In particular, please describe:
Swiss intellectual property laws explicitly refer to the Swiss Code of Obligations (âCOâ) with respect to monetary reliefs (art. 73 of the Swiss Patent Act, (âPAâ); art. 62(2) of the Swiss Copyright Act (âCAâ); art. 55(2) of the Swiss Trademark Act (âTAâ); art. 35(2) of the Swiss Design Act (âDAâ); art. 9(3) of the Swiss Unfair Competition Act (âUCAâ)). Consequently monetary reliefs may be claimed based on damages (art. 41 CO), infringerâs profit (art. 423 CO) or unjust enrichment (art. 62 CO).
The method used to determine the diversion of sales is based on damages (art. 41 CO). Damages arising from an infringement of IP rights are identical to any damages in civil law, which are defined as the involuntary decrease in net capital (actual damage); it corresponds to the difference between the claimantâs hypothetical economic position in the absence of the wrongful conduct, and the claimantâs actual position (difference theory) (ATF 129 III 331 consid. 2.1 and references). The claimant must prove that damage occurred (art. 42(1) CO). Consequently, and based on the strict approach of the Swiss Supreme Court, the plaintiff must prove both the existence and the amount of its loss in a sufficiently determined and concrete manner (ATF 127 III 365, consid. 2b and further references by Benoit Chappuis, Assessing Damage under the Discounted Cash Flow Approach (DCF): Sound Tool or Speculative Method? A Swiss perspective, RSDA 4/2012, 269 et seqq.). However, where the exact value of the damage cannot be quantified, the court estimates the value at its discretion in light of the normal course of events and the steps taken by the injured party (art. 42(2) CO). The damage is proven if the injured party provides sufficient evidence from which the court may conclude that the claimed damage has Âactually occurred (ATF 122 III 219 Âconsid. 3a).
In light of the above definition of damage (actual damage and difference theory), only the loss incurred (damnum emergens) and the lost profit (lucrum cessans) are subject to damages. With regard to the loss incurred, the damage may be a result of market disturbances, because this may oblige the injured party to increase the publicâs knowledge or advertisement or because the company value/goodwill diminishes (Lucas David, SIWR I/2, Der ÂRechtsschutz im ImmaterialgĂŒter- und Wettbewerbsrecht, 3. ed., Basel 2011, 155). The damage may also be calculated on the basis of pre-trial costs (ATF 117 II 394, consid. 3a).
With regards to lost profit, there are three methods that can be used for determination. One method is to produce evidence of the actual damage by showing a decline in turnover which is linked to the IP infringement. A non-increase of the turnover may also be an indication, if it is demonstrated that the turnover did not increase the year the infringement took place, but generally increased by up to 10% every year for the previous ten years (Jenny, Die Eingriffskondiktion bei ImmaterialgĂŒterÂrechtsverletzungen â Unter BerĂŒcksichtigung der AnsprĂŒche aus unerlaubter Handlung und unechter GeschĂ€ftsfĂŒhrung ohne Auftrag, Zurich 2004, 75). The claimant must show that, in the absence of IP infringement, he would have made those profits (e.g. that he would have sold his products instead of the infringerâs products). The second method consists of relying on a reasonable royalty and the third method on infringerâs profits to quantify the lost profit under art. 41 CO.
However, reasonable royalties can alternatively be claimed, according to the main doctrine (cf. question 2), under art. 62 CO as restitution for unjust enrichment and the infringerâs profit under art. 423 CO as compensation based on agency without authority.
Only the net profit is taken into account; it is calculated according to the difference between the infringerâs income and expenses. There is no specific level indicated (cf. question 3).
In particular, please describe:
As mentioned above (cf. question 1)a)), a reasonable royalty can either be claimed under art. 41 CO as method of quantifying lost profit or, according to the main doctrine, under art. 62 CO as restitution for unjust enrichment.
According to the Swiss Supreme Court, the reasonable royalty determination seems to be based on art. 41 CO as a method for quantifying lost profits (one can speak about a lost royalty fee). In the âMilchschĂ€umer IIâ decision (ATF 132 III 379), the Swiss Supreme Court examined the reasonable royalty under art. 41 CO and stated that the claimant can only ask for a reasonable royalty if he shows that he would have effectively concluded a license agreement without the infringement (ATF 132 III 379 consid. 3.3.3. For an in-depth analysis of the decision, see Benhamou, DommaÂges-intĂ©rĂȘts suite Ă la violation de droits de propriĂ©tĂ© intellectuelle, Etude de la mĂ©thode des redevances en droit suisse et comparĂ©, 2013, 198 et seqq.). The Swiss Supreme Court concluded that the claimant failed to prove that a license agreement in the claimed amount would have been concluded inter alia because he had offered the infringer a license for a fee of CHF 90â 000 and the infringer refused such offer and subsequently started to infringe the patent. Furthermore, the Swiss Supreme Court indicated that the decisive criterion for determining the reasonable royalty is not an appropriate royalty but a hypothetical royalty which would have been agreed on when concluding a license agreement on the IP right in question (ATF 132 III 379).
According to the main doctrine, a reasonable royalty may be claimed under art. 62 CO as restitution for unjust enrichment (see for instance, Roberto Vito, Schadenersatz, Gewinnabschöpfung und Bereicherungsanspruch bei ImmaterialguÌterrechtsverletzungen, sic! 2008, Sondernummer, 23 et seqq.; Jenny, 183 et seqq.). Unlike the method of quantifying lost profit, the action for unjust enrichment is available irrespective of the fault of the infringer (cf. question 10). However, this method of calculation has not really been an issue until recently and is somewhat controversial.
First, there is a controversy with respect to the conditions under which the method is available under art. 62 CO, in particular whether it is available when a license agreement could not have been concluded in the absence of the infringement or, in the alternative, whether it is available only when a license agreement could have been concluded (Benhamou, 200 et seqq., indicating also that the fact that the Swiss Supreme Court neglected to examine the conditions under art. 62 CO in the âMilchschĂ€umer IIâ case could be seen as a rejection of the method under art. 62 CO).
Second, there is a controversy with respect to the extent of the method, in particular whether the compensation is based on the objective value of the use equivalent to the reasonable royalties (objective approach) or on the profit acquired by the infringer (subjective approach). The doctrine and the ÂCantonal Court of St.â Gallen follow the objective approach and consider ÂenÂrichment to be equal to the license fee (Decision of the Cantonal Court of St.â Gallen, sic! 1999, 631 Âconsid. 2c).
Third, the extent to which a good-faith IP infringer is allowed to deduct certain expenses (e.g. overhead- and fixed costs) under art. 64 CO remains controversial. The rationale behind this provision is that the restitution to be paid by the IP infringer shall not lead to a decrease of its own assets. On the other hand, the application of this provision creates the risk that the IP Âinfringer is able to cut the enrichment down to a negligible residual value (see Ralph Schlosser, Commentaire romand, PropriĂ©tĂ© intellectuelle, BĂąle 2013, LDA (CA) 62, 545 et seqq.).
So far, there has been no decision of the Swiss Supreme Court where the claim for a reasonable royalty under art. 62 CO has been examined and where it clearly pronounces itself for one or the other approach.
A royalty can be quantified based on the royalty rate customarily owed or on a hypothetical royalty.
With respect to the royalty rate customarily owed, the applicable tariffs in the respective sectors or the principles for calculating compulsory licenses or compensation for employeesâ inventions may serve as indications (Jenny, 312). Comparables may also serve as indications by taking into account previous contracts with similar products or services. However, there is not much case law in Switzerland, which indicates how to quantify the royalty rate customarily owed (see Benhamou, 275 et seqq. for comparables and 313 for a chart summarizing the Swiss cantonal and Federal court rulings where the royalty method has been taken into account). In copyright, the basic royalty rate amounts to 10% of the sales price but may be higher or lower and varies from 1 to 19%. In patent law, royalty rates usually vary from 3 to 10% of the sales price and, in trademark law, between 1 to 5% of the sales price, which can even be up to 15% if well-known trademarks are involved (Jenny, 318). Furthermore, Swiss Courts are not opposed to applying concrete tariffs or industry recommendations, if available in the business sector concerned. So far, this has only been the case in copyright law (cf. Decision of the Cantonal Court of St.â Gallen, sic! 2003, 706 et seqq.; ATF 122 III 463; CJ GE, SJ 1982 413, âKGBâ).
In the absence of relevant comparables, a reasonable royalty may be quantified based on a hypothetical royalty (cf. question I.2.c).
A reasonable royalty may be quantified based on the hypothetical royalty. The decisive criterion is what reasonable contractors would have agreed on with full knowledge of the relevant facts of the particular case. The quantification requires taking into account the principles governing the negotiations of a license agreement, which is a two-steps analysis: first, one shall determine what price a licensor would request and what price a licensee would be prepared to pay. Second, one shall compare these prices based on the bargaining power (Benhamou, 277). In trademark law, for example, the brand awareness and its reputation as well as the danger of confusion must be taken into account when quantifying a hypothetical royalty (Jenny, 313).
Depending on the concrete needs of the parties, the reasonable royalty can be a lump-sum, a per-unit royalty, a percentage of revenues or profit, or a combination of the aforementioned (Jenny, 317). A lump-sum is convenient for contracts where the administrative expense shall be kept low, e.g. for timely limited licenses on copyright protected works. In patent law, where the success or failure of an innovation on the market is crucial, the payment of a mere lump sum is usually regarded to be to the detriment of one of the parties involved. Therefore, mixed royalties (usually a royalty consisting of a fixed amount and a performance-based variable component) are most common (Hilty, Lizenzvertragsrecht, Systematisierung und Typisierung aus schutz- und schuldrechtlicher Sicht, 486 et seqq.).
In particular, please describe:
- a) the method to determine the profits resulting from the infringement, i.e. resulting from the use of the IP right;
- b) what level of profit margin of the infringer should be taken into consideration.
As mentioned above (cf. question 1)a)), the infringerâs profit can also be claimed under art. 423 CO. In this case, the infringerâs profits are calculated on the basis of the infringerâs net profits, which equal the gross profit plus interests less the costs relating to the realization of the profit. According to the jurisprudence and the doctrine, only the directly attributable costs to the infringement are deductible, such as the costs of materials, salary, production, distribution and advertising costs.
Costs which would have been paid even if no infringement had occurred, such as fixed or general costs, basically cannot be deducted when quantifying the infringerâs profits. However, there is a debate over whether some of the general costs should also be deductible. Some scholars make the difference between variable costs, which shall be deductible, and non-deductible fixed or general costs (Schlosser, 519). Other scholars renounce this subdivision and allow the infringed party to basically deduct any costs as long as they are causal for the infringement (Benhamou, 187). This approach is in line with the Swiss Supreme Courtâs decision âResonanzetiketteâ, in which it stated that only those costs which were exclusively incurred in relation to the production of the infringed products are deductible and that generally no costs exist that are not deductible as long as they were necessary for realization of the profit (ATF 134 III 306 consid. 4.1.4 et seq.).
- a) in relation to convoyed goods;
- b) where the infringing product forms part of a larger assembly; or
- c) where the IP rights found infringed are routinely licensed together with other IP rights as a portfolio?
- d) when the damage suffered by the right holder is related to competing goods which do not implement the infringed IP rights?
The Swiss Supreme Court has ruled that a reasonable royalty can only be requested by the right holder based on damages (art. 41 CO) if he can show that the defendant would have entered into a license agreement with the right holder (cf. question 2a). This is a major obstacle to applying reasonable royalties. The right holder usually relies on actual loss (art. 41 CO) although he has to provide evidence for the fault of the infringer. Relating to a), b) and d), the right holder is entitled to claim lost sales of ancillary products which may comprise equipment, spare parts, etc., which the right holder ordinarily sells alongside the protected article, and which are not covered by the IP right, irrespective of whether the IP right is a patent (Heinrich, PatG/EPà PA 73 N 35), a trademark or a design right. When a number of licensing agreements exists, concluded by the right holder with third parties according to c), it is considered permissible that the right holder requests a reasonable royalty on the basis of unjust enrichment law (art. 62 CO) (Calame/Sterpi, Patent Litigation, London 2012, 422).
They are the same in principle, namely with respect to exclusive licensees. Indeed, the calculation of the damages remains the same. There is a difference with respect to the standing to sue depending on the nature of the license. In more detail:
The right holder and the licensee are in a different position when it comes to claiming damages depending on the nature and scope of the license. The various statutes (art. 75 PA; art. 34(4) DA; art. 55(4) TA; art. 62(3) CA) explicitly permit the so-called âexclusive licenseeâ to claim damages. The notion of exclusive licensee under these provisions covers both sole licenses as well as exclusive licenses. However, the exclusive licensee may only claim damages if the licensed rights are impacted by the infringement. If these conditions are met, the exclusive licensee is in much the same situation as the right holder as regards the rules and methods addressed in questions 1 through 4 above.
Non-exclusive licensees were not granted similar statutory rights out of fear of conflicting or overlapping claims. Nonetheless, non-exclusive licensees are entitled to intervene in proceedings to claim damages; such damages must however be particularly and directly hit by the infringement, thus justifying the non-exclusive licenseeâs intervention (German text of the Federal Council Message on the PA 2005, 127).
- a) the quantum of actual loss;
- b) the quantum of reasonable Âroyalties.
For example, is expert accounting evidence on past licensing practices accepted?
In general, all kinds and types of evidence are accepted, including expert accounting evidence and past licensing practices.
Claimants will usually rely on the general concepts of torts in their attempt to prove the quantum of their actual loss, because of the absence of specific statutory provisions.
In particular, article 42(2) CO allows the court to estimate the quantum when the exact value of the damage or reasonable royalties cannot be established. To trigger this provision, the plaintiff must bring forth sufficient evidence to convince the court to estimate the quantum of the actual loss. Such evidence must not only be direct, but can be an array of indirect evidence (decision of the ATF 132 III 379, âMilchschĂ€umer IIâ). Consequently, the court will rely on probability and experience rules (e.g. in light of the normal course of events and the steps taken by the injured party). Such indirect evidence may namely be a decrease in the right holderâs turnover in close time proximity to the infringement, the infringerâs profits, the duration of the infringement, etc. These assessments may be provided in various forms, for instance through expert advice, accounting books, and so forth.
More precisely, the Swiss Civil Procedure Code (CPC) allows for rather wide-ranging evidence: testimony, physical records, inspection, expert opinion, written information, examination of the parties (art. 168 CPC). In that respect, expert accounting evidence on past licensing practices is permissible evidence; however, in this situation, the expert must be appointed by the court. Indeed, though the parties are free to provide their own expert report such a contribution would only amount to a private pleading without benefiting from the additional weight of evidence under the CPC (Peter Hafner, in: SpĂŒhler/Tenchio/Infanger, Basler Kommentar, Schweizerische Zivilprozessordnung, Basel 2013, CPC 168 N 4).
When the court requires the defendant to provide specific items of evidence, it is not uncommon to raise a business or trade secrets defense. The defendant thus attempts to avoid having to produce evidence by claiming it is covered by a trade secret. Such a Âdefense is however very limited as the courts, after balancing the interests of the Âinvolved parties, may implement Âmeasures to avoid any infringement of such secrets (art. 156 CPC, also art. 68 PA), for instance by redacting the names of third parties. Thus, business or trade secrets is not a solid defense against the counterpartyâs right to Âinformation.
Switzerland does not have a general discovery process. But with IP infringements there is a specific two-step approach (âStufenklageâ) available (art. 85 CPC), which allows the right holder to get information from the infringer on the quantum of monetary compensation before the right holder has to finally specify its claim on monetary relief later on in the litigation.
Quite often courts will decide IP cases on infringement first, before they decide on monetary relief. The parties can influence the course of the litigation with their prayers for relief.
It is possible to separate the proceedings into several interdependent stages. As a first step, the right holder can seek a partial ruling on the production of information and documentation from the infringer, as well as the accounting of books. In a second step, the right holder can claim monetary relief based on one of the three available methods, i.e. damages (art. 41 CO), infringerâs profit (art. 423 CO) or unjust enrichment (art. 62 CO). Hence, plaintiff will typically only quantify his monetary compensation claim after the abovementioned information is obtained through this first-step ruling providing information and accounting of books.
Swiss Patent Law stipulates (art. 73(1) PA) that damages are to be paid if any of the circumstances giving rise to liability are met (art. 66 PA). No difference is made between direct unlawful use of a patented invention and contributory infringement (art. 66(d) PA) when a person abets inter alia direct infringement, participates in it, or aids or facilitates the performance of such an act. However, Swiss Patent Law requires that a direct patent infringement takes place (ATF 129 III 588 âStickmaschineâ; Heinrich, PatG/EPĂ, PA 66 N 42â44). Decisions of the Swiss Federal Patent Court do not apply different quantification methods relating to damages for direct infringement and damages for contributory infringement.
Swiss Trademark Law (art. 13 TA) mentions affixing the sign to goods (direct use) and to packaging or otherwise in the course of trade (indirect use) within the same list.
Independent from the kind of IP right it is possible as a matter of principle to claim the entire loss from the contributory infringer.
- â if an injunction has also been granted;
- ⥠only if an injunction has not been granted; or
- ⥠not at all?
Forward-looking damages are available, regardless of whether an injunction has been granted or not.
In the event of infringement, various civil actions are available to the claimant. Injunctions may be requested, i.e. the cessation of an existing infringement or the prohibition of an imminent infringement (art. 72(1) PA; 55(1)(a) TA; 62(1)(a) and (b) CA) (David, 282 et seqq). Monetary reliefs may also be requested (art. 55(2) TA; 62(2) CA; 73(1) PA), i.e. compensation for damages (art. 41 CO), infringerâs profits (art. 423 CO) and unjust enrichment (art. 62 CO) (David, 105). These actions are not per se mutually exclusive. Consequently, the request for an injunction does not preclude the action for monetary compensation.
No distinction should be made between current damage (damage that has already occurred as of the date of the judgement of the cantonal court of last resort) and future damage (damage that occurs after such a judgement is made). There is little specific IP case law relating to future damage. However, case law in tort shows that the elements (current and future damage) are identical and that the principles for calculating the damage are the same (for these principles cf. Question I.1.a), the only difference being the moment at which the damage arose (Chappuis, 272 and references). Future damage must be foreseeable with the same degree of certainty as current damage (ATF 116 II 441, consid. 3aa = JdT 1991 I 166). Consequently, the action for monetary reliefs may cover both the current and future damage, provided that they are foreseeable.
The conditions of compensation for damages (art. 41 CO) are: an infringing activity, a damage suffered by the claimant, a causal connection between the infringing activity and the damage, and fault of the infringer. The conditions of Âinfringerâs profits (art. 423 CO) are: an infringing activity, the profits made by the infringer, a causal connection Âbetween the illegal activity and the profits and bad faith of the infringer. Finally, the action for unjustified enrichment (art. 62 CO) is available irrespective of the fault or bad faith of the infringer.
Consequently, the fault or bad faith is a condition of action for monetary reliefs (excluding the action for unjustified enrichment) and shall be evidenced by the claimant (R. Schlosser, Commentaire romand de propriĂ©tĂ© intellectuelle, BĂąle 2013, LDA (CA) 62 N 33; F. Dessemontet, Le droit dâauteur, Lausanne 1999, N 802). In the event of slight negligence of the infringer, the court may decide to reduce the damages (art. 43(1) and 44(2) CO). Similarly, in the event of concurrent negligence of the plaintiff, the court may decide to reduce the damages (art. 44(1) CO), for instance when the plaintiff delayed action for preliminary injunctions without legitimate grounds (CJ GE, sic! 2000, 596 consid. 7 âCrazy Horseâ, quoted by Schlosser, LDA (CA) 62 N 41).
The relevant moment for determining the damage is the date of the award of damages. On that date, the Court shall however take into account all damaging effects, whether or not already incurred, terminated or still in progress. Indeed, Swiss law enables courts to take into account various points of time (the date of the award of damages; the date of the infringing acts; the day on which the damage materialized) (B. Chappuis, Le moment du dommage, Zurich 2007, 146 et seqq.) and the Court shall take into account any damaging effects between the date of the infringing acts (e.g. the marketing value of the assets of the injured party) or after the award of damages and that will materialize in the future (Chappuis, 147).
As indicated above (cf. question I.9), no distinction should be made between current and future damage. They are identical other than the one difference as to the moment at which the losses arise. Additionally, the harmed party must prove both the existence and the amount of its loss, but the court has discretionary power to lighten the burden of proof, provided however that the injuring effect is difficult to establish and that the plaintiff has collected all the evidence at its disposal. Consequently, future damage that does not exist at the moment of the judgement will be compensated, in addition to the current damage, provided it is foreseeable.
Yes, the group is of the view that aspects could be improved. In Swiss law, monetary reliefs are often rejected for lack of evidence of injury, of enrichment or of a quantifiable gain (based on a strict approach of the difference theory), including the royalty method when the plaintiff cannot prove its intention or ability to enter into a licensing agreement with the infringer or a third party. Consequently, Swiss law does not necessarily comply with its obligations under the TRIPS Agreement.
The group is of the view that the aspects to be improved could be a slight relaxation of the difference theory (legitimated on the basis of the specific nature of IP and of the application of tort law tailored to IP matter), which would allow courts to apply the royalty method more broadly (i.e. also when the injured party has neither the intention nor the ability to enter into a licensing agreement).
- â the Courtâs assessment of the hypothetical negotiation be under an assumption that all the IP rights in suit are valid and infringed?
- ⥠the Court first be required to find that all the IP rights in suit are valid and infringed?
According to the general principles of tort law, monetary reliefs in the form of a reasonable royalty are available in the event of a valid IP right and of an IP infringement. However, we do not consider this question to be highly relevant from a Swiss perspective, as when a monetary claim becomes an issue, the validity of the IP rights in suit and the infringement of the same will usually already have been assessed by the court (particularly if the specific proceeding is conducted in a two-step approach (âStufenklageâ)).
When the royalty rate customarily owed is not available (i.e. based on comparables or the applicable tariffs in the respective sectors), the reasonable royalty shall be determined by reference to a hypothetical negotiation (cf. Question I.2 b) and c)). The criteria is not what would have been accepted by the infringer or the plaintiff, but what âreasonable partiesâ would have agreed on based on all the circumstances (e.g. the market value of the IP right, the research and development costs, the marketing efforts) (Jenny, N 598;Â Benhamou, 277). Also, expert opinions on licensing practices in the relevant industry and royalty rate appraisals by accounting firms should be considered as relevant evidence.
The quantification of damages does not depend on injunctive relief: both claims are not per se mutually exclusive: injunctions look at the future and require in particular no fault on the infringerâs part but a legitimate interest of the claimant (i.e. possible risk of repetition the infringing act or of committing such an infringing act), while damages look at the past, aim at compensating a prejudice suffered and require in particular the proof of damage suffered (based on the difference theory). Consequently, damages are available, as long as the harmed party can prove both the existence and the amount of its loss in a sufficiently determined and concrete manner (cf. question 9).
The group is of the view that there is no need for full harmonization of damages, as the concept of damages varies from one jurisdiction to another (from specific regimes of damages tailored to IP with over-compensatory functions, to the general tort law principles with a strict limitation to compensatory functions) and as such conceptions may be deeply enshrined in each jurisdictionâs legal system. However, there shall be a minimum harmonization in the sense that courts shall award at least (minimum) damages based on the royalty method in case of willful or negligent infringement, in order to take into account the specific nature of IP and to comply with the TRIPS Agreement (in particular art. 45.1 TRIPS and art. 41.1 TRIPS) (see Benhamou, N 654).
If yes, please respond to the following questions without regard to your Groupâs current law.
As explained above (cf. question 14), the courts shall award minimum damages based on the royalty method in case of willful or negligent infringement.
Even if no, please address the following questions to the extent your Group considers your Groupâs current law could be improved.
In Swiss law, monetary reliefs are often rejected for lack of evidence of an actual damage, an enrichment or infringerâs profits (based on a strict approach of the difference theory):
- â Regarding the compensation of actual damage (art. 41 CO), it requires a market disruption, i.e. that customers have been genuinely deceived with regard to the quality of the counterfeit product, and the lost profits require that the good was sold in sufficient commercial quantities as well as being substitutable. The royalty method applies, according to the Swiss Supreme Court and based on art. 41 CO, only if a licensing agreement would effectively have been concluded in the absence of infringement.
- â Regarding the defendantâs profits (art. 423 CO), such profits require a delicate calculation of the deductibility of fees and the factors affecting causation.
- â Regarding unjustified enrichment (art. 62 CO), the enrichment requires expenditures made in the ordinary course and on the basis of life experience, as well as a careful calculation of objective value.
The group is of the view that such difficulties are not desirable, in particular the fact that the regular rejection of monetary relief does not necessarily comply with the TRIPS Agreement, and that the courts shall at least award (minimum) damages based on the royalty method in case of willful or negligent infringement. Such method has a sufficient legal basis under the current law but requires a certain relaxation of tort law (in particular the difference theory):
- â From the perspective of Swiss law, a possible legal basis is the unjust enrichment (art. 62 CO), as the Swiss Supreme Court maintains a strict interpretation of art. 41 CO which does enable the royalty method and as art. 62 CO only requires to redefine the notion of enrichment (something that is already recognized by some courts and the majority of legal scholars).
- â From the perspective of adapting Swiss law to the neighboring countries of the European Union and to the minimum standards of the TRIPS Agreement, the legal basis to be preferred is the compensation of actual prejudice (art. 41 CO), because the Directive 2004/48/EC and its transposition link this method to the actual damage, while simultaneously expanding the concept of damage by taking into account the specific nature of IP.
Our preference would be for the legal basis of art. 41 CO. It enables courts to limit the royalty method to cases of IP infringement â or possibly to cases of goods with similar characteristics (ubiquitous, intangible, non-consumable) such as image rights or business secrets â contrary to art. 62 CO which risks expanding the method to all cases of undue use of a good. It allows one to maintain a certain flexibility in oneâs calculations and to take into account the concept of fault, which appears necessary in light of the increasingly controversial nature of IP and complex nature of the products it covers. Finally, it fits into the expansion of the concept of damage which is the object of several developments (exceptions to the difference theory as well as general and abstract presumptions under copyright law) (Benhamou, N 649 et seqq. and references).
Compensation for actual loss is very difficult to obtain under the current practice of the Swiss courts, which puts the burden of the quantification of the damage entirely on the holder of the infringed IP rights. For this reason, claiming lost profits requires that the plaintiff discloses its profit margin. Because of these hurdles, claiming lost profits is normally not the IP holderâs preferred option.
Notwithstanding of the aforementioned, the choice of the underlying basis of the claim to be applied in a concrete case heavily depends on the available means of evidence.
The group is of the opinion that the quantification of a hypothetical royalty should always focus on what reasonable contracting parties would have agreed on with full knowledge of all circumstances, which are suitable to influence the amount of the license fee. This approach necessarily means that the quantification of reasonable royalties must be assessed on a case by case basis.
As already mentioned (cf. question I.2.c)) a hypothetical negotiation usually comes into play in the absence of relevant comparables. Based on the fact that a hypothetical licensee would not be willing to pay for the use of an invalid (or not infringed) IP right, we are of the opinion that the hypothetical negotiation should necessarily be under the assumption that the IP rights being negotiated were found valid and infringed.
The group agrees that the principle set out in the patent-related US decision Georgia-Pacific Corp. v. United States Plywood Corp., which established that the licensorâs established policy and marketing program to maintain its monopoly by not licensing others to use his invention might be relevant to determine the amount of the hypothetical license fee. In our view, an established restrictive license policy by the IP right holder shall necessarily lead to an increase of the license fee to be paid by the infringer of the IP rights in suit.
Furthermore, prior going rates for licensing the IP rights in suit are deemed to be relevant, as they provide a rough indication of what is customary in connection with the IP rights in suit. However, the existence of prior going rates shall not lead to a factual obligation to contract of the IP owner.
Prior licensing practices or prior going rates for licensing other IP rights of third parties should only be considered relevant if they are similar to the IP rights in suit.
- a) how convoyed goods should be dealt with;
- b)Â how competing goods of the right holder, not making use of the patent, should be dealt with; and
- c) how damages should be determined when the infringing product forms part of a larger assembly.
Since compensation for actual loss requires â according to the current practice of the Swiss courts â that the plaintiff discloses its profit margin, the burden becomes even more difficult in view of conveyed goods. The loss due to conveyed sales has to be taken into account, when the non-protected parts drove customer demand and the infringing and non-infringing products form a functional unit.
Competing goods of the right holder should not regularly be taken into account in relation to actual loss.
The loss due to sales of the entire assembly has to be taken into account, when the protected parts drove customer demand to acquire the assembly.
According to Swiss law, actions in Switzerland relating to indirect infringement, being considered to be contributory infringement, are not reprehensible if no direct infringement takes place in Switzerland. Therefore, in order to award damages for indirect/contributory infringement in the circumstances mentioned in the question, the way indirect/contributory infringements are handled in the country has to be changed first by the lawmaker.
The alternative or cumulative relation between damages and account of profits is of interest.
Additional factors, such as âmoral damagesâ should also be taken into account. Under Swiss law, moral damages pursuant to art. 49 CO may also be claimed by legal entities which benefit from personality rights. However, moral damages require a severe infringement of the personality of the right holder, which may be difficult to prove and are distinct from the actual damage incurred. Consequently, the relation between these moral damages and the actual damage incurred should be clarified.
Additional economic methods should also be considered to quantify a reasonable royalty (see for instance, Benhamou, 286 et seqq., suggesting to combine standard methods of economic evaluation with the economic royalty rate method and the Financial Indicative Running Royalty Model FIRRM).
Summary
In Swiss law, monetary reliefs are often rejected for lack of evidence of an actual damage (art. 41 CO), an enrichment (art. 62 CO) or infringerâs profits (art. 423 CO) (based on a strict approach of the difference theory). Regarding the compensation of actual damage (art. 41 CO), it requires a market disruption and the royalty method applies, according to the Swiss Supreme Court, as a lost royalty fee only if a licensing agreement would effectively have been concluded in the absence of infringement. Regarding the defendantâs profits (art. 423 CO), such profits require a delicate calculation of the deductibility of fees and the factors affecting causation. Regarding unjustified enrichment (art. 62 CO), the enrichment requires expenditures made in the ordinary course and on the basis of life experience, as well as a careful calculation of objective value. The group is of the view that such difficulties are not desirable, in particular the fact that the regular rejection of monetary relief does not necessarily comply with the TRIPS Agreement, and that the courts shall at least award (minimum) damages based on the royalty method in case of willful or negligent infringement. Such method has a sufficient legal basis under the current law but requires a certain relaxation of tort law (in particular the difference theory). The group holds also the view that additional economic methods should be considered to quantify the damages, in particular the reasonable royalty (such as the economic royalty rate method and the Financial Indicative Running Royalty Model FIRRM).
Zusammenfassung
Im Schweizer Recht werden geldwerte AnsprĂŒche hĂ€ufig aufgrund des Fehlens von Beweisen eines tatsĂ€chlichen Schadens (Art. 41 OR), einer ungerechtfertigten Bereicherung (Art. 62 OR) oder eines Verletzergewinnes (Art. 423 OR) zurĂŒckgewiesen (basierend auf einem strengen Ansatz der Differenztheorie). FĂŒr die Kompensation eines tatsĂ€chlichen Schadens (Art. 41 OR) wird eine Zerstörung des Marktes gefordert und die Lizenzberechnung ist gemĂ€ss dem Schweizerischen Bundesgericht als eine verlorene LizenzgebĂŒhr nur dann anwendbar, falls eine Lizenzvereinbarung in Abwesenheit einer Verletzung effektiv abgeschlossen worden wĂ€re. In Bezug auf die Gewinne des Beklagten (Art. 43 OR) ist eine delikate ÂBerechnung der Absetzbarkeit von GebĂŒhren und der BerĂŒcksichtigung von Faktoren, die in einem Kausalzusammenhang stehen, erforderlich. Die ungerechtfertigte Bereicherung (Art. 62 OR) erfordert die Bereicherung im ordentlichen Verlauf und auf der Basis der Lebenserfahrung vorgenommene Ausgaben, als auch eine sorgfĂ€ltige Berechnung des objektiven Wertes. Die Gruppe ist der Auffassung, dass solche Schwierigkeiten nicht wĂŒnschenswert sind, insbesondere im Hinblick darauf, dass die regelmĂ€ssige ZurĂŒckweisung von geldwerten AnsprĂŒchen nicht notwendigerweise im Einklang mit dem TRIPS-Ăbereinkommen steht, und dass die Gerichte mindestens einen (minimalen) Schadensersatz basierend auf der Lizenzpreisanalogie im Falle von vorsĂ€tzlicher oder fahrlĂ€ssiger Verletzung sprechen sollten. Ein solches Verfahren hat eine ausreichende gesetzliche Grundlage unter dem heutigen Recht, erfordert aber eine gewisse Lockerung in Bezug auf das Deliktsrecht (insbesondere die Differenztheorie). Die Gruppe ist auch der Ansicht, dass zusĂ€tzliche ökonomische Verfahren eingesetzt werden sollten, um die SchĂ€den zu quantifizieren, insbesondere eine angemessene LizenzgebĂŒhr (wie das ökonomische Lizenzpreisanalogieverfahren und das Financial Indicative Running Royalty Model FIRRM).
Résumé
En droit suisse, les actions rĂ©paratrices sont souvent rejetĂ©es, faute de preuve dâun dommage (art. 41 CO), dâun enrichissement (art. 62 CO) ou dâun gain quantifiable (art. 423 CO) (selon une approche stricte de la thĂ©orie de la diffĂ©rence). Sâagissant de lâaction en dommages-intĂ©rĂȘts (art. 41 CO), le dommage suppose une rĂ©elle perturbation du marchĂ© ou une exploitation du bien avec des capacitĂ©s commerciales suffisantes et la mĂ©thode des redevances sâapplique, selon le TF en tant que redevances manquĂ©es, uniquement lorsquâun contrat de licence aurait Ă©tĂ© effectivement conclu en lâabsence de la violation. Sâagissant de lâaction en remise du gain (art. 423 CO), le gain suppose une dĂ©licate apprĂ©ciation de la dĂ©ductibilitĂ© des frais et des facteurs agissant sur la causalitĂ©. Sâagissant de lâaction en enrichissement illĂ©gitime (art. 62 CO), lâenrichissement suppose des dĂ©penses faites selon le cours ordinaire des choses et lâexpĂ©rience de la vie et un calcul dĂ©licat de la valeur objective. Le groupe est dâavis que de telles difficultĂ©s ne sont pas souhaitables. Il considĂšre en particulier que cette pratique conduisant au rejet systĂ©matique des dommages-intĂ©rĂȘts ne respecte pas nĂ©cessairement les obligations dĂ©coulant de lâAccord ADPIC et que les tribunaux devraient allouer (au minimum) des dommages-intĂ©rĂȘts calculĂ©s selon la mĂ©thode des redevances en cas de violation intentionnelle ou nĂ©gligente. Une telle mĂ©thode repose sur un fondement lĂ©gal suffisant, mais requiert un certain assouplissement du droit commun (particuliĂšrement de la thĂ©orie de la diffĂ©rence). Le groupe est Ă©galement dâavis que le calcul des redevances de licence, et plus gĂ©nĂ©ralement des dommages-intĂ©rĂȘts, pourrait sâeffectuer Ă©galement Ă lâaide des mĂ©thodes Ă©conomiques et fiscales, telles que les mĂ©thodes Ă©conomiques du taux de la redevance (Royalty Rate Method) et de la Financial Indicative Running Royalty Model.
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Members of the working group: Yaniv ÂBenhamou (chairman), Christoph Berchtold, Markus Frick, YaĂ«l Heymann, Michael ÂLiebetanz. |