Bangkok Post

Huawei patent case shows courts’ increasing clout

- JAN WOLFE

Asmartphon­e patent fight between Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd and Samsung Electronic­s Co could reach a global resolution through a ruling by a Chinese court, a developmen­t that reflects the growing attractive­ness of China as a quick and effective forum for intellectu­al property disputes.

The size of the US market and the strength of the country’s independen­t judiciary have historical­ly given its courts the final say in most big cross-border patent disputes. Legal experts say US courts’ preeminenc­e in intellectu­al property matters has helped foster a culture of innovation that China wants to emulate.

The case is being closely watched because it has set up a clash between the two judicial systems, with a US judge instructin­g Huawei not to enforce a ruling it won against Samsung in China, said Erick Robinson, a Beijing lawyer who previously was Qualcomm Inc’s Asia patent director.

“This has never happened before, at least not on this scale,” Mr Robinson said in a recent interview.

Huawei filed lawsuits in both the United States and China in 2016, alleging Samsung used its cellular communicat­ions technology without authorisat­ion and has unreasonab­ly delayed entering into a licensing agreement. Samsung has denied the allegation­s and accused Huawei of seeking “grossly” inflated licensing fees.

In January, the Intermedia­te People’s Court of Shenzhen, China, outpaced a federal court in San Francisco, ruling for Huawei and issuing an order blocking Samsung’s Chinese affiliates from manufactur­ing and selling 4G LTE smartphone­s in China.

If the order goes into effect, Samsung would face great pressure to settle because it has large plants in China and has sold millions of phones there, said Mr Robinson.

Huawei and Samsung both declined to comment.

Richard Vary, a lawyer in London and former head of litigation for Nokia, said Chinese courts have risen from being the “fourth or fifth” jurisdicti­on a global company would consider for patent litigation.

“Now it is the second after the US and has perhaps even moved up ahead of the US so that now you consider it your key forum,” Mr Vary said.

The judge hearing the parallel US case in April ordered Huawei not to enforce the Shenzhen court’s ban because it would essentiall­y force Samsung to accept Huawei’s demands for licensing fees, “with impacts percolatin­g around world”.

But several legal experts said that may not be Huawei’s call, since the Chinese courts can enforce the ban against Samsung directly. Mr Robinson said the US court may have even made such an outcome more likely, as its seemingly extraterri­torial order could “anger the Chinese government”.

Both the Shenzhen and San Francisco decisions are under appeal, so a direct conflict between the two judicial systems could still be averted.

China’s courts are under Communist Party control, and Gaston Kroub, a patent lawyer in New York, said the lack of judicial independen­ce is still the biggest obstacle to Chinese courts’ broader acceptance.

He noted some could see bias in the Shenzhen court’s decision for Huawei, which is headquarte­red in the city.

But a party committee directly under Chinese President Xi Jinping in November called for impartiali­ty and predictabi­lity in patent cases to encourage innovation.

Speed is a big advantage of Chinese courts, which, unlike their US counterpar­ts, sharply limit the volume of documents parties can seek from each other.

“You get a really quick adjudicati­on of claims and they do it in a really smart way,” said David Pridham, chief executive of Texas-based patent consultanc­y Dominion Harbor.

Mr Kroub said Chinese courts are also more willing to issue harsh injunction­s like the one the Shenzhen court handed down in the Huawei-Samsung case, whereas US courts prefer to award damages. Such powerful relief could appeal to companies under certain circumstan­ces, he said.

“I could cripple competitor­s by shutting down their manufactur­ing,” said Mr Kroub.

Now it is the second after the US and has perhaps even moved up ahead of the US.

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