Federal Circuit Upholds Reasonable Royalty, and Upholds Injunction Against a Party Not Adjudged Liable


ASETEK DANMARK A/S v. CMI USA INC: Apr. 3, 2017. Before Prost, Newman, and Taranto

Takeaways:

Procedural Posture:

At the N.D. Cal., plaintiff Asetek prevailed at trial, receiving a judgment of infringement, and of no invalidity, plus a damages award against defendant CMI. The district court entered an injunction against CMI and Cooler Master. CMI and Cooler Master appealed. The CAFC affirmed the ruling on infringement, invalidity, and damages, and affirmed-in-part, and vacated-in-part the injunction. The CAFC wrote another opinion December 6th, 2016, in which they did not vacate the injunction.

Synopsis:

Permanent injunction: The permanent injunction against Cooler Master was proper despite the earlier dismissal of claims against the Taiwanese company with prejudice. Claim preclusion from the dismissal with prejudice did not bar the injunction. Injunctive relief covers future conduct, and “claim preclusion does not bar relief as to future conduct.” The difference in timing between pre-dismissal conduct and post-injunction conduct “means that the two situations do not involve the same claim for claim-preclusion purposes, even if all the conduct is alleged to be unlawful for the same reason.” As to the scope of the injunction (reaching Cooler Master in its own capacity), the CAFC partially vacated the injunction, and remanded.


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National Law Review, Volume VII, Number 111