DC Federal Court Rejects Employee Challenge to Arbitration Agreement

Friday, April 26, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

An employee who claimed an agreement he entered to arbitrate all employment related claims was unconscionable has his challenged rejected as the Court found the arbitration agreement to be neither procedurally or substantively unconscionable.

In the case of Fox v. Computer World Services Corp., et al. (2013), when Plaintiff Phillip Fox (“Fox”) began his employment with Computer World Services Corp. and C2 Essential, Inc. (joint employers of Fox and collectively referred to as “Defendants”) he electronically signed a number of forms, one of which was an arbitration agreement.  The arbitration agreement provided that the parties agreed to arbitrate, inter alia, any claims alleging violation of federal and state statutes.  Approximately eighteen months after he began working for Defendants, Fox’ employment was terminated.  Fox alleged that his job termination was in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act, and also alleged retaliation and violations of the District of Columbia Human Rights Act.  Fox refused to arbitrate his claims and instead sued Defendants in state court.  Defendants removed the case to federal court and also filed a motion to dismiss and to compel arbitration.    

For his part, Fox challenged the arbitration agreement and claimed it was procedurally unconscionable because it was buried within a larger series of employment documents; it was presented to him on a take it or leave it basis; and, he did not understand that by acknowledging the arbitration agreement he was agreeing to the terms within the agreement.  Fox also challenged the agreement because he signed it electronically.  The Court rejected each of these arguments and found that the Agreement to Arbitrate was presented in a separate document and the title of the document was in all caps and in bold font.  In addition, the Court found that immediately before the signature line of the agreement was an acknowledgement, again in all caps, which stated that the signatory read and understood the terms of the agreement and was been provided the opportunity to discuss the agreement with legal counsel.  Finding that Fox had a choice as to whether to enter the agreement, acknowledged that he read and understood the agreement and was given a chance to consult legal counsel, the Court found the arbitration agreement was not procedurally unconscionable. 

Fox also raised a number of substantive challenges to the arbitration agreement, including challenging the agreement on the grounds that it contained a fee-sharing provision wherein all parties were required to share the fees and costs of the arbitrator in an amount and manner determined by the arbitrator.  While the Court easily disposed of most of Fox’ substantive challenges to the arbitration agreement, the fee- sharing issue raised by Fox and whether forcing him to go through arbitration would be prohibitively expensive was not so easily resolved.  Ultimately, the Court found that the risk that Fox might incur prohibitive costs was too speculative to invalidate the agreement.  The Court relied on the fact that Defendants had waived the fee-sharing provision in the agreement, and that the agreement (although somewhat ambiguous) appeared to allow the arbitrator discretion as to how to allocate fees and costs. Therefore, Fox’ argument as to what portion of those fees he would have to bear were too speculative to deem the arbitration agreement substantively unconscionable.  The Court held that the arbitration agreement was enforceable and compelled Fox to arbitrate his claims.

Written By Malik K. Cutlar 

Maryland Highest Court Determines Proper Calculation of Lost Profits in Contract Case

Thursday, April 25, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

Since the amount of damages sought on a lost profits claim can be substantial, any variations in the standard will likely have a drastic impact on the recovery.  The Maryland Court of Appeals (the highest court in the state) in CR-RSC Tower I, LLC v. RSC Tower I, LLC recently addressed the issue of whether the trial court properly excluded post-breach market conditions to mitigate consequential lost profits in a jury trial which resulted in an award of $36 Million in damages. 

The landlord defendants in CR-RSC Tower I, LLC deliberately breached a real estate agreement causing plaintiff developer’s financing to fall through.  The developer sued for breach of contract and sought recovery of lost profits basing its market projections at the time of the breach.  The landlords did not dispute the breach, but countered that the current market conditions were relevant and necessary to meet the requirement that lost profits be proven with “reasonable certainty.” The landlords sought to offer the testimony of an expert to show that the developer would not have suffered any damages given the subsequent downturn in the real estate market. 

The Court explained that the contract in this case did not address or allocate the possibility of future market downturns.  The only evidence established that, at the time the parties entered into the agreement, the parties contemplated a relatively stable market and did not foresee the cataclysmic crash of real estate.  Thus, evidence of post-breach booms or even busts was not relevant to the determination of the expected value of performance as of the time of breach.  As a result, the Court upheld the trial court’s exclusion of the defendants’ evidence of “post-breach market conditions.” 

Written By Angela H. France

Fourth Circuit Substantially Reduces Jurys Emotional Damages Award

Wednesday, April 24, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

Please see, Angela France's article featured within Virginia Business Law Update.


Written By Angela H. France 

US Citizenship and Immigration Services Releases New & Revised Federal I-9 Form

Wednesday, April 24, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

Please see, Angela France's article featured within Virginia Business Law Update.

http://www.virginiabusinesslawupdate.com/2013/04/articles/small-business-1/us-citizenship-and-immigration-services-releases-new-revised-federal-i9-form/

Written By Angela H. France 

Government Contractor Teaming Agreement Ruled Unenforceable

Monday, April 22, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

Please see, Malik Cutlar's article featured within Virginia Business Law Update.

Written By Malik K. Cutlar

Use of Misappropriated Trade Secret Not Required For a Trade Secrets Act Violation

Tuesday, April 16, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

If an employee misappropriates their current or former employer’s proprietary information, and discloses such information to its new employer and/or any other unauthorized person(s), that is enough to establish a violation under the Virginia Uniform Trade Secrets Act (“VUTSA”) so says the Virginia Supreme Court. There is no requirement under the Act that the employee or new employer actually use the misappropriated information to compete with the former employer.

In the case of Geographic Services, Inc. v. Collelo, et al. (2012), the Virginia Supreme Court held that once an employer establishes the existence of a trade secret, all that they are then required to show is that the trade secret was misappropriated as that term is defined under the Trade Secrets Act. The entity from which the trade secret was misappropriated does not have to show that defendants used the trade secret in order to establish a claim under the VUTSA and recover damages. Disclosure of the trade secret is sufficient where it can be shown that the new employer and/or person to whom the trade secret was disclosed knew, or had reason to know, that the trade secret was acquired by improper means. In such cases, where the plaintiff cannot readily prove measurable damages, then the VUTSA provides that the court can impose a reasonable royalty upon the wrongdoers for the unauthorized disclosure of the trade secret.

This decision by Virginia’s highest court provides a cautionary note for Virginia employers: if you know, or should have known, that an employee has obtained proprietary information from its prior employer without its knowledge, you could be on the hook for damages if the employee discloses the information to your company – even if your company never uses the information. The disclosure, in and of itself, will be enough to expose companies to monetary damages. Conversely, companies in which an employee has taken proprietary information can seek legal redress and possibly obtain damages even if the employee and its new company did not use the information.

Written By Malik K. Cutlar

Trademark Licensing Agreement Foreclosed Naked Licensing Defense

Tuesday, April 16, 2013 by Team PCT Law Group

Please see, Angela France's article featured within Virginia Business Law Update.

http://www.virginiabusinesslawupdate.com/2013/04/articles/intellectual-property/trademark-licensing-agreement-foreclosed-naked-licensing-defense/

Written By Angela H. France 


PCT Law Group Blog

Business Methods (and Software) are Still Patentable!

Tuesday, August 28, 2012 by Team PCT Law Group

Please see my guest post — “Business Methods (and Software) are Still Patentable!” – on IPWatchdog.com


Written by Raymond Millien


 

Patent Rights Under Space Act Agreements

Wednesday, August 15, 2012 by Team PCT Law Group


SNC is developing the Dream Chaser under Space Act Agreements with NASA. Image credit: NASA/SNC.

Aladdin’s genie had “Phenomenal cosmic powers! Itty-bitty living space!” Space Act Agreements (SAAs) are very similar. They give NASA considerable flexibility to partner with private entities. NASA can start from essentially a blank slate in order to create an agreement aimed toward a specific goal like using theInternational Space Station as a national laboratory ordeveloping robotic vehicles capable of delivering supplies to low earth orbit. On the other hand, SAAs may not be used in many circumstances. For example, funded SAAs are typically used only where a NASA objective cannot be achieved through the use of traditional contracts. When SAAs are used, The Chiles Act may force NASA to take ownership of any intellectual property developed under the SAA. However, there are ways to avoid the title taking action. Even when NASA does take title to the IP, many SAAs provide a clear path to returning ownership of patents and other IP that is developed under the SAA to the private developer.

Space Act Agreements are formed between NASA and a private entity, like a company or university, in order to carry out specific objectives. The agreements establish how NASA resources like personnel, equipment, and testing facilities may be used to achieve the specific goal defined in the SAA.

SAAs generally come in three flavors: reimbursable, nonreimbursable, and funded.

Nonreimbursable agreements are typically created where NASA and a private company are working together toward a common goal. NASA and the partner company work together in a limited manner, but no funds are exchanged.

Reimbursable agreements provide more flexibility, but at a cost to the private entity. The private entity may use NASA’s resources (e.g., wind tunnels) for the entity’s own purposes, but must reimburse NASA for that use.

Funded agreements, darlings of the commercial space race, are used “only sparingly”, when traditional funding methods are inappropriate. NASA provides funds, expertise, and other assistance to the private entity to achieve a goal, such as developing a private space ferry to the International Space Station.

Under the laws which created NASA, inventions made under NASA contracts, including Space Act Agreements, are the property of the federal government. Traditionally, this has discouraged may innovative companies from working with NASA, for fear that the company will have no control over technologies they conceive of or first construct under contract with NASA. At a 2006 symposium on space law and intellectual property rights, NASA IP counsel Gary Borda stated that this structure “has worked with traditional contractors such as Boeing and Lockheed” but “ [NASA does] not get the innovative ideas from the smaller companies” because they don’t want to lose rights to their technological data.

If the SAA directs the private party to perform work of an inventive type for NASA, NASA generally automatically owns the patent rights to inventions made that SAA. Many funded SAAs involve inventive-type work, such as the COTS program.

Under these SAAs, the private party must establish invention reporting procedures which ensure that both NASA’s rights and the private party’s inventive rights are preserved. New technologies must generally be reported within six months of conception or production via the NASA New Technology Reporting System.

Even where NASA is set to automatically take title to patent rights on inventions developed under an SAA, NASA may waive rights to all technology developed under the SAA, either in advance or on a case-by-case basis. NASA “liberally grants waivers to SAA Partners for the purpose of commercializing the waived invention”, but the partner has to ask for the waiver and report newly developed technologies! In any event, NASA is entitled to a government purpose license of the technology.

As previously mentioned, NASA must take title where inventive work is being performed for NASA by the private party. Generally, work performed under a nonreimbursable SAA or a reimbursable SAA is not inventive work performed for NASA. Technologies developed solely by the private party are generally not subject to ownership by NASA.

Inventions jointly developed by NASA and the private party under an un-funded SAA must be reported to NASA and the two entities may decide how to assign the inventive rights.

Space Act Agreements are powerful tools which allow NASA to advance its objectives and the objectives of the commercial sector. SAAs may still be subject to laws such as the Chiles Act which requires NASA to take title to inventions developed at its direction. Companies entering into SAAs should be aware of reporting and invention assignment requirements before entering into SAAs and should consider alternative development arrangements and funding sources where appropriate. Armed with this knowledge, companies make take advantage of the “phenomenal cosmic power” a Space Act Agreement can hold!

Happy creating!

Written by Andrew Rush


The Smart Phone Patent Wars: Is Government Action on the Horizon?

Wednesday, August 08, 2012 by Team PCT Law Group

 

Please see my guest post — “The Smart Phone Patent Wars: Is Government Action on the Horizon?” – on IPWatchdog.com. 

 
Written by Raymond Millien

Property Rights in Space, Part 1 of 2: No Space Police Needed

Wednesday, August 08, 2012 by Team PCT Law Group

Is a space-based police force necessary? Image via BoingBoing.

Vestigial intellectual property rightsin space exist, but what about general property rights in space? Are there paths forward to enforce space real property rights (land ownership) and personal property rights (iPod ownership, unless it’s a really big iPod) via earth-based actions?

In order to explore these issues, let’s make a few assumptions. Assumption number one: when space is commercially exploited and settled, the United States will be the largest, richest market for space faring firms. Assumption number two: under the current legal regime, or under one hastily installed upon an individual or company seriously laying claim to land or minerals in space, a private ownership right in goods and services sent to earth from space is recognized.

With these assumptions in mind, a near term and long term path for real recognition and enforcement of property rights in space and on other celestial bodies exists. These enforcement mechanisms do not necessarily require a “space police” force in order to enforce those rights.

Many people, companies, and organizations argue for national or international recognition of some form of private property rights in space.

Both Rand Simberg and the Space Frontier Foundation directly argue for recognition of private property rights in space. At a minimum, they support passage of US laws in the vein of the Space Settlement Prize Act, establishing a path to lunar land ownership for anyone that settles on the moon.

Private companies like Planetary Resources and Shackleton Energy indirectly argue for creation of individual property rights in space resources. Rather than simply lobbying for changes in law, these companies pour their creative energies into actually engineering ways to locate, mine, and bring rare platinum group metals back to earth.

The visionaries behind these companies are surely motivated by other factors, but earning enormous profits most assuredly looms large for them (and their investors!). Because it would be very hard to make any return on investment via “equitable sharing” of the resources returned from space as the Moon Treaty decrees, it is clear that private space mining companies like Planetary Resources and Shackleton Energy seek a path to private property ownership in space.

Even if private property rights are created on paper, will they be more than just words on a page? How will they be enforced? Where will the rights be enforced?

 

Enforcement of property rights in space should follow the forms used on earth.

On earth, ownership in goods and in land is well established, as are enforcement mechanisms. Private property rights may be protected by government intervention or by private action. The United States has a long history of hitting ner-do-wells in their wallets with civil penalties in order to discourage would be violators. For example, if someone steals your wallet, call the police and they’ll try to get it back for you, fine him, require the payment of restitution to make you whole again, and probably throw that bum in jail! If an individual negligently crashes into your car, you may sue and recover money damages.

Property rights are often enforced via fines and restitution payments which eliminate the profitability of activities which tread on others’ property rights. Often, private or government enforcement of private property right is doneexclusively through fines and restitution because monetary punishment is such a powerful deterrent.

Because monetary punishment via fines and/or seizure of stolen goods is effective in deterring violations of property rights on earth, monetary punishment should initially be the only way to enforce property rights in space. As space-based operations expand, monetary punishment should remain the principal enforcement mechanism.

Apollo 11 astronauts filled out this customs form upon their return to earth, declaring importation of moon rocks and dust.

Enforcement should occur at the financial fountainhead of commercial space ventures: earth. Much like the famous Boston tea party, or the modern act of destroying counterfeit goods at the border, any goods procured improperly in space should simply be seized upon landing on the planet. The goods should then be returned to the proper owner or sold off, with the proceeds being returned to the proper owner. No space-based police force would be required, existing customs enforcement agencies could take up the task.

Precedent of a sort has already been established for customs regulation of space goods being brought to earth. Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins had to declare the importation of “moon rock and moon dust samples” when they arrived in Hawaii after their successful flight to the moon!

Come back Monday for the conclusion of Property Rights in Space, where we’ll discuss how a possible system for regulating private property ownership in space from earth can be implemented by the United States.

Happy creating!

Written by Andrew Rush

In Tough Economic Times, Patent Office Will Soon Offer Price Breaks

Tuesday, August 07, 2012 by Team PCT Law Group

As I have often pointed out on this Blog, small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that overlook their intellectual property assets (i.e., “IP” or patents, copyrights, trademarks and trade secrets) do so at their own peril.  As IP accounts for a vast majority of SMEs’ value, the key to their exit strategy – be it an IPO or sale – is the IP that they control or potentially control.  Thus, the excuse of not being able to afford U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) filing and maintenance fees will soon be a thing of the past for SME’s trying building their IP portfolios.

The Leahy-Smith America Invents Act (“AIA”), was signed by President Obama on September 16, 2011, after receiving overwhelming bi-partisan support by passing the House 304-117, and the Senate 89-9.  The AIA has been recognized as the first major overhaul to the patent system in almost 60 years!  Under the AIA, the USPTO will soon offer a three-tier pricing structure for a majority of its patent-related fees.

Currently, the USPTO offers a 50% reduction on most fees (e.g., filing, searching, examining, issuing, appealing, and maintenance fees) to every “small entity” – a company with less than 500 employees (including affiliates) – as defined by the Small Business Administration.  Now, under the AIA, the USPTO will offer each “micro entity” a 75% reduction on such fees.  A “micro entity” is a patent applicant who meets the definition of a “small entity” in addition to: (1) not being named on more than four previously-filed non-provisional applications; and (2) not having gross income exceeding three times the median U.S. household income for the preceding calendar year in which the applicable fee is being paid.  Obviously, a patent applicant that does not meet the “micro entity” nor the “small entity” definitions will be considered a “large entity” and must pay the standard (i.e., 100%) fee.

Paying micro entity fees can produce significant savings.  For example, the basic non-provisional patent application filing, search and examination fees for a large entity, as of July 2, 2012, is $1250.  The same fees for a small entity is $625.  For a micro entity, however, the same fees would be just $312.50!

So, the next question becomes how do we calculate “three times the median U.S. household income”?  In 2011, the median U.S. household income, as reported by the Census Bureau, was $51,413.  Thus, the cut-off for micro entity status would be three times that, or $154,239.  Note that this is household income.  Thus the income of an inventor’s spouse figures into the calculation!  Also, where there are joint inventors, each must meet (and certify that they meet) the “micro entity” status requirements.

We will stay tuned for the exact effective date of this new three-tier pricing system and watch its effects on SME innovation.

Written by Raymond Millien