,243 more sales of its ADL-100; and 1,692 more sales of dock levelers, a bridging platform sold with the restraints and used to bridge the edges of a vehicle and dock. The court awarded Rite-Hite as a manufacturer the wholesale profits that it lost on lost sales of the ADL-100 restraints, MDL-55 restraints, and restraint-leveler packages. It also awarded to Rite-Hite as a retailer and to the ISOs reasonable royalty damages on lost ADL-100, MDL-55, and restraint-leveler sales caused by Kelley’s infringing sales. Finally, prejudgment interest, calculated without compounding, was awarded. Kelley’s infringement was found to be not willful.
On appeal, Kelley contends that the district court erred as a matter of law in its determination of damages. Kelley does not contest the award of damages for lost sales of the MDL-55 restraints; however, Kelley argues that (1) the patent statute does not provide for damages based on Rite-Hite’s lost profits on ADL-100 restraints because the ADL-lOOs are not covered by the patent in suit; (2) lost profits on unpatented dock levelers are not attributable to demand for the ’847 invention and, therefore, are not recoverable losses; (3) the ISOs have no standing to sue for patent infringement damages; and (4) the court erred in calculating a reasonable royalty based as a percentage of ADL-100 and dock leveler profits. Rite-Hite and the ISOs challenge the district court’s refusal to award lost retail profits and its award of prejudgment interest at a simple, rather than a compound, rate.
We affirm the damage award with respect to Rite-Hite’s lost profits as a manufacturer on its ADL-100 restraint sales, affirm the court’s computation of a reasonable royalty rate, vacate the damage award based on the dock levelers, and vacate the damage award with respect to the ISOs because they lack standing. We remand for dismissal of the ISOs’ claims and for a redetermination of damages consistent with this opinion. The issues raised by Rite-Hite are unpersuasive.
DISCUSSION
Because the technology, the ’847 patent, and the history of the parties and their litigation are fully described in the opinions of the district court and that of the earlier panel of our court that affirmed the liability judgment, we will discuss the facts only to the extent necessary to discuss the issues raised in this appeal.
In order to prevail on appeal on an issue of damages, an appellant must convince us that the determination was based on an erroneous conclusion of law, clearly erroneous factual findings, or a clear error of judgment amounting to an abuse of discretion. Amstar Corp. v. Envirotech Corp., 823 F.2d
A.
Kelley’s Appeal
I. Lost Profits on the ADL-100 Restraints
The district court’s decision to award lost profits damages pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 284 turned primarily upon the quality of Rite-Hite’s proof of actual lost profits. The court found that, “but for” Kelley’s infringing Truk Stop competition, Rite-Hite would have sold 3,243 additional ADL-100 restraints and 80 additional MDL-55 restraints. The court reasoned that awarding lost profits fulfilled the patent statute’s goal of affording complete compensation for infringement and compensated Rite-Hite for the ADL-100 sales that Kelley “anticipated taking from Rite-Hite when it marketed the Truk Stop against the ADL-100.” Rite-Hite,
Kelley maintains that Rite-Hite’s lost sales of the ADL-100 restraints do not constitute an injury that is legally compensable by means of lost profits. It has uniformly been the law, Kelley argues, that to recover damages in the form of lost profits a patentee must prove that, “but for” the infringement, it would have sold a product covered by the patent in suit to the customers who bought from the infringer. Under the circumstances of this case, in Kelley’s view, the patent statute provides only for damages calculated as a reasonable royalty. Rite-Hite, on the other hand, argues that the only restriction on an award of actual lost profits damages for patent infringement is proof of causation-in-fact. A patentee, in its view, is entitled to all the profits it would have made on any of its products “but for” the infringement. Each party argues that a judgment in favor of the other would frustrate the purposes of the patent statute. Whether the lost profits at issue are legally compensable is a question of law, which we review de novo.
Our analysis of this question necessarily begins with the patent statute. See General Motors Corp. v. Devex Corp.,
Upon finding for the claimant the court shall award the claimant damages adequate to compensate for the infringement, but in no event less than a reasonable royalty for the use made of the invention by the infringer, together with interest and costs as fixed by the court.
35 U.S.C. § 284 (1988). The statute thus mandates that a claimant receive damages “adequate” to compensate for infringement. Section 284 further instructs that a damage award shall be “in no event less than a reasonable royalty”; the purpose of this alternative is not to direct the form of compensation, but to set a floor below which damage awards may not fall. Del Mar Avionics, Inc. v. Quinton Instrument Co.,
The Supreme Court spoke to the question of patent damages in General Motors, stating that, in enacting § 284, Congress sought to “ensure that the patent owner would in fact receive full compensation for ‘any damages’
In Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
The question to be asked in determining damages is “how much had the Patent Holder and Licensee suffered by the infringement. And that question [is] primarily: had the Infringer not infringed, what would the Patentee Holder-Licensee have made?”
Panduit Corp. v. Stahlin Bros. Fibre Works, Inc.,
Applying Panduit, the district court found that Rite-Hite had established “but for” causation. In the court’s view, this was sufficient to prove entitlement to lost profits damages on the ADL-100. Kelley does not challenge that Rite-Hite meets the Panduit test and therefore has proven “but for” causation; rather, Kelley argues that damages for the ADL-100, even if in fact caused by the in
Preliminarily, we wish to affirm that the “test” for compensability of damages under § 284 is not solely a “but for” test in the sense that an infringer must compensate a patentee for any and all damages that proceed from the act of patent infringement. Notwithstanding the broad language of § 284, judicial relief cannot redress every conceivable harm that can be traced to an alleged wrongdoing. See Associated General Contractors, Inc. v. California State Council of Carpenters,
Judicial limitations on damages, either for certain classes of plaintiffs or for certain types of injuries have been imposed in terms of “proximate cause” or “foreseeability.” See Consolidated Rail Corp. v. Gottshall, — U.S. -, -,
We believe that under § 284 of the patent statute, the balance between full compensation, which is the meaning that the Supreme Court has attributed to the statute, and the reasonable limits of liability encompassed by general principles of law can best be viewed in terms of reasonable, objective foreseeability. If a particular injury was or should have been reasonably foreseeable by an infringing competitor in the relevant market, broadly defined, that injury is generally compensable absent a persuasive reason to the contrary. Here, the court determined that Rite-Hite’s lost sales of the ADL-100, a product that directly competed with the infringing product, were reasonably foreseeable. We agree with that conclusion. Being responsible for lost sales of a competitive product is surely foreseeable; such losses constitute the full compensation set forth by Congress, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, while staying well within the traditional meaning of proximate cause. Such lost sales should therefore clearly be compensable.
Recovery for lost sales of a device not covered by the patent in suit is not of course expressly provided for by the patent statute.
Kelley asserts that to allow recovery for the ADL-100 would contravene the policy reason for which patents are granted: “[T]o promote the progress of ... the useful arts.” U.S. Const., art. I, § 8, cl. 8. Because an inventor is only entitled to exclusivity to the extent he or she has invented and disclosed a novel, nonobvious, and useful device, Kelley argues, a patent may never be used to restrict competition in the sale of products not covered by the patent in suit. In support, Kelley cites antitrust case law condemning the use of a patent as a means to obtain a “monopoly” on unpatented material. See, e.g., Ethyl Gasoline Corp. v. United States,
These cases are inapposite to the issue raised here. The present case does not involve expanding the limits of the patent grant in violation of the antitrust laws; it simply asks, once infringement of a valid patent is found, what compensable injuries result from that infringement, i.e., how may the patentee be made whole. Rite-Hite is not attempting to exclude its competitors from making, using, or selling a product not within the scope of its patent. The Truk Stop restraint was found to infringe the ’847 patent, and Rite-Hite is simply seeking adequate compensation for that infringement; this is not an antitrust issue. Allowing compensation for such damage will “promote the Progress of ... the useful Arts” by providing a stimulus to the development of new products and industries. See 1 Ernest B. Lipscomb III, Walker on Patents 65 (3d ed. 1984) (quoting Simonds, Summary of the Law of Patents 9 (1883)) (“The patent laws promote the progress in different ways, prominent among which are by protecting the investment of capital in the development and working of a new invention from ruinous competition till the investment becomes remunerative.”).
Kelley further asserts that, as a policy matter, inventors should be encouraged by the law to practice their inventions. This is not a meaningful or persuasive argument, at least in this context. A patent is granted in exchange for a patentee’s disclosure of an invention, not for the patentee’s use of the invention. There is no requirement in this country that a patentee make, use, or sell its patented invention. See Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
Kelley next argues that to award lost profits damages on Rite-Hite’s ADL-100s would be contrary to precedent. Citing Panduit, Kelley argues that case law regarding lost profits uniformly requires that “the intrinsic value of the patent in suit is the only proper basis for a lost profits award.” Kelley argues that each prong of the Panduit test focuses on the patented invention; thus, Kelley asserts, Rite-Hite cannot obtain damages consisting of lost profits on a product that is not the patented invention.
Generally, the Panduit test has been applied when a patentee is seeking lost profits for a device covered by the patent in suit. However, Panduit is not the sine qua non for proving “but for” causation. If there are other ways to show that the infringement in fact caused the patentee’s lost profits, there is no reason why another test should not be acceptable. Moreover, other fact situations may require different means of evaluation, and failure to meet the Panduit test does not ipso facto disqualify a loss from being compensable.
In any event, the only Panduit factor that arguably was not met in the present fact situation is the second one, absence of acceptable non-infringing substitutes. Establishment of this factor tends to prove that the patentee would not have lost the sales to a non-infringing third party rather than to the infringer. That, however, goes only to the question of proof. Here, the only substitute for the patented device was the ADL-100, another of the patentee’s devices. Such a substitute was not an “acceptable, non-infringing substitute” within the meaning of Panduit because, being patented by RiteHite, it was not available to customers except from Rite-Hite. Cf. State Indus.,
Kelley’s conclusion that the lost sales must be of the patented invention thus is not supported. Kelley’s concern that lost profits must relate to the “intrinsic value of the patent” is subsumed in the “but for” analysis; if the patent infringement had nothing to do with the lost sales, “but for” causation would not have been proven. However, “but for” causation is conceded here. The motive, or motivation, for the infringement is irrelevant if it is proved that the infringement in fact caused the loss. We see no basis for Kelley’s conclusion that the lost sales must be of products covered by the infringed patent.
Kelley has thus not provided, nor do we find, any justification in the statute, precedent, policy, or logic to limit the compensabil
II. Damages on the Dock Levelers
Based on the “entire market value rule,” the district court awarded lost profits on 1,692 dock levelers that it found Rite-Hite would have sold with the ADL-100 and MDL-55 restraints. Kelley argues that this award must be set aside because Rite-Hite failed to establish that the dock levelers were eligible to be included in the damage computation under the entire market value rule. We agree.
When a patentee seeks damages on unpatented components sold with a patented apparatus, courts have applied a formulation known as the “entire market value rule” to determine whether such components should be included in the damage computation, whether for reasonable royalty purposes,
The entire market value rule has typically been applied to include in the compensation base unpatented components of a device when the unpatented and patented components are physically part of the same machine. See, e.g., Western Elec. Co. v. Stew
In Paper Converting, this court articulated the entire market value rule in terms of the objectively reasonable probability that a pat-entee would have made the relevant sales. See
Specifically, recovery was sought for the lost profits on sales of an entire machine for the high speed manufacture of paper rolls comprising several physically separate components, only one of which incorporated the invention. The machine was comprised of the patented “rewinder” component and several auxiliary components, including an “unwind stand” that supported a large roll of supply paper to the rewinder, a “core loader” that supplied paperboard cores to the rewin-der, an “embosser” that embossed the paper and provided a special textured surface, and a “tail sealer” that sealed the paper’s trailing end to the finished roll. Although we noted that the auxiliary components had “separate usage” in that they each separately performed a part of an entire rewinding operation, the components together constituted one functional unit, including the patented component, to produce rolls of paper. The auxiliary components derived their market value from the patented rewinder because they had no useful purpose independent of the patented rewinder.
Similarly, our subsequent eases have applied the entire market value rule only in situations in which the patented and unpat-ented components were analogous to a single functioning unit. See, e.g., Kalman v. Berlyn Corp.,
Thus, the facts of past cases clearly imply a limitation on damages, when recovery is sought on sales of unpatented components sold with patented components, to the effect that the unpatented components must function together with the patented component in some manner so as to produce a desired end product or result. All the components together must be analogous to components of a single assembly or be parts of a complete machine, or they must constitute a functional unit. Our precedent has not extended liability to include items that have essentially no functional relationship to the patented invention and that may have been sold with an infringing device only as a matter of convenience or business advantage. We are not persuaded that we should extend that liability. Damages on such items would constitute more than what is “adequate to compensate for the infringement.”
The facts of this case do not meet this requirement. The dock levelers operated to bridge the gap between a loading dock
III. Standing of the ISOs
The ISOs asserted claims for patent infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 281 as co-plaintiffs with Rite-Hite and were awarded damages calculated on the basis of a reasonable royalty at the retail level on both restraints and dock levelers, based on the number of sales each asserted it lost to Kelley. Kelley challenges any award of damages to the ISOs on the ground that the ISOs had no standing to seek recovery for patent infringement. The ISOs argue that the exclusivity of their sales territories gave them standing as “exclusive licensees.” The question of standing to sue is a jurisdictional one, Imperial Tobacco, Ltd. v. Philip Morris, Inc.,
The right of a patentee to a remedy for patent infringement is created by the statute, Arachnid, Inc. v. Merit Indus., Inc.,
Generally, one seeking money damages for patent infringement must have held legal title to the patent at the time of the infringement. Crown Die & Tool Co. v. Nye Tool & Machine Works,
Under certain circumstances, a licensee may possess sufficient interest in the patent to have standing to sue as a co-plaintiff with the patentee. See id. (if necessary to protect the rights of all parties, the licensee may be joined as co-plaintiff); Independent Wireless Tel. Co. v. Radio Corp. of America,
The ISOs maintain that they are allowed to join as co-plaintiffs because each claims it has a virtually exclusive license to sell products made by Rite-Hite to particular customers in an exclusive sales territory. To determine whether the ISOs have standing to be co-plaintiffs, we look to their contracts with Rite-Hite.
The typical original ISO contract provided in pertinent part:
Representative’s right to solicit sales of the Company’s products in the Territory shall be exclusive in that the Company will not appoint any other sales representative in the territory so long as, in Company’s good faith judgment, Representative is doing an adequate job in the entire Territory for all listed products. [If not,] Company shall have the right to reduce the Territory, if it gives Representative notice of the change. Company shall in no event be hable for any violation or infringement of Representative’s territorial rights hereunder except such as are committed directly by Company. Company also reserves the non-exclusive right to make sales of its products within the Territory directly to the motor freight industry, governmental agencies, government contractors, and any other purchasers which, in Company’s judgement, can be served best by direct sales.
The subject products are “All Rite-Hite Mechanical and Hydraulic Dock Levelers and Related Equipment.” The word “patent” appears nowhere in this document, although, just prior to their intervention as plaintiffs, many of the ISOs executed supplements to their contracts which specified that the “products” of the Sales Representative Agreement include “products manufactured and sold by [Rite-Hite] ” that embody “any of the claims set forth in Rite-Hite patents relating to ‘Dok-Lok’ devices, including (but not by any way of limitation) U.S. Patent No. 4,373,847.” Rite-Hite,
In the original agreement, Rite-Hite itself expressly retained substantial rights to sell within the assigned territories to specific classes of purchases and to “any other purchasers which, in Company’s judgement, can be served best by direct sales.” The last minute modifications on the eve of litigation included for the first time products covered
We agree with Kelley that the district court’s conclusion that these contracts conveyed a “sufficient, legally recognized interest in the rights secured by the [’847] patent” to confer standing on the ISOs was erroneous as a matter of law. Id.,
Most particularly, the ISOs had no right under the agreements to exclude anyone from making, using, or selling the claimed invention. The ISOs could not exclude from their respective territories other ISOs, third parties, or even Rite-Hite itself. Any remedy an ISO might have had for violation of its rights would lie in a breach of contract action against Rite-Hite, if the agreement was breached, not in a patent infringement action against infringers. Rite-Hite had no obligation to file infringement suits at the request of an ISO and the ISOs had no right to share in any recovery from litigation. Moreover, appellees have not contended that such obligations and rights are to be implied. Nor do appellees even argue that the ISOs had the right under their contracts to bring suit for infringement against another ISO or a third party, making Rite-Hite an involuntary plaintiff. To the contrary, under their agreement, if an ISO sold in another’s territory, the profits were shared according to Rite-Hite’s “split commission” rules. While the patentee and the ISOs have cooperated in this litigation, that fact alone does not establish their right to sue.
Weinar v. Rollform,
These agreements were simply sales contracts between Rite-Hite and its independent distributors. They did not transfer any proprietary interest in the ’847 patent and they did not give the ISOs the right to sue. If the ISOs lack a remedy in this case, it is because their agreements with Rite-Hite failed to make provisions for-the contingency that the granted sales exclusivity would not be maintained. The ISOs could have required Rite-Hite to sue infringers and arrangements could have been agreed upon concerning splitting any damage award. Apparently, this was not done.
The grant of a bare license to sell an invention in a specified territory, even if it is the only license granted by the patentee, does not provide standing without the grant of a right to exclude others. The ISOs are legally no different from the individual salespersons whom the district court earlier refused to allow to join the suit. Rite-Hite,
IV. Computation of Reasonable Royalty
The district court found that Rite-Hite as a manufacturer was entitled to an award of a reasonable royalty on 502 infringing restraint or restraint-leveler sales for which it had not proved that it contacted the Kelley customer prior to the infringing Kelley sale. Rite-Hite,
A patentee is entitled to no less than a reasonable royalty on an infringer’s sales for which the patentee has not established entitlement to lost profits. 35 U.S.C. § 284 (1988); Hanson v. Alpine Valley Ski Area, Inc.,
The district court here conducted the hypothetical negotiation analysis. It determined that Rite-Hite would have been willing to grant a competitor a license to use the ’847 invention only if it received a royalty of no less than one-half of the per unit profits that it was foregoing. In so determining, the court considered that the ’847 patent was a “pioneer” patent with manifest commercial success; that Rite-Hite had consistently followed a policy of exploiting its own patents, rather than licensing to competitors; and that Rite-Hite would have had to forego a large profit by granting a license to Kelley because Kelley was a strong competitor and Rite-Hite anticipated being able to sell a large number of restraints and related prod
We conclude that the district court made no legal error and was not clearly erroneous in determining the reasonable royalty rate. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s calculation of a reasonable royalty rate. However, because we vacate the court’s decision to include dock levelers in the royalty base, we remand for a redetermination of damages based only on the sale of the infringing restraints and not on the restraint-leveler packages.
B.
Rite-Hite’s Cross Appeal
Rite-Hite and the ISOs sought damages based on lost profits at the retail level for ADL-100 and MDL-55 restraints and dock levelers. The district court denied the award on the basis that both Rite-Hite and the ISOs failed to meet their evidentiary burden of proving lost profits. Rite-Hite has not persuaded us that the court’s decision was erroneous. As for the ISOs, this issue is mooted by the above rulings.
Rite-Hite also argues that the district court erred in awarding interest at a simple rather than a compound rate because, as a matter of law, prejudgment interest must be compounded. We disagree. It has been recognized that “an award of compound rather than simple interest assures that the patent owner is fully compensated.” Fromson v. Western Litho Plate & Supply Co., 13 USPQ2d 1856, 1862,
CONCLUSION
On Kelley’s appeal, we affirm the district court’s decision that Rite-Hite is entitled to an award of lost profit damages based on its lost business in ADL-100 restraints. We affirm the court’s determination of the rea
COSTS
Each party will bear its own costs of this appeal.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, and REMANDED.
Notes
. Claim 1 of the patent reads:
A releasable locking device for securing a parked vehicle to an adjacent relatively stationary upright structure, said device comprising a first means mountable on an exposed surface of the structure, a second means mounted on said first means for substantially vertical movement relative thereto between operative and inoperative modes, the location of said second means when in an inoperative mode being a predetermined distance beneath the location of said second means when in an operative mode and in non-contacting relation with the vehicle, and third means for releasably retaining said second means in an operative mode; said second means including a first section projecting outwardly a predetermined distance from said first means and the exposed surface of the structure, one end of said first section being mounted on said first means for selective independent movement relative thereto along a predetermined substantially vertical path, and a second section extending angularly upwardly from said first section and being spaced outwardly a substantially fixed distance from said first means and the exposed surface of the structure, said second means, when in an operative mode, being adapted to interlockingly engage a portion of the parked vehicle disposed intermediate the second section and said first means; said second means, when in an inoperative mode, being adapted to be in a lowered nonlocking relation with the parked vehicle.
. On February 15, 1989, seven ISOs that had not yet intervened brought a separate action, Block-Dickson, Inc. v. Kelley Co., Case No. 89-C-0190 (E.D.Wis. Feb. 15, 1989), which was consolidated with Rite-Hite's action by stipulation of the parties.
. As succinctly summarized by Keeton et at.: In a philosophical sense, the consequences of an act go forward to eternity, and the causes of an event go back to the dawn of human events, and beyond. But any attempt to impose responsibility upon such a basis would result in infinite liability for all wrongful acts, and would "set society on edge and fill the courts with endless litigation.” As a practical matter, legal responsibility must be limited to those causes which are so closely connected with the result and of such significance that the law is justified in imposing liability. Some boundary must be set to liability for the consequences of any act, upon the basis of some social idea of justice or policy.
W. Page Keeton et at., Prosser & Keeton on the Law of Torts § 41, at 264 (5th ed. 1984) (citation and footnote omitted).
. After an explication of established patent law principles, the partial dissent of Judge Nies ultimately agrees that there are judicial limitations on damages; the dissent simply disagrees that the damages sought here fall within those limitations, concluding instead that the damages are too "remote.” The dissent's disagreement thus centers not on whether lines are drawn regarding the compensability of damages, but only on where those lines are to be drawn.
. The partial dissent of Judge Nies appears to confuse exclusion under a patent of a product that comes within the scope of the claims with the determination of damages to redress injury-caused by patent infringement once infringement has been found.
. The partial dissent of Judge Nies agrees with Kelley, citing several Supreme Court decisions. However, the Supreme Court has provided no definitive ruling on the proper scope of damages to redress lost sales of diverted products such as those in this case. The dissent also relies on dicta in older district court cases; however, the issue directly before us is one of first impression in this court. Moreover, the more recent (post-1946) cases cited by the dissent do not hold that a patentee may receive damages in the form of lost profits only for diverted sales of devices covered by the patent in suit. Rather, the cases relied upon either relate to recovery for lost sales of items sold with devices covered by the patent in suit under the entire market value rule, or they stand for the unremarkable proposition that the patentee must be in the business of selling a device in order to recover damages for alleged lost sales of such a device.
. The partial dissent of Judge Nies makes much of the fact that Rite-Hite could not mark its ADL-100 restraints with notice of the '847 patent, cautioning, "[t]o hold that a patentee may recover damages respecting injury to its business in products that do not embody the invention which are unmarked or marked with a different patent number would treat a patentee that does not practice its invention more favorably than a patentee that does. The marking statute generates absurd results when applied to damages tied to products not made under the patent in suit." We disagree. The marking statute provides that if a product is not marked, no damages shall be recovered by the patentee except on proof that the infringer was notified of the infringement. See 35 U.S.C. § 287(a) (1988). That a patentee cannot recover damages in the absence of actual notice when it has not marked remains the law, but that law does not preclude assessing damages for lost sales of diverted products after actual notice of infringement has been given.
. This issue of royalty base is not to be confused with the relevance of anticipated collateral sales to the determination of a reasonable royalty rate. See Deere & Co. v. International Harvester Co.,
. In the first and third cases, the assignee may sue in its name alone; in the second case, it may sue jointly with the assignor. Waterman v. Mackenzie,
. The court found that this industry was an insignificant market for Rite-Hite’s products, in-eluding its vehicle restraints.
. Appellees contend that the issue of the ISOs' standing to recover damages is law of the case because of Kelley's failure to appeal during the liability phase of the trial the district court’s order permitting intervention, for which reconsideration was denied in August 1984. We disagree. At the time of intervention, other unfair competition claims were asserted, now abandoned. Further, in the damage phase of the case, now appealed, the district court heard evidence and made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the background of the ISOs, the exclusivity of their licenses, and their entitlement to damages. Rite-Hite Corp. v. Kelley Co.,
. The hypothetical negotiation is often referred to as a "willing licensor/willing licensee" negotiation. However, this is an inaccurate, and even absurd, characterization when, as here, the pat-entee does not wish to grant a license. See Hanson v. Alpine Valley Ski Area, Inc.,
Dissenting Opinion
with whom ARCHER, Chief Judge, SMITH, Senior Circuit Judge, and MAYER, Circuit Judge join, dissenting-in-part.
I.
SUMMARY
The majority uses the provision in 35 U.S.C. § 284 for “damages” as a tool to expand the property rights granted by a patent. I dissent.
No one disputes that Rite-Hite is entitled to “full compensation for any damages suffered as a result of the infringement.” General Motors Corp. v. Devex Corp.,
The majority divorces “actual damages” from injury to patent rights.
I would hold that the diversion of ADL-100 sales is not an injury to patentee’s property rights granted by the ’847 patent. To constitute legal injury for which lost profits may be awarded, the infringer must interfere with the patentee’s property right to an exclusive market in goods embodying the invention of the patent in suit. The patentee’s property rights do not extend to its market in other goods unprotected by the litigated patent. Rite-Hite was compensated for the lost profits for 80 sales associated with the MDL-55, the only product it sells embodying the ’847 invention. That is the totality of any possible entitlement to lost profits. Under 35 U.S.C. § 284, therefore, Rite-Hite is entitled to “damages” calculated as a reasonable royalty on the remainder of Kelley’s infringing restraints.
I also disagree that the calculations of a reasonable royalty may be based on a percentage of Rite-Hite’s lost profits. Under 35 U.S.C. § 284, a reasonable royalty must be attributed to Kelley’s “use of the invention.” A royalty must be based on the value of the patented hook, not on other features in the infringing device, e.g., the motors, which form no part of the patented invention used by Kelley. Further, the trial court discounted or excluded significant evidence and otherwise improperly calculated a reasonable royalty rate.
II.
LOST PROFITS
As a matter of legal analysis, the majority treats the issue of “damages” for a patentee’s lost trade in competitive goods not embodying the invention of the patent in suit as one of first impression. It is not. The following outline sets out the established law:
(1) Patent “damages” are limited to legal injury to property rights created by the patent, not merely causation in fact.
(2) Under precedent in 1946, a patentee was entitled to recover, either at law or in equity, only the profits attributable to the invention. A patentee’s property rights were limited to its exclusivity in the market for the patented goods in suit. “Damages” were awardable only for injury to that trade, and only to the extent of the contribution of the invention to profits. Apportionment of profits and the entire market value rule reflect these principles. Injury to the patentee’s trade in other competitive products was deemed an indirect loss and not compensable. “Foreseeability” was not the test for legal injury for patent infringement.
(3) In 1946, Congress eliminated the remedy of an equitable accounting for a defendant’s profits and reenacted the provision for “damages” in 1946 and 1952. Congress made no change in the prece-dential law of “damages” except for prejudgment interest.
(4) Since 1946, the Supreme Court has not overturned its precedent on “damages.” Under the entire market value rule applicable to lost profits awards, a paten-tee must prove the invention in suit created consumer demand for the patented and infringing products.
(5) The majority’s decision creates a conflict with the law of patent “damages” in all other circuits.
(6) The majority decision cannot be reconciled with other provisions of the patent statute or with public policies.
A. The Insufficiency of “But-For” as the Sole Test
As a preliminary matter, I wish to state my reasons for rejecting the arguments made by appellee Rite-Hite in support of the district court’s judgment. The district court held, and Rite-Hite argues on appeal, supported by the amici, that the only restriction on the award of “actual damages” for patent infringement is proof of causation in fact, that is, satisfaction of a “but-for” test.
In support of the district court’s ruling, Rite-Hite relies on the statement in Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
[A]fter a patentee has collected from or on behalf of a direct infringer damages sufficient to put him in the position he would have occupied had there been no infringement, he cannot thereafter collect actual damages from a person liable only for contributing to the same infringement.
Aro,
Rite-Hite’s principal authority from this court for its “but-for” theory is Lam, Inc. v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
Over centuries of judge-made law, the term “damages” has become a word of art in the common law carrying both factual and legal limitations. The legal limitations (frequently called “proximate cause,” an unfortunate expression because of its confusing similarity to a but-for test) must be determined as a matter of law by the judge. W. Page Keeton, et ah, Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 41 (5th ed. 1984). Causation in fact of an injury (i.e., the but-for test) is applied after the legal determination is made that the asserted injury is a type which is legally compensable for the wrong. The but-for determination is a factual matter for the jury (or the judge in a bench trial). Thus, the common law term “damages” does not encompass any and all economic injury that one may suffer in fact from a wrong. Also, contrary to the district court’s view, “proximate” or “legal” causation of patent damages is not merely a more closely scrutinized causation in fact test determined by “the quality of plaintiffs’ proof.”
The term “damages” in the patent statute must be interpreted in light of the familiar common law principles of legal or proximate cause associated generally with that term. In rejecting a “but-for” standard for determining “damages” in the Clayton Act,
[A] number of judge-made rules circumscribed the availability of damages recoveries in both tort and contract litigation— doctrines such as foreseeability and proximate cause, directness of injury, certainty of damages, and privity of contract. Although particular common-law limitations were not debated in Congress, the frequent references to common-law principles imply that Congress simply assumed that antitrust damages litigation would be subject to constraints comparable to well-accepted common-law rules applied in corn-parable litigation.
Associated Gen. Contractors,
The Supreme Court has recently applied a similar analysis of the civil action damages provision of RICO.
[A] showing [must be made] not only that the defendant’s violation [of RICO] was a ‘but for’ cause of [the plaintiffs] injury, but was the proximate cause as well. [As further explained] proximate cause [is used] to label generically the judicial tools used to limit a person’s responsibility for the consequences of that person’s own acts.
Under this Supreme Court precedent, the law is clear that proximate cause is applied as a legal limitation on “damages” in connection with the statutory torts which the Court has considered. A “but-for” test tells us nothing about whether the injury is legally one which is compensable. As above stated, the lack of proximate causation will preclude recovery for certain losses even though a
Rite-Hite and the majority treat lost profits as the legal injury. However, lost profits is a way to measure compensation for a legal injury. Lost profits is not itself the legal injury. No rational basis is suggested by Rite-Hite or the amici for applying a different interpretation to the statutory term “damages” in connection with the tort of patent infringement. No legislative history even hints that patentees are so favored that a special or more expansive meaning was intended for patent “damages.” A “but-for” test for “damages,” which would mandate that all types of economic injury to a paten-tee’s business traceable to the infringement are compensable, is as legally deficient a standard for patent infringement “damages” as for “damages” under the Clayton Act or RICO. Causation in fact is not the sole test for determining compensable “damages” under 35 U.S.C. § 284.
That said, however, merely brings us to the issue of what are the legal limits on “damages” for patent infringement.
As will be shown, precedent before 1946 unequivocally established that compensable lost profits were restricted to those the pat-entee would have made from commercializing the invention. Further, Congress reenacted the provision for “damages” with that understanding.
B. Statutory Provisions
The question raised in this appeal is one of statutory construction, but it is of constitutional dimension. Article I, section 8 of the Constitution provides for a patent system which will “promote the Progress ... of the useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to ... Inventors the exclusive Right to their Discoveries.” Congress has provided in 35 U.S.C. § 284 (1988):
Upon finding for the claimant the court shall award the claimant damages adequate to compensate for the infringement, but in no event less than a reasonable royalty for the use made of the invention by the infringer, together with interest and costs as fixed by the court.
When the damages are not found by a jury, the court shall assess them. In either event the court may increase the damages up to three times the amount found or assessed.
The court may receive expert testimony as an aid to the determination of damages or of what royalty would be reasonable under the circumstances.
What stimulus, what financial rewards did Congress intend by the term “damages” to effect the purpose of promoting progress in the useful Arts?
The majority concludes that Congress enacted expansive language in § 284, providing “only a lower limit and no other limitation.” Op. at 1544.
This is not a ease in which Congress has reenacted statutory language that the courts had interpreted in a particular way.*1561 In such a situation, it may well be appropriate to infer that Congress intended to adopt the established judicial interpretation.
Id.
The provision for “damages” in § 284, unlike that for “interest,” was reenacted language. While the statutory remedies have been modified over the years in other ways, a patentee has been entitled to recover actual damages at law since the beginning of the nineteenth century. See Seymour v. McCormick,
Immediately prior to 1946, the patent statute provided for recovery of the “damages” the patentee sustained, a remedy at law, which could, in appropriate cases, be the amount of a patentee’s lost profits by diversion of its sales of patented goods, the amount of an established royalty or a reasonably royalty.
“By the 1946 amendments, [citation omitted] the statute was changed to its present form, whereby only ‘damages’ are recoverable.” Aro Mfg. Co.,
One need not rely on mere inference respecting the meaning Congress intended for the term “damages.” As explained to Congress in hearings on the 1946 statute by officials of the Patent Office and other witnesses endorsing the bill, “Damages in a legal sense means the compensation which the law will award for an injury done.” House Hearings at 9 (Henry statement). Respecting the restriction of profits to those created by the invention, all agreed “those [are] the only profits to which the patentee is entitled.” Id. at 3 (Fish letter introduced by Hon. Robert K. Henry, Member of Congress). Those statements correctly reflect the pre-1946 meaning of “damages” in the patent statute.
C. Property Rights Granted by Patent
An examination of pre-1946 Supreme Court precedent discloses that the legal scope of actual damages for patent infringement was limited to the extent of the defendant’s interference with the patentee’s market in goods embodying the invention of the patent in suit. This limitation reflects the underlying public policy of the patent statute to promote commerce in new products for the public’s benefit. More importantly, it protects the only property rights of a paten-tee which are protectable, namely those granted by the patent. The patentee obtained as its property an exclusive market in the patented goods. “[I]nfringement was a tortious taking of a part of that property.”
In Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
In contrast, in the United States, the grant of a patent did not convey to the inventor a right to make, use and vend his invention despite the statutory language originally to that effect. In interpreting a patentee’s rights in Crown Die & Tool Co. v. Nye Tool & Machine Works,
An inventor is entitled to a patent by meeting the statutory requirements respecting disclosure of the invention. Prior commercialization of the invention has never been a requirement in our law to obtain a patent. An inventor is merely required to teach others his invention in his patent application. Thus, when faced with the question of whether a patentee was entitled to enjoin an infringer despite the patentee’s failure to use its invention, the Supreme Court held for the patentee. Continental Paper Bag,
These clearly established principles, however, do not lead to the conclusion that the patentee’s failure to commercialize plays no role in determining damages. That the quid pro quo for obtaining a patent is disclosure of the invention does not dictate the answer to the question of the legal scope of damages. The patent system was not designed merely to build up a library of information by disclosure, valuable though that is, but to get new products into the marketplace during the period of exclusivity so that the public receives full benefits from the grant. The Congress of the fledgling country did not act so quickly in enacting the Patent Act of 1790 merely to further intellectual pursuits. As explained in an early text, “The patent laws
In Bement v. National Harrow Co., the Supreme Court recognized that the patent system was designed to stimulate the paten-tee to put new products into the market where the public would benefit from them:
“If [the patentee] see fit, he may reserve to himself the exclusive use of his invention or discovery. If he will neither use his device nor permit others to use it, he has but suppressed his own. That the grant is made upon the reasonable expectation that he will either put his invention to practical use or permit others to avail themselves of it upon reasonable terms, is doubtless true. This expectation is based alone upon the supposition that the paten-tee’s interest will induce him to use, or let others use, his invention. The public has retained no other security to enforce such expectations.”
Thus, a patentee may withhold from the public the benefit of use of its invention during the patent term, and the public has no way to withdraw the grant for nonuse. Like the owner of a farm, a patentee may let his property lay fallow. In doing so, “he has but suppressed his own.” Bement,
D. Injury to a Patentee’s Market in Unprotected Goods is not a Patent Infringement Injury
The question of recovery of lost profits to compensate a patentee for injury to its business in competitive products not protected by the patent in suit (hereinafter “unprotected goods”) is not a new theory of damages. Over a hundred years ago, the Supreme Court expressed its view that damages in the form of lost profits must be based upon injury to the patentee’s trade in products embodying the patented invention. As stated in Crosby Steam Gage & Valve Co. v. Consolidated Safety Valve Co.,
If there had been an award of damages, and the loss of trade by the plaintiff, in consequence of the competition by the defendant, had been an element entering into those damages, it would have been a material fact to be shorn by the plaintiff that it was putting on the market goods embodying the [patented] invention.
Since Seymour v. McCormick,
As the plaintiff, at the time of the infringement, availed himself of his exclusive right by keeping his patent a monopoly, and granting no licenses, the difference between his pecuniary condition after the infringement, and what his condition would have been if the infringement had not occurred, is to be measured, so far as his own sales of locks are concerned, by the difference between the money he would have realized from such sales if the infringement had not interfered with such monopoly, and the money he did realize from such sales.
Commercialization of a patented invention can be accomplished by the patentee either (1) itself making, using or selling an embodiment of the invention or (2) licensing others to do so. Seymour,
The interest of the patentee is represented by the emoluments which he does or might receive from the practice of the invention by himself or others. Hence acts of infringement must attack the right of the patentee to those emoluments.
An attempt to recover actual damages for lost sales of a competitive unprotected product was made in Metallic Rubber Tire Co. v. Hartford Rubber Works Co.,
Additionally, the commentary over the years supports this position. The current statement in 8 Ernest Bainbridge Lipscomb, Walker on Patents § 27:22 (1989) has been essentially unchanged since at least the 1940’s, before the present statute was enacted:
Indirect consequential damage cannot be recovered in a patent infringement action. [Footnote omitted. See, e.g., Velo-Bind, Inc. v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co.,647 F.2d 965 , 973,211 USPQ 926 , 934 (9th Cir.1981).] The instances in which such damages have been claimed are few, but it is advisable to mention such injuries as might probably be held to fall within such a category.
Pecuniary injury may result to a paten-tee from a particular infringement, in that it caused him to suffer competition and consequent loss in business outside of the patent infringed; or in that it so unexpectedly reduced the business in the patented article as to make it necessary for him to sell unpatented property at less than its real value, or to borrow money at more than a proper rate of interest in order to meet his pecuniary engagements; or in that it encouraged other persons to infringe from whom, by reason of insolvency or other obstacle, no recovery can be obtained; or in that such infringement caused the patentee so much trouble and anxiety that he incurred loss from inability to attend to other business. But pecuniary injury of any of these kinds would be such an indirect consequential matter as not to furnish any part of a proper basis for recoverable damages in an infringement suit. [Emphasis added.]
There is no dispute that parts of a paten-tee’s business not directed to commercializing the patented invention may indirectly benefit from the patentee’s ownership of that patent. An extant patent of which a paten-tee makes little or no commercial use may serve to impede competition in the field so that a patentee is able to maintain its market position for the patentee’s already established line of unprotected goods. However, where infringement of the patent interferes with that indirect benefit from the patent, the injury has heretofore been held to be an indirect consequential loss and not recoverable.
E. Precedent Respecting the Apportionment of Profits and the Entire Market Value Rule
The limitation of a patentee’s monetary recovery to profits created by the invention is also reflected in the extensive pre-1946 caselaw on apportionment of profits and the correlative entire market value rule. While patentees who commercialized the invention of the patent in suit might recover some amount of profits, the entire amount of profits would not be awarded where the invention was not of an entirely new device but amounted only to an improvement, unless the invention was the basis for demand for the entire device. Similarly, in equity a patentee was limited to an accounting for the defendants’ profits attributable to the invention. See Dobson v. Dornan,
Apportionment of profits so as to reflect the “fruits” of the patent was the problem that prompted the 1946 amendments of the statute. The legislative history repeatedly indicates that apportionment required protracted expensive litigation for both parties and, because it was virtually impossible to apportion profits with any exactitude, frequently produced unfair results. Yet the profits due to the invention are the only profits to which the patentee was entitled unless the patentee could prove that the entirety of the profits were due to the invention under the entire market value rule. Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co. v. Wagner Elec. & Mfg. Co.,
Respecting “damages” at law, in Dowagiac Mfg. Co., supra, the Supreme Court endorsed the theory of a hypothetical reasonable royalty as “damages” where the paten-tee could not prove actual damages. This relief had been developed in several lower courts because of the unfairness to the paten-tee who, despite infringement, received only nominal damages.
The 1946 amendments provide no basis for the majority’s expansive view that Congress intended a patentee to recoup all losses from infringement with “only a lower limit and no other limitation.” Op. at 1544. Indeed, Congress eliminated equitable accounting which, under Westinghouse, had favored patentees. Monetary relief was expanded to provide for the recovery of prejudgment interest. Respecting other forms of “damages,” Congress left the law intact. Faulkner v. Gibbs,
F. Post-19%6 Precedent
The previously discussed decisions in Aro, which limited damages, and General Motors, which dealt with prejudgment interest, provide the only direct guidance from the Supreme Court on “damages” under the current statute. Neither overturns the established precedent that a patentee is entitled to its own lost profits only for diversion of sales which the patentee would have made from its goods using the invention of the litigated patent. Nor do they overturn the entire market value rule that the entirety of a patentee’s lost profits may be recovered as “damages” only where the patentee proves that use of the invention in suit in the paten-tee’s and infringer’s goods creates consumer demand for the entire product.
Between 1946 and 1982, every other circuit which addressed the issue adhered to the basic tenet that a patent protects a paten-tee’s market for its own goods embodying the invention and no other market. Moreover, lost profits on an entire product were recoverable only where the patented invention created the demand for that product. The following eases are illustrative:
Second Circuit:
Electric Pipe Line, Inc. v. Fluid Systems, Inc.,250 F.2d 697 , 699,116 USPQ 25 , 27 (2nd Cir.1957) (Lost profits appropriate since patentee and infringer “were the only suppliers of this unique patented fuel storage and transportation system ... [and] but for [defendant’s] infringement, [paten-tee] would have made all these installations.”).
Third Circuit:
American Securit Co. v. Shatterproof Glass Corp.,268 F.2d 769 , 777,122 USPQ 167 , 174 (3d Cir.), cert. denied,361 U.S. 902 ,80 S.Ct. 210 ,4 L.Ed.2d 157 (1959) (“Each patent gives its owner a monopoly in respect to its disclosures, so much and no more. It is a grant of the exclusive right to manufacture, use and sell the invention which is disclosed. That invention is what the patent grant protects by the monopoly, not that invention plus some embellishment, improvement, or alternate product or process, which also happens to be patented.”);
Devex Corp. v. General Motors Corp.,667 F.2d 347 , 361,212 USPQ 643 , 655 (3d Cir.1981) aff'd461 U.S. 648 ,103 S.Ct. 2058 ,76 L.Ed.2d 211 (1983) (<cWhere a plaintiff itself uses the patented process in manufacturing, damages for infringement may take the form of lost profits, and the burden is on the plaintiff to show their amount. Where, as here, the party alleging infringement does not itself manufacture or use the patented process, compensation may take the form of a reasonable royalty for licensing the use of the patent.”) (Citations omitted.) (The majority cites Supreme Court decision as support for a more expansive view.)
Fourth Circuit:
Marvel Specialty Co. v. Bell Hosiery Mills, Inc.,386 F.2d 287 ,155 USPQ 545 (4th Cir.1967) cert. denied390 U.S. 1030 ,88 S.Ct. 1409 ,20 L.Ed.2d 286 (1968) (Pat-entee manufacturer could recover only established royalty for patented goods, not other established royalty for patented goods plus improvements not covered by patent).
Fifth Circuit:
Baumstimler v. Rankin,677 F.2d 1061 , 1072,215 USPQ 575 , 584 (5th Cir.1982) (“Since [patentee] did not manufacture, sell or use the patented invention ... [paten-tee] technically had no lost profits”);
Livesay Window Co. v. Livesay Indus., Inc.,251 F.2d 469 , 470,116 USPQ 167 , 168-89 (5th Cir.1958) (Lost profits determined based on sales of patented invention by exclusive licensee).
Sixth Circuit:
Panduit Corp. v. Stahlin Bros. Fibre Works, Inc.,575 F.2d 1152 , 1156,197 USPQ 726 , 730 (6th Cir.1978) (Patentee manufacturer must prove lost profits by showing: “1) demand for the patented product, 2) absence of acceptable nonin-fringing substitutes, 3) his manufacturing*1568 and marketing capability to exploit the demand [for the patented product], and 4) the amount of profits he would have made.”)-15
Seventh Circuit:
Union Carbide Corp. v. Graver Tank & Mfg. Co., 282 F.2d 653, 665-68,127 USPQ 3 , 12-14 (7th Cir.1960), cert. denied,365 U.S. 812 ,81 S.Ct. 692 ,5 L.Ed.2d 691 (1961) (Upholding special master’s conclusion of law which stated “Plaintiff ... has failed to prove ... [t]he amount of its damage from loss of profits it would have made on such additional sales of the patented composition”).
See also In re Universal Research Lab., Inc.203 USPQ 984 , 989,1978 WL 21369 (N.D.Ill.1978).
Ninth Circuit:
Velo-Bind, Inc. v. Minnesota Mining & Mfg. Co.,647 F.2d 965 , 973,211 USPQ 926 , 933-94 (9th Cir.), cert. denied,454 U.S. 1093 ,102 S.Ct. 658 ,70 L.Ed.2d 631 (1981) (patentee manufacturer of invention denied lost profits on unpatented supplies: “where the patent creates only part of the profits, damages are limited to that part of the profits, which must be apportioned as between those created by the patent and those not so created, [citation omitted] The damages sustained by [patentee] are easily apportioned between patented and unpatented lost sales.”);
Faulkner v. Gibbs,199 F.2d 635 , 638 n. 7,95 USPQ 400 , 402 n. 7 (9th Cir.1952) (“Where, however, the patentee has himself engaged in the manufacture, use or sale of his patented article, he may be awarded damages for his loss of profits resulting from the infringement.”).16
Until this decision, the precedent of this court was consistent with other circuits. Lost profits have not been awarded except where the patentee lost sales of products in which the patentee used the claimed invention found to be infringed. See Manville Sales Corp. v. Paramount Sys., Inc.,
Because Lindemann did not compete in the sale of its invention in the United States, it did not, as it could not, seek damages on the basis of lost profits.
Moreover, under our precedent, lost profit awards have been dependent, inter alia, on proof that consumer demand for the paten-tee’s goods is created by the advantages of the patented invention. Slimfold Mfg. Co. v. Kinkead Indus., Inc.,
The patentee’s willingness and ability to supply the patented invention during the period of infringement is the thread that runs through all precedent of this court respecting “lost profits” awards. See Kori Corp. v. Wilco Marsh Buggies & Draglines, Inc.,
G. “Foreseeability” is not the Test for Patent Damages
The majority agrees that the types of com-pensable injury for patent infringement are not unlimited. The majority draws the line against recovery for an inventor’s heart attack or for the decrease in the value of stock of a corporate patentee. Its opinion holds:
We believe that under § 284 of the patent statute, the balance between full compensation, which is the meaning that the Supreme Court [in General Motors ] has attributed to the statute, and the reasonable limits of liability encompassed by general principles of law can best be viewed in terms of reasonable, objective foreseeability. If a particular injury was or should have been reasonably foreseeable by an infringing competitor in the relevant market, broadly defined, that injury is generally compensable.... Being responsible for lost sales of a competitive product is surely foreseeable; such losses constitute the full compensation set forth by Congress, as interpreted by the Supreme Court, while staying well within the traditional meaning of proximate cause.
Op. at 1546 (emphasis added).
In the majority’s view, the consideration of patent rights ends upon a finding of infringement. The separate question of damages under its test does not depend on patent rights but only on foreseeable competitive injury.
The majority does not give a passing nod to long-standing precedent restricting a pat-entee’s legal injury to diversion of sales it would have made of products containing the patented invention, much less does it explain why the precedent should be abandoned. It simply declares ipse dixit: “Whether a pat-entee sells its patented invention is not crucial in determining lost profits damages.” Op. at 1548. While proximate cause limitations are acknowledged, the majority sees no problem here because the infringing devices were designed to compete with the ADL-100 devices and the “clear purpose of the patent law [is] to redress competitive damages resulting from infringement of the patent.” Op. at 1551. This reasoning awards patent infringement damages as if for a kind of unfair competition with the patentee’s business. However, infringement of a patent is not a species of common law unfair competition; it is a distinct and independent federal statutory claim. Mars Inc. v. Kabushiki-Kaisha Nippon Conlux,
Reiterating that objective, the Supreme Court stated in Kewanee Oil Co. v. Bicron Corp.,
The productive effort thereby fostered [by the patent laws] will have a positive effect on society through the introduction of new products and processes of manufacturer into the economy, and the emanations by way of increased employment and better lives for our citizens.
Ignoring this objective, this decision expands the property rights afforded by a patent by broadening a patentee’s protected market and, as a consequence, provides a disincentive to a patentee’s commerce in the patented products.
Nothing in the statute supports the majority’s “foreseeability” rule as the sole basis for patent damages. To the contrary, no-fault liability is imposed on “innocent” infringers, those who have no knowledge of the existence of a patent until suit is filed. Damages are recoverable for up to six years of unknowing infringement before suit. 35 U.S.C. § 286 (1988). “Foreseeability” is a wholly anomalous concept to interject as the basis for determining legal injury for patent infringement. While unknowing infringers cannot “foresee” any injury to the patentee, they are subject to liability for damages, including lost profits, for competition with the patentee’s patented goods. Now they will be liable for diverting sales of the paten-tee’s unprotected competitive products as well.
The “foreseeability” standard also cannot be reconciled with the statutory requirement for a patentee to mark its patented goods with the patent number to prevent innocent infringement.
The availability of damages in an infringement action is made contingent upon affixing a notice of patent to the protected article. 35 U.S.C. § 287. The notice requirement is designed “for the information of the public,” Wine Railway Appliance Co. v. Enterprise Railway Equipment Co.,297 U.S. 387 , 397 [56 S.Ct. 528 , 531,80 L.Ed. 736 ] (1936), and provides a ready means of discerning the status of the intellectual property embodied in an article of manufacture or design. The public may rely upon the lack of notice in exploiting shapes and designs accessible to all. See Devices for Medicine, Inc. v. Boehl,822 F.2d 1062 , 1066 (CA Fed.1987) (“Having sold the product unmarked, [the patentee] could hardly maintain entitlement to damages for its use by a purchaser uninformed that such use would violate [the] patent”).
Rite-Hite could not mark its ADL-100 restraints with notice of the ’847 patent. Such “notice” would constitute false marking under 35 U.S.C. § 292 (1988). To hold that a patentee may recover damages respecting injury to its business in products that do not embody the invention which are unmarked or marked with a different patent number would treat a patentee that does not practice its invention more favorably than a patentee that does. The marking statute generates absurd results when applied to damages tied to products not made under the patent in suit.
The majority simply has the rule backwards. Heretofore, the first requirement to establish a patentee’s entitlement to actual damages in the form of lost profits has been proof that the patentee exercised its market place monopoly for its patented invention. Evidence of a patentee’s business losses not due to an infringer’s interference with the patentee’s marketing of the invention was immaterial in assessing damages. The patent affords no property rights which can be injured outside the market in goods protected by the asserted patent.
The majority goes on to find the award of damages for lost sales of ADL-100s a foreseeable injury for infringement of the ’847 patent. This is a remarkable finding. The facts are that Rite-Hite began marketing its ADL-100 motorized restraint in 1980. Kelley put out its Truk Stop restraint in June 1982. There is no dispute in this case
Kelley would also have had to foresee that, for the first time in over 200 years of patent infringement suits, a court would extend protection to a part of a patentee’s business which is not dependent on the patentee’s use of the patented technology. Moreover, the Supreme Court and all sister circuits which have spoken on the legal scope of damages
Under the entire market value rule, if Rite-Hite used the later improvement of the ’847 patent in the ADL-100 restraint, it would have been required to prove that demand for those restraints was created by that invention to receive lost profits on the entire device. The majority recognizes the entire market value rule, citing State Indus.,
The basic flaw in the majority’s ruling is its rejection of the premise that recovery must be tied to profits from the invention itself. Here the patentee would have made no profits from the patented invention by additional sales of the unprotected ADL-100. There is no reason for the entire market value analysis if a patentee is entitled to compensation for “competitive damages” to its business generally. The ’847 patent discloses and claims particular hook technology for a truck restraint. No part of the invention relates to motors. Indeed, the specification states that an advantage of the invention is that it requires no motor. No doubt the motorized features of the ADL-100 and the Truk-Stop which added to their price, by the same token, contributed to their profitability and salability as well. But because Rite-Hite did not use the ’847 invention in the ADL-100 restraint, it escaped having to prove consumer demand for the motorized restraint was attributable to the ’847 invention of an improved hook. It simply was awarded lost profits based on unpatented features and features protected by other patents. None of the lost profits on the ADL-100s are the fruit of the ’847 invention. It cannot be the law that they are recoverable.
If damages are awardable based on lost sales of a patentee’s business in established products not protected by the patent in suit, the patentee not only has an easier case as a matter of proof, but also would receive greater benefits in the form of lost profits on its established products than if the patentee had made the investment necessary to launch a new product. That lost profits on an established line are likely to be greater than on a new device cannot be gainsaid. See Continental Paper Bag,
The old rule stimulated a patentee’s commerce in patented goods. The new rule makes it more profitable to the patentee to protect the status quo. The status quo is not “progress in the arts.” Article I, sec. 8. I conclude the majority’s rule is a wrong interpretation of the statute, indeed, may exceed the constitutional power to provide inventors with the exclusive right to their discoveries.
H. The ADL-100 Patents
Not only is the majority’s basic idea of legal injury unsound based on “foreseeability” but also its specific test is equally flawed. For convenience, I have referred to the ADL-100 as “unprotected,” meaning not covered by the patent in suit. However, a key factor in the majority’s decision awarding damages for lost sales of the ADL-100 is that the “device” is “patented”. The majority does not, nor did the parties, discuss what inventions the one or more patents on the
[Fjederal law requires that all ideas in general circulation be dedicated to the common good unless they are protected by a valid patent. [Emphasis added.]
Given that Kelley has had no legal basis for bringing a declaratory judgment action challenging the unlitigated patents (never having been charged with their infringement), the majority imposes liability and overlooks the unfairness in its theory. If the unlitigated patents are significant to damages, Kelley deserves an opportunity to defend against them. A clearer denial of due process is rarely seen. The award of damages for competition with Rite-Hite’s market for ADL-100s is no more supportable than an injunction against infringement of the ADL-100 patents.
If nothing else, the patent term limit provision of 35 U.S.C. § 154 is skewed by protecting the profits on goods made under one patent for infringement of another. Under the majority’s decision, the 17-year terms of the ADL-100 patents are meaningless. Rite-Hite is entitled to the add-on years provided by the later ’847 patent after the terms of the ADL-100 patents expire. Congress has provided the term and the basis for protection of ADL-100 restraints. An award of damages on ADL-100s based on infringement of the ’847 patent expands the term of protection as well as the basis for protection. Moreover, the majority would award damages for losses connected to the ADL-100 even if the patents on that device are invalid (albeit under a slight variation of a “but-for” test). If Rite-Hite had asserted infringement of the ADL-100 patents, it would receive no lost profits based on invalid ADL-100 patents but, nevertheless, is held entitled to lost profits on ADL-100s based on the ’847 patent. This construction of the statute seems patently absurd.
In short, Rite-Hite has obtained indirectly what it may or may not be entitled to recover directly by suit on the ADL-100 patents. Moreover, this was accomplished without putting the ADL-100 patents at risk to a challenge of invalidity. The unasserted patents provide no basis for sweeping the losses related to the ADL-100 into the scope of legal injury attributed to Kelley’s use of the ’847 invention.
The majority rejects what it called Kelley’s “antitrust” arguments that the award of lost profits on the ADL-100 unduly expanded rights in the ’847 patent on the rationale that this ease deals only with what injuries are compensable for infringement, not with violation of antitrust laws. This rationale cannot be squared with Ethyl Gasoline v. United States, in which the Supreme Court held:
The patent monopoly of one invention may no more be enlarged for the exploitation of a monopoly of another, than for the exploitation of an unpatented article, or for the exploitation or promotion of a business not embraced within the patent.
No one argues that Rite-Hite is violating the antitrust laws. However, an award of damages for infringement of one patent based on losses of sales of a product not within the protected market violates antitrust policies. Under those policies, Rite-Hite is not entitled to tribute for infringement of one
I. Reasonable Royalty is a Proper Measure of “Adequate” Damages
Finally, Rite-Hite argues that the highest possible damages should be imposed to deter infringers and that the district court, therefore, correctly assessed a higher lost profits award in lieu of a reasonable royalty. Rite-Hite also argues that a reasonable royalty creates a compulsory license. Both points are meritless. As indicated, a finding of infringement is not dependent on a finding of negligence or culpable intent by the wrongdoer. An infringement, like a trespass, may be committed unknowingly. In such situations, the amount of damages manifestly can have no effect to deter an unknowing in-fringer. Basic damages, which are at issue here, fall on the innocent and the culpable to the same extent. See Intel Corp. v. United States Int’l Trade Comm’n,
The spectre of a compulsory patent license is raised. However, a damages award calculated as a reasonable royalty gives no mandatory license. If it did, relief by way of an injunction against future use makes no sense.
J. Conclusion
The majority holds that it has balanced the interests of the patentee and the infringer. I disagree. In Fogerty v. Fantasy, Inc., — U.S. -, -,
Because copyright law ultimately serves the purpose of enriching the general public through access to creative works, it is peculiarly important that the boundaries of copyright law be demarcated as clearly as possible. To that end, defendants who seek to advance a variety of meritorious copyright defenses should be encouraged to litigate them to the same extent that plaintiffs are encouraged to litigate meritorious claims of infringement.... Thus a successful defense of a copyright infringement action may further the policies of the Copyright Act every bit as much as a successful prosecution of an infringement claim by the holder of a copyright.
The same policy statement applies equally to patent law enacted under the complementary
Commercialization of inventions in the fast changing world of today is at least as viable a purpose of the patent statute as under the prior statutes. For our patent system to fully serve its goal of promoting economic growth, innovations must make it to market during the patent term. The period of exclusivity, a monopoly in the market place, is granted to that end.
The Senate Report on the legislation that culminated in this court’s creation cites the following testimony of Harry F. Manbeek, Jr., then General Patent Counsel for the General Electric Company and later Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks:
Patents, in my judgment, are a stimulus to the innovative process, which includes not only investment in research and development but also a far greater investment in facilities for producing and distributing goods. Certainly, it is important to those who must make these investment decisions that we decrease unnecessary uncertainties in the patent system
The Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1981, S.Rep. No. 97-275, 97th Cong., 1st Sess., 6 (1981).
The Senate Report on the 1980 Reexamination statute cites the following testimony of then Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks Sidney Diamond:
Indeed, the patent system was established to provide certain incentives for the conduct of activities critical to our economic and technological prosperity — the invention of new and improved technology, the disclosure of this technology to the public, and the investment in its commercialization.
Patent Reexamination, S.Rep. No. 96-617, 96th Cong., 2d Sess., 9 (1980). These are but two examples emphasizing the present day importance of patents as an incentive for investment in marketing the products for which the exclusive market is given. An exhaustive treatment would occupy a sizeable tome.
It cannot be disputed that Congress intended that the patent grant provide an incentive to make investments in patented products during the patent term. If a paten-tee is rewarded with lost profits on its established products, the incentive is dulled if not destroyed. Why make the investment to produce and market a new drug if the patent on the new discovery not only protects the status quo in the market but also provides lost profits for the old?
For the foregoing reasons, I would hold that an injury to the patentee’s marketing of products protected only by other patents — if at all — does not fall within the grant of rights protected by the ’847 patent in suit and is not compensable. Thus, I would vacate the award of lost profits on 3,283 sales based on Rite-Hite’s loss of business in ADL-100 restraints and remand for damages to be assessed on the basis of a reasonable royalty for those infringements.
III.
LEVELER SALES
I agree with the majority that under the entire market value rule, Rite-Hite is not entitled to lost profits on dock levelers, sold in conjunction with patented or unpatented restraints. However, I disagree with the majority’s reasoning. The entire market val
IV.
CALCULATION OF A REASONABLE ROYALTY
The district court awarded damages in the form of a reasonable royalty for 502 infringing sales based on lost profits on Rite-Hite’s restraints and restraint leveler packages. This “reasonable royalty,” which totals $1,045.00 per infringing restraint, is more than the price of Rite-Hite’s patented MDL-55, more than 75 percent of the average net sale price of Kelley’s Truk-Stop, and 33 times greater than Kelley’s net profit on its entire machine. If lost profits on ADL-100’s were not recoverable as such, the court said it would have raised the amount of the reasonable royalty to include all of Rite-Hite’s anticipated profits on ADL-100 units and packages. Rite-Hite,
In determining a reasonable royalty, the district court started with basically wrong ideas even if ADL-100s and levelers were protected by the ’847 patent. The court erroneously believed Kelley had to pay a reasonable royalty on ADL-100 sales if lost profits were not awarded. Id. This is a fundamental misunderstanding. Rite-Hite is entitled to a reasonable royalty on Kelley’s sales of infringing devices. Rite-Hite would be entitled to a reasonable royalty on those sales even if it made no sales of a competing product. Further, where a patentee is not entitled to lost profit damages, lost profits may not, in effect, be awarded by merely labelling the basis of the award a reasonable royalty. See SmithKline Diagnostics, Inc. v. Helena Labs. Corp.,
A “reasonable royalty” is a hypothetical royalty for the use of the patented technology by the infringer, calculated as if the parties negotiated at arm’s length as a willing li-censor and a willing licensee on the date when the infringement began. State Indus.,
The focus of a reasonable royalty determination is on the value of the invention in the marketplace. As the statute states, a reasonable royalty is an award “for the use of the invention by the infringer.” 35 U.S.C. § 284. Rite-Hite’s lost profits on ADL-100s and levelers are not factors in calculating that value for the same reasons lost profits are not awardable for the goods. Neither is part of the exclusive market granted by the ’847 patent. The ’847 patent may not be used “for the exploitation or promotion of a business not embraced within the patent.” Ethyl Gasoline,
A reasonable royalty requires a balancing of the interests of the parties. It would be proper, therefore, to consider Rite-Hite’s policy of not licensing direct competitors like Kelley, but this factor cannot justify the rate here. See Panduit,
It is apparent that the district court limited its assessment to Rite-Hite’s side of the hypothetical negotiating table rather than to balance the interests of both parties. Kelley presented extensive evidence of royalty rates prevalent in the industry, which is relevant to determining a reasonable royalty. Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. United States Plywood Corp.,
The evidence of record negates a finding that the dock equipment industry is so lucrative that net profits in the 50-75 percent range could be anticipated. Rite-Hite’s net profits during the period of infringement were in the 6-10 percent range and Kelley’s only 2.3 percent. This evidence of actual profitability forcefully negates the anticipation by either party of profits of 50-75 percent on their devices and was improperly disregarded in the district court’s determination of what royalty Kelley would have agreed to pay. Lindemann Maschinenfabrik,
Although the determination of a fair and reasonable royalty is a difficult judicial chore, seeming often to involve more the talents of
V.
CONCLUSION
This court was created to bring uniformity to the law; but where uniform precedent exists, it was given no mandate to ignore established law. It was not given a blank legal slate on which to write greatly enlarged property rights for patentees. In view of this court’s exclusive jurisdiction, however, the majority has effectively set new precedent for all awards of damages in future patent cases.
The majority justifies its expansion of patent protection with the explanation that the Supreme Court has provided no definitive ruling on the proper scope of damages. I conclude the Supreme Court has repeatedly stressed that actual damages for patent infringement must be based on interference with the patentee’s market for its own goods embodying the invention in suit. Thus, I must respectfully dissent.
. The term "actual damages” is used to distinguish from an award based on a hypothetical reasonable royalty. In the majority view, this dissent "confuses” the patent right to exclude with the separate determination of actual damages for patent infringement. Contrary to the majority, both determinations depend on injury to patent rights. The patent defines the metes and bounds of legal injury. As the Supreme Court stated in Continental Paper Bag Co. v. Eastern Paper Bag Co.,
. Rite-Hite Corp. v. Kelley Co.,
In order to recover lost profits damages, "a patentee must show a reasonable probability that, but for the infringement, it would have made the sales that were made by the infringer.” Id.; see also Panduit Corp. v. Stahlin Bros. Fibre Works,575 F.2d 1152 ,197 U.S.P.Q. 726 (6th Cir.1978). The issue of whether a court should award lost profits damages or a reasonable royalty under § 284 thus turns primarily upon the quality of plaintiffs' proof of lost profits. Neither § 284 nor controlling case law restricts the recovery of lost profits damages any further.
. The majority also finds support for its decision here in decisions of this court which applied a but-for test to determine liability for lost profits in connection with the patentee's business in goods embodying the patented invention in suit, namely, State Indus., Inc. v. Mor-Flo Indus., Inc.,
. Section 4 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 15 (1988) provides (emphasis added):
[A]ny person who shall be injured in his business or property by reason of anything forbidden in the antitrust laws may sue therefore in any district court of the United States in the district in which the defendant resides or is found or has an agent, without respect to the amount in controversy, and shall recover threefold the damages by him sustained, and the cost of suit, including a reasonable attorney's fee.
. RICO’s civil action provision, 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c) (1988), reads (emphasis added):
Any person injured in his business or property by reason of a violation of section 1962 of this chapter may sue therefore in any appropriate United States district court and shall recover threefold the damages he sustains and the cost of the suit, including a reasonable attorney’s fee.
.These principles were stated in the context of a party’s standing to sue. However, the Court drew upon principles respecting the limitation of “proximate cause” on recoverable damages. See Associated Gen. Contractors,
. The majority construes "adequate” as an expansive term. If anything the term "adequate" suggests moderation, the standard definition of the term being "reasonably sufficient,” Webster’s Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary, 56 (9th ed. 1983), or even "barely sufficient," The American Heritage Dictionary 15 (10th ed. 1981).
. Other types of actual damages, e.g., price erosion on the patentee's patented goods, are not involved here.
. See Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. United States Plywood Corp.,
. See, e.g., Acts of 1790, 1793, and 1870.
. The Statute of Monopolies remained the only statute on patents in England well into the 19th Century.
. See Edward C. Walterscheid, The Early Evolution of the United States Patent Law: Antecedents (Part 2), 76 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc'y, 849, 870-71 (1994). The original period of exclusivity was 14 years. Why that term was provided is unknown. It may have some relationship to the terms of successive apprenticeships. Id.
.The current statute provides expressly in 35 U.S.C. § 154:
Every patent shall contain ... a grant to the patentee ... of the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the invention throughout the United States.
. Although the Patent Act of 1922, 42 Stat. 392 (1922), contained no specific provision for a reasonable royalty, it was interpreted to allow this form of damages. See Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. United States Plywood,
. The majority misstates the record and grossly distorts the Panduit test. First, contrary to the majority's statement that “Kelley does not challenge that Rite-Hite meets the Panduit test,” op. at 1545, Kelley's supplemental brief at 11 states: "If the trial court’s decision is good law, then Panduit is not.... Affirming Rite-Hite v. Kelley will mean effectively overruling Panduit.” See also Kelley's opening brief at 14. Second, the Panduit factors were not met. There is no proof anyone bought either the Rite-Hite or Kelley restraints because of the patented hook technology and the ADL-100 itself is an acceptable substitute not within the patent claims, i.e., a nonin-fringing acceptable substitute.
. See also Note, Remedies Against Patent Infringement, 72 Harv.L.Rev. 328, 344-45 (1958) ("If a patentee who sells his invention discovers ... that an infringer seller has diverted some of his potential sales,” such a patentee may recover lost profits.); Note, Recovery in Patent Suits, 60 Colum.L.Rev. 840, 846-48 (1960) ("When a pat-entee has exploited his grant by manufacturing and selling the patented article rather than licensing others to do so, profits lost by the paten-tee as a direct result of an infringer’s competing sales may be the measure of his damages.”).
. If the majority would limit the entire market value rule precedent to “convoyed” sales, op. at 1548, note 7, this is clearly unwarranted. See, e.g., Kori,
. The majority cites no Supreme Court or other precedent for its proposition that "foreseeability” alone is the key to legal causation of patent damages and there is none.
. 35 U.S.C. § 287(a):
Patentees, and persons making or selling any patented article for or under them, may give notice to the public that the same is patented, either by fixing thereon the word “patent” or the abbreviation "pat.”, together with the num-
*1571 ber of the patent, or when, from the character of the article, this can not be done, by fixing to it, or to the package wherein one or more of them is contained, a label containing a like notice. In the event of failure so to mark, no damages shall be recovered by the patentee in any action for infringement, except on proof that the infringer was notified of the infringement and continued to infringe thereafter, in which event damages may be recovered only for infringement occurring after such notice. Filing of an action for infringement shall constitute such notice.
. Rite-Hite, however, is not foreclosed by this litigation from suing Kelley on the ADL-100 patents and asserting collateral estoppel respecting the attribution of its ADL-100 losses to Kelley.
. The analysis is confused with the situation where the patentee is a licensing patentee who offers paid-up licenses to all who desire them. See 3 Robinson § 1058 at 331 and cases cited therein.
. Indeed, Congressman Lanham embraced the reasonable royalty provision as the preferred remedy on the facts of this case, stating:
Of course, in a case of an innocent infringement, it is to be presumed that the court would assess no more than a reasonable royalty for such time as the patent was infringed by the innocent user.
92 Cong.Rec. 1857 (1946). See also House Hearings at 19-21.
. Here, the amount of damages for nonwillful infringement awarded or proposed to be awarded as a royalty is so great that it has forced Kelley to file for bankruptcy. Kelley, an employee-owned business, would now likely be out of business had we not granted its motion for stay of execution of the district court’s judgment. This case therefore illustrates the mischief and misery that can accompany the over enforcement of patents rights.
. Another case awarding damages on the paten-tee's unpatented goods is already waiting in the wings.
Concurrence in Part
with whom Circuit Judge RADER joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
The court today takes an important step toward preserving damages as an effective remedy for patent infringement. Patent infringement is a commercial tort, and the remedy should compensate for the actual financial injury that was caused by the tort. Thus I concur in the majority’s result with respect to entitlement to damages for lost sales of the ADL-100.
Yet the court draws a new bright line, adverse to patentees and the businesses built on patents, declining to make the injured claimants whole. The majority now restricts en banc the patentee’s previously existing, already limited right to prove damages for lost sales of collateral items — the so-called “convoyed” sales. Such remedy is now eliminated entirely unless the convoyed item is “functionally” inseparable from the patented item. The court thus propounds a legally ambivalent and economically unsound policy, authorizing damages for the lost sales of the ADL-100 but not those dock levelers that were required to be bid and sold as a package with the MDL-55 and the ADL-100.
The district court, in contrast, took a straightforward approach to the damages determination. The district court awarded compensatory damages for (1) Rite-Hite’s lost sales of the MDL-55 and the ADL-100 models of truck restraint, recognizing the commercial and competitive relationships of these models and the infringing device; (2) Rite-Hite’s lost sales of 1,692 dock levelers that were bid and sold in packages with the truck restraints, recognizing that the dock leveler business was a significant factor in Kelley’s infringing activity; and (3) the sales-level losses incurred by the independent sales organizations (the ISOs), recognizing their position as geographically exclusive selling arms of the patentee.
The majority affirms only the first of these three areas of pecuniary injury, reversing the district court’s damages award in the other two areas. I know of no law or policy served by eliminating recovery of actual damages when patents are involved. In holding that those injured by the infringement shall not be made whole, the value of the patent property is diminished. The majority’s half-a-loaf award, wherein the patentee and the other plaintiffs are denied recovery of a significant portion or all of their proven damages, is an important policy decision. Thus, although I join Parts A-I and B of the majority opinion, I must dissent from Parts A-II and A-III. With respect to Part A-IV, I agree that the district court’s determination of the royalty rate should not be disturbed, but I do not
I. THE LOST PROFITS FOR THE ADL-100
I agree that lost profits on the lost sales of the MDL-55 and the ADL-100 are the proper measure of compensatory damages for Kelley’s infringement of Rite-Hite’s ’847 patent. The considerations with respect to the ADL-100 are those of general damages: directness, foreseeability, duty.
Patent damages must be viewed with a practical eye in order to implement the policy of damages law. It is not the usual situation that an infringing device takes sales from a patentee’s line of more than one product, not all of which were made under the patent that is infringed. However, this does not change the application of 35 U.S.C. § 284. It may be simply differences in inventorship, or the timing of the discoveries, that places inventions in different patents of the same patent owner. Such a situation is not unusual. An example may be the case at bar, wherein Rite-Hite disclosed and claimed the infringed restraint in a later-filed patent having a different inventive entity than the patent on the ADL-100. Examples abound in the chemical field, where inventors may create related chemical compounds, obtain patents as the research progresses, and commercialize one of them. Should the infringer divert sales from another member of this series, according to Kelley, the only damages available would be a royalty at a sufficiently low rate to provide a profit to the infringer. The patent law is not prisoner of such irrational economics.
II. THE LOST CONVOYED SALES OF DOCK LEVELERS
A. Principles of Damages Law
The basic principle of damages law is that the injured party shall be made whole. On the facts on which the district court awarded damages for certain lost sales of dock levelers, the relationships were direct, causation was proved, the scope of recovery was narrow, and the circumstances were unusual. Reversing the district court, the majority holds that if the patented and convoyed items also have a separate market, there can never be recovery for the lost sales of the convoyed items. I do not believe that such a rule is necessary, or correct, in patent cases.
The majority adopts the rule for patent cases that lost “convoyed” sales can not be recompensed, whatever the directness of the injury and whatever the weight of the proof, unless the thing convoyed is a “functional” part of the thing patented. Heretofore, the question of recovery for lost sales of collateral items was a matter of fact and proof, the court looking at the closeness of the relationship between the items and the quality of the proof, cognizant of the policy of setting reasonable limits to liability.
The district court awarded damages only for those lost dock leveler sales that were bid and sold in a package with the truck restraint, and for which Rite-Hite proved it had competed with Kelley for the same customers, presenting transaction-by-transaction evidence. The district court’s finding that Rite-Hite would have sold an additional 1,692 dock levelers, in specifically proven restraint-leveler packages, is not disputed. It is not disputed that there was a direct, causal, foreseeable relationship between Kelley’s infringement and these lost sales. This court’s decision to withhold compensation for these specifically proven lost sales is a decision of policy, not law, for damages law supports compensation on these proofs. Refusing a remedy for proven injury caused by wrongdoing is an unusual judicial policy. It is not required by patent law, and it contravenes the rule that the injured party shall be made whole. Thus my colleagues carve a patent-based exception into the rule of general damages, refusing to award compensatory damages that have been proved.
The purpose of tort damages is to place the wronged party, as closely as possible, in the financial position that it would have occupied but for the wrong. The patent statute requires that damages for infringement shall be adequate to compensate for the losses caused by the infringement:
35 U.S.C. § 284. Damages
Upon finding for the claimant the court shall award the claimant damages ade*1580 quate to compensate for the infringement, but in no event less than a reasonable royalty for the use made of the invention by the infringer, together with interests and costs as fixed by the court.
When the damages are not found by a jury, the court shall assess them. In either event the court may increase the damages up to three times the amount found or assessed.
The statute codifies the general rule of damages resulting from wrongful economic behavior:
And where a legal injury is of an economic character, “[t]he general rule is, that when a wrong has been done, and the law gives a remedy, the compensation shall be equal to the injury. The latter is the standard by which the former is to be measured. The injured party is to be placed, as near as may be, in the situation he would have occupied if the wrong had not been committed.”
Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
The cardinal principle of damages in Anglo-American law is that of compensation for the injury caused to plaintiff by defendant’s breach of duty.
... The primary notion is that of repairing the plaintiffs injury or of making him whole as nearly as that may be done by an award of money. The “remedy [should] be commensurate to the injury sustained.”
4 Fowler V. Harper et al., The Law of Torts § 25.1, 490, 493 (2d ed. 1986) (quoting Rockwood v. Allen,
[The law] will only seek, as near as may be, by awarding money compensation, to place you in the same position as respects your pocketbook as you would have occupied if no wrong had taken place.
The threshold condition is embodied in 35 U.S.C. § 284 and its requirement that “the court shall award the claimant damages adequate to compensate.” The majority correctly applied this rule to Rite-Hite’s lost sales of the ADL-100 model of truck restraint, but inappropriately rejected the district court’s recognition of the lost sales of the dock levelers.
The district court recognized that the purpose of the award of damages for patent infringement is to compensate the claimant for the losses incurred. 35 U.S.C. § 284. This is a question of fact, reviewable for clear error. For convoyed sales there are issues of the directness of the injury and associated policy implications, but there is no prohibition in legal principle against recovery of the actual economic loss caused by the infringement. Indeed, this is the most fundamental of damages principles. See William M. Landes and Richard A. Posner, The Economic Structure of Tort Law (1987).
The Supreme Court has well stated the requirement that losses due to patent infringement shall be fully recompensed:
The question to be asked in determining damages is “how much had the Patent Holder and Licensee suffered by the infringement. And that question [is] primarily: had the Infringer not infringed, what would the Patent Holder-Licensee have made?”
Aro Manufacturing Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
[T]he present statutory rule is that "only “damages” may be recovered. These have been defined by this Court as “compensation for the pecuniary loss he has suffered from the infringement, without regard to the question whether the defendant has gained or lost by his unlawful acts.” They have been said to constitute “the difference between his pecuniary condition after the*1581 infringement, and what Ms condition would have been if the infringement had not occurred.”
Aro Manufacturing,
The Federal Circuit heretofore conscientiously recognized that the rules of general damages applied to patent infringement cases. E.g., Lam, Inc. v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
[Damages adequate to compensate for the infringement constitute] “ ‘the difference between [the patent owner’s] pecumary condition after the infringement, and what his condition would have been if the infringement had not occurred.’ ”
Fromson v. Western Litho Plate & Supply Co.,
The statute ... mandates that damages shall be “adequate to compensate” the patent owner for the infringement. That requirement parallels the criterion long applicable in other fields of law.
See also Paper Converting Machine Co. v. Magna-Graphics Corp.,
A wrongdoer is, simply put, responsible for the direct, foreseeable consequences of the wrong. Indeed, in General Motors Corp. v. Devex Corp.,
When Congress wished to limit an element of recovery in a patent infringement action, it said so explicitly.
B. The “Package” Sales of Dock Levelers and Truck Restraints
The district court found that Kelley “developed its Truk Stop restraint both to capture part of the newly-developed restraint market and to avoid losing leveler sales.” Rite-Hite Corp. v. Kelley Co.,
The district court assessed the damages caused by Kelley’s infringement after meticulous review of an extensive body of evidence. The elements of causation and foreseeability, although fully satisfied on the evidence, are scarcely at issue. It is not disputed that these 1,692 dock levelers were sold, warranted, installed, and used together with the truck restraints. Kelley’s actual “package” sales of dock levelers and infringing restraints were the only convoyed sales for which compensation was awarded.
These dock leveler sales were as direct a target of the infringement as were the ADL-100 sales, and the quality of the proofs was equally high. The evidence shows the same transaction-by-transaction losses of sales to Kelley for the dock levelers as for the ADL-100 truck restraints, indeed in the same bid and sale packages. Precedent previously recognized that compensation may be appropriate when the items are sold together,
Recovery of damages for lost “convoyed” sales has always required a high standard of proof, lest remote and speculative claims be opportunistically pressed. However, it is not correct to hold that recovery is never possible unless the relationship of the patented and convoyed products is such that the only and necessary use is as a “single functioning unit.” Indeed, even the majority’s new requirement is met in this ease. These specific dock levelers were not sold separately because the customer or Kelley required that they be sold together; and it is undisputed that they are used together.
The correct question is not whether the infringing truck restraint was part of a larger combination whereby the truck restraint could not function without the dock leveler, or whether the truck restraint or the dock leveler also had an independent market and use. The correct rule was stated in Leesona Corp. v. United States,
it is not the physical joinder or separation of the contested items that determines their inclusion in or exclusion from the compensation base, so much as their financial and marketing dependence on the patented item under standard marketing procedures for the goods in question.
The sales of dock levelers and truck restraints met this criterion.'
As the Court reiterated in Aro Manufacturing and in General Motors v. Devex, general damages in patent cases are whatever damages the plaintiff can prove. The history of the 1946 enactment reports this legislative purpose:
The object of the bill is to make the basis of recovery in patent infringement suits general damages, that is, any damages the complainant can prove, not less than a reasonable royalty, together with interest from the time the infringement occurred, rather than profits and damages.
Report of the Senate Subcommittee on Patents, S.Rep. No. 1503, 79th Cong., 2d Sess. 1, reprinted in 1946 U.S.Code Cong. Serv. 1386, 1387. The record shows that Kelley foresaw the potential loss of dock leveler sales, and that this contributed to Kelley’s infringement of Rite-Hite’s truck restraint patent. The record shows Kelley and Rite-Hite both bidding on the same restraint/leveler packages. The evidence established that Rite-Hite’s loss of 1,692 dock leveler sales was the direct, foreseeable, and indeed intended result of Kelley’s infringement.
Kelley bore the risk that if it was found to infringe Rite-Hite’s restraint patent, it would be liable for compensatory damages on the restraint/leveler packages. By eliminating recovery for this proven loss, this court makes a policy decision contrary to the principles of compensatory damages. Heretofore Federal Circuit precedent treated lost convoyed sales as a matter of fact and proof. I discern no clear error or discretionary abuse in the district court’s award of actual damages for these specific lost sales of restraint/leveler packages.
III. THE INJURY TO THE ISOs
Twenty-six of the plaintiffs are small businesses or individuals who were directly injured by the infringement. Some of these plaintiffs had previously brought a separate action against Kelley, the district court consolidating these actions. The district court’s award of damages to these plaintiffs has not been shown to be clearly erroneous, and I would affirm it.
A. The Position of the ISOs
Adam Smith observed that people work most effectively when they have a personal stake in the fruits of their labor. That is apparently how Rite-Hite structured its business. The ISOs were not “employees,” but independent entities. They were responsible for 70% of Rite-Hite’s sales. They
Indeed, the ISOs’ portion of the injury caused by the infringement is recoverable even on the majority’s view of the position of the ISOs in the “original ISO contract,” majority op. at 1552, which granted the ISOs the right “to solicit sales in the [exclusive] Territory.” The majority states that this commercial relationship was unchanged in any substantive way by the new agreement whereby Rite-Hite designated the ISOs as exclusive sales “licensees.” It is not necessary to decide the nuances of this contractual relationship, for the losses experienced at the sales level are compensable. If the ISOs were simply sales agents, as Kelley argues, then Rite-Hite is the seller of the goods. If these plaintiffs do not have “standing,” as the majority states, because the lost sales were made by Rite-Hite, not the ISOs, then Rite-Hite is entitled to these damages. Thus, if compensation is not owed to the ISOs, it is owed to Rite-Hite.
Witnesses at the damages trial explained that the profits from Rite-Hite’s manufacture and sale of truck restraints were calculated at both the manufacturing level and the sales level. Rite-Hite made about 30% of its sales through its own sales organizations, and 70% of its sales through the ISOs, which were assigned geographically exclusive territories. The district court awarded damages in accordance with which plaintiffs bore the losses, at the manufacturing and the sales levels. The majority apparently recognizes the recovery by Rite-Hite for the sales it made through its own selling arms, but not for those obtained by the ISOs.
The majority may have misunderstood the commercial structure, for it continues the loose reference to Rite-Hite’s manufacturing-level price as a “wholesale” price, although the lost sales to the customer — the price at which Kelley and Rite-Hite competed — was not at this manufacturing level of $1,000-1,500, but in the $2,500-3,000 range for the ADL-100. This price included both the manufacturing-level costs and profit and the sales-level costs and profit. Indeed, the district court drew this distinction, although not for the purpose of excluding recovery of sales-level losses, but for the purpose of distinguishing the profits lost at each level. Analyzing the evidence, the district court limited the recovery at the sales level to one third of that claimed, disallowing claims for individual salesmen’s commissions.
The trial court has substantial discretion in determining damages. In State Industries, Inc. v. Mor-Flo Industries, Inc.,
the only limit on [the district court’s] discretion in selecting a remedy is that it be adequate to compensate for the damages suffered as a result of the infringement.
Id. at 1577, 12 USPQ2d at 1029. This deference that the judicial process accords to the trial court’s assessment of damages recognizes the fact-dependency of just compensation. In Perkins v. Standard Oil Co.,
B. The ISOs as Sales Agents
The purpose of legal remedy is the recovery of damages by those injured by the tortious acts of another, provided of course that policy-based criteria are met. See, e.g., Illinois Brick Co. v. Illinois,
Kelley argued at trial, as it does here, that the ISOs can not recover damages because they were not exclusive patent licensees. The district court thoroughly explored the relationships between Rite-Hite and the ISOs. The ISOs were sales agents with certain exclusive rights and exclusive territories, with some exceptions for direct sales by Rite-Hite. Since they are not suing independently of the patentee, there is no relevance to those cases which hold that a nonexclusive licensee can not sue in its own name. When the patentee is joined as a party, as Rite-Hite is here, and the licensee has an exclusive right to make, use, or sell, the licensee has standing to recover for its own injury. In Western Elec. Co. v. Pacent Reproducer Corp.,
Thus if the ISOs are viewed as sales agents instead of licensees, either their sales exclusivity suffices to permit them to join with Rite-Hite in this suit, or Rite-Hite as principal can recover on their behalf.
C. General Damages Theory
The jurisprudence of tort damages illustrates myriad relationships between the wrongdoer and the injured party, from which there have evolved general criteria that apply damages law and policy. Precedent deals with the criteria of directness of the injury, foreseeability, and duty, derived from policy considerations whereby the public interest in remedying wrong is balanced with the public interest in placing reasonable limits on liability. Applying these rules, the ISOs were a direct and foreseeable victim of the infringement. Their recovery is not barred by statute or policy. Their entitlement is a question of fact and proof, applying the law and policy of damages.
Much of the evidence at trial, of head-to-head competitive bids against Kelley, was presented by the ISOs:
Each of plaintiffs’ claim files contains several documents pertaining to a single transaction or series of transactions with a single customer. The files include deposition testimony from a member of a Rite-Hite sales organization regarding a sale that Rite-Hite claims to have lost on account of an infringing Kelley sale. According to plaintiffs’ expert witness, accountant Ronald Beckman, every claim file regarding transactions in which plaintiffs seek lost profit damages contains testimony that: (1) prior to the Kelley sale, Rite-Hite salespersons had solicited the Kelley customer for Rite-Hite vehicle restraints, and (2) vehicle restraints from other manufacturers had not been bid or had been ruled out by the customer because of perceived product problems_ PDTX-143 specifically itemizes 169 cases in which plaintiffs’ salespersons testified that they*1585 had initially convinced the customer to purchase a restraint before the customer ultimately purchased from Kelley.
Rite-Hite v. Kelley,
The provision of adequate remedy for patent infringement is fundamental to a viable patent law. The district court’s damages rulings are not in clear error, and I would sustain them.
