Title: IP Licenses and U.S. Insolvency Law:
1IP Licenses and U.S. Insolvency Law
- The Sexiest Intersection on Bankruptcy Boulevard
William F. Gray, Jr., Es q. Zachary D.
Silbersher, Esq.
2OVERVIEW
- I. U.S. Bankruptcy Code Key Provisions
- II. The debtor as licensor
- III.The debtor as licensee
- IV.Source Code Escrow Agreements Are they worth
it? - V. The Nextwave case Where the government is the
licensor
3The Clash of Bankruptcy Law and Patent Law
- Bankruptcy Law Free assignability of contracts
is fundamental to a businesss successful
reorganization and re-emergence from bankruptcy. - Patent Law Non-exclusive patents are not freely
assignable fundamental to patent law is the
patent holders right to exclude others from
using the patent.
4U.S. Bankruptcy Code Key Provisions
- Bankruptcys Goal relieve honest debtors of
debts and provide them with a fresh start - Section 541 - The Bankruptcy Estate
- Sweeping, inclusive definition of debtors
property - Consists of all legal and equitable interests of
the debtor at the time of filing the petition. - Property of the Estate includes contract rights
(In re Computer Communications, Inc., 824 F.2d
725 (9th Cir. 1987)) - Section 525 - Protection Against Discrimination
- prevents government discrimination on the basis
of companys bankruptcy
5U.S. Bankruptcy Code Key Provisions
- Section 365(c) - Assumption
- invalidates provisions restricting assignment
unless applicable non-bankruptcy law excuses the
other party from accepting performance from an
entity other than the debtor - Section 365(f) - Assignment
- invalidates provisions restricting assignment
- subject to 365(c)
- Section 365(e) - Voids Ipso Facto Clauses
- invalidates provisions that terminate a license
upon insolvency or bankruptcy. - Nevertheless, non-assignment provisions and ipso
facto clauses should always be placed in
contracts even though they may be invalidated in
bankruptcy
6IP Licenses are Executory Contracts
- Section 365 allows the trustee or
debtor-in-possession to reject, assume or assign
executory contracts. - Executory contract a contract where neither
party has yet to fully perform and failure to
perform by either party would constitute a
material breach.
7 Debtor as Licensor
- May the debtor-licensor reject the license?
- Section 365(n) enacted in response to Fourth
Circuits decision in Lubrizol Enterprises, Inc.
v. Richmond Metal Finishers, Inc., 756 F.2d 1043
(4th Cir. 1985). - Without Section 365(n), debtor-licensors could
reject their licenses and sell them to other
parties for a greater benefit, hanging the
original licensee out to dry.
8Debtor as Licensor
- Under Section 365(n), EVEN IF a debtor-licensor
rejects a license, then the licensee may - 1) treat the rejection as a breach and file a
claim, - the claim will be treated as pre-petition breach
- the licensee cannot continue using the license
- OR
- 2) keep its rights under the license for its
remaining term and continue to make royalty
payments. - licensee waives any right to setoff
- licensee waives any right to an administrative
expense claim
9Debtor as Licensee
- Remember Section 365(n)? It protects licensees
when the debtor is the licensor. If the
debtor-licensor rejects the license, the licensee
can keep using it. - Section 365 enables a debtor-licensee to assume
or reject IP license as it chooses. - Except, when the debtor is a patent licensee, it
needs the licensors consent to keep its patent
license.
10Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- In re Catapult Entertainment, Inc., 165 F.3d 747
(9th Cir. 1999) - Debtor-licensee wanted to assume its patent
license in a reorganization plan. - Licensor argued that since US federal patent law
barred assignment without the licensors consent,
the debtor-licensee could not assume the license.
11Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- In re Catapult Entertainment, Inc., 165 F.3d 747
(9th Cir. 1999) - Section 365(c) prevents a trustee or
debtor-in-possession from assuming or assigning
contracts if applicable non-bankruptcy law would
hold that the non-debtor party is excused from
accepting performance form anyone other than the
debtor. - If only Section 365(f) applied, then the U.S.
federal patent statute (which prevents
assignments of patent licenses without the
licensors consent) would be applicable
non-bankruptcy law, and would not be enforced. - But, Section 365(f) states that it is subject to
Section 365(c).
12 Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- In re Catapult Entertainment, Inc., 165 F.3d 747
(9th Cir. 1999) - Under the language of Section 365(c),
non-bankruptcy applicable law can prevent a
trustee or debtor-in-possession from assuming or
assigning executory contracts. - The majority of courts interpret this language to
make it difficult for insolvent technology
companies to use their patents to reorganize. - Two tests have emerged
- 1) Hypothetical Test
- 2) Actual Test
13Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- In re Catapult Entertainment, Inc., 165 F.3d 747
(9th Cir. 1999) - Hypothetical Test (Majority)
- The Hypothetical Test will not let a technology
company assume a license if, hypothetically,
applicable law would prevent it from assigning
that license.
14Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- Three reasons the Hypothetical Test is bad for
technology companies trying to reorganize - 1. Section 365(c) controls instead of Section
365(f). - Which means applicable non-bankruptcy law that
restricts assignment of licenses will apply. - 2. The US federal patent statute (restricting
assignment without licensors consent) is
applicable non-bankruptcy law. - Which means debtor cannot assign its
non-exclusive patent licenses without licensors
consent. - 3. Following a literal reading of a Section
365(c), non-assignability under applicable
non-bankruptcy law also extends to the right to
assume licenses. - Which means a debtor-in-possession may not even
assume a patent license without the licensors
consent, even if it does not intend to assign
that license.
15Debtor as Licensee (contd)
- Actual Test (Minority)
- Will the licensor have to accept performance from
someone other than who it contracted? - Therefore, a technology company in bankruptcy can
assume its licenses, provided they will not be
assigned. - Which means the company can keep operations
going in order to successfully reorganize. - The First Circuit follows the Actual Test.
- Recently, a District Court in the Fourth Circuit
followed the Actual Test.
16Source Code Escrow Agreements (SCEA)in
Bankruptcy Are they worth it?
- A licensee does not need an SCEA if Section
365(n)(1)(B) and (n)(3) applies. - Under those sections, a vendor can access source
code over objections of the trustee, if - the license is executory, due to continuing
obligations of the vendor, and - the license explicitly requires the vendor
release the source code upon default. - Practical Tip Source code is not helpful
without expert consultants (i.e. programmers or
the softwares developers).
17The Nextwave case Where the government is the
licensor
- F.C.C. v. Nextwave Personal Communications, Inc.,
is a recent Supreme Court decision that will have
broad implications for government licensing
issues. - Nextwave addresses whether a governmental agency
can discriminate against a company in
bankruptcy.
18The Nextwave case Where the government is the
licensor)
- The FCC used auctions to award broadband
licenses. Two of the six auction blocks (C-Block
and F-Block) were restricted to small businesses. - The FCC revoked Nextwaves licenses, declaring
they were cancelled upon Nextwaves breach of the
payment obligations. Again the Second Circuit
denied Nextwave relief. It reasoned that the FCC
was acting as a regulator and not a creditor.
Thus Nextwave could only challenge the FCCs
revocation of its licenses under the arbitrary
and capricious standard.
19The Nextwave case Where the government is the
licensor)
- The Supreme Court reversed and held for Nextwave.
It held that the FCC violated Section 525 of the
Bankruptcy Code which prevents government
agencies from revoking licenses from debtors who
are in bankruptcy for failure to pay a
dischargeable debt.
20The Nextwave case Where the government is the
licensor
- By its holding, the Supreme Court realigned the
priority of the Bankruptcy Code with respect to
government issued licenses. Nextwave foreclosed
the governments ability to hide behind a
regulatory flag. - Market predictability is redeemed.
- Bankruptcy priority is restored.
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