How to make the best use of a cease & desist letter?
Managing IP is part of the Delinian Group, Delinian Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX, Registered in England & Wales, Company number 00954730
Copyright © Delinian Limited and its affiliated companies 2024

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

How to make the best use of a cease & desist letter?

In China, the cease and desist letter is commonly used to warn infringers. Experience showed that you may have 50% of chance to get a reply to your cease and desist letter. The cease and desist letter usually works well with straightforward counterfeit case and against small infringers. When it comes to complicated case and big infringer, it is critical that you carefully evaluate the risk of being sued before sending out the cease and desist letter.

The recognition of non-infringement lawsuit:

The recognition of non-infringement lawsuit was first accepted in a patent case in 2002. Then Article 18 of the SPC's Judicial Interpretation on Several Issues Concerning the Hearing of Patent Infringement Cases (2010) set up the procedural requirements: 1) the right owner sends the cease and desist letter; 2) the recipient urges the right owner to file the civil lawsuit; 3) the right owner does not withdraw the cease and desist letter or does not file the civil lawsuit within a reasonable period; 4) the recipient can then file a recognition of non-infringement lawsuit.

Now, the recognition of non-infringement lawsuit extends to all IP cases, and the courts are lowering the procedural requirements: the recipient is sometimes allowed to file a lawsuit as soon as it receives the cease and desist letter.

The biggest inconvenience of being sued for non-infringement is that, you lose the control of the lawsuit: 1) you have no more choice of the jurisdiction which is very important in a lawsuit strategy; 2) you have limited time to prepare the evidences, and sometime even worse, the evidences will disappear if you did not secure them before sending the cease and desist letter.

In the Honda case (selected in the 2015 top ten IP cases by the SPC), Honda sent cease and desist letter to Shuanghuan, a Chinese car maker based in Shijiazhuang city, and its distributors, asking for immediate cease of design patent infringement. Shuanghuan filed non infringement lawsuit in Shijiazhuang in October 2003. Hongda then filed infringement lawsuit in Beijing in November 2003, claiming huge damages (RMB 3.4 billion). According to the SPC's first-file principle, Beijing High Court transferred the infringement case to Shijiazhuang Intermediate Court in 2004 for a combined trial.

In the meanwhile, Shuanghuan filed invalidation action in December 2003, and successfully cancelled Honda's patents in September 2007.

In April 2008 and then in April 2013, Shuanghuan lodged additional claims requiring Hongda to pay RMB 3.6 billion for the damages caused by the cease and desist letters.

Finally, in December 2015, the SPC decided that Hongda shall pay RMB 16 million for the damages caused to Shuanghuan.

How to use the cease and desist letter:

It is recommended to make a website notarization and/or notarized purchase before sending a cease and desist letter.

If the infringer ignores the cease and desist letter, you can arrange another round of notarization to prove the infringer's bad faith, and then file the lawsuit.

For complicated and important case, it is advisable to do the forum shopping and directly file the civil action without sending the cease and desist letter.

more from across site and ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Counsel reveal how a proposal to create separate briefings for discretionary denials at the USPTO could affect their PTAB strategies
The UK Supreme Court rejected the firm’s appeal against an earlier ruling because it did not raise an arguable point of law
Loes van den Winkel, attorney at Arnold & Siedsma, explains why clients' enthusiasm is contagious and why her job does not mean managing fashion models
Allen & Gledhill partner Jia Yi Toh shares her experience of representing the winning team in the first-ever case filed under Singapore’s new fast-track IP dispute resolution system
In-house lawyers reveal how they balance cost, quality, and other criteria to get the most from their relationships with external counsel
Dario Pietrantonio of Robic discusses growth opportunities for the firm and shares insights from his journey to managing director
We provide a rundown of Managing IP’s news and analysis from the week, and review what’s been happening elsewhere in IP
Law firms that pay close attention to their client relationships are more likely to win repeat work, according to a survey of nearly 29,000 in-house counsel
The EMEA research period is open until May 31
Practitioners analyse a survey on how law firms prove value to their clients and reflect on why the concept can be hard to pin down
Gift this article