Petition for Extraordinary Writ Denied Without Opinion– Patent Case 94-1257
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Petition for Extraordinary Writ Denied Without Opinion– Patent Case 94-1257.
9th Circuit pre-filing Order Trumps Lack of Jurisdiction Claim. The method followed was standard, namely, forget jurisdiction and decide accused respondent’s defenses (or apply court ordered pre filing order) without reviewing the petitioner’s claims for lack of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court denied petitions without opinion making them, and many others like them, stand as law of the land. As precedents, these cases have totally corrupted the law.
James Constant
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Petition for Extraordinary Writ Denied Without Opinion– Patent Case 94-1257 - James Constant
Petition for Extraordinary Writ Denied Without Opinion– Patent Case 94-1257
Court Pre-filing Order Trumps Lack of Jurisdiction Claim
By James Constant
Smashwords Edition
Copyright © 1994 by James Constant
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
CASE BACKGROUND IN THE INVENTOR’S OWN WORDS IN PLAIN ENGLISH
This case illustrates why the American judicial system has become the greatest threat to inventor’s rights. When a patent owner claims patent infringement of his patent by a corporation, the federal court has jurisdiction to hear and decide the claim and the alleged infringer has a right to bring up his defense. It is important to follow this order because, if the court decides, as required by its jurisdiction, that the owner’s patent infringes the corporation’s patent the corporation will hesitate to bring up its defense of patent invalidity lest its own patent also becomes invalid. However, to protect corporate interests, judges decide the corporation defense of patent invalidity without hearing and deciding the owner’s claim of patent infringement. This happens most frequently when the patent owner is an individual and the alleged infringer is a large corporation. In theory, judges who hear and decide cases without jurisdiction lose immunity and, just like other government employees, should be subject to civil rights violations. In practice, to protect themselves and their corporate sponsors, judges have no fear to jump the law.
In 1985, Mr. Constant brought suit in the Central District of California against twenty companies for patent infringement. Judge Wilson granted summary judgment in favor of defendants in that action, finding Constant's patents invalid and his constitutional challenges to 35 U.S.C. 282 without merit. Constant v. Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Case No. CV 85-0262-SVW (hereinafter First Patent Case
) Judge Wilson's decision was upheld on appeal, and certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court. Constant v. Advanced Micro Devices,Inc. (CAFC 88)848 F.2d 1560, 7 USPQ2d 1057 cert. den. 109 S.Ct. 228 (1988)
This is a 15 year case. Following the lower court’s finding that his patents were invalid, without hearing his claims for patent infringement, Mr. Constant sought relief by making appeals seeking review to reverse the lower court’s decision. Some dozen appeals reaching the Supreme Court were filed against corporate defendants and judges. In each appeal, Constant raised the issue of lack of jurisdiction for finding his patents invalid without deciding his claims for patent infringement. Under pressure for payment of costs and attorney’s fees to corporations, he declared bankruptcy and his corporate adversaries, always with the assistance of judges, claimed and obtained the balance of his intellectual property.
The courts denied Constant’s petitions, some without opinion, and some setting their opinions not for publication and sanctions and pre filing orders were made. The method followed was standard, namely, forget jurisdiction and decide accused respondent’s defenses (or apply court ordered pre filing order) without reviewing the petitioner’s claims for lack of jurisdiction. The Supreme Court denied Constant’s petitions without opinion making them, and many others like them, stand as law of the land. As precedents, these cases have totally corrupted the law. Mr. Constant’s large patent portfolio was confiscated in bankruptcy, his business was ruined and he was left penniless. For Constant, the judicial system turns the individual’s constitutional rights into mythology. For details of this inventor’s ordeal see
http://www.coolissues.com/patentcases/jamesconstant.htm
Appendix A