Casting a Worldwide Net: How Litigation Funders Can Leverage Europe’s New Unified Patent Court

- Broader Geographic Reach. The UPC makes multi-jurisdictional patent campaigns cost-effective and efficient by allowing plaintiffs to target infringement across at least seventeen countries in one court proceeding. Plaintiffs no longer need to pick and choose the countries in which to enforce their patents. The reach of the UPC is likely to expand further: the UPC is expected to be integrated into European mutual recognition mechanisms that will allow the UPC’s jurisdiction to extend not only to the EU but also to Switzerland, Norway, and the UK. While these mutual recognition mechanisms have long existed, national courts have historically been reluctant to rely on them. The UPC, by contrast, is expected to do so much more regularly.
- Reduced Transaction Costs. Reliance on a single proceeding across multiple countries will cut down on the costs of litigating in multiple European countries in parallel. The UPC will therefore dramatically reduce the resources necessary to launch and maintain a multi-jurisdictional campaign in the EU. The UPC will also cut down on the logistics and transactional costs associated with such campaigns. A plaintiff, for example, no longer needs to hire three separate teams to enforce patents in, for instance, France, Germany, and Italy, and pay additional fees for those three teams to coordinate to ensure coherence across jurisdictions.
- Short Time to Trial. UPC proceedings will expedite the pace of patent campaigns. Some commentators suggest that proceedings will only take 12-15 months from complaint to final ruling—a significant boon for patent owners looking to promptly and efficiently enforce their rights. If this holds true, and if sustainable, this pace would rival the speed of some of the fastest dockets among U.S. district courts.
- Efficient Evidence Gathering Procedures. Unlike the U.S., there is no formal discovery in the UPC, which significantly reduces litigation costs and can expedite proceedings. But the UPC offers several key features that will be of value to patent owners: (i) plaintiffs may move to seize evidence of infringement from a defendant’s premises, and (ii) they may obtain court orders to force defendants to produce documents.
- Larger Damages Awards. Since UPC judgments will cover more countries and consumers, the potential damages awards should be considerably larger than they would be in a single jurisdiction. This should help drive up the value of settlements, and put more pressure on defendants to settle earlier. It also radically tips the scale on the economics of patent litigation funding in the EU. Suddenly, the EU becomes an attractive venue in-and-of-itself for funders—not just an ancillary venue in support of higher-stakes U.S. litigation.
- Broad Injunctive Relief. The UPC will allow patent holders to seek injunctive relief across multiple countries in one shot. This too should help drive bigger and earlier settlements—a boon for funders looking for a rapid return on their investment.
- High-Quality Decisions. It is expected that the Court will render first-rate decisions for two principal reasons: (i) it has attracted seasoned IP judges from across Europe, and (ii) the judges consist of a mix of legally and technically qualified judges. Furthermore, due to the high specialization of the Court, the number of judges will be quite limited (<100), which may help contribute to greater respect for precedent from fellow judges, which in turn leads to greater predictability for litigants.
