Abstract

This paper takes a hard look at the relationship between international intellectual property litigation and the proposed Hague Convention on Jurisdiction and the Recognition of Foreign Judgments. The Convention is mainly aimed at creating a way for a civil judgment rendered in one member state to be assured enforcement in all other member states. Toward that end, it defines a series of agreed bases of personal jurisdiction; when a judgment is predicated on one of these bases, other member states are obliged to enforce it. The Convention also determines where particular claims can be litigated-certain claims are within the exclusive jurisdiction of particular states, others can be litigated where ever the Convention permits the assertion of adjudicatory authority over the defendant. After briefly describing the terms of the Convention, its application to intellectual property is analyzed. One question is whether the territorial nature of intellectual property rights means that no nation should be permitted to adjudicate intellectual property claims arising under the laws of another jurisdiction. If some extraterritorial adjudication is permissible, the next question is, in what kind of cases. The Convention distinguishes between registered rights cases, where issues of validity-and perhaps even infringement-can only be resolved at the place of registration, and all other intellectual property cases. This article takes the position that the line should be drawn between patent cases on the one hand and copyright and trademark cases on the other. Patent cases require a level of technical expertise that is not as necessary for resolving copyright and trademark cases. Moreover, copyright and trademark cases often involve products that are digitally transmitted and thus can be infringed in many states simultaneously. Consolidated adjudication of such multinational copyright and trademark disputes can save judicial and litigant resources, avoid inconsistent outcomes, and provide fora for developing law for the new borderless market that the creative industries now encounter. The paper ends with a series of proposals to facilitate consolidation and adjudication of intellectual property disputes. In that respect, it acts as background material for a draft judgments convention focusing exclusively on intellectual property litigation, which will be offered by the author and Professor Jane Ginsburg should the Hague efforts be frustrated or culminate in the exclusion of intellectual property from coverage.

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