China's National Intellectual Property Strategy Outline promulgated in 2008 proposed "to improve the trial system for intellectual property and optimize the allocation of judicial resources". Driven by this vision, China has been exploring the specialization of adjudication for IP rights in the past decade.
By the end of 2014, three specialized IP courts were formed in Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou – the leading metropolises of the country. From 2017, eighteen specialized IP tribunals were successively set up. In October 2018, the Standing Committee of the People's National Congress approved the Pilot Program of the Supreme People's Court on the establishment of an IP-specialized (appellate) tribunal which will begin operation on January 1, 2019 to hear appeals in civil and administrative cases of technology-related intellectual property disputes nationwide. At this point, a system of specialized IP adjudication is put in place.
Infrastructure
Responding to the call of specialization, these IP courts and tribunals have centralized and exclusive jurisdiction over technology-related IP matters highly technical and complex.
The three specialized IP courts, namely, Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou Intellectual Property Courts, have independent public judicial body and operate as intermediate courts in the hierarchy of the Chinese judicial system. The courts house build-in divisions usually comprising a case filing chamber, several tribunals, a technical research office, and a judicial police team. Eighteen specialized regional IP tribunals located in the capital or important cities of fifteen provinces are subordinate to the local Intermediate People's Courts. The specialized IP tribunal sitting in the Supreme People's Court becomes the exclusive appellate venue for the technology-related IP lawsuits.
A specialized IP court usually has 20-30 judges and a specialized regional IP tribunal has 12 to 15. The majority of the judges have a graduate degree or above, some came from a mixed background of law and technology, some majored in intellectual property during college years, and quite a few of the judges have more than 10 years of IP trial experience.
Specific IP jurisdiction
Intellectual property cases are generally classified into three categories based on the involvement of technology: technology-related IPRs refer to patents, new plant variety, layout design of integrated circuits, know-hows, and computer software; general IPRs refer to those such as copyrights, trademarks, technology contracts, unfair competition, franchise contracts; the rest IPRs involves antitrust and recognition of well-known trademarks (referred hereinafter as "other").
The specialized IP courts and regional tribunals mainly adjudicate first-instance administrative cases in connection with "technology-related" and "other" categories, and civil cases of the categories where the value of the subject matter of action is within certain level (usually less than 200 million yuan where the domiciles of both parties are in the territorial jurisdiction, or less than 100 million yuan where the one party's domicile is not in the territorial jurisdiction or where a foreign, Hong Kong, Macao or Taiwan party is involved). Where the value of the subject matter is beyond the certain level, the civil case shall be tried at the superior Higher People's Court. For "general" cases, regulations vary from place to place, and the level of court is essentially determined based on the value of the subject matter.
In addition to the above rules, the Beijing Intellectual Property Court also has exclusive jurisdiction over the following IP administrative cases of first-instance: (1) refusing to accept the decisions made by organs of the State Council regarding allowance or validity of IP rights including patents, trademarks, new plant varieties, and layout-design of integrated circuits; (2) refusing to accept the decisions made by organs of the State Council regarding compulsory license compulsory license fees or rewards involving patents, new plant varieties, layout-design of integrated circuits; and (3) refusing to accept other administrative acts made by organs of the State Council regarding the authorization and confirmation of allowance or validity of IP rights.
By taking over the appellate jurisdiction currently hold by the provincial and municipal High People's Courts, the IP tribunal of the Supreme People's Court will have exclusive jurisdiction over: (1) appeals of first-instance decisions and rulings issued by local high people's courts, IP courts and intermediate courts in relation to infringement, ownership disputes, or administrative rulings for invention and utility model patents, new plant varieties, layout-design of integrated circuits, technical secrets, computer software or antitrust cases; and (2) appeals of first-instance administrative decisions of Beijing IP Court for reexamination and invalidation regarding patents (Note: including designs), new plant varieties, layout-design of integrated circuits, know-hows, computer software, or antitrust cases.
It is also worth noting that the Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou Intellectual Property Courts and the IP tribunal of the Supreme People's Court only adjudicate civil and administrative IP cases but not criminal cases, whereas the specialized regional IP tribunals adopt the "three-in-one adjudication" mode, that is, they have integrated jurisdiction over civil, administrative and criminal IP cases.
Cross-regional jurisdiction
Except for the specialized IP courts in Beijing, Shanghai and the regional IP tribunals in Tianjin and Shenzhen which only have jurisdiction over local IP cases, all other specialized IP tribunals have cross regional jurisdiction. The "single center" model is adopted in provinces such as Sichuan, Hubei and Anhui, where the specialized regional IP tribunal sits in an Intermediate People's Court in the capital city of the province to adjudicate technology-related and other IP cases throughout the province; while in Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Shandong provinces, two specialized regional IP tribunals ("dual center") were set up with divided jurisdiction covering the whole province.
Moreover, it is proposed in the Opinions on Several Issues on the Reform and Innovation in the Field of Intellectual Property Adjudication promulgated in early 2018 that the juridical system will continue to "explore the mechanism of long-distance adjudication under cross-regional IP jurisdiction" and "fully integrate the advanced judicial resources of courts in Beijing Municipality, Tianjin Municipality, and Hebei Province and explore to give Beijing Intellectual Property Court centralized jurisdiction over technology-related IP cases in these places", which indicates that the Beijing Intellectual Property Court is likely to obtain cross-provincial jurisdiction in the future.
List of Specialized Intellectual Property Courts and Tribunals
Date of Establishment | Name | Jurisdiction | |
2014.11.6 | Beijing Intellectual Property Court | Beijing Municipality | |
2014.12.28 | Shanghai Intellectual Property Court | Shanghai Municipality | |
2014.12.16 | Guangzhou Intellectual Property Court | Guangdong Province, except Shenzhen City | Guangdong Province |
2017.12.26 | Shenzhen Intellectual Property Tribunal | Shenzhen City | |
2017.1.9 | Chengdu Intellectual Property Tribunal | Sichuan Province | |
2017.1.19 | Nanjing Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Nanjing, Zhenjiang, Yangzhou, Taizhou, Yancheng, Huaian, Suqian, Xuzhou, and Lianyungang | Jiangsu Province |
2017.1.19 | Suzhou Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Suzhou, Wuxi, Changzhou, and Nantong | |
2017.2.22 | Wuhan Intellectual Property Tribunal | Hubei Province | |
2017.8.30 | Hefei Intellectual Property Tribunal | Anhui Province | |
2017.9.8 | Hangzhou Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Hangzhou, Jiaxing, Huzhou, Jinhua, Quzhou, and Lishui | Zhejiang Province |
2017.9.8 | Ningbo Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Ningbo, Wenzhou, Shaoxing, Taizhou, and Zhoushan | |
2017.9.28 | Fuzhou Intellectual Property Tribunal | Fujian Province | |
2017.9.28 | Jinan Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Jinan, Zibo, Zaozhuang, Jining, Taian, Laiwu, Binzhou, Dezhou, Liaocheng, Linyi, Linyi, and Heze | Shandong Province |
2017.9.30 | Qingdao Intellectual Property Tribunal | Cities of Qingdao, Dongying, Yantai, Weifang, Weihai, and Rizhao | |
2018.2.24 | Xi'an Intellectual Property Tribunal | Shaanxi Province | |
2018.3.1 | Tianjin Intellectual Property Tribunal | Tianjin Municipality | |
2018.3.1 | Changsha Intellectual Property Tribunal | Hunan Province | |
2018.3.2 | Zhengzhou Intellectual Property Tribunal | Henan Province | |
2018.7.5 | Nanchang Intellectual Property Tribunal | Jiangxi Province | |
2018 | Changchun Intellectual Property Tribunal* | Jilin Province | |
2018 | Lanzhou Intellectual Property Tribunal* | Gansu Province | |
by the end of 2018 | Intellectual Property (Appellate) Tribunal of the Supreme People's Court | Nationwide |
*only appeared in the report of the Supreme People's Court "Continue to Move through the Innovation Road - a summary of the intellectual property trial work of the people's courts since the Reform and Opening-up" published in December 2018.
Functions and effects
Specialized IP adjudication organs, especially the IP Courts, have successfully launched a number of exploratory and pilot measures and obtained valuable experiences for the judicial reform regarding intellectual property protection.
One of the significant progresses is the increase of compensation awarded in IPR infringement case. The specialized IP Courts are trying to order or support compensation more comparable to the value of the IPRs and establish new mechanisms involving third party appraisal organizations, clarifying burden of proof, introducing new elements into the compensation.
In 2016, the Beijing Intellectual Property Court awarded the plaintiff in USBKey patent infringement case with 49 million yuan compensation and supported the plaintiff's claim on another 1 million yuan lawyer's fees; in the "QiangGu" trademark infringement case the plaintiff's claim to 10 million yuan compensation was fully supported. In the past 12 months, the Shanghai Intellectual Property Court issued a first-instance judgment ordering the defendant of a software copyright case to stop the infringement and compensate the plaintiff a total of 1505 million yuan for economic losses and reasonable expenses; the Guangzhou Intellectual Property Court awarded a compensation of more than 10 million yuan in 10 cases and a compensation between 1 million and 10 million yuan in 111 cases; the Beijing Intellectual Property Court also set a legal precedent by imposing a fine of 1 million yuan on perjury in the Travel Vhannel vs. Love Virtue copyright infringement case. These rulings have encouraged the IPR holders and resulted in more aggressive claims in the recent pending cases, Huawei vs. Samsung (80 million yuan), Polarity vs. Beijing Xiaoyu (100 million yuan), Qualcomm vs. Meizu (520 million yuan), and Apple vs. Qualcomm (1 billion yuan).
By introducing diversified technical fact-finding mechanisms with the help of technical assistance, judicial authentication, and expert consultation, the specialized IP Courts sought for ways to improve effectiveness of technical investigation and ensure the neutrality, objectivity and scientific reliability in the process. Statistics showed the three IP Courts employed 61 technical investigators; they provided opinions in over 1000 cases in the first three year since the establishment of the specialize IP Courts; and the number has grown quickly in 2018, where 448 cases tried by the Guangzhou Intellectual Property Court alone involve technical investigators.
The specialized IP Courts further pursued to increase the convenience of temporary remedy for a party whose right has been infringed. They executed preliminary injunctions and preservations on properties, activities and evidence. By the end of 2017, the three IP Courts had ruled to support 638 injunction and preservation cases of various kinds, including 79 pre-litigation and 559 during litigation.
The specialized IP Courts also worked hard to enhance productivity and efficiency by centralizing the trials, streamlining the procedures, and simplifying certain documents. At present, the average adjudication time of a case tried by the Guangzhou Intellectual Property Court is less than 50 days, and the average time for simple patent cases of first-instance has been reduced to 3 to 4 months. The average adjudication time of foreign-related IP cases handled by the Beijing Intellectual Property Court is 4 months, while that in major European countries is about 18 months. The Shanghai Intellectual Property Court further explored diversified mechanisms for dispute resolution to greatly shorten the duration of a case and signed cooperation agreements with 13 mediation organizations and industrial associations. It also expanded the pre-trial mediation to a boarder scope. As a result, it has successfully concluded 85 cases before trial, accounting for 29.2% of cases which entered into mediation.
Summary:
According to the court conference on intellectual property adjudication, China will continue improving its IP environment through great efforts on specialization of intellectual property adjudication, centralization of jurisdiction, simplification of procedures, and professionalization of juridical personnel. By 2020 the intellectual property court system will cover the entire country. Enterprises and other intellectual property rights holders are encouraged to pay attention to the developments of the judicial reform, in order to make good use of the rules for safeguarding your rights and interests.
This article was first published on IPLink-Asia.
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.