July 18, 2017
LES Insights
In determining that a Kansas court did not have personal jurisdiction over an accused patent infringer, the Federal Circuit found that the accused infringer's activities prior to the date the patent was granted were irrelevant to the question of whether the infringer had sufficient activity in Kansas such that the Kansas court had personal jurisdiction over the accused infringer. The court also found a forum selection clause in an end user license agreement accepted by the accused infringer did not apply and could not be used in the patent infringement suit to dictate the court in which the case would be heard.
In NexLearn LLC (NexLearn) v. Allen Interactions, Inc. (Allen), the Federal Circuit upheld a District Court’s ruling that the defendant had insufficient contacts with the forum state to support the patent infringement claims, given that most of the contacts arose prior to issuance of the asserted patent. The Federal Circuit also agreed that a forum-selection clause in an end-user license agreement of the plaintiff’s software did not apply to claims for patent infringement and breach of a non-disclosure agreement, and could not be used in the patent infringement suit to dictate the court in which the case would be heard.
NexLearn and Allen entered into a nondisclosure agreement so that Allen could assess a trial version of NexLearn’s SimWriter social-simulation software. Upon accessing the trial software, Allen also agreed to an end-user license agreement with a forum-selection clause specifying that any disputes arising from the agreement would be resolved exclusively in Wichita, Kansas.
Allen informed NexLearn it was no longer interested in pursuing a deal with NexLearn and eventually unveiled its own social-simulation software, called ZebraZapps.
In response, NexLearn sued Allen in Kansas, asserting that Allen infringed its patents covering the SimWriter software and that Allen breached the NDA by misusing confidential information obtained during the trial period. The District Court granted Allen’s motion to dismiss the case, finding that it lacked personal jurisdiction over Allen as a defendant. NexLearn appealed this decision to the Federal Circuit.
Therefore, to maintain its suit in Kansas, NexLearn could not rely on the forum-selection clause, but instead had to demonstrate that Allen had sufficient minimum contacts with the state of Kansas, related to NexLearn’s patent-infringement claims based on the facts in the case:
In assessing whether these contacts where sufficient to establish personal jurisdiction of the Kansas court over Allen, the Federal Circuit observed that the trade magazine advertisement and all but one of Allen’s emails arose prior to NexLearn’s patent being granted and were irrelevant to jurisdiction because they were not related to the NexLearn’s patent-infringement claims.
The Federal Circuit found the remaining contacts between Allen and Kansas insufficient to establish personal jurisdiction of the Kansas court over Allen:
This case illustrates that a defendant’s contacts with a forum that occur before a patent is issued may be deemed irrelevant and ignored when a court analyzes whether it has personal jurisdiction to decide patent-infringement claims against that defendant.
It also illustrates that a forum-selection clause may not apply to all claims between the parties. Rather, a court may narrowly construe the clause to only cover claims arising specifically from the agreement containing the clause, and it may not apply the clause to disputes arising under other agreements between the parties, regardless of the connection between the agreements and the activities of the parties from a commercial perspective.
The NexLearn opinion can be found here.
Copyright © Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP. This article is for informational purposes, is not intended to constitute legal advice, and may be considered advertising under applicable state laws. This article is only the opinion of the authors and is not attributable to Finnegan, Henderson, Farabow, Garrett & Dunner, LLP, or the firm’s clients.
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