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Patents R Us: Information and Services for Inventors and Patent Owners |
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Possible Outcomes to Your Patent SuitIf you find it necessary to file a patent suit (more formally and correctly, a patent infringement lawsuit), you should know that there are several possible outcomes. Victory at Trial: It is possible that your case will go to trial, and you could be victorious. In a patent suit, the jury will have to make two decisions – first, if the defendant actually did infringe on your patent; and, second, if the defendant did, what damages are to be paid. The good news is that a jury verdict is a satisfying vindication of your claim of patent infringement. The bad news is that the losing defendant can file for an appeal, and that can delay payment of any award. The defendant may succeed in getting the original verdict overturned, in which case the whole process essentially starts all over again! As you will learn, victory after a trial is an unlikely outcome as only a small percentage of patent infringement suits actually go to trial. Defeat at Trial: It is also possible that your patent suit will go to trial and you will lose. The jury will rule that the defendant did NOT infringe your patent, so the defendant owes you nothing! You could appeal the verdict, but you cannot appeal a jury verdict just because you did not like the outcome of the trial. Your attorney must identify an error made by the judge, and convince an appellate court that the error was serious enough that it affected the outcome of the trial. Appealing a jury verdict, and then re-trying the case, will be VERY expensive and will take years. This, however, is also an unlikely outcome as very few patent infringement suits actually go to trial and are heard by a jury. Dismissal: It is possible that the judge may dismiss your patent infringement claim. This is rare, but it is possible that the defendant’s attorney will convince the judge that you essentially do not have a case and you are wasting the court’s time. Abandon the Suit: It is also possible that you and your attorney will decide to abandon your claim. You may reach the conclusion that you will lose at trial, or you may run out of money if you are funding the legislation yourself, and you have no alternative but to walk away because you cannot put any more money into the case. Out-of-Court Settlement: The most
likely outcome of most types of civil litigation is an out-of-court
settlement. The plaintiff and defendant and their attorneys meet and
hash out a settlement that everyone can live with. When you go to trial,
either side can win big or lose big, and that’s risky and scary. So
the most likely outcome, if you and your attorney have been aggressively
prosecuting your claim, is that at some point the defendant will agree
to meet and discuss a settlement.
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