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Intellectual Property: Principles Governing Jurisdiction, Choice of Law, and Judgments in Transnational Disputes, © 2008 by The American Law Institute. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved.

 Intellectual Property: Principles Governing Jurisdiction, Choice of Law, and Judgments in Transnational Disputes— Copyright 2008 by The American Law Institute

Copyright 2008 by The American Law Institute. Reproduced with permission. All rights reserved.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY:

PRINCIPLES GOVERNING JURISDICTION, CHOICE OF LAW,

AND JUDGMENTS IN

TRANSNATIONAL DISPUTES

(with Comments and Reporters’ Notes)

Part II

JURISDICTION

Introductory Note:

This Part recommends bases of jurisdiction that are appropriate for transnational

intellectual property cases and that form a fair predicate for obliging a party to defend in the

forum. Chapter 1 deals with the court’s power over the litigants; Chapter 2 deals with the

court’s power over the subject matter, and Chapter 3 with the dispute as a whole. In offering

rules that can be invoked by lawyers and applied by courts from both civil- and common-law

traditions, the Principles employ terminology chosen to be generally comprehensible,

regardless of the jurist’s national legal tradition. As a result, the Principles forgo certain terms

of art, well known in one system, but unfamiliar to the other, in favor of expressions intended

to be sufficiently descriptive of the concepts conveyed. The Principles do not set out generally

accepted rules of due process; it is assumed that the forum’s law regarding such matters as

notice and opportunity to be heard will conform to international standards. If in any particular

case the rendering court’s procedures were not compatible with fundamental principles of

fairness, that judgment will not be recognized or enforced. See § 403(1).

The issues covered in Chapters 1 and 2 must be evaluated separately. For example,

authority over the litigant is generally dependent on, and proportionate to, the nature of the

litigant’s activities. However, no matter how broad that power is, the court must also have

authority over the subject matter of the dispute. At the same time, the court’s power over the

subject matter does not confer jurisdiction over the parties. These Chapters do not purport to

include all the bases of authority that are currently recognized. Thus, there will be situations

where the Principles consider it inappropriate to resolve a transnational dispute in a court that

has authority to do so under its own domestic law. In such situations, the parties may proceed

at their own risk, for the Principles will not support (or, indeed, may prohibit) the enforcement

of the resulting judgment; see Part IV. Conversely, the Principles do not adopt all of the limits

that a State may impose on its courts’ assertions of adjudicatory authority. Thus, there will be

situations where domestic law does not permit a court to adjudicate a dispute in the manner

envisioned by the Principles. If States come to appreciate the efficiency and fairness values

that underlie the Principles, they might consider expanding the scope of their courts’ authority

to adjudicate multiterritorial claims.

Chapter 3 is designed for disputes that would otherwise be subject to piecemeal

adjudication in more than one State. The overarching goal is to make litigation more

economical and substantively fair. Courts have sometimes attempted to streamline litigation

by applying local law to extraterritorial events. The Principles reject that approach, see Part

III. Instead, they aim to create efficiency through coordinated adjudication, thereby allowing

local law to govern when that is appropriate. The Principles achieve efficiency by combining

civil-law and common-law approaches. The civil-law tradition, codified in lis pendens rules,

is to prevent parallel litigation by channeling disputes to the court first seized. That court has

no (or little) authority to refuse to entertain the suit; conversely, other courts have no authority

to hear a case presenting the same claims. In common-law jurisdictions, the doctrine of forum

non conveniens also serves a channeling role: it gives a court power to stay (or dismiss)

proceedings on the ground that the court is not appropriate, and that a better forum exists

elsewhere.

The Principles combine these two approaches as follows. In most instances, the court

first seized has the primacy accorded by the lis pendens doctrine (§ 221), here called

“coordination” authority. Courts entertaining related disputes must dismiss (or stay) their

cases in favor of this forum. However, the primacy of the court first seized starts as

administrative primacy. Thus, the court’s first task is to decide whether the cases should be

streamlined through cooperation or consolidation. If the latter, then the court must, in a

manner akin to forum non conveniens determinations, decide the appropriate court to hear the

consolidated case (§ 222). Once that court is determined, other courts stay their proceedings

while the parties proceed in the forum chosen by the court first seized (§ 223). After the case

is resolved in that court, any court that has stayed its proceedings would then dismiss the

action. If, however, the case is not prosecuted within a reasonable time, the stay should be

lifted.

Illustrative Overview:

JCo, a Japanese company, develops a program that allows computer owners to share

digitized movie files with their peers. The program can be downloaded for free from JCo’s

Japanese-language website; JCo makes its money by selling various informational products.

JCo then enters into a licensing agreement with USCo, whereby USCo is permitted to offer

JCo’s shareware at its English-language website, along with informational products. The

companies agree to take reasonable steps to avoid selling informational products in one

another’s markets. Similar agreements are made with ICo. an Indian company, covering the

market for Indian products, and a German firm, GCo, for Europe.

Knowing that it and its business partners are likely to be sued by MajorMovieCo, a

worldwide film producer with its seat in the United States, JCo brings an action against

MajorMovieCo in Freedonia, where MajorMovieCo regularly films and markets movies. JCo

asks for a declaration that it is not liable on any theory of copyright infringement anywhere.

Knowing that Freedonia’s courts are extremely slow to act and that the State does not

recognize claims for contributory or vicarious copyright infringement, MajorMovie

Co brings its own series of infringement actions: first, against JCo in Japan, then against each

of JCo’s business partners in the United States, India, and Germany, asserting against each

defendant rights under the relevant copyright laws of every nation where files are

downloaded. MajorMovieCo would like to coordinate all of these actions in a single court.

Under the Principles, each court would determine its adjudicatory authority over the

parties (§§ 201-207) and its power over the dispute (§§ 211-214). The “court first seized”

under these Principles will determine how the global dispute should be adjudicated (§ 221). It

would decide whether efficiencies could be gained through coordinated adjudication and

whether these efficiencies would best be captured through cooperation or consolidation. If

consolidation is the option chosen, it would also pick the court to hear the case (§ 222). Other

courts would then stay their actions (§ 223).

Jurisdiction. The courts in the State where each defendant operates have personal

jurisdiction over that defendant (§ 201). As an initial matter, it may appear that because each

defendant took reasonable steps to leave its partners’ markets alone, only Japan has

jurisdiction over JCo, only India has jurisdiction over ICo, etc. However, because each of the

countries where MajorMovieCo has sued is the residence of one of the defendants, § 206 is

available to expand personal jurisdiction over the others. This is a situation where there is a

risk of inconsistency as to whether file-sharing is permissible on the Internet, and whether

there is, through JCo., a relationship among the parties. And because JCo’s and

MajorMovieCo’s territorial copyright claims are all considered part of the series of

transactions in which the various companies are engaged, it is likely that under its domestic

law, the court chosen would have subject-matter jurisdiction over all territorial claims.

Coordination. At first blush, it may appear that coordination decisions should be made

by the Freedonian court because the first action was brought there. However, that action there

sought a declaration of nonliability. Thus, under § 213(4), authority to coordinate does not

attach. For these purposes, the Japanese court was the one “first seized” under § 221(5). The

Japanese court would then determine, under the criteria set out in § 222, whether worldwide

claims should be handled through cooperation or consolidated. If each cooperating court is in

a State where an infringement has occurred, then cooperation would allow each court to apply

its own law (see § 301), but acquiring and taking of evidence might be streamlined. In this

case, however, consolidation is likely the better course because it would promote efficiency

and avoid inconsistency. The State with the closest connection to the dispute is either Japan,

where the activity was initiated, or the United States, which is likely the State of title of most

of the works about which MajorMovieCo is concerned. The courts in either State are

acceptable under

§ 222(4)(f) because they have procedures consistent with international norms as evidenced by

the States’ common membership in the WTO. The ultimate choice may depend on whether

there are novel issues (such as the law on contributory and vicarious liability) at stake.

Once a court is chosen to hear the global dispute, other courts can dismiss or stay

proceedings, but may—if consistent with the forum State’s law—require the parties to post

bonds (§ 223(3)). However, if any of the courts finds provisional relief is appropriate, it may

order such relief against defendants that are subject to its authority

(§ 214). If the case is not prosecuted in a timely manner, courts that ordered stays may lift

them and proceed to adjudicate their cases (§ 223(4)).

Admittedly, coordination can create new opportunities for dilatory practice. But it also

brings the parties together and hence may promote settlement.

REPORTERS’ NOTES

1. Utility of coordination. The intellectual property community has developed

considerable interest in finding ways to streamline litigation of multijurisdictional

infringements. The AIPPI Resolution on Question Q174 notes that “[i]n a world where

business is global,” means are needed to enforce intellectual property judgments on a

multinational basis. Although this Project differs from the AIPPI’s vision of new

international, bilateral, and multinational agreements, the approach taken is similar. It creates

a method of coordinating parallel actions, either through cooperation among courts seized, or

by consolidating parallel actions in a single court—in many instances, the court of a State in

which the defendant has acted—and giving that court authority to issue judgments, based on

the law of other territories, that would (absent public-policy considerations) be binding and

enforceable in other territories’ courts. Cf. Mattel Inc. v. Woolbro (Distributors) Ltd., HC-03

No. CO2684 (Oct. 23, 2003) (consolidating European Community design-right claims); Coral

Corp. K.K. (Kabushiki Kaisha) v. Marine Bio K.K. (Tokyo D. Ct. Oct. 16, 2003)

(consolidating a U.S. patent claim with Japanese patent claims). See also International Law

Association Committee on International Civil and Commercial Litigation, Third Interim

Report on Declining and Referring Jurisdiction in International Litigation, 24-35 (2000),

available at http://www.ila-hq.org/pdf/Civil%20&%20Commercial%20Litigation/Comm

Litigation.pdf (last visited Jan. 3, 2008) (describing “new solutions” to parallel litigation).

2. Tendencies in U.S. courts to expand the reach of domestic laws to cover foreign

infringements. No single jurisdiction is likely to write law that expressly deals with

multinational disputes; however, courts have shown considerable temptation to apply their

domestic law extraterritorially; see, e.g., AT & T Corp. v. Microsoft Corp., 414 F.3d 1366

(Fed. Cir. 2005) (applying U.S. patent law to the transfer of software onto foreign-assembled

computers from “golden master” disks or electronic transmissions originating in the United

States), rev’d, 127 S. Ct. 1746 (2007); Los Angeles News Service v. Reuters Television

International Ltd., 340 F.3d 926 (9th Cir. 2003) (applying U.S. law to communication

overseas of videotaped news event when the initial communication was made within the

United States); Update Art, Inc. v. Modiin Pub’g, Ltd., 843 F.2d 67, 73 (2d Cir. 1988)

(applying U.S. copyright law to infringements in Israel that resulted from an initial

reproduction of the work in the United States). However, although the Supreme Court of the

United States started the trend in Steele v. Bulova Watch Co., 344 U.S. 280 (1952), it

subsequently expressed considerable unease with that approach, stating that statutes should be

construed so that “conflicting laws of different nations work together in harmony—a harmony

particularly needed in today’s highly interdependent commercial world.” F. Hoffmann-La

Roche Ltd. v. Empagran S.A., 542 U.S. 155, 164-165 (2004). Coordination provides an

important way for international law to evolve in a manner that better accommodates

worldwide interests. See generally Graeme B. Dinwoodie, A New Copyright Order: Why

National Courts Should Create Global Norms, 149 U. Pa. L. Rev. 469 (2000).

3. Illustrative Overview. The illustration is loosely based on the facts described in

Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd., 125 S. Ct. 2764 (2005). A similar case

in Japan involved the File Rogue program, which was held to violate Japanese copyright laws.

For a description of the case, see Japanese ‘Napster’ Shut Down, available at

http://www.p2pnet.net/story/403 (last visited Jan. 3, 2008).

4. Analogous projects. Insolvency is another area where considerations of efficiency

and fairness may militate in favor of developing an international mechanism to consolidate

dispute resolution. The ALI’s Transnational Insolvency volume, Principles of Cooperation

Among the NAFTA Countries (hereinafter Transnational Insolvency Principles), attempts to

develop such a method for managing bankruptcy within NAFTA countries; UNCITRAL has

promulgated a Model Insolvency Law with some of the same goals in mind. See UNCITRAL

Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency available at

http://www.uncitral.org/pdf/english/texts/insolven/insolvency-e.pdf (last visited Jan. 3, 2008).

See generally Jay Lawrence Westbrook, International Judicial Negotiation, 38 Tex. Int’l L.J.

567 (2003). Such projects have been criticized on the grounds that it will be difficult for a

court in one jurisdiction to assert adjudicatory authority over creditors and assets in other

locations; that the “wholesale” effects of bankruptcy will interfere too severely with the

authority of foreign sovereigns to impose their own preferences among local creditors; and

that each nation’s desire to protect local creditors will trap all relevant States in unproductive

prisoners’ dilemmas; see Frederick Tung, Is International Bankruptcy Possible?, 23 Mich. J.

Int’l L. 31 (2001). Most of these problems are either not present or less significant in the

intellectual property context. The parties over whom jurisdiction is needed have engaged in

voluntary association with the forum or its intellectual property. Further, because of existing

international agreements on intellectual property, national approaches to intellectual property

rights may be closer than are approaches to insolvency.