Finjan, Inc. v. Sophos, Inc., No. 14cv01197WHO (N.D. Cal., Aug. 15, 2016)
Finjan, Inc. v. Sophos, Inc., No. 14cv01197WHO, No. 324 (N.D. Cal. Sept. 8, 2016)
Multiple infringement claims
In this case, Sophos’ unified threat management (UTM) suite of antivirus software products allegedly infringed six of Finjan’s patents (ultimately, Sophos was found to have infringed five of the patents).
The plaintiff’s damages expert opined that five of UTM’s seven modules infringed Finjan’s patents. She determined that a reasonable royalty rate was 16%. But, in applying that rate, she double or triple counted revenue attributable to certain product features, resulting in a royalty base that was greater than 100% of the products’ total value.
The court offered an example: The “’844 patent” covers two modules: the threat engine and live protection modules. So, Finjan’s expert opined that it was appropriate to apportion 28.6% (2/7) of the royalty base to that patent. In addition, the expert claimed the “’494 patent” also covered those modules, making it appropriate to apportion 28.6% of the royalty base to that patent as well. The court concluded that the expert’s methodology was unreasonable because it used an inflated royalty base.
No overlapping patents
Finjan argued that its expert’s methodology was reliable because she’d calculated damages on a per-patent basis, allowing the jury to calculate damages specific to each patent even if some of the patents were found to be invalid. It characterized Sophos’ challenge as a claim that Finjan is “only entitled to recover damages as if it was one patent in suit because we have overlapping technologies at issue.”
The federal district court agreed with Sophos. The opinion states, “If Finjan’s patented technologies are truly overlapping then it can in fact only recover damages as if one patent is in suit as ‘no patent can issue for an invention actually covered by a former patent.’”
The court acknowledged that Finjan’s patents could cover related or intermingled technologies but not identical ones. Viewed that way, multiple patents that cover the same feature “must cover different technologies that together contribute to the total value of the [feature].”
If at first you don’t succeed...
Finjan’s expert amended her report, applying a more complex methodology that involved declining royalty rates. Although the revised approach resulted in lower damages, it suffered from the same flaw as the first report. Assuming that each module had equal value, the court explained, Finjan’s patents accounted for, at most, 5/7 of UTM’s total revenue.
The total revenue was approximately $21.5 million, so the total possible apportioned revenue base was approximately $15.4 million ($21.5 million × 5/7). Applying a 16% royalty rate to this royalty base, the court arrived at a maximum reasonable royalty damages award of $2.5 million, but the expert’s methodology produced a $5.6 million royalty — more than double the court’s estimate.
Applying a “sanity check”
Finjan illustrates the importance of stepping back and asking whether a damages calculation makes sense. In general, a royalty base that substantially exceeds the total revenue generated by an infringing product clearly doesn’t seem reasonable.
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