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Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property

SCOTUS Series: Mission Product Holdings Inc. v. Tempnology, LLC

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February 20, 2019
4:00pm | Room YT01-02油

Reception to Follow

Mission Product could settle a circuit split over the fate of trademark licenses in bankruptcy.

Section 365(n) of the Bankruptcy Code empowers a nondebtor/licensee of rights to intellectual property under a rejected contract with the debtor/licensor to retain [the licensees] rights under such contract and under any agreement supplementary to such contract, to intellectual property as such rights existed immediately before the case commenced Section 101(35A) of the Bankruptcy Code, in turn, defines intellectual property to include trade secrets, patents, patent applications, plant varieties, copyrights and mask works for semiconductor chip productsbut leaves out trademarks.

Panel:

  • Christine Haight Farley
    51画鋼 Washington College of Law, moderator

  • WilmerHale, Counsel for Petitioner (Mission Product Holdings, Inc.)

  • Ropes & Gray, Counsel for Respondent (Tempnology, LLC)
  • &
    Debevoise & Plimpton, Counsel for Amicus International Trademark Association (in support of petitioner)
  • &
    Rivkin Radler, Counsel for New York Intellectual Property Association (in support of petitioner)

  • Kilpatrick Townsend, Counsel for Amicus American Intellectual Property Law Association (in support of neither party)

  • Pirkey Barber, Counsel for Amicus Intellectual Property Owners Association (in support of neither party)

Issue:

The question in the case is whether the rejection of a license in bankruptcy terminates a licensees right to use licensed trademarks or simply constitutes a breach, which may not preclude the licensees continued trademark exploitation.

UPDATE:

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All briefs available on SCOTUSblog: