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  <history>
    <transcribed>2006-03-29</transcribed>
  </history>
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    <speaker id="stephen_g_breyer" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/stephen_g_breyer" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/stephen_g_breyer">Stephen G. Breyer</speaker>
    <speaker id="sandra_day_oconnor" type="justice" gender="female" path="/justices/sandra_day_oconnor" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/sandra_day_oconnor">Sandra Day O'Connor</speaker>
    <speaker id="ruth_bader_ginsburg" type="justice" gender="female" path="/justices/ruth_bader_ginsburg" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/ruth_bader_ginsburg">Ruth Bader Ginsburg</speaker>
    <speaker id="anthony_kennedy" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/anthony_kennedy" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/anthony_kennedy">Anthony M. Kennedy</speaker>
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    <speaker id="antonin_scalia" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/antonin_scalia" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/antonin_scalia">Antonin Scalia</speaker>
    <speaker id="david_h_souter" type="justice" gender="male" path="/justices/david_h_souter" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/justices/david_h_souter">David H. Souter</speaker>
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    <speaker id="unknown" type="other" gender="male" path="/others/default" image="/others/default/default-60.jpg">Unknown Speaker</speaker>
    <speaker id="carter_g_phillips" type="advocate" gender="male" path="/advocates/p/c/carter_g_phillips" image="/thumbnails/transcript_thumbnail/advocates/p/c/carter_g_phillips">Carter G. Phillips</speaker>
    <speaker id="jeffrey_p_minear" type="advocate" gender="male" path="/advocates/m/j/jeffrey_p_minear" image="/others/male7/male7-60.jpg">Jeffrey P. Minear</speaker>
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  <episode startTime="0.000" stopTime="1588.532">
    <title>eBay v. MercExchange (No. 05-130) - Oral Argument</title>
    <section startTime="0.000" stopTime="1460.016">
      <heading>Argument of Carter G. Phillips</heading>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="0.000" stopTime="6.401">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="0.000">We'll hear argument next in eBay v. MercExchange.</text>
        <text syncTime="4.218">Mr. Phillips.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="6.401" stopTime="76.646">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="6.401">Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court--</text>
        <text syncTime="9.251">The fundamental question that's posed in this particular case is whether or not the court of appeals by adopting a rule that declares categorically that three out of the four traditional factors for deciding whether or not to grant permanent injunctive relief will be irrebuttably presumed to be satisfied whenever a jury has found that a patent is valid and has been infringed.</text>
        <text syncTime="33.134">The rule in the Federal Circuit for at least 20 years has been that if you have validity and infringement decided by the jury, that then there is irrebuttable finding of... of irreparable injury, of inadequate remedy at law, and that the balance of harms decidedly favors the plaintiff, and that the only issue that remains available to the defendant in that circumstance is a heightened scrutiny on the standard of whether or not the... the public interest commands that an injunction be denied in a particular case.</text>
        <text syncTime="64.238">And even in that context, the Federal Circuit's rule is extraordinarily stringent because not just any public interest can... will satisfy, but instead, it has to be a public interest that endangers the public health.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="76.646" stopTime="82.231">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="76.646">Is that all in Judge Bryson's decision?</text>
        <text syncTime="80.181">I certainly didn't see it there.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="82.231" stopTime="106.165">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="82.231">That... that is precise... I think it's the only way to read Judge Bryson's decision, Justice Ginsburg, where the court says, at page 26a, that a permanent injunction will issue once infringement and validity have been adjudged, and then say, to be sure, it will not be so to protect the public interest.</text>
        <text syncTime="100.627">And we all know the traditional rule with respect to the grant of injunctive relief is that it's a four factor test.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="106.165" stopTime="108.731">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="106.165">I didn't see anything about irrebuttable presumption.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="108.731" stopTime="193.820">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="108.731">Well, the point is that if an injunction follows with a finding of... of validity and infringement, then that means that there has to be... there has to be irreparable injury, inadequate remedy at law, and that the balance of hardships has to tilt in... in favor of the plaintiff.</text>
        <text syncTime="124.460">And then the only issue that remains is whether or not the public interest justifies not granting an injunction under the circumstances of this case.</text>
        <text syncTime="132.630">It seems to me there's no other way to read that.</text>
        <text syncTime="134.566">And if you read it in the context of the... of the previous 20 years of decisions from the Federal Circuit, it is absolutely clear.</text>
        <text syncTime="140.386">We don't have the opportunity to come back as a defendant in an infringement action and say, Your Honor, in the specific facts of this case, this is someone for whom money damages is a completely adequate remedy.</text>
        <text syncTime="152.860">And... and it seems to me quite clear that section 283 is designed to be exactly the opposite of the way the Federal Circuit has interpreted this... this scheme.</text>
        <text syncTime="163.501">Section 283 says explicitly... and this is at page 1 of the blue brief... district courts, quote, may... not shall... grant injunctions in accordance with principles of equity.</text>
        <text syncTime="173.441">And principles of equity, as Justice Story said almost 200 years ago, systematically reject the idea that you will act on a categorical basis in deciding whether or not to grant or withdraw the injunctive relief in... in particular circumstances.</text>
        <text syncTime="190.402">And to the contrary, you have to look at each specific issue.</text>
        <text syncTime="193.020">And in that regard--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="193.820" stopTime="237.983">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="193.820">Is... is that so with... with respect to someone else's use of... of your property?</text>
        <text syncTime="202.893">It seems to me very rare where... where someone takes your property, that the court wouldn't... wouldn't give you the property back and... and simply say, you know... I can think of a few extraordinary examples.</text>
        <text syncTime="216.803">If somebody makes a statue out of stolen gold, you know, the... the old classic, I guess you'd get the money back.</text>
        <text syncTime="225.076">But ordinarily we're talking about a property right here, and... and the property right is... is explicitly the right to exclude others from... from use of that.</text>
        <text syncTime="234.181">That's what the patent right is.</text>
        <text syncTime="235.714">And all he's asking for is give me my property back.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="237.983" stopTime="303.342">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="237.983">--Right.</text>
        <text syncTime="238.366">And... and Congress already made the... the balance, Justice Scalia, with respect to that because Congress obviously identified the property right as the right to exclude.</text>
        <text syncTime="246.405">And then Congress did not confer upon the district courts no discretion to act in... in a situation where the property right has been violated.</text>
        <text syncTime="255.178">Instead, Congress expressly adopts in 283 a very broad grant of equitable discretion.</text>
        <text syncTime="260.999">To be sure, in the ordinary case, you... you very well may have irreparable injury proved, but the question is, do you... do you eliminate any inquiry and any specific facts of the case and instead not only presume it, which I think is a mistake, although the district court did that and found that in this case the presumption was rebutted, but to... but to say irrebuttably it's presumed that you have irreparable injury, irrebuttably presumed that you don't have an adequate remedy at law, and irrebuttably presume that the balance of equities tilt in favor of the plaintiff.</text>
        <text syncTime="291.851">And that, it seems to me, cannot be squared with the language of the statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="295.236">And, indeed, on that score, the United States sort of magically ends up on our side of the... of the table because the United States says the same thing.</text>
        <text syncTime="302.076">There is no way--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="stephen_g_breyer" startTime="303.342" stopTime="333.261">
        <label>Justice Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="303.342">On Justice Scalia's question, I was trying to think of some, and I was trying to think the analogy might... you might find some analogy in the public utilities field, the... or a ferris wheel or something.</text>
        <text syncTime="315.050">What you want is a person who uses his property not at all himself, but licensed the public generally.</text>
        <text syncTime="321.704">And now would a... would a court issue an injunction there?</text>
        <text syncTime="329.493">And as I think about that, I don't realize I don't know the answer.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="333.261" stopTime="338.246">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="333.261">--I don't know of any.</text>
        <text syncTime="334.128">I mean, I certainly wouldn't categorically declare that you have to I guess is the way I would respond to that.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="stephen_g_breyer" startTime="338.246" stopTime="346.686">
        <label>Justice Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="338.246">Yes, that's what... I mean, that... that's what you're trying to analogize this case to, I guess, is a person who licenses others to use his property and never uses it himself.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="346.686" stopTime="348.102">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="346.686">That's precisely what this case involves.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="stephen_g_breyer" startTime="348.102" stopTime="352.720">
        <label>Justice Breyer</label>
        <text syncTime="348.102">And there, I don't know how courts do normally act in other areas of property law.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="352.720" stopTime="392.694">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="352.720">Well, I don't know that there are a whole lot of them like that, but the one thing that... I mean, there are two things to think about the property concept in the statute.</text>
        <text syncTime="359.158">First of all, Congress does not declare that the property interest here is a real property interest, which traditionally has been protected differently.</text>
        <text syncTime="366.395">It's a personal property interest, which is traditionally given... accorded less protection under this kind of a scheme.</text>
        <text syncTime="373.482">And so there... and... and again, Congress in any event struck the balance.</text>
        <text syncTime="378.184">It didn't say, as it could have, that there is presumed... there's a presumption that we have an injunction.</text>
        <text syncTime="383.771">It didn't say, as it could have, that we shall have a... shall have either a presumption or an injunction in any particular case.</text>
        <text syncTime="391.194">And so under the statutory scheme here, it seems to--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="392.694" stopTime="412.239">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="392.694">Well, but... but the exercise of discretion is channeled over time, as... as judges apply it in... in similar cases.</text>
        <text syncTime="400.564">You're not suggesting that in a typical run of the mine patent case, no special considerations, it would be wrong to say that in those cases you typically would grant an injunction?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="412.239" stopTime="508.549">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="412.239">--I think in those cases, the irreparable injury and the inadequacy of the remedy at law will be... will be easy to demonstrate, as they have been for hundreds of years.</text>
        <text syncTime="422.213">The... the fundamental difference... this is important to have this in mind.</text>
        <text syncTime="425.748">The Federal Circuit adopted this rule of law some 20 years ago.</text>
        <text syncTime="429.283">That's before the high tech boom, before the explosion in the number of patents.</text>
        <text syncTime="434.585">And so the opportunity to deal with these issues on an individualized basis that might give rise to some kinds of rules that you could, in fact, apply to the generality of cases based on an experience has never been there.</text>
        <text syncTime="447.661">We have been dealing with an irrebuttable presumption for 20 years in a way that has... has completely stultified the ability to develop any of those kinds of rules.</text>
        <text syncTime="455.481">And what we're asking this Court to do at this point is to say, no, enough is enough.</text>
        <text syncTime="460.552">We need to go back to a time where the... go back to the language of the statute, confer the discretion on the district courts.</text>
        <text syncTime="466.456">And it's important not just for a case like this one, but it... but it distorts tremendously the settlement value and the process and the relationship between the patent holder and all of the potential licensees because we're in a... in a world... and I don't think the Court can ignore this because it's in the amicus briefs.</text>
        <text syncTime="481.649">We're in a world where if a patent holder files a lawsuit in Marshall, Texas, no patent has ever been declared invalid in that jurisdiction, and no patent has never been found not to infringe.</text>
        <text syncTime="491.856">And then you take that finding automatically and you turn it into an injunction.</text>
        <text syncTime="495.808">Any person who has been threatened under those circumstances and told that we're going to face a lawsuit in Marshall, Texas is going to have a very different negotiating posture than in a situation where--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="508.549" stopTime="514.953">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="508.549">You know, I mean, that's... that's a problem with Marshall, Texas, not with the patent law.</text>
        <text syncTime="511.917">I mean, maybe... maybe we should remedy that problem.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="514.953" stopTime="515.419">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="514.953">--Well, I hope you--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="515.419" stopTime="542.902">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="515.419">But I don't think we should write... write our patent law because we have some renegade jurisdictions.</text>
        <text syncTime="522.655">Why... why isn't the... the free market normally adequate to solve any problems you're talking about?</text>
        <text syncTime="531.429">Everybody is in this for the money.</text>
        <text syncTime="533.297">Nobody is going to hold off giving the license beyond the point where... where it makes financial sense.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="542.902" stopTime="543.986">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="542.902">--Well--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="543.986" stopTime="546.069">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="543.986">Why can't... why can't we let the market take care of the problem?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="546.069" stopTime="567.365">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="546.069">--Well, I think the... the market will take care of the problem.</text>
        <text syncTime="548.371">The question is under what standards are you going to apply.</text>
        <text syncTime="550.556">Are you going to say that there is no effective check on the jury system, that it goes automatically from a jury's finding to injunctive relief, or are you going to implement it against the backdrop of what Congress specifically provides, which is that the district courts should exercise equitable discretion in deciding how best to proceed.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="567.365" stopTime="615.165">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="567.365">One of the problems with the district court exercising equitable discretion without a close review by the Federal Circuit is just the thing that the Federal Circuit was created to handle, that is, to get a tremendous disparity among district judges.</text>
        <text syncTime="587.746">I don't know that it's only in Marshall, Texas that you have a tilt in one direction or in the other.</text>
        <text syncTime="593.817">So the Federal Circuit is put there not to say that the district judges have no discretion, but to try to rein it in somewhat so that you won't have wide disparities, which you very well might have if you just say discretion to the district judges and very light review on appeal.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="615.165" stopTime="651.438">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="615.165">But, Justice Ginsburg, the... the problem with that is that that's not the scheme that Congress created with respect to the remedial aspects of... of the patent laws.</text>
        <text syncTime="623.319">I mean, it is surely the case that Congress meant, as... as substantive patent law is generally enforced and implemented, that the Federal Circuit would play a significant role in ensuring some kind of uniformity, but Congress didn't then go the extra step and say, and when it comes time to decide whether or not injunctive relief ought to be granted, that it will... that we will presume it or that we will deal with it in a categorical way.</text>
        <text syncTime="647.035">Congress granted that discretion to the district courts and with good reason because district--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="651.438" stopTime="675.701">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="651.438">I think maybe you exaggerate the... the extent of equitable discretion.</text>
        <text syncTime="656.159">I mean, it wasn't as though it's just left up to the judge, seems like a good idea or not a good idea.</text>
        <text syncTime="661.627">There are a lot of rules for when... when you would give injunctive relief and not.</text>
        <text syncTime="665.929">And... and I... you know, I'm not sure you're going to get into the kind of wide ranging allowance that... that you seem to be arguing for.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="675.701" stopTime="701.585">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="675.701">--Well, I don't know that I need a wide ranging allowance with respect to this.</text>
        <text syncTime="679.070">What I need is elimination of the irrebuttable presumption that doesn't allow any consideration of whether money damages are adequate in a particular case.</text>
        <text syncTime="686.575">And... and here, it's very important to focus.</text>
        <text syncTime="688.944">The... the district judge didn't just say, I woke up this morning and I felt really good about the defendant, and therefore, I'm not granting an injunction.</text>
        <text syncTime="696.114">The district court here said, I'm making specific findings of fact with regard to the adequacy of money damages to deal--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="701.585" stopTime="709.155">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="701.585">Well, but he said other things too, and one thing he said is, I don't like business method patents very much, and so I'm not going to give an injunction here.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="709.155" stopTime="709.655">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="709.155">--Well, that's--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="709.655" stopTime="711.374">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="709.655">Do you think that was proper or improper?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="711.374" stopTime="718.445">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="711.374">--That's... that's not precisely what he said, Mr. Chief Justice.</text>
        <text syncTime="713.893">What he said was that business method patents stand on a somewhat different footing because they're subject--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="718.445" stopTime="722.748">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="718.445">He said there's a growing concern over the issuance of business method patents.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="722.748" stopTime="723.048">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="722.748">--Right.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="723.048" stopTime="727.633">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="723.048">Is that an appropriate consideration to take into account in determining whether to grant an injunction or not?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="727.633" stopTime="735.470">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="727.633">I think probably, at the end of the day, it wouldn't be, but the bottom line is that he did that in the context of analyzing the public interest consideration and he said that didn't--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="735.470" stopTime="736.653">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="735.470">Well, then he went on and he said--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="736.653" stopTime="737.470">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="736.653">--tilt in favor.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="737.470" stopTime="753.765">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="737.470">--another... another consideration is that this patentee does not practice its patents.</text>
        <text syncTime="742.040">But, I mean, isn't that just saying he's, you know, the... the guy in the garage and he's an inventor and the way he's going to market his discoveries is by getting some firm that basically speculates on patents.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="753.765" stopTime="754.115">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="753.765">Sure.</text>
        <text syncTime="754.115">And--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="754.115" stopTime="764.154">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="754.115">And if he's denying that inventor, you know, the... what he'd give to Bell Labs... or whatever Bell Labs is these days... that does practice the inventions--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="764.154" stopTime="792.573">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="764.154">--I should know that actually, but--</text>
        <text syncTime="765.487">[Laughter]</text>
        <text syncTime="766.639">But, Mr. Chief Justice, I... I think you can... it's... it's not fair to pick apart each one of his findings and say does that finding enough or is that finding enough.</text>
        <text syncTime="775.028">The truth is the district court made a series of four findings that overlap, and one of which was, obviously, he doesn't... he doesn't practice his patent.</text>
        <text syncTime="782.932">He also doesn't effectively license.</text>
        <text syncTime="785.834">He's willing to license his patent to eBay.</text>
        <text syncTime="788.086">He's willing to license this patent to anybody under these circumstances.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="792.573" stopTime="793.073">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="792.573">Well, but--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="793.073" stopTime="797.375">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="793.073">And candidly, most of the licensing arrangements don't even exist, and they're... I'm sorry, Justice Kennedy.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="797.375" stopTime="816.103">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="797.375">--Well, I'm... I interrupted you.</text>
        <text syncTime="799.391">But the... the business process point you give away fairly quickly.</text>
        <text syncTime="803.962">I... I thought that was rather substantial.</text>
        <text syncTime="806.062">The whole point is, is that a business process patent is... is difficult to define and could be very... it can be very restrictive.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="816.103" stopTime="830.578">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="816.103">I... I think in... in a proper case... and I don't think you can do it under the... under the public interest analysis.</text>
        <text syncTime="821.924">I think you'd probably end up doing it under the balance of the hardships.</text>
        <text syncTime="825.126">But in any event... and... and what you... you know, obviously, this case is... is more complicated because--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="830.578" stopTime="837.267">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="830.578">My concern is if you take that away, I don't know if you've got a lot left for the... saying no injunction in this case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="837.267" stopTime="874.107">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="837.267">--Well, I... I mean, there's plenty left because he doesn't practice this invention.</text>
        <text syncTime="840.652">He has no intention of practicing this invention beyond the receipt of money.</text>
        <text syncTime="843.670">Money damages are a completely adequate remedy under these particular circumstances, given... given especially the fact that if... if the infringement continues... and remember, this is not a situation where he proposes to continue to infringe.</text>
        <text syncTime="856.895">We propose to work around it, but if the infringement continues, we're then subject to enhanced damages and all of the deterrent power that that has, plus the possibility, obviously, down the road that the district court could, on a rule 54 motion, now come back and say, well, no, now I've decided that injunctive relief is warranted under these circumstances.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="ruth_bader_ginsburg" startTime="874.107" stopTime="896.053">
        <label>Justice Ginsburg</label>
        <text syncTime="874.107">Well, isn't it a concern that Congress didn't provide for compulsory licensing which this seems to have a very strong resemblance to?</text>
        <text syncTime="883.879">It says eBay wants to do this, so they're going to have to pay for it, but the patentee can't stop them.</text>
        <text syncTime="892.835">It just has... in effect, has to license them to do it.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="896.053" stopTime="979.522">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="896.053">But... but we're not asking for a compulsory license because it is not our intention, going forward, to infringe this patent.</text>
        <text syncTime="902.107">We've made it very clear to the district court and the district court recognizes that we not only intend to but have, in fact, implemented a design around or a work around to this particular patent.</text>
        <text syncTime="912.797">And that's what we expect will happen.</text>
        <text syncTime="914.164">So we're not asking for the right to continue to infringe and the willingness to pay as we go.</text>
        <text syncTime="918.699">Our concern... and this does go to the business method patent because it does go to the... to the uncertainty.</text>
        <text syncTime="924.436">The problem we have here is we don't know where the line is going to be drawn.</text>
        <text syncTime="927.305">That's why the district court said specifically, you know, there's going to be unending litigation on this because it's very difficult to define the metes and bounds of this particular patent, and we're going to have to fight over that, so that the traditional reason for injunctive relief, which is to bring peace, isn't available in this case.</text>
        <text syncTime="942.581">We're not going to have peace under these circumstances.</text>
        <text syncTime="944.766">And when you have that situation and you have the kind of uncertainty, not because of business method patents generally... that's... that's where I was I think probably giving up too much immediately.</text>
        <text syncTime="954.955">I don't think the fact of a business method patent is per se a problem, but I think analyzing the specific business method patent and its uncertainty is a legitimate consideration for the district court to take into account in deciding whether or not, in a particular circumstance, we are better off saying, pay the plaintiff the money for the past injury, let's see how the work around develops, and take it into account, but without the sort of--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="979.522" stopTime="1000.148">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="979.522">Well... well, tell me how... how this works.</text>
        <text syncTime="981.622">It seems to me that an injunctive hearing is... might be the cheapest, most effective way to... to sort out whether there's going to be a violation.</text>
        <text syncTime="990.042">You call the parties in and they indicate what... what they propose to do, and the judge says, well, this is within it or it's without it.</text>
        <text syncTime="997.612">It's... it's much cheaper than a... a new lawsuit.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1000.148" stopTime="1013.071">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1000.148">--Well, of course, the consequences of the... of the process are significantly different because, obviously, the remedies for... for contempt are significantly more draconian than... than just a finding of a... of a violation.</text>
        <text syncTime="1011.455">But more... more important than that, Justice Kennedy--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1013.071" stopTime="1020.761">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1013.071">Well, but this gives you the advantage of coming in in advance saying, I want... I... I want a ruling in advance that I'm not going to violate the injunction.</text>
        <text syncTime="1019.811">You've got a cheap lawsuit.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1020.761" stopTime="1189.382">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1020.761">--Well, and the reality is the district court already looked at this and said that it... it is the district court's judgment that they're going to require full infringement trials.</text>
        <text syncTime="1030.933">I mean, that was the finding it made with respect to the balance of hardships.</text>
        <text syncTime="1033.885">And... and neither the court of appeals nor the... nor the respondent in this case has... has challenged that particular finding.</text>
        <text syncTime="1039.353">So the reality is the district court has made the determination that that's not... that process is either not available or not practical in the context of this particular case, which of course, goes back to why it's important to make sure that you look at each of these cases on their individual facts rather than across the board on a... on these... on an irrebuttable presumption basis.</text>
        <text syncTime="1061.866">The... the additional point that I think it's important I at least spend a minute on, because the Court asked for us to deal with Continental Paper Bag, is that it does seem to me quite clear that, at least at this stage, the parties are pretty much in sync, that... that the Court need not revisit Continental Paper Bag.</text>
        <text syncTime="1076.876">The holding in that case is actually almost a sort of quintessential situation where you have two participants in the market, one of whom would like to take advantage of a patent that will improve that participant's ability to produce a product.</text>
        <text syncTime="1089.517">The patent holder is not ready yet to develop that product using that particular method and, therefore, sues to stop his competitor from entering into that market.</text>
        <text syncTime="1099.440">I mean, that's the classic kind of situation where you have a... you know, where you... where you've got the potential infringer is looking at what's going on and making a decision and copying it and then trying to implement it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1110.680">And the Court said, under those circumstances, you get an injunction.</text>
        <text syncTime="1113.632">But here, of course, we're dealing with a vastly different situation, as we... as we point out that... in our brief, where the... at page 9 where the district court specifically found that not any of eBay's success is attributable to anything in the patents of the plaintiff in this case and that nothing in the patents that were put forward by the plaintiff in this case provide any basis on which anyone could build a business model.</text>
        <text syncTime="1139.782">So this is, to my mind, the antithesis of the situation in Continental Paper Bag.</text>
        <text syncTime="1144.770">But in any event, the holding there is clearly not implicated here.</text>
        <text syncTime="1147.486">It's been codified by Congress.</text>
        <text syncTime="1149.288">There's no basis for the Court to reconsider it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1151.174">To the extent that there is... is dicta in there that talks about the right to exclude, Justice Scalia, I think, in general, the right to exclude is one that you do, in fact, enforce with injunctive relief in many cases, but the question here is whether or not the Federal Circuit should have adopted a rule that says you... you enforce it in every case irrebuttably as to three of the four factors, and as to the fourth factor, you don't go any further than requiring the plaintiff to show that there's a... an imminent public health crisis.</text>
        <text syncTime="1178.825">Under those circumstances, it seems to me the Court should reverse the court of appeals.</text>
        <text syncTime="1182.376">And, indeed, if there were ever a case in which the Court ought to uphold the district court on a... under the abuse of discretion standard, it is this case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1189.382" stopTime="1215.949">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1189.382">--Why should we... if I can get back to one of the factors.</text>
        <text syncTime="1192.417">Why should we draw a distinction between the... the sole inventor who needs a patent speculation firm to market his discovery and... and somebody else?</text>
        <text syncTime="1206.492">Why... why should he lose the leverage of the normal injunction and have substituted for that a duel of experts over what a reasonable royalty should be?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1215.949" stopTime="1251.538">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1215.949">Because the... because Congress didn't dictate that he gets that leverage in every situation.</text>
        <text syncTime="1221.853">And... and it's quite possible that the... there are going to be a lot of situations.</text>
        <text syncTime="1225.221">And the Solicitor General's brief identifies four of them in which an inventor, who doesn't plan to practice the invention, engages in... in various kinds of licensing schemes that create all kinds of interrelationships among the way the patent is going to be developed, and I think all of those are perfectly legitimate and could easily justify injunctive relief in precisely the kind of case that you pose, Mr. Chief Justice.</text>
        <text syncTime="1249.003">But that's not this case.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1251.538" stopTime="1267.279">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1251.538">Can I... maybe I don't understand what it means to practice the invention.</text>
        <text syncTime="1254.388">If... if I... does that... if... if I invent something, you know, a new... better way to make a car engine work and I want to sell that to somebody, that's... you'd say that's not practicing the invention because I don't build cars?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1267.279" stopTime="1334.737">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1267.279">Right.</text>
        <text syncTime="1268.445">But again, you've licensed it and there are certain rights that, obviously, arise out of the licensing.</text>
        <text syncTime="1272.897">None of these factors is alone, I don't believe, sufficient to say you don't get injunctive relief.</text>
        <text syncTime="1278.401">But I think what the district court said, and I think that this is why the Court ought to affirm the district court's under... under an abuse of discretion standard, which never been applied to this case... what the Court should say is, look, and where you have no practicing of the invention by the inventor, where you have a complete willingness to license not only to the world, but also to eBay specifically, and where you've never sought preliminary injunctive relief, under all of those... and where... and where there's serious question about the lines to be drawn, there's no benefit to be had by... in the way of trying to eliminate the amount of litigation on an ongoing basis, under all of those circumstances, all of which the district court identified, then it's not appropriate to grant injunctive relief.</text>
        <text syncTime="1321.247">We'll allow enhanced damages in the interim and even the potential down the road, obviously, of... of an injunction to serve as enough of a deterrent to protect the right to exclude that the plaintiff has under the statute.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1334.737" stopTime="1354.218">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1334.737">Why... why does the fact that... that you're not practicing the invention make a difference?</text>
        <text syncTime="1339.125">I mean, why... why should I be in better shape, as far as getting an injunction is concerned, if I produce an automobile engine and... and make some undeterminate profit--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1354.218" stopTime="1354.751">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1354.218">Right.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1354.751" stopTime="1374.064">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1354.751">--from the use of this particular invention in the engine than I would be if I licensed it with a royalty based upon the number of sales of engines?</text>
        <text syncTime="1365.443">I mean, they're both risking, you know, the same future use of the... of the device.</text>
        <text syncTime="1370.328">Why... why does one situation justify an injunction more than the other?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1374.064" stopTime="1411.338">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1374.064">Yes, I think... I think I ought to modify it slightly because it's not just simply that you don't practice the invention.</text>
        <text syncTime="1378.500">It's that you're not in the market itself because that's... that's the Continental Paper Bag case.</text>
        <text syncTime="1382.487">You know, in Continental Paper Bag, they don't want to... they don't want to practice the invention either because they want to hold it back in order to be able effectively to use it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1388.724">If they had wanted to license it, that would have made sense too.</text>
        <text syncTime="1391.074">But this is not a competitor in the market.</text>
        <text syncTime="1392.876">If they were a... it seems to me you have a much better claim to a need to occupy space.</text>
        <text syncTime="1397.994">That's what the injunction is trying to say.</text>
        <text syncTime="1399.280">This is my space.</text>
        <text syncTime="1400.696">I want to occupy it.</text>
        <text syncTime="1401.815">But if you choose not to occupy it, it's not to say that you abandon your right to an injunction, but that that ought to be a legitimate, individualized consideration, among other considerations--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="antonin_scalia" startTime="1411.338" stopTime="1414.805">
        <label>Justice Scalia</label>
        <text syncTime="1411.338">By not occupying it, you mean including not licensing it to somebody else.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1414.805" stopTime="1434.203">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1414.805">--Well, if you didn't license it... and actually we have no relevant licenses here too... that would be another factor that ought to be... that ought to count in the mix.</text>
        <text syncTime="1421.193">Again, it's not... I'm not looking for a presumption the other way and I'm not looking for categorical rules that say that if you... if you're a nonperforming entity, that you don't get a license, or even if you're a troll, as that term gets bandied around, that you're never entitled to a... to an injunction.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1434.203" stopTime="1440.371">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1434.203">Well, is... is the troll the scary thing under the bridge, or is it a fishing technique?</text>
        <text syncTime="1437.988">I... I want--</text>
        <text syncTime="1438.788">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1440.371" stopTime="1444.339">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1440.371">For my clients, it's been the scary thing under the bridge, but--</text>
        <text syncTime="1443.573">[Laughter]</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="anthony_kennedy" startTime="1444.339" stopTime="1445.573">
        <label>Justice Kennedy</label>
        <text syncTime="1444.339">I mean, is that what the troll is?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="carter_g_phillips" startTime="1445.573" stopTime="1460.016">
        <label>Mr. Phillips</label>
        <text syncTime="1445.573">Yes, I believe that's the... I think that's what... what it is, although you... maybe we should think of it more as Orks, now that we have a new generation, but at this point troll is the word that gets... that gets used.</text>
        <text syncTime="1456.214">If there are no further questions, I'd like to reserve the balance of my time, Your Honors.</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
    <section startTime="1460.016" stopTime="1588.532">
      <heading>Argument of Jeffrey P. Minear</heading>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1460.016" stopTime="1463.885">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1460.016">Thank you, Mr. Phillips.</text>
        <text syncTime="1460.949">Mr. Minear, we'll hear from you.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="jeffrey_p_minear" startTime="1463.885" stopTime="1517.270">
        <label>Mr. Minear</label>
        <text syncTime="1463.885">Thank you, Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court--</text>
        <text syncTime="1473.007">The United States submits that the right to a patent is an important matter, but it must be considered in the context of the remedies as well.</text>
        <text syncTime="1482.780">And the United States further submits the patentee's right to an injunction should be covered by the familiar four factor test this Court has applied in cases such as Weinberger v. Romero Barcelo.</text>
        <text syncTime="1494.754">This Court's express endorsement of the four factor test would provide disciplined guidance and a framework for the lower courts to evaluate whether or not a patent should issue in any particular case.</text>
        <text syncTime="1507.212">The court of appeals in this case did not make express reference to the four factor test.</text>
        <text syncTime="1511.799">Nevertheless, it did identify the difficulties with the... the district court's decisions.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1517.270" stopTime="1522.805">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1517.270">You don't think Mr.... you don't think Judge Bryson forgot about the four factor test, do you?</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="jeffrey_p_minear" startTime="1522.805" stopTime="1523.540">
        <label>Mr. Minear</label>
        <text syncTime="1522.805">Absolutely not.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1523.540" stopTime="1537.913">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1523.540">Sure.</text>
        <text syncTime="1524.057">And... and he was just reflecting the reality that in a typical case, this is what happens.</text>
        <text syncTime="1529.493">It seems to me all you want us to do is edit his opinion and stick in this formulaic paragraph about there are four factors and here they are.</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="jeffrey_p_minear" startTime="1537.913" stopTime="1586.596">
        <label>Mr. Minear</label>
        <text syncTime="1537.913">Not exactly, Your Honor.</text>
        <text syncTime="1540.065">We think that there is some legitimate confusion among the patent bar and in the community about whether or not this test issues nearly automatically or not.</text>
        <text syncTime="1548.871">Certainly there are many amicus briefs on both sides.</text>
        <text syncTime="1551.072">And we think it's useful for this Court to make clear that this is an exercise of equitable discretion.</text>
        <text syncTime="1555.858">Now, Judge Bryson, I think, was aware of the four factor test.</text>
        <text syncTime="1559.012">In fact, both parties cited the four factor test before the district court.</text>
        <text syncTime="1562.464">He was also aware of the abuse of discretion standard.</text>
        <text syncTime="1565.082">That's a well established standard and the parties cited that standard to the Federal Circuit in the course of briefing this case below.</text>
        <text syncTime="1571.486">But what we think this Court can do is it can provide guidance on how those factors are applied in the patent context in this very important area.</text>
        <text syncTime="1578.640">We think the court of appeals decision is correct.</text>
        <text syncTime="1581.509">The judgment is correct.</text>
        <text syncTime="1582.628">But we think that there's some benefit to this Court explaining why that is so, and I'd like to--</text>
      </turn>
      <turn speaker="john_g_roberts_jr" startTime="1586.596" stopTime="1588.532">
        <label>Chief Justice Roberts</label>
        <text syncTime="1586.596">Can I ask you about one factor in particular?</text>
      </turn>
    </section>
  </episode>
</transcript>
