Patent Court’s Oral Hearing in English in Korea



The Patent Court of Korea held a test trial of an International Chamber case hearing adjudicated in English. According to the Patent Court, the demand for English-language trials has been repeatedly raised by international parties. More than 40 percent of the 611 cases in 2016 are international parties involved.

The test trial is “3M Innovative Properties Company v. KIPO.” According to the Patent Court, it was not too different from an ordinary hearing, oral arguments for the case were given in English by attorneys representing the plaintiffs and KIPO.
 

Enforcement of a Foreign Court’ Judgment in Korea


In principle, it is possible to enforce a foreign court’s judgment against a Korean individual or a Korean company within Korea. In order to enforce a foreign court’s judgment in Korea, a party must obtain a new judgment for recognition of a foreign judgment and enforcement judgment from a Korean court.


Under Article 217, Korean Civil Procedure Act, it is required to meet the following conditions for obtaining the recognition of a foreign judgment and its enforcement judgment:

1.       The foreign court’s judgment is final and conclusive.
2.      The foreign court has jurisdiction under the principles of international jurisdiction under Korean law or treaties.
3.      The defendant was properly served with the complaint or summons in advance, to allow sufficient time for preparation of his or her defense, or the defendant responded to the suit without having been served.
4.      The foreign judgment is not contrary to Korean public policy.
5.      The countries shall allow a guarantee of reciprocity.
 
 

Basics of the Statute of Limitation in Korea


In General, for civil claims such as breach of contract, the statute of limitation is ten years. The statute of limitation starts from the event date. However, claims based on ownership are not subject to any statute of limitation.

Tort claims must either be brought, whichever is earlier, within ten (10) years from the date the tort was committed, and within three (3) years from the date the claimant became aware of the damage and the identity of the tortfeasor.

Claims based on special statutes are subject to the specific time bars specified in the statutes. These statutes of limitations are often set for shorter periods.


Qualcomm v. KFTC case in Korea


Last year the Korea Fair Trade Commission (“KFTC”) imposed $865 Million sanctions against Qualcomm for abuse in licensing standard essential patents (“SEP”) in the mobile communications industry. In particular, KFTC released an English translation of the Attached is the press release of Qualcomm case.

1.      Facts

Qualcomm and its affiliates owns patents essential to mobile cellular technology standards (“SEPs”). Qualcomm holds over 90% of the SEPs on 2G CDMA technology, but had a smaller share of SEPs on later generations of the standard: 27% of the 3G WCDMA standard and 16% of the 4G LTE standard.

KFTC indicates that Qualcomm only offers a comprehensive license to its entire portfolio of cellular patents that includes both SEPs and non-SEPs. Qualcomm licenses its patents to handset companies regardless of whether they use Qualcomm mobile chips or a competitor’s mobile chips.

The license terms may include the handset company granting Qualcomm a cross-license to the handset company’s patents. Competing cellular modem chip suppliers have asked for a license to Qualcomm’s SEPs. But Qualcomm either refused to grant them a license or has entered limited, non-exhaustive licenses with restrictive terms that do not extend a license to handsets that use those chips (the handset companies must seek such license rights from Qualcomm).  The number of modem chip competitors has decreased.

2.     KFTC’s Position

KFTC asserted that Qualcomm participated in three specific areas of conduct that combined to form an unfair business model:

(1)    Qualcomm not licensing SEPs to competitor chip suppliers (or restricting those licenses)

(2)   Qualcomm not selling its modem chips to handset companies that are not licensed to Qualcomm patents that cover those chips.

(3)   Qualcomm licensing together as a single patent portfolio its SEPs and non-SEPs without fairly negotiating the licensing terms and requiring free cross-licenses to handset company patents

KFTC further indicated that patent holdup has occurred based on three licensing terms:

(1)    Qualcomm licensing only the entire portfolio of SEPs and non-SEPs, so handset companies wanting only licenses to SEPs also must license unnecessary patents.

(2)   Qualcomm has kept the same licensing rate over long term licenses even though Qualcomm’s contribution of SEPs declined over each new generation of the cellular standard.

(3)   Qualcomm obtained free cross-licenses to handset company patents.

KFTC also pointed out that handset companies lost incentive to invest in research and development (“R&D”), because any cellular SEPs they obtained would be cross-licensed to Qualcomm for free. Qualcomm collects a significant portion of any increased value-added created by those companies’ innovation efforts.

 

The Korea Copyright Commission (KCC)


The Korea Copyright Commission (“KCC”) is the national agency dedicated to copyright-related affairs. It plays a pivotal role in promotion of the legitimate use of works, and development of the copyright industry.

 
The KCC covers its roles ranging from deliberating copyright-related issues, mediating copyright disputes, researching policies and legislations on copyright, providing copyright education and public awareness programs, to serving as a copyright registration agency.

 
Authors may register their copyrighted works in the Copyright Commission. Further, the Copyright Commission provides ADR solutions regarding copyright disputes in Korea. The Copyright Commission employs conciliation for a settlement of copyright disputes. The Copyright Dispute Conciliation system is meant to efficiently resolve problems through the Copyright Commission established under the Copyright Act, with respect to disputes over rights protected by the Act. One can apply for conciliation for a small fee and the Commission shall reach conciliation within three months from the date of the application.

 
Confidentiality is assured in conciliation. Conciliation has binding effect to both parties as a judicial settlement. Under the Supreme Court Regulation, when a party does not follows the contents of the settlement, the counter party may enforce his rights through direct execution based the conciliation without bringing a separate lawsuit.

 
When any one creates a computer program, he can deposit a copy of a source code or object code of the program to register his program in the Committee. The deposit and registration will serve to clarify the priority to the later developers and the contents of the work. Further, the Committee provides ADR solutions in legal disputes regarding computer programs through mediation and conciliation. A mediation and conciliation board is consists of a panel 3 computer program specialists from legal, academic and industrial area. When both parties accept mediation, the mediation is binding and has identical effect to the judgment of a court.