[E-trademarks] For administrative law fans: an amicus brief
David Boundy
DavidBoundyEsq at gmail.com
Wed Nov 13 14:42:59 UTC 2024
Last week, I filed an amicus brief in *Apple v. Vidal* that might be
interesting to those of you that are interested in administrative law.
In 2018, Director Iancu tried to recalibrate standards for instituting IPRs
and PGRs by specifying factors for “discretionary denial” of institution. That
much is all well and good: agency heads can make rules like this to guide
the discretion of agency employees. The Administrative Procedure Act says
that the way to do that is to publish a notice in the Federal Register. 5
U.S.C. § 552(a). Other agencies issue this kind of guidance about 1000
times per year. But for some reason the PTO doesn’t want to do it that way.
(In the brief, I note that the effect is evasion of oversight under the
Paperwork Reduction Act, Regulatory Flexibility Act, and several executive
orders. Of course I have no knowledge of subjective intent. But the
effect smoke from the intent gun is pretty hard to miss.)
Instead, the PTO’s lawyers misled Director Iancu and advised him to invent
a non-statutory end run: PTAB “precedential decisions” with the Director
sitting as one APJ on the panel (the infamous “Precedential Opinion Panel”
or POP). In the very first such decision, I filed an amicus brief warning
that the PTAB was violating the law and building on a foundation of sand.
https://ssrn.com/abstract=3836861. Nonetheless, the PTAB ignored me and
went ahead with its illegal extrastatutory creation.
The most controversial of POP decisions has been *Apple Inc. v. Fintiv Inc.*,
which sets forth factors to be considered in discretionary denials of IPRs
and PGRs. The big users of IPRs/PGRs—namely, the big techs and Unified
Patents—aren’t fans of anything that gets in the way of IPRs and PGRs. So,
unsurprisingly, they’ve been attacking *Fintiv* for years. They made
several false starts, challenging through paths of review that any
administrative law lawyer would have advised against. After wasted years
and millions of dollars, the big techs finally followed the proper path of
review, and the case is now at the Federal Circuit. And now they’re wrong
on the merits.
My brief explains that both the appellants and the PTO are half right and
100% wrong. My goal is to get the PTO to follow the same law that all
other agencies follow. For your reading delight, it’s at
https://ssrn.com/abstract=5016833
--
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*David Boundy *| Partner | Potomac Law Group, PLLC
P.O. Box 590638, Newton, MA 02459
Tel (646) 472-9737 | Fax: (202) 318-7707
*dboundy at potomaclaw.com <dboundy at potomaclaw.com>* | *www.potomaclaw.com
<http://www.potomaclaw.com>*
Articles at http://ssrn.com/author=2936470 <http://ssrn.com/author=2936470>
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