US Supreme Court uses TC Heartland to blunt key troll tool, but will California welcome the next wave of troll litigation?

The AmeriKat's view on her way to San Jose.  Will
California be the new hotbed of troll litigation?  
With the ramifications of yesterday's US Supreme Court decision in TC Heartland reverberating from coast to coast, the AmeriKat has asked her Kat friends at California-headquartered firm, Fenwick & West, to provide some more background for European readers, what this means for patent trolls and foreign defendants.  Patent litigation partner Mike Sacksteder and associate Athul Acharya report:    
"For the past 27 years, plaintiffs have been able to bring patent infringement suits against most corporations almost anywhere in the United States. So-called non-practicing entities (“NPEs”), also known as “patent trolls,” have taken advantage of that fact to make the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas the country’s most popular forum for patent lawsuits by a huge margin. But yesterday, in TC Heartland LLC v. Kraft Food Group Brands LLC, the United States Supreme Court changed the dynamic, simply by reinterpreting a single word in the patent venue statute. As a result of the Court’s decision, a domestic corporation not organized under Texas law and without a “regular and established place of business” in the Eastern District is no longer amenable to suit there.
Legal Framework:  Where does a corporation reside? 
The legal question in the case is relatively simple: Where does a corporation “reside”? The United States’ general venue statute provides that a defendant may be sued where it resides, and that “for all venue purposes”—“except as otherwise provided by law”—a defendant corporation “shall be deemed to reside” in any judicial district where it is “subject to the court’s personal jurisdiction.” To simplify somewhat, in practice this has meant that corporations that direct their activities throughout the States can more or less be sued throughout the States. A more specific venue statute for patent cases provides that a corporate defendant may be sued for patent infringement either in a district where it has a “regular and established place of business” and has committed alleged acts of infringement, or in the state where it “resides.” The issue before the Court, therefore, was whether the general statute supplies the definition of “resides” in the patent-specific statute, or whether the specific statute is, in the words of the general statute, an exception “otherwise provided by law.”
The evolution of the field
The Supreme Court had previously addressed this question in its 1957 decision Fourco Glass Co. v. Transmirra Products Corp., in which it canvassed the history of the statute and determined that Congress had enacted the patent venue statute specifically to limit the fora in which a corporate defendant could be sued for patent infringement. The Fourco Court accordingly held that a corporation’s residence for patent purposes was only its domicile—the state in which it was incorporated—and that the patent venue statute stood “complete, independent and alone controlling in its sphere.”
In 1988, however, Congress amended the general venue statute. Shortly thereafter, in its 1990 decision VE Holding Corp. v. Johnson Gas Appliance Co., the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit—an intermediate court that hears all patent appeals from American trial courts—held that the amendments to the general venue statute had brought the patent-specific statute within the general statute’s ambit. Absent review by the Supreme Court, that decision was binding throughout the States.
As discussed above, in the 27 years since VE Holding, patent plaintiffs—in particular, NPEs—have flocked to a single district court tucked away in Marshall, Texas, and the small cities nearby. More than 40 percent of U.S. patent cases are filed in the Eastern District of Texas, and a quarter of all patent cases nationwide are overseen by a single judge there. More than 90 percent of those cases are brought by non-practicing entities. Indeed, some see the explosion in such suits in the last decade as a driving force behind the Supreme Court’s recently renewed interest in the field of patent law.
Justices disfavor implied amendment 
The Court’s unanimous decision in TC Heartland rejected the Federal Circuit’s decision in VE Holding and restored the Fourco regime. Invoking the canon against implied repeals—here applied to implied amendment—the Court reasoned that absent a “relatively clear indication of its intent,” Congress does not alter the meaning of one statute by amending another. Here, Congress may have amended the general venue statute in 1988 and 2011, but it had left the patent venue statute untouched since the Fourco decision. The Court accordingly held that the amendment of the former did not affect the meaning of the latter. That statute therefore continues to mean what it meant in Fourco: A suit against a domestic corporation for patent infringement must be brought either where the corporation has an established place of business and commits an act of alleged infringement, or in the state in which it is incorporated. 
Takeaway:  Patent trolls no longer pick the playing field - most of the time
TC Heartland is a game-changing decision for a large majority of NPE lawsuits, but it will not end such suits, nor will it keep all of them out of the Eastern District of Texas. Although the majority of such cases will need to be filed elsewhere, venue will remain proper against any domestic defendant that maintains a “regular and established place of business” in the District and is alleged to infringe there—by making, using, selling, or offering to sell the allegedly infringing product or service. The remaining troll suits are likely to concentrate to a certain extent in Delaware, where many companies are incorporated, and in technology centers such as the Northern District of California, where many NPE targets are headquartered.
But what all this means for foreign corporate defendants is uncertain—the Supreme Court studiously avoided opining on the subject in its opinion in TC Heartland. In its last word about foreign defendants in patent lawsuits, however, the Court held that “suits against aliens are wholly outside the operation of all federal venue laws, general and special.” The statutory framework has changed since that decision, but the general principle has not: “a defendant not resident in the United States may be sued in any judicial district.” The Court’s decision this week means that the question will be subject to litigation anew—but in all likelihood, venue for patent suits against foreign corporations will continue to lie anywhere in the United States."
US Supreme Court uses TC Heartland to blunt key troll tool, but will California welcome the next wave of troll litigation? US Supreme Court uses TC Heartland to blunt key troll tool, but will California welcome the next wave of troll litigation?  Reviewed by Annsley Merelle Ward on Tuesday, May 23, 2017 Rating: 5

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