- Roberts said Judiciary Conference will review forum rules
- Tech companies have long criticized patent cases in Texas
Chief Justice
In his annual year-end
Roberts said a study of the “arcane but important matter of judicial administration” is a “good example of a matter that self-governing bodies of judges from the front lines are in the best position to study and solve -- and to work in partnership with Congress in the event change in the law is necessary.”
That the patent forum issue was one of just three agenda items in Roberts’ annual report -- the other tw
o were financial disclosures and workplace harassment -- illustrates the pressure the judicial branch has come under to address the issue.
Courts in Waco in the Western District of Texas and Marshall in the Eastern District have long been the
‘Troll’
The Texas courts are particularly favored by patent-licensing firms, often called the pejorative “
The much-criticized actions of those firms has enabled tech companies to lob the “troll” word at any almost any patent owner that sues them, including universities, research firms and struggling business that argue they’ve been overwhelmed by the power of Silicon Valley.
The review by the Judicial Conference, which could issue its report by May 1, will focus on the Western District, where local rules allow litigants to select the particular courthouse where they want to file their cases. District Court Judge
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, the nation’s top patent court, has repeatedly
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Ian Fisher, Virginia Van Natta
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