Judges Get Creative as Patent Jury Trials Resume Next Month
Plexiglass, larger deliberation rooms and physically distant seating are some of the safety solutions coming online in the heavy patent dockets of Texas and California. In New York, a judge is mulling a hybrid virtual/in-person bench trial.
May 21, 2020 at 05:26 PM
10 minute read
Update: The Northern District of California announced Thursday that all civil jury trials will be postponed until October. On the same day U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman set a May 26 case management conference in Finjan v. Cisco, presumably to set a new trial date.
Patent trials are ramping back up as federal courts take the first steps toward fully reopening their doors.
Jury trials are scheduled to get under way during the next six weeks in at least the Eastern and Western districts of Texas and the Northern District of California. And a bench trial that's part in-person, part virtual is under consideration in the Southern District of New York.
Judges are getting creative about ways to make participants, especially jurors, feel safe. U.S. District Judge Beth Labson Freeman of the Northern District of California, who has set a June 22 trial date for Finjan v. Cisco Systems, plans to utilize the San Jose courthouse's large ceremonial courtroom. She's using tape to indicate where participants can safely stand and sit. And she'll send jurors to an empty courtroom during breaks and deliberations, where they can maintain more space than in a traditional jury room.
"Judge Freeman has clearly put a lot of thought into it," said Fish & Richardson partner Juanita Brooks, who is part of Finjan's trial team.
Western District of Texas Judge Alan Albright said he's blessed with a large courtroom and jury box in his courtroom in Waco, Texas, where trial in MV3 Partners v. Roku is scheduled to begin June 29. Because the jury room is small, deliberations will instead be held in the basketball-court-sized jury assembly room, "so they would be able to self-space however they want to," Albright said.
Albright said he and Freeman recently spent an hour on the phone brainstorming ideas, and he fully intends to debrief with U.S. District Chief Judge Rodney Gilstrap of the Eastern District of Texas, who is scheduled to start a patent trial earlier in June.
"I think at some point we do need to get back to trials," said Albright, who noted that patents are a depreciating asset. "The only way for each region of the country to know that it's ready is to do it."
Not every region is ready. The Southern District of New York has suspended jury trials indefinitely. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has extended the state's stay-at-home order to June 13, and SDNY's standing order on operations notes that at least four weeks will likely be required to assemble a jury venire panel.
Still, SDNY Chief Judge Colleen McMahon is pressing ahead with a bench trial in the patent infringement case Ferring Pharmaceuticals v. Serenity Pharmaceuticals that's set to start July 6. In a telephonic hearing Wednesday, she explored the idea of a hybrid trial, part held in court, and part virtually. "I'm willing to hear from people remotely. If people want to take advantage of that, feel free," McMahon said. "If witnesses want to be in the courtroom, they will be testifying behind a plexiglass shield. They will be protected. We will have all manner of remote seating, and cleaning agents, and new protocols and procedures." She expects at least one lawyer from each side to be present in court.
Skiermont Derby's Paul Skiermont, who represents Serenity Pharmaceuticals LLC, said that after talking with a technology provider, he believes that once you start down the remote route, it's best to go 100% remote.
But Womble Bond Dickinson partner Mary Bourke, who represents Ferring Pharmaceuticals Inc., said she'd spoken with a trial coordinator and a graphics "hot seat" person who are willing to come to the courtroom. "The preference for us would be in the courtroom with the trial coordinator, with the trial graphics, such that when these glitches occur … we have the technical support there to assist us," she said.
It wouldn't be the country's first virtual patent trial. U.S. District Judge Henry Coke Morgan is currently presiding over a virtual bench trial by Zoom in an Eastern District of Virginia patent case. And U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers of the Northern District of California just conducted a virtual Markman claim construction hearing by Zoom on May 15.
"Overall, it was a real positive experience," said Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman partner David Jakopin, who represented SiTime Corp. in the Markman hearing. "It'll be interesting to see how other Markmans later evolve. I think we're in this for awhile."
It appears safe to say that each judge and each district court are going to operate at their own pace. "The judges take personal pride in the management and running of their courts," said Dechert partner Katherine Helm, a former law clerk for the Northern District of California. Some are proceeding extra cautiously, while others seem eager to develop best practices.
In Waco, MV3 v. Roku had been scheduled for trial June 1, but Albright continued it to June 29 after the Western District of Texas postponed all trials through the end of May. MV3 alleges that it invented a novel set top box that enables the provisioning of both broadcast and internet content for display on a large television screen. MV3 is represented by Kasowitz Benson Torres; Mandel, Tindel & Thompson; and Haley & Olson. Roku is represented by Oblon, McClelland, Maier & Neustadt and three other firms.
Albright said the court has arranged for extra cleaning of the courtroom and the jury assembly room and has consulted with Waco's mayor and other other officials with the aim of ensuring that participants don't interact any more closely with each other than they would if shopping for groceries or attending church services under current guidelines. The court will limit prospective jurors to four per gallery bench, which will allow for 48 to be questioned while maintaining physical distance.
Attorneys will be required to maintain distance at counsel's table too. Albright intends to limit each side to two lawyers, plus possibly one corporate representative. He's scheduled 15 hours aside for the one-patent trial, a couple of hours more than he would normally allot, because he knows there are bound to be unexpected issues. While he hates to sacrifice efficiency, "making sure we get it right" is paramount, Albright said.
All of that work could end up being for naught. The Patent Trial and Appeal Board launched an administrative review of MV3′s patent last July. The board found a reasonable likelihood that 55 of 61 challenged claims are obvious in light of a similar 2007 patent. The board has scheduled oral arguments for May 26 and has said it intends to issue a final written decision by July 16.
In San Jose, Finjan Inc. is suing Cisco Systems Inc. over five anti-malware patents after a 20-year partnership between the companies went sour. Beginning in the late 1990s Cisco incorporated Finjan's technology and invested in the company, at one point holding a 7.5% stake and a non-voting seat on Finjan's board. But the parties fell out in 2013 once Finjan began focusing more on patent assertion and Cisco acquired Sourcefire and incorporated Sourcefire's technology into its security products.
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