Posted on 04/24/2018 6:00:08 PM PDT by MarvinStinson
Inventors' rights can be revoked through a controversial administrative process, the Supreme Court ruled by a seven-to-two margin on Tuesday, a move that promises to continue the trend of invalidation of hundreds of existing patents.
The case, Oil States v. Greene's Energy, concerns an administrative tribunal called the Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB). As the Free Beacon has previously reported, the PTAB is responsible for reviewing patents whose validity have been challenged. The PTAB runs on a host of procedures alien to federal court proceedings: lower evidentiary standards, the ability of anyone to challenge a patent right, and a broad interpretative standard for PTAB administrative judges.
Because of these procedures, the PTAB has a track record of striking down more or less every patent that passes in front of it: A former federal judge once called PTAB tribunals "patent death squads."
Oil States argued in its brief, and in oral arguments last November, that in practice the PTAB was actively depriving American inventors of their property rights, an institution normally held sacrosanct under the Constitution. Furthermore, they argued, those property rights were being deprived by administrative courts. These are importantly not under the federal court system, to which the Constitution explicitly reserves the "judicial power." In other words: Americans losing their property rights without due process in a real court of law.
But the Supreme Court's majority didn't agree with this analysis. Justice Clarence Thomas wrote for the majority, joined by his conservative colleague Samuel Alito, swing-vote Anthony Kennedy, and the Court's four liberal justices.
The Court's majority opinion centered around the distinction between "private" and "public" rights. Patent rights are public rights, the Court argued, in that they are extended as a government franchise, and so are subject in their form to the terms laid out by the legislature. In the case of patent rights, if Congress stipulates that a patent can be retroactively reviewed and struck down, even under the zealous rules of the PTAB, then that is a necessary feature of the extension of the patent right to its holder.
Patent rights are not a private or natural right, Thomas wrote, and the right they conferthe exclusion of others from making or selling the inventionare not common law rights. "Rather, it is a creature of statute law,'" he wrote, referring to standing precedent.
Importantly, the majority "emphasize[s] the narrowness of our holding," stipulating the ruling only covers the constitutionality of a certain form of PTAB review, rather than more expansive questions of patent law. This matters in part because, had Oil States been decided in the opposite direction, it would have struck a substantive blow to administrative tribunalsit is likely that at least the conservative members of the majority would like to revisit the thorny issue of administrative law.
Justice Stephen Breyer seems to signal this future conflict in a concurring single-paragraph opinion.
"The Court's opinion should not be read to say that matters involving private rights may never be adjudicated other than by Article III courts, say, sometimes by agencies. Our precedent is to the contrary," Breyer, joined by Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor, wrote.
Still, the narrowness of the ruling is cold comfort to American inventors who have lost their patents at the PTAB. Josh Malone, the inventor of a water-balloon filling system, claims to have spent $2 million litigating in front of the PTAB. Speaking on behalf of other U.S. inventors, Malone decried the ruling to the Free Beacon.
"Inventors, aspiring inventors, and patriots of all kinds are devastated by today's Supreme Court ruling," Malone said. "Following its radical disregard for private property rights in Kelo v. City of New London, today the Court obliterated the Fifth and Seventh Amendments to the Constitution. Now if a big corporation wants your patents or your land, they only need to convince their friends in the administrative tribunal or city council to do the job. No judge, no jury, no America."
Malone's distress was mirrored in Justice Neil Gorsuch's dissent, joined by Chief Justice John Roberts. Gorsuch decried the administrative law process, which he argued led to judges only accountable to their appointing patrons, precisely the situation the Founders sought to avoid with the separation of powers.
"No doubt [the PTAB] is well intended," Gorsuch wrote. "But can there be any doubt that it also represents a retreat from the promise of judicial independence? Or that when an independent Judiciary gives ground to bureaucrats in the adjudication of cases, the losers will often prove the unpopular and vulnerable? Powerful interests are capable of amassing armies of lobbyists and lawyers to influence (and even capture) politically accountable bureaucracies. But what about everyone else?"
Adam Mossoff, a law professor at George Mason University whose writings were frequently cited in Gorsuch's dissent, told the Free Beacon that the majority's opinion departed from a substantive history of viewing patents as private property.
"For the first time, the Supreme Court holds that patents for new inventions are regulatory grants similar to monopoly grants for bridges or toll roads. The decision ignores the Supreme Court's own substantial case law over the past two centuries that patents are private property rights that secure the fruits of productive labors under the Constitutionlike all other property rights in homes, farms, and animals," Mossoff said.
"As the dissenting Justices point out, this turns the Constitution and the U.S. patent system on their heads. It perverts the function of the constitutional protections afforded to the property rights of all U.S. citizens, an increasingly commonplace occurrence today under the expanding and all-encompassing administrative state," Mossoff added.
‘The English patent system evolved from its early medieval origins into the first modern patent system that recognised intellectual property in order to stimulate invention; this was the crucial legal foundation upon which the Industrial Revolution could emerge and flourish.
‘The Patent and Copyright Clause of the United States Constitution was proposed in 1787 by James Madison and Charles Cotesworth Pinckney. In Federalist No. 43, Madison wrote, “The utility of the clause will scarcely be questioned. The copyright of authors has been solemnly adjudged, in Great Britain, to be a right of common law. The right to useful inventions seems with equal reason to belong to the inventors. The public good fully coincides in both cases with the claims of the individuals.”
The first Patent Act of the U.S. Congress was passed on April 10, 1790, titled “An Act to promote the progress of useful Arts.” The first patent was granted on July 31, 1790 to Samuel Hopkins for a method of producing potash.’
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_patent_law
Very bad news for inventors. No one will file a patent since 1) it isn’t affording them any protection for their “private right” (a point a disagree with the court on) and 2) filing the patent provides public information to the competition.
Instead people will build in destructive fail safes so that any attempt to take apart and backward engineer will instead corrupt and destroy.
Patent rights have been around since the original blacksmiths. The whole reason the length of time was originally set (17 years I think) was that was the normal amount of time required for an apprentice to master the craft and any new techniques his master had developed.
No private right... pshaw
Thanks for all the info, Pelham.
I see this as a victory against patent trolls - companies that will buy the rights to large amounts of vague patents and then sue anybody who is able to make a vague idea in the original “patent” into reality.
No. It's vs. the wisdom of the market.
its a tough call. Ill have to think about it.
Next time do that before you post.
Hamilton? Seriously?
No they won't. Go lookup "product strict liability".
I see from the thread that this is Hussein Obama’s handy work.
That’s happening defacto.
Even the devil can use truth against foolish men who won’t acknowledge it.
One major purpose of “letters patent” was vitiated long ago with the sheer volume of material — not to mention that people in the development sector are urged never to actually look at patents. The result is reinvention of the same thing dozens of times and few actually caring. Hence this new board’s almost universal determinations of obviousness — the facts empirically prove it out in a moribund system. Surely patents were never intended to be welfare for lawyers and courts.
But yet again, this board might not be looking at the best patents, the ones that are the most visionary. It might be looking mainly if not only at trash patents. If so, yes they deserve to die.
This one ought to be interesting in helping us understand Gorsuch's constitutional philosophy a bit more, as Gorsuch and Roberts dissented.
THOMAS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY, GINSBURG, BREYER, ALITO, SOTOMAYOR, and KAGAN, JJ., joined. BREYER, J., filed a concurring opinion, in which GINSBURG and SOTOMAYOR, JJ., joined. GORSUCH, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which ROBERTS, C. J., joined.
Because this used to be a Constitutional Republic, many of the old forms are still in place to placate the rubes.
Yeah. First Secretary of the Treasury. Played a very large role in designing America's financial system.
Perhaps you are as unfamiliar with Hamilton as you are with the Constitution's protection of patents and copyrights:
To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries.
Joe Sobran or Sam Francis used to say something along the lines of “we have a Constitution but the gov’t never lets it get in the way of doing what they want”
“Correct. patents are not property and they never have been.”
Well no one can ever accuse you of knowing the first thing about the long history of patents as property rights:
http://www.ipwatchdog.com/2017/09/07/patents-property-rights-history-lesson/id=87644/
Yam gonna be rich!!
The term "intellectual property" only came into fashion in the late 19th century. Before that, patents were simply known as monopolies. Every reference in the article you posted is from that period or later, except one reference from the evil John Marshall. Patents, as we know them, were established first by the English Statute of Monopolies in 1624. The reference in the US Constitution is just an incorporation of that legal doctrine.
And a deeply evil man because of it.
Perhaps you are as unfamiliar with Hamilton as you are with the Constitution's protection of patents and copyrights:
I doubt you even know the difference between a patent and a copyright. You clearly don't understand that they are both just government created monopolies.
And you haven't answered my question. Why, if patents are property, do patents expire?
Bttt
It should be congresses priority to correct this.
Not much incentive to invent things if some administrative court can facilitate the theft of your intellectual property.
"Fat, drunk and stupid is no way for you to go through life"- Dean Wormer
"And you haven't answered my question. Why, if patents are property, do patents expire?"
Because patents aren't charters.
Those with knowledge of the history of patents, (quite evidently "not you"), know that in medieval Europe where the concepts developed, that there was a distinction between "charters" which were perennial rights and "patents" which were rights of finite duration.
Since we have finite rights to our inventions we deal in patents and not charters. If we had an office granting perpetual rights to inventions then it would be "The US Charter and Trademark Office" rather than the USPTO.
The patent term of 20 years, like patents themselves,derives from medieval practice and mirrors the expected working career of a craftsman in the medieval guilds. The first recorded modern patent for an invention was a barge fitted with a hoist for moving marble slabs. Florence, 1421.
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