THE DIRECT COSTS FROM NPE DISPUTES
99 Cornell L. Rev. 387 (2014)
Available at http://cornelllawreview.org/files/2014/01/99CLR387.pdf
Boston University School of Law Working Paper No. 12-34
(June 25, 2012)
James Bessen
Boston University School of Law
Michael J. Meurer Boston University School of Law
This paper can be downloaded without charge at:
http://www.bu.edu/law/faculty/scholarship/workingpapers/2012.html
The Direct Costs from NPE Disputes
99 CORNELL L. REV. 387 (2014)
available at http://cornelllawreview.org/files/2014/01/99CLR387.pdf
By James Bessen[1] and Michael J. Meurer[2]
Abstract:
In the past, “non-practicing entities” (NPEs), popularly known as “patent trolls,” have helped small inventors profit from their inventions. Is this true today or, given the unprecedented levels of NPE litigation, do NPEs reduce innovation incentives? Using a survey of defendants and a database of litigation, this paper estimates the direct costs to defendants arising from NPE patent assertions. We estimate that firms accrued $29 billion of direct costs in 2011. Although large firms accrued over half of direct costs, most of the defendants were small or medium-sized firms. Moreover, an examination of publicly listed NPEs indicates that little of the direct costs represents a transfer to small inventors. This updated version of the paper includes a reply to critics.
1. Introduction
The American patent system has experienced an explosion of patent litigation over the past decade initiated by parties called Non-Practicing Entities (NPEs).[3] The term Non-Practicing Entity identifies parties who own and sometimes assert patents, but do not practice technology covered by their patents.[4] Commentators agree that there has been an explosion of NPE patent litigation, and that NPE lawsuits differ in important ways from other patent lawsuits,[5] but they disagree in their normative assessments of this phenomenon. We believe that this explosion is troubling, and herein we present evidence that NPE litigation imposes substantial direct costs on high-tech innovators with little apparent offsetting benefit to inventors or innovators[6] from assertion of NPE patents.
In this Article we present results from a unique survey of firms targeted by NPE patent assertions.[7] We augment the survey results with information derived from a comprehensive database of NPE litigation, and information derived from financial disclosures by publicly traded NPEs. We find that: (1) the estimated direct accrued costs of NPE patent assertions total $29 billion in 2011; (2) much of this burden falls on small and medium-sized companies; (3) publicly-traded NPEs likely cost small and mediumsized firms more money than these NPEs transfer to inventors; and (4) the distribution of costs imposed by NPEs is highly skewed, probably because NPEs pursue a range of different business strategies.
The survey we will describe is unique in three ways. First, it includes defendant companies that are privately held, including small firms. Second, it reveals information about costs associated with cases in which NPE patents are asserted but which are resolved before a lawsuit is filed. Finally, it provides aggregated information about NPE patent license fees. These kinds of information have not been available, in part, because the terms of patent licenses are often secret, and in part because previous surveys have simply not asked about assertions that did not advance to the filing of lawsuits.6 The costs disclosed by this survey are significant and should play a prominent role in policy debates about the treatment of NPE patent lawsuits.
Our survey results are largely consistent with the only other study of NPE litigation costs, a study we completed recently with co-author Jennifer Ford.7 In contrast to the $29 billion annual cost figure estimated in this Article, we previously estimated the annual cost of NPE litigation to publicly traded American firms to be about $80 billion.[8] The previous analysis used a slightly different data set, a very different empirical approach and a different concept of “cost.” Rather than surveying defendants and asking them to report costs, we observed the stock market reaction to the filing of an NPE lawsuit against a defendant firm. We estimated litigation cost by analyzing stock price movements associated with lawsuit filing.
We are not surprised that the survey generated lower costs than the stock market event study, because the survey measures only direct costs from NPE patent assertions while the earlier study measured total costs. Direct costs include the cost of outside legal services, licenses fees, and other direct costs incurred in response to NPE litigation risk. Indirect costs captured by our event study methodology include the opportunity costs of the effort exerted by legal, managerial, engineering, and sci
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