The Hindu (Kolkata)

The judiciary’s shadow over standard essential patents

- Prashant Reddy T.

here is a possible crisis brewing in India over the manner in which certain technology companies are wielding ‘standard essential patents’ (SEP) against the telecom manufactur­ing sector in India. This is a complex policy issue which has direct ramication­s for India’s e„ort to build a domestic manufactur­ing industry for cellular phones. So far, the issues of regulating SEPs have been left to the judiciary, which, as an institutio­n, has mostly missed the ball.

To begin with, it is important to understand the importance of SEPs. These are patents that cover technologi­es which are adopted by the industry as “standards”. For example, technologi­es such as CDMA, GSM, LTE are all industry standards in the telecom sector. Such technologi­cal standards are especially important to ensure interopera­bility of di„erent brands of cellular phones manufactur­ed by di„erent companies. For example, once GSM was adopted as a standard, all manufactur­ers had to ensure that the handsets that they manufactur­ed were compatible with GSM. Otherwise there would be no demand for their phones.

TOpaque model

The process of setting standards in the technology sector is largely privatised and dominated by “standard setting organisati­ons” (SSOs) run largely by private technology companies. Countries such as India with little innovation in the telecom sector, have very little in¥uence over how standards are set or how SEPs are licensed.

Theoretica­lly, the companies which own the SEPs, gain enormously because every manufactur­er of cellular phones has to licence the technologi­cal standards in question in order to survive in the market. The lack of alternativ­es also means that owners of SEPs can demand extortiona­ry royalties or licensing terms from manufactur­ers that block competitio­n. In economics, this is called the “patent holdup” problem. In theory, the SSOs are supposed to prevent such a scenario by requiring the owners of SEPs to licence their technologi­es at a fair, reasonable and non-discrimina­tory (FRAND) rate.

In practice, this model of self-regulation by the technology industry has been marked with opacity and has failed rather spectacula­rly, as evidenced by the record nes that some of these SEP owners have had to cough up across the world for engaging in anti-competitiv­e practices. The largest of these SEP owners, Qualcomm, has been ned $975 million by China (2015), $873 million by South Korea (2017), $774 million by is the co-author of ‘Create, Copy, Disrupt: India’s Intellectu­al Property Dilemmas’ (2017)

Taiwan (2017) and $1.2 billion (2018) and another $272 million (2019) by the Europe Commission. Not all these nes have been sustained on appeal but are a useful indicator of how other countries have responded to the issue from a competitio­n law perspectiv­e.

The e ect of judicial lethargy and activism The Indian response to the issue has been characteri­sed by both judicial lethargy and judicial activism at the Delhi High Court. This may seem contradict­ory but a few facts will help explain how India landed in this situation.

In 2013, the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI), acting on a complaint by Micromax began an investigat­ion under the Competitio­n Act into the issue of whether Ericsson abused its dominant position by demanding extortiona­te royalties for its SEPs. Ericsson challenged the power of the CCI to do so, before the Delhi High Court, on the grounds that the Patents Act vested the power to remedy an abuse of patents only with the Patent O–ce.

The rst round of litigation was resolved in favour of the CCI by a single judge on March 30, 2016. Ericsson then challenged this decision before the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court, where it remained pending for an astounding seven years until a judgment was delivered against the CCI on July 13, 2023. The

CCI has appealed against this decision to the Supreme Court of India, where the matter remains pending. As a result, India is the only major economy to not yet investigat­e the potentiall­y abusive licensing practices of technology companies that own SEPs.

While the competitio­n law issues remained mired in litigation, the Delhi High Court proceeded to hear lawsuits led by Ericsson and other SEPs owners against manufactur­ers of cellular phones on the question of whether the latter were infringing SEPs owned by the former and whether damages were payable. Ideally the infringeme­nt lawsuits should have been stayed until the competitio­n law issues were resolved. The ordinary course of such litigation in most countries is for the courts to conduct a trial on the validity of the patents, whether there has been infringeme­nt and, if so, the damages payable. These trials are complex and can take time. For example, one of the early lawsuits led by Ericsson against Lava Internatio­nal took eight years to be decided in a remarkable judgment, running into 500 pages, and delivered by Justice Amit Bansal of the Delhi High Court, recently.

The problem, however, is the manner in which Delhi High Court has granted “interim” remedies pending the conclusion of these long-winded trials. For the last decade, the Delhi High Court has short circuited the entire process by granting a series of orders requiring manufactur­ers, many of them Indian companies, to “deposit” money with the court in order to continue manufactur­ing during the pendency of the trial.

Such “deposit” orders, often running into crores of rupees, before trial, are unpreceden­ted in the history of commercial law for the simple reason that there is no provision in the law granting judges such powers. In addition to being unpreceden­ted, these orders are also unfair to defendants because they deprive them of working capital (which is very expensive in India) for the entire duration of the trial (which can take up to eight years).

Yet, such judicial activism has been justied by the Delhi High Court by invoking its “inherent powers to do justice”. Such similar logic has been used in the past by the judiciary to justify activist measures such as “public interest litigation”. That the same argument has been used to justify activism in the name of the oppressed and also in the name of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns demonstrat­es how specious an argument it was in the rst place.

This judicial activism combined with judicial delays will have a negative impact on the government’s attempt to attract more investment in the manufactur­ing sector. These measures, by government, have included payouts to manufactur­ers under the “production linked incentives” scheme for manufactur­ing in India. It is worth questionin­g the rationale of putting money in the pockets of manufactur­ers, while turning a Nelson’s eye to the manner and the amount of money that is being removed from the same pockets by the owners of SEPs. More pertinentl­y, unlike manufactur­ers who are investing in India to create jobs, the owners of SEPs are only taking their money out of the country.

The government must put in place measures to regulate standard essential patents before the judiciary causes further damage to India’s manufactur­ing dreams

The case of Europe

It is time for the Indian government to intervene and put in place measures to regulate SEPs before the judiciary causes further damage to India’s manufactur­ing dreams. India will not be an outlier if it intervenes. The European Parliament has already enacted one such set of measures to regulate SEPs. India, arguably, has a much stronger case to push for similar, if not stronger regulatory measures, since it has no say in how SEPs are selected by SSOs, while also being compelled by internatio­nal agreements to enforce patents of foreign technology companies.

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