A California court recently denied Finjan's motion for a preliminary injunction to prevent the alleged infringer, Blue Coat Systems, LLC, from selling its accused product before trial. Although Finjan was likely to prevail in its infringement suit, and although Finjan's licensees may have competed with Blue Coat, the court nevertheless found that Finjan was not entitled to a preliminary injunction because it failed to prove that it would suffer irreparable harm if Blue Coat were allowed to continue its activities. In particular, it found that harm to Finjan's licensees did not create irreparable harm to Finjan or justify Finjan's request for a preliminary injunction.
Finjan sought a preliminary injunction to prevent Blue Coat from making, using, selling, or importing its Internet security software before trial. Finjan, a company primarily engaged in the business of licensing its computer security patents, initially sued Blue Coat for patent infringement in 2013, and asserted numerous patents in a legal battle spanning years. During an earlier litigation, Finjan won a multimillion dollar judgement against Blue Coat, 60% of which related to infringement by the same accused Blue Coat product as in the present case.
Background
When issued by a court, preliminary injunctions prevent an accused infringer from performing infringing activities until a final judgment issues after trial. As such, they are considered "drastic or extraordinary" remedies "for preserving the status quo," preventing "irreparable loss of rights before the judgment." A party seeking a preliminary injunction must prove four elements: (1) that it is likely to succeed on the merits of the case; (2) that it is likely to suffer irreparable harm if the injunction is not granted; (3) that the balance of the hardships on the parties imposed by an injunction weighs in its favor; and (4) that an injunction is in the public interest.
Based on expert testimony and the judgment that Finjan won against Blue Coat during the previous litigation, Finjan argued it would likely win the current case against Blue Coat. Citing its own expert testimony, Blue Coat argued that Finjan would not win the case because its products did not infringe Finjan's patents, and because the asserted patent was probably invalid given that the USPTO had instituted IPR proceedings against it.
The parties also disagreed about whether Finjan would be irreparably harmed without a preliminary injunction. Finjan argued that its licensees directly competed with Blue Coat, and that by not taking a license, Blue Coat was decreasing the value of Finjan's patents. Blue Coat argued that any harm caused to Finjan's licensees did not constitute irreparable harm to Finjan itself.
Order
1. Likelihood of Success on the Merits
As to whether Finjan would succeed in the suit against Blue Coat,
the court found that that there was a "high likelihood"
that Finjan would prevail in demonstrating infringement of at least
one asserted patent claim. The court observed that the asserted
claims were similar to claims that Finjan had already proven Blue
Coat infringed in the earlier litigation, and that Finjan would
likely succeed in proving infringement a second time. The court
also determined that Blue Coat was unlikely to successfully show
that the asserted patent was invalid.
2. No Irreparable Harm
But as to the second factor, the court found that Finjan would not
likely suffer irreparable harm without an injunction. Finjan
asserted several theories of irreparable harm, including that the
parties are both direct and indirect competitors in the mobile
security software market, as well as that Blue Coat's
infringement harmed its goodwill and reputation in the
industry.
a. Not Direct Competitors in the Industry
The court first found that the parties are not direct competitors
in the mobile security software industry because Finjan's
software was a free mobile app for consumers while Blue Coat's
software was sold to enterprise customers who purchased its product
suite. The court observed that the parties' products "seem
to operate in different segments of the market," and noted
that there was no evidence that Finjan's software had lost any
market share because of the customers' choice to install Blue
Coat's product over its own.
b. Not Direct Competitors as Technology Licensors
The court also found that the parties were not in direct
competition as technology licensors, because Blue Coat sold
licenses to its anti-malware engines, while Finjan sold licenses to
its patents. The court observed that Finjan presented no evidence
that any prospective licensees declined to license its patents
because they licensed Blue Coat's services instead.
c. Indirect Competitors Through Their Licensees but No
Direct Harm
The court agreed that the parties were indirect competitors through
Finjan's licensees, but found that Finjan failed to show that
it stood to suffer immediate irreparable harm. The court emphasized
that its analysis turned on whether Finjan itself would suffer
harm, and stated that whether Finjan's licensees would suffer
harm was not relevant to the inquiry. Although Finjan could suffer
harm based on the impact of Blue Coat's alleged infringement on
its licensees, the court concluded that Finjan failed to offer
specific evidence showing that the value of its patents declined as
a result of Blue Coat's actions, despite Finjan's argument
that Blue Coat's infringement undermined the value of its
licenses.
d. Harm to Reputation and Goodwill is
Speculative
The court next found that the purported harm to Finjan's
reputation and goodwill as a result of infringement was
speculative, as Finjan provided no evidence that Blue Coat's
alleged misrepresentations actually hurt Finjan's reputation.
The court concluded that Finjan's arguments regarding
irreparable harm, taken together, did not justify the
"extraordinary relief" of a preliminary injunction.
e. History of Granting Non-Exclusive
Licenses
The court also found that other factors weighed against a finding
of irreparable harm. The court noted Finjan's long history of
granting non-exclusive licenses to its patents, including executing
licenses with 12 companies and entering into licensing discussions
with many more. The court concluded that these actions weighed
against a finding of irreparable harm, because Finjan had shown
itself willing to accept payment in exchange for not asserting its
exclusive rights under the patents. Thus, any injury caused by
infringement would be compensable in quantifiable damages, whereas
a preliminary injunction is better suited to situations where money
alone cannot make the plaintiff whole.
f. Delay in Moving for a Preliminary Injunction and Lack
of Causal Nexus
The court also noted Finjan's delay in moving for the
injunction. Finjan waited a year after it filed the suit to seek
the preliminary injunction, and such a delay weighed against a
finding of an immediate, irreparable injury. The court also found
that Finjan did not sufficiently demonstrate the required causal
nexus between the alleged harm and the alleged infringement, as it
did not link Blue Coat's accused product to the alleged
harm.
3. Balance of Hardships Favored Accused
Infringer
For the third factor of its analysis, the court held that the
balance of hardships caused by a preliminary injunction weighed in
Blue Coat's favor. The asserted patent was set to expire in two
months, so the harm that Finjan would suffer would simply be two
more months of patent infringement (when it had already waited a
year to seek the injunction). In contrast, the court noted that
Blue Coat could suffer substantial hardship due to the potential
disruption to its businesses if it were forced to comply with an
injunction.
4. No Public Interest in Injunction
For the fourth factor, the court determined that the public's
interest in an injunction did not affect the outcome of the case.
While the court recognized the public's interest in protecting
patent rights, it concluded that that interest alone did not
justify an injunction. The court also noted that the injunction
would take Blue Coat's product off the market, thereby slightly
harming the public by restricting consumer choice.
Strategy and Conclusion
This case illustrates that a party seeking a preliminary injunction must be prepared to provide concrete evidence that it would be irreparably harmed if the injunction is not granted, and that merely showing possible harm to licensees arising from indirect competition is insufficient. Generalized, speculative assertions of harm, without adequate supporting evidence, will likely not convince a court to issue a preliminary injunction.
Further Information
The Finjan decision can be found here.
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