IPO Owners As Plaintiffs

How to Get an Insurer to Pursue Patent Infringers with Attorneys You Choose at Its Expense – The Advent of Patent Pursuit Policies

As the cost of patent infringement litigation escalates, the average case will require more than $1,000,000 to pursue through trial according to a 1999 AIPLA (American Intellectual Property Law Association) survey. Many patent holders have been successful in procuring damages, principally via reasonable royalty awards, that make such lawsuits financially worthwhile. Lawsuits that do settle between major corporations are typically resolved through cross-licensing of patents possessed by each corporation. The net effect of these cases is to generate new marketing alliances.

For companies that do not have a significant patent portfolio that they can exchange with a competitor to resolve infringement disputes, the inability to afford costly patent litigation may mean the abandonment of a key market advantage, central to the company’s strategy. For such companies, the ability to afford patent infringement is a matter of economic survival.

Some years ago, creative patent attorneys appreciated the insurance industry seeking solutions to this issue. Persuaded that an advance of monies to fund such lawsuits could often be paid back from the proceeds realized through successful litigation, some select insurers began underwriting a new form of insurance – pursuit coverage that placed insurers and companies with patent rights into partnership in their efforts to realize the full benefit of the patents the companies had procured.
Continue Reading...