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Kimble v. Marvel: Contract Provisions That Run Royalties Beyond Patent’s Term

By on July 7, 2015 in Contracts, Intellectual Property

U.S. Supreme CourtDLA Piper has published a paper about the Supreme Court’s ruling upholding a long-standing precedent that restricts the ability of a patent holder to charge a royalty beyond the term of a patent. In a 6-3 decision, the court in Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment declined to overrule Brulotte v. Thys Co., a 1964 decision in which the Court ruled that an obligation to pay royalties for use beyond the expiration of the patent was unenforceable.

“The Court acknowledged that Brulotte restricts a patentee’s and an accused infringer’s right to freely contract to a royalty that runs beyond the patent’s term and noted that extending the term of the patent, in some circumstances, ‘may better allocate the risks and rewards associated with commercializing inventions,’ ” the paper explains.

Kimble turns on the principle of stare decisis.

Read the article.

 

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