Review by Dennis Crouch
Dave Schwartz is a law professor these days. However, before joining Chicago-Kent he was litigator for more than a decade. Schwartz's most recent article is interesting study of the practice of contingent fee patent litigation. And, the article is appropriately named "Contingent Fee Patent Litigation." [Download the Article from SSRN] The meat of the article is based on Schwartz's interviews with a set of forty litigators who work on contingency fee basis and a privately collected set of contingency fee agreements.
From the abstract:
Drawing upon several sources of data, including in-depth interviews with over forty lawyers involved in contingent representation in patent litigation and examination of over forty contingent fee agreements, this Article provides the first comprehensive analysis of the rapid evolution of contingent representation in patent law. The development of contingent representation includes top-tier litigation firms recently transitioning to taking on high value contingent cases, small entrants representing plaintiffs in lower value cases, and numerous general practice firms experimenting with contingent patent litigation. These diverse players each select and litigate cases using varied methods, resulting in different levels of risk and reward. The Article uses the study of these players to discuss how and why attorney-client contingent relationships established in the nascent marketplace of patent contingent litigation differ from other types of contingent litigation, and what patent law can teach about contingent representation in general.
Schwartz particularly rejects the conclusions drawn by Texas Professors Ronen Avraham and John Golden that former medical malpractice and mass tort lawyers have moved into the contingency fee patent law arena. Rather, Schwartz concludes that "most lawyers whose practice consists of substantially all patent contingent litigation are primarily and historically patent litigators. They are not former medical malpractice, personal injury, or other tort lawyers."
I might quibble a bit with Schwartz's prognostication that the America Invents Act (AIA) is likely to reduce the filing of weak patent claims where the patentees are hoping to settle for the cost of defense. The basis for this is the AIA's new anti-joinder rule that "joining multiple defendants in many circumstances." Schwartz correctly writes that "this means that the practice of suing multiple unrelated defendants in one cause of action is prohibited going forward." However, in my own experience filing patent complaints, it is not much more difficult to file 20 separate actions as it is to file one action against 20 defendants. The primary difference is the $350 federal court filing fee and perhaps a need for a slightly better system of managing multiple cases. However, those fees are still small when compared with settlement figures.
One topic fascinating to me that is only lightly discussed by Schwartz is financing for the lawyers themselves and the rise of Wall Street hedge fund and bank financed patent litigation. Those underlying financing issues almost certainly drive elements of contingent fee patent litigation.



