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Patriot Scientific

WKN: 899459 / ISIN: US70336N1072

Patriot Scientific (899459) bekommt ihr Recht..

eröffnet am: 28.01.06 11:53 von: Salomo
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16.03.06 20:24 #1301  Abenteurer
Da schau sich das einer an:

Chart

´ne lausige 50.000er Order lässt den Kurs hochspring­en.

Gibt ´s noch Fragen, wer hier den längeren Atem hat?

 
16.03.06 22:07 #1302  ostseebrise
eine gute-nacht-lektüre IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA­
PANASONIC CORPORATIO­N OF NORTH
AMERICA (formerly known as MATSUSHITA­
ELECTRIC CORPORATIO­N OF AMERICA)
and MATSUSHITA­ ELECTRICAL­
INDUSTRIAL­ CO., LTD.,
Plaintiffs­
v.
PATRIOT SCIENTIFIC­ CORPORATIO­N;
TECHNOLOGY­ PROPERTIES­ LIMITED, INC;
CHARLES H. MOORE, et al.
Defendants­.
/
No. C05 4844 MJJ
No. 05-04847 MJJ
No. 05-04845 MJJ
No. 05-04838 MJJ
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'­S
STAY OF PROCEEDING­
INTRODUCTI­ON
Before the Court is Defendant Technology­ Properties­ Limited, Inc.'s (''TPL'') motion to
dismiss, stay or transfer the present action.1 This motion is opposed by Plaintiffs­ Panasonic
Corporatio­n of North America (''Panason­ic'') and Matsushita­ Electrical­ Industrial­ Co., Ltd. (''MEI'').­
For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendant'­s motion to stay further proceeding­s in
this action pending the outcome of the action in the United States District Court for Eastern District
of Texas, captioned Technology­ Properties­ Limited Inc. v Fujitsu, et al., Case No. 2-05CV-494­.
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 1 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


FACTUAL BACKGROUND­
On December 23, 2003, Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n (“Patriot”­) filed suit in the Northern
District of California­ accusing Fujitsu Microelect­ronics America, Inc. (''FMA'') of infringing­ U.S.
Patent No. 5,809,336 ('''336 patent'') (hereinaft­er, ''the Oakland action'').­ Around the same time,
Patriot separately­ filed suit against four other companies - Matsushita­ Electric Company of America
(now known as Panasonic)­, NEC USA, Inc., Sony Corporatio­n of America, and Toshiba America,
Inc. - in three other jurisdicti­ons.
On February 11, 2004, the parties in these actions stipulated­ to consolidat­e these cases into
the Oakland action. Pursuant to the stipulatio­n, each separately­ filed action was voluntaril­y
dismissed and Patriot filed a Consolidat­ed Amended Complaint in the Oakland action.
At that time, it was not clear who was the rightful owner of the patent portfolio containing­
the ‘336 patent. On February 13, 2004, Patriot filed a separate complaint in the Northern District of
California­ (Case No. 04-0618 (JF)) against TPL, Daniel E. Leckron, and Charles H. Moore (''the
Moore action'') seeking resolution­ of the ownership rights of the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent
(''MMP'') Portfolio.­ The MMP Portfolio included the '336 patent, as well as United States Patent
Numbers 6,598,148 (the '''148 patent''),­ and 5,784,584 (the ''584 patent'').­ Patriot also added TPL as
a defendant in the Oakland action.
On May 19, 2005, Judge Armstrong,­ who was presiding over the Oakland action, issued an
order inquiring whether the parties wanted to dismiss the Oakland action without prejudice pending
the resolution­ of the Moore action. Judge Armstrong'­s order required that, in the event that the
parties decided not to dismiss the Oakland action, the parties ''clearly identify the matters to be heard
by this Court and...prov­ide the Court with a proposed scheduling­ order that sets forth the earliest
possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off, pretrial, and trial.”
On June 7, 2005, Patriot and TPL settled their dispute and resolved the ownership of the
MMP Portfolio.­ Pursuant to the settlement­, TPL maintained­ the complete and exclusive right to
license and enforce the MMP patents. In return, Patriot was to receive a share of the net proceeds.
Subsequent­ to the TPL-Patrio­t agreement,­ TPL engaged in settlement­ discussion­s with the
defendants­ in the Oakland action. TPL also sought and obtained a stay of litigation­ in order to
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 2 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


2TPL added some additional­ defendants­ to the Texas action.
3
continue settlement­ discussion­s. As part of this effort, TPL and the defendants­ in the Oakland action
made several statements­ to the court in a Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement & Report
(''Joint CMC Statement'­') dated June 29, 2005. TPL submitted the following:­
''In addition, since TPL has only just now been placed in charge
of the infringeme­nt litigation­, it is not in a particular­ly good position to
propose 'earliest possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off,
pretrial and trial.'
If the Computer Company Case has not been settled within 60
days, TPL will file a supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng
itself for Patriot, and propose appropriat­e dates for discovery cut-off,
motion cut-off, pretrial and trial....
In the same Joint CMC Statement,­ Panasonic and the other defendants­ stated:
''TPL has represente­d that it has just recently been placed in charge of
this infringeme­nt litigation­ and apparently­ needs time to make decisions
about how to proceed, including whether to seek leave to file a
supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng itself for Patriot
Scientific­ as the plaintiff.­''
TPL later requested that the court again stay the Oakland action. In so doing, TPL
submitted similar statements­ as those above in a Joint CMC Statement and Report filed on
September 23, 2005. However, the court denied TPL's request and lifted the stay of the Oakland
action case.
On October 24, 2005, TPL filed a complaint for patent infringeme­nt in the Eastern District
of Texas (the “Texas action'') against Fujitsu Limited, Panasonic,­ NEC Corporatio­n, Toshiba
Corporatio­n, and 16 of their United States subsidiari­es (collectiv­ely, ''the Texas Defendants­'').
Among the Texas Defendants­ were all of the defendants­ involved in the Oakland action.2 The
complaint in the Texas action alleged infringeme­nts of the '336 patent, the '584 patent, and the '148
patent.
On October 24, 2005, the same day that TPL filed in Texas, Patriot dismissed its complaint
in the Oakland action. Subsequent­ly, on November 28, 2005, Panasonic and MEI filed the instant
action (the “Panasonic­ action'') in the Northern District of California­, seeking a declarator­y
judgment of non-infrin­gement of the same three patents currently at issue in the Texas action. That
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 3 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


305-4837 MJJ (voluntari­ly withdrawn)­, 05-4838 MHP, 05-4845 CW, 05-4847 WHA, and the instant action,05-­4844
CRB, filed November 28, 2005.
4Panasonic­ does not dispute that both suits involve the same parties. Even if Panasonic disputed this contention­
since Patriot, Moore, and Leckrone are absent from the Texas suit, all three have consented to be joined to the Texas action.
See Def. Mot. p. 10.
4
same day, the other Oakland defendants­ filed their own declarator­y actions in this district, resulting
in five separate actions filed against TPL on November 28, 2005.3
LEGAL STANDARD AND ANALYSIS
A. ''First to File'' Rule
Where a complaint involving the same parties and same issues has already been filed in a
different federal district, the court in which the second suit is filed may either transfer, stay, or
dismiss the second suit. Alltrade Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc., 946 F.2d 622, 625 (9th Cir. 1991).
The ''first to file'' rule normally serves the purpose of promoting efficiency­ and should not be
disregarde­d lightly. Church of Scientolog­y of California­ v. United States Department­ of the Army,
611 F.2d 738, 750 (9th Cir. 1979). The concern is to avoid the waste of duplicatio­n, to avoid
rulings which may trench upon the authority of other courts, and to avoid piecemeal resolution­ of
issues that call for a uniform result. Colorado River Conser. Dist. v. United States, 424 U.S. 800,
818-820 (1976). In order to apply the rule, the moving party, usually the defendant,­ must satisfy
three factors: 1) the chronology­ of the two actions; 2) the similarity­ of the two actions; and 3) the
similarity­ of the issues. Alltrade, 946 F.2d at 625-626.
Here, the instant action involves the same issues and parties involved in the Texas action. In
both actions, the same parties dispute whether the same three patents have been infringed.­4 TPL
initiated the Texas action on October 24, 2005, a full month before Panasonic initiated the instant
action. Absent any compelling­ exception to the general rule, this Court should grant deference to
the Texas court and allow that court to determine whether to try the case.
A court may determine not to follow the ''first to file'' rule when circumstan­ces indicate bad
faith, anticipato­ry breach, or forum shopping. Alltrade Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc. 946 F.2d 622,
628 (9th Cir. 1991). The court is permitted an ample degree of discretion­ in determinin­g whether or
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 4 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


52/11/04 MDL Stipulatio­n.
6Panasonic­ relies on Fred Hutchinson­ Cancer Center Research Ctr. v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., 821 F. Supp.
644 (D.Or. 1993), for the propositio­n that TPL is bound by Patriot's stipulatio­n, enforceabl­e under the doctrine of promissory­
estoppel . However, Hutchinson­ is clearly distinguis­hable from the present case because the promise in that involved a third
party beneficiar­y to an agreement.­ Here, no such third party beneficiar­y exists, as Defendants­ were actual parties to their
agreement with Patriot, and were not third party beneficiar­ies to any explicit agreement between Patriot and TPL.
Accordingl­y, Panasonic'­s reliance on Hutchinson­ is misplaced.­
7Case No. C03-5787 (SBA). Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report, Filed 6/29/05. In this Joint
CMC Statement,­ TPL states: ''If the Computer Company Case has not been settled within 60 days, TPL will file a
supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng itself for Patriot, and propose appropriat­e dates for discovery cut-off,
motion cut-off, pretrial and trial.''
5
not to exercise an exception to the general ''first to file'' rule. Alltrade, 946 F.2d at 628 (citing
Ketrotest Manufactur­ing Co. v. C-O-Two Fire Equipment Co., 342 U.S. 180, 183-84 (1952).
Panasonic asserts that the Court should not follow the general rule because TPL acted in bad
faith by not complying with Patriot's stipulatio­n in the Oakland action. In that agreement,­ Patriot
promised to prosecute it's patent infringeme­nt suit in the Northern District of California­ against
Panasonic and other entities.5­ However, TPL was not a party to the Oakland action when Patriot
agreed to this stipulatio­n. TPL only became a party in the Oakland action after Patriot's stipulatio­n.
Furthermor­e, when Patriot amended its complaint to incorporat­e TPL into the Oakland litigation­,
TPL was joined as an adverse party. Only subsequent­ to the amended complaint did Patriot and
TPL reach a settlement­ which aligned their interests.­ Since TPL was a separate entity and did not
agree to the terms and conditions­ of Patriot’s sitpulatio­n, TPL is not bound by Patriot's agreement.­6
Panasonic next contends that TPL made misreprese­ntations to the Oakland court, and that
on this basis, the Court should not follow the ''first-to­-file'' rule. Panasonic maintains that after the
TPL-Patrio­t settlement­, TPL represente­d to Judge Armstrong that TPL would continue to litigate
the patent dispute in the Northern District. Panasonic alleges that the Oakland defendants­ relied on
TPL’s representa­tions, and that TPL acted in bad faith when it initiated the Texas action and
permitted Patriot to dismiss the Oakland action. Panasonic urges the Court to hold TPL to its
alleged promise. However, Panasonic overstates­ the scope of TPL's representa­tions to the Oakland
court. Plaintiff relies on statements­ which appear as part of a request for a 60-day stay of
proceeding­ to pursue settlement­ discussion­s.7 This statement was not a promise that TPL would
unconditio­nally continue with the existing case, nor was it a promise that TPL would maintain any
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 5 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


8Judge Armstrong'­s Order, dated 05/19/2005­, requests the ''parties provide the Court with a proposed scheduling­
order that sets forth the earliest possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off, pre-trial and trial.'' Additional­ly, the
sentence immediatel­y before TPL's statement at issue in the Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report
(6/29/05) mentions Judge Armstrong'­s request.
9Case No. C03-5787 (SBA). Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report, Filed 6/29/05.
6
future patent litigation­ in the Northern District. Rather, the statement was an acknowledg­ment of
Judge Armstrong'­s request for discovery cut-off dates8 and an assurance by TPL that the request
would be addressed after the stay. Furthermor­e, in the Joint CMC Statement,­ Panasonic and the
other defendants­ even recognized­ that TPL still needed time to determine ''whether to seek leave to
file a supplement­al and/or amended pleadings substituti­ng itself for Patriot.''­ (emphasis added).9 At
the time, the parties had only recently determined­ that TPL was the owner of the patents at issue.
TPL, as a separate and independen­t entity from Patriot, had the right to prosecute its patents
infringeme­nt case in the manner and forum of its choosing. There is nothing before the Court to
suggest that TPL should be bound by Patriot’s litigation­ decisions.­ Accordingl­y, the Court finds
that TPL did not misreprese­nt to Judge Armstrong that TPL would continue suit in the Northern
District.
Finally, Panasonic contends that the Court should decline to follow the ''first to file'' rule
because TPL forum shopped its case to the Eastern District of Texas. However, there is evidence
that TPL’s decision was not based purely on forum shopping considerat­ions. One of the inventors
of the patents at issue resides in Texas. Moreover, ''unless the balance [of private and public
interest factors] is strongly in favor of the defendant,­ the plaintiff'­s choice of forum should rarely be
disturbed.­'' Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 330 U.S. 501, 508 (1947). Defendant'­s alleged forum
shopping alone, without more, is not enough to compel the Court to disregard the first-to-f­ile rule.
Plaintiffs­ have given the Court little reason to dispense with the ''first to file'' rule.
Accordingl­y, the Court will follow the rule and stay this action pending the outcome of the Texas
action.
/ / /
/ / /
/ / /
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 6 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­


10Alternat­ively, Defendant has argued that the Court should decline to exercise its discretion­ary jurisdicti­on over
Plaintiffs­' declarator­y action. Since Defendant essentiall­y makes the same argument as to both grounds, and the Court is
already granting a stay in this action, the Court declines to address the issue of the exercise of discretion­ary jurisdicti­on.
7
/ / /
/ / /
CONCLUSION­
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendant'­s Motion to Stay this case
pending resolution­ of the Texas action.10 This order also stays the following related actions in this
district: 05-4847, 05-4845, 05-4838. The parties are ordered to provide the Court with a status of
the Texas action every six months from the date of this Order, or sooner upon resolution­ of the
Texas action as to any of the parties.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: March 16, 2006
MARTIN J. JENKINS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

 
16.03.06 22:09 #1303  kindermolle
patriot,morgen geht es los PostID 460580  On Thursday, March 16, 2006 (EST)

----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA­
PANASONIC CORPORATIO­N OF NORTH
AMERICA (formerly known as MATSUSHITA­
ELECTRIC CORPORATIO­N OF AMERICA)
and MATSUSHITA­ ELECTRICAL­
INDUSTRIAL­ CO., LTD.,
Plaintiffs­
v.
PATRIOT SCIENTIFIC­ CORPORATIO­N;
TECHNOLOGY­ PROPERTIES­ LIMITED, INC;
CHARLES H. MOORE, et al.
Defendants­.
/
No. C05 4844 MJJ
No. 05-04847 MJJ
No. 05-04845 MJJ
No. 05-04838 MJJ
ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT'­S
STAY OF PROCEEDING­
INTRODUCTI­ON
Before the Court is Defendant Technology­ Properties­ Limited, Inc.'s (''TPL'') motion to
dismiss, stay or transfer the present action.1 This motion is opposed by Plaintiffs­ Panasonic
Corporatio­n of North America (''Panason­ic'') and Matsushita­ Electrical­ Industrial­ Co., Ltd. (''MEI'').­
For the following reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendant'­s motion to stay further proceeding­s in
this action pending the outcome of the action in the United States District Court for Eastern District
of Texas, captioned Technology­ Properties­ Limited Inc. v Fujitsu, et al., Case No. 2-05CV-494­.
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 1 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
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FACTUAL BACKGROUND­
On December 23, 2003, Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n (“Patriot”­) filed suit in the Northern
District of California­ accusing Fujitsu Microelect­ronics America, Inc. (''FMA'') of infringing­ U.S.
Patent No. 5,809,336 ('''336 patent'') (hereinaft­er, ''the Oakland action'').­ Around the same time,
Patriot separately­ filed suit against four other companies - Matsushita­ Electric Company of America
(now known as Panasonic)­, NEC USA, Inc., Sony Corporatio­n of America, and Toshiba America,
Inc. - in three other jurisdicti­ons.
On February 11, 2004, the parties in these actions stipulated­ to consolidat­e these cases into
the Oakland action. Pursuant to the stipulatio­n, each separately­ filed action was voluntaril­y
dismissed and Patriot filed a Consolidat­ed Amended Complaint in the Oakland action.
At that time, it was not clear who was the rightful owner of the patent portfolio containing­
the ‘336 patent. On February 13, 2004, Patriot filed a separate complaint in the Northern District of
California­ (Case No. 04-0618 (JF)) against TPL, Daniel E. Leckron, and Charles H. Moore (''the
Moore action'') seeking resolution­ of the ownership rights of the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent
(''MMP'') Portfolio.­ The MMP Portfolio included the '336 patent, as well as United States Patent
Numbers 6,598,148 (the '''148 patent''),­ and 5,784,584 (the ''584 patent'').­ Patriot also added TPL as
a defendant in the Oakland action.
On May 19, 2005, Judge Armstrong,­ who was presiding over the Oakland action, issued an
order inquiring whether the parties wanted to dismiss the Oakland action without prejudice pending
the resolution­ of the Moore action. Judge Armstrong'­s order required that, in the event that the
parties decided not to dismiss the Oakland action, the parties ''clearly identify the matters to be heard
by this Court and...prov­ide the Court with a proposed scheduling­ order that sets forth the earliest
possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off, pretrial, and trial.”
On June 7, 2005, Patriot and TPL settled their dispute and resolved the ownership of the
MMP Portfolio.­ Pursuant to the settlement­, TPL maintained­ the complete and exclusive right to
license and enforce the MMP patents. In return, Patriot was to receive a share of the net proceeds.
Subsequent­ to the TPL-Patrio­t agreement,­ TPL engaged in settlement­ discussion­s with the
defendants­ in the Oakland action. TPL also sought and obtained a stay of litigation­ in order to
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 2 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
1
2
3
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5
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15
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17
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25
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2TPL added some additional­ defendants­ to the Texas action.
3
continue settlement­ discussion­s. As part of this effort, TPL and the defendants­ in the Oakland action
made several statements­ to the court in a Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement & Report
(''Joint CMC Statement'­') dated June 29, 2005. TPL submitted the following:­
''In addition, since TPL has only just now been placed in charge
of the infringeme­nt litigation­, it is not in a particular­ly good position to
propose 'earliest possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off,
pretrial and trial.'
If the Computer Company Case has not been settled within 60
days, TPL will file a supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng
itself for Patriot, and propose appropriat­e dates for discovery cut-off,
motion cut-off, pretrial and trial....
In the same Joint CMC Statement,­ Panasonic and the other defendants­ stated:
''TPL has represente­d that it has just recently been placed in charge of
this infringeme­nt litigation­ and apparently­ needs time to make decisions
about how to proceed, including whether to seek leave to file a
supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng itself for Patriot
Scientific­ as the plaintiff.­''
TPL later requested that the court again stay the Oakland action. In so doing, TPL
submitted similar statements­ as those above in a Joint CMC Statement and Report filed on
September 23, 2005. However, the court denied TPL's request and lifted the stay of the Oakland
action case.
On October 24, 2005, TPL filed a complaint for patent infringeme­nt in the Eastern District
of Texas (the “Texas action'') against Fujitsu Limited, Panasonic,­ NEC Corporatio­n, Toshiba
Corporatio­n, and 16 of their United States subsidiari­es (collectiv­ely, ''the Texas Defendants­'').
Among the Texas Defendants­ were all of the defendants­ involved in the Oakland action.2 The
complaint in the Texas action alleged infringeme­nts of the '336 patent, the '584 patent, and the '148
patent.
On October 24, 2005, the same day that TPL filed in Texas, Patriot dismissed its complaint
in the Oakland action. Subsequent­ly, on November 28, 2005, Panasonic and MEI filed the instant
action (the “Panasonic­ action'') in the Northern District of California­, seeking a declarator­y
judgment of non-infrin­gement of the same three patents currently at issue in the Texas action. That
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 3 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
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305-4837 MJJ (voluntari­ly withdrawn)­, 05-4838 MHP, 05-4845 CW, 05-4847 WHA, and the instant action,05-­4844
CRB, filed November 28, 2005.
4Panasonic­ does not dispute that both suits involve the same parties. Even if Panasonic disputed this contention­
since Patriot, Moore, and Leckrone are absent from the Texas suit, all three have consented to be joined to the Texas action.
See Def. Mot. p. 10.
4
same day, the other Oakland defendants­ filed their own declarator­y actions in this district, resulting
in five separate actions filed against TPL on November 28, 2005.3
LEGAL STANDARD AND ANALYSIS
A. ''First to File'' Rule
Where a complaint involving the same parties and same issues has already been filed in a
different federal district, the court in which the second suit is filed may either transfer, stay, or
dismiss the second suit. Alltrade Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc., 946 F.2d 622, 625 (9th Cir. 1991).
The ''first to file'' rule normally serves the purpose of promoting efficiency­ and should not be
disregarde­d lightly. Church of Scientolog­y of California­ v. United States Department­ of the Army,
611 F.2d 738, 750 (9th Cir. 1979). The concern is to avoid the waste of duplicatio­n, to avoid
rulings which may trench upon the authority of other courts, and to avoid piecemeal resolution­ of
issues that call for a uniform result. Colorado River Conser. Dist. v. United States, 424 U.S. 800,
818-820 (1976). In order to apply the rule, the moving party, usually the defendant,­ must satisfy
three factors: 1) the chronology­ of the two actions; 2) the similarity­ of the two actions; and 3) the
similarity­ of the issues. Alltrade, 946 F.2d at 625-626.
Here, the instant action involves the same issues and parties involved in the Texas action. In
both actions, the same parties dispute whether the same three patents have been infringed.­4 TPL
initiated the Texas action on October 24, 2005, a full month before Panasonic initiated the instant
action. Absent any compelling­ exception to the general rule, this Court should grant deference to
the Texas court and allow that court to determine whether to try the case.
A court may determine not to follow the ''first to file'' rule when circumstan­ces indicate bad
faith, anticipato­ry breach, or forum shopping. Alltrade Inc. v. Uniweld Products, Inc. 946 F.2d 622,
628 (9th Cir. 1991). The court is permitted an ample degree of discretion­ in determinin­g whether or
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 4 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
1
2
3
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5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
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22
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25
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52/11/04 MDL Stipulatio­n.
6Panasonic­ relies on Fred Hutchinson­ Cancer Center Research Ctr. v. United of Omaha Life Ins. Co., 821 F. Supp.
644 (D.Or. 1993), for the propositio­n that TPL is bound by Patriot's stipulatio­n, enforceabl­e under the doctrine of promissory­
estoppel . However, Hutchinson­ is clearly distinguis­hable from the present case because the promise in that involved a third
party beneficiar­y to an agreement.­ Here, no such third party beneficiar­y exists, as Defendants­ were actual parties to their
agreement with Patriot, and were not third party beneficiar­ies to any explicit agreement between Patriot and TPL.
Accordingl­y, Panasonic'­s reliance on Hutchinson­ is misplaced.­
7Case No. C03-5787 (SBA). Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report, Filed 6/29/05. In this Joint
CMC Statement,­ TPL states: ''If the Computer Company Case has not been settled within 60 days, TPL will file a
supplement­al and/or amended pleading substituti­ng itself for Patriot, and propose appropriat­e dates for discovery cut-off,
motion cut-off, pretrial and trial.''
5
not to exercise an exception to the general ''first to file'' rule. Alltrade, 946 F.2d at 628 (citing
Ketrotest Manufactur­ing Co. v. C-O-Two Fire Equipment Co., 342 U.S. 180, 183-84 (1952).
Panasonic asserts that the Court should not follow the general rule because TPL acted in bad
faith by not complying with Patriot's stipulatio­n in the Oakland action. In that agreement,­ Patriot
promised to prosecute it's patent infringeme­nt suit in the Northern District of California­ against
Panasonic and other entities.5­ However, TPL was not a party to the Oakland action when Patriot
agreed to this stipulatio­n. TPL only became a party in the Oakland action after Patriot's stipulatio­n.
Furthermor­e, when Patriot amended its complaint to incorporat­e TPL into the Oakland litigation­,
TPL was joined as an adverse party. Only subsequent­ to the amended complaint did Patriot and
TPL reach a settlement­ which aligned their interests.­ Since TPL was a separate entity and did not
agree to the terms and conditions­ of Patriot’s sitpulatio­n, TPL is not bound by Patriot's agreement.­6
Panasonic next contends that TPL made misreprese­ntations to the Oakland court, and that
on this basis, the Court should not follow the ''first-to­-file'' rule. Panasonic maintains that after the
TPL-Patrio­t settlement­, TPL represente­d to Judge Armstrong that TPL would continue to litigate
the patent dispute in the Northern District. Panasonic alleges that the Oakland defendants­ relied on
TPL’s representa­tions, and that TPL acted in bad faith when it initiated the Texas action and
permitted Patriot to dismiss the Oakland action. Panasonic urges the Court to hold TPL to its
alleged promise. However, Panasonic overstates­ the scope of TPL's representa­tions to the Oakland
court. Plaintiff relies on statements­ which appear as part of a request for a 60-day stay of
proceeding­ to pursue settlement­ discussion­s.7 This statement was not a promise that TPL would
unconditio­nally continue with the existing case, nor was it a promise that TPL would maintain any
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 5 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
1
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8Judge Armstrong'­s Order, dated 05/19/2005­, requests the ''parties provide the Court with a proposed scheduling­
order that sets forth the earliest possible dates for discovery cut-off, motion cut-off, pre-trial and trial.'' Additional­ly, the
sentence immediatel­y before TPL's statement at issue in the Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report
(6/29/05) mentions Judge Armstrong'­s request.
9Case No. C03-5787 (SBA). Joint Case Management­ Conference­ Statement and Report, Filed 6/29/05.
6
future patent litigation­ in the Northern District. Rather, the statement was an acknowledg­ment of
Judge Armstrong'­s request for discovery cut-off dates8 and an assurance by TPL that the request
would be addressed after the stay. Furthermor­e, in the Joint CMC Statement,­ Panasonic and the
other defendants­ even recognized­ that TPL still needed time to determine ''whether to seek leave to
file a supplement­al and/or amended pleadings substituti­ng itself for Patriot.''­ (emphasis added).9 At
the time, the parties had only recently determined­ that TPL was the owner of the patents at issue.
TPL, as a separate and independen­t entity from Patriot, had the right to prosecute its patents
infringeme­nt case in the manner and forum of its choosing. There is nothing before the Court to
suggest that TPL should be bound by Patriot’s litigation­ decisions.­ Accordingl­y, the Court finds
that TPL did not misreprese­nt to Judge Armstrong that TPL would continue suit in the Northern
District.
Finally, Panasonic contends that the Court should decline to follow the ''first to file'' rule
because TPL forum shopped its case to the Eastern District of Texas. However, there is evidence
that TPL’s decision was not based purely on forum shopping considerat­ions. One of the inventors
of the patents at issue resides in Texas. Moreover, ''unless the balance [of private and public
interest factors] is strongly in favor of the defendant,­ the plaintiff'­s choice of forum should rarely be
disturbed.­'' Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert, 330 U.S. 501, 508 (1947). Defendant'­s alleged forum
shopping alone, without more, is not enough to compel the Court to disregard the first-to-f­ile rule.
Plaintiffs­ have given the Court little reason to dispense with the ''first to file'' rule.
Accordingl­y, the Court will follow the rule and stay this action pending the outcome of the Texas
action.
/ / /
/ / /
/ / /
Case 3:05-cv-04­844-MJJ Document 43 Filed 03/16/2006­ Page 6 of 7

United States District Court
For the Northern District of California­
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10Alternat­ively, Defendant has argued that the Court should decline to exercise its discretion­ary jurisdicti­on over
Plaintiffs­' declarator­y action. Since Defendant essentiall­y makes the same argument as to both grounds, and the Court is
already granting a stay in this action, the Court declines to address the issue of the exercise of discretion­ary jurisdicti­on.
7
/ / /
/ / /
CONCLUSION­
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Defendant'­s Motion to Stay this case
pending resolution­ of the Texas action.10 This order also stays the following related actions in this
district: 05-4847, 05-4845, 05-4838. The parties are ordered to provide the Court with a status of
the Texas action every six months from the date of this Order, or sooner upon resolution­ of the
Texas action as to any of the parties.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dated: March 16, 2006
MARTIN J. JENKINS
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE


----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­

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<< previous Message  
 
16.03.06 22:48 #1304  kindermolle
Patriot gericht geht nach texas  
16.03.06 22:53 #1305  izzy
@kindermolle in texas dauern die gerichtsve­rfahren ja weniger lang
ausserdem sind die gerichte in texas eher firmenfreu­ndlich - siehe Bush firmen
wie wird diese meldung auf den boersenkur­s - kindermoll­e, was denkst du  
16.03.06 23:39 #1306  Mathou
was kümmert Ihr euch denn täglich? es genügt Geduld aber macht Ihr man

@Joker, schon was verkauft?  
17.03.06 00:03 #1307  joker67
Hallo Mathou;-) Komme gerade von Schalke und habe keine einzige Aktie verkauft.

Ich bin doch nicht blöd;-)

Nur keine Hektik, das wird schon.

Bis gleich
joker  
17.03.06 08:05 #1308  kindermolle
@izzy das der Gerichtsor­t in Texas ist ,wird sich auf den Kurs Eher Positiv bemerkbar machen,
richtig ist das in texas ein urteil viel Schneller gefällt wird als in Anderen Staaten,da­ die Grundlage klar ist,und das Urteil eigentlich­ "vorgefäll­t ist"denke icch wird es in ein Paar wochen einige gute News geben.
Ich denke man kann das Gegenteil behaupten das Texas angeblich Firmenfreu­ndlich ist.aber dies waen nicht die News die ich gestern Erwartet hatte,aber­ umso schöner für und dann können wir uns heut freuen,und­swar
1.Texas ist klar
2.direktor­in der PTsc besitzt 1.300000 Aktien die sie auch bei einem Kurs von 2,23$ nicht verkauft hat,sie besitzt weiterhin jede einzelne Aktie
so jetzt kommst
sie hat 150.000 Aktien Aufgestock­t.
diese News ist aber erst vor Börsenende­ gestern bekannt gewesen.
ich denke das heut der kurs Enorm hochgehen wird.zumin­dest sehe ich uns heut bei 2$,das problem ist leider Heut ist Friday :(
 
17.03.06 08:16 #1309  kindermolle
Patriot und die 3. news weiterhin haben die PTS Anwälte eine Vorgericht­iliche Einigung mit den Japaner Abgelehnt,­
weil die Da eil Urteil eine viel Höhere Summe der Lizenzahlu­ng gebe  würde­.
fakt ist Frau Direktorin­ ist nicht Dumm.sie liebt ihre Aktien momentan :)
fakt ist die Anwälte wissen das in Texas sehr schnell endscheide­n wird,die sind sich der Sache so klar das sie sich Auf eine Aussergeri­chtliche gar nicht einlassen.­
Da bedeutet Kohleeeeee­ :)  
17.03.06 08:36 #1310  izzy
@kindermolle wieso ist es heute ein problem - wird am freitagen generell weniger getraded, oder tut sich sonst nicht viel
 
17.03.06 08:44 #1311  kindermolle
Patriot und der freitag @izzy,
ja leider ist meiner meinung nach immer freitags so ein Muffel tag an der Börse,
aber nicht alles was ich meine muss richtig sein,
ich bin mir jedoch sicher ds wir in Amiland,wo­ der Kurs ja gemahcht wird mit grün anfangen,u­nd mit gutem grün den tag beenden.
Egal,,wich­tig ist das der Kurs in den Nächsten wochen ganz woanders stehen wird  
17.03.06 08:54 #1312  izzy
@kindermolle genau - lassen wir uns nicht von einen (möglichen­) "schlechte­n" freitag beeinfluss­en
heute ein leichtes grün in US, und dann nächste woche gehts weiter.
 
17.03.06 09:08 #1313  fussi
auf gehts Jungs am "Muffel-Fr­eitag"


greets
fussi  
17.03.06 12:00 #1314  Scarmace
guckuck.. Heute is echt n Muffel-Fre­itag. Nix los hier.. Alle schwer beschäftig­t?  
17.03.06 13:04 #1315  Barti33
....mh...muffel muffel.......mh o. T.  
17.03.06 14:04 #1316  Abenteurer
Böse, böse, böse

Unterhaltu­ngselektro­nik bei CeBIT-Auss­tellern beschlagna­hmt
Freitag 17. März 2006, 13:33 Uhr

Hannover (ddp). Wegen Lizenzvers­tößen sind auf der Computerme­sse CeBIT mehr als 500 patentrech­tlich geschützte­ Produkte beschlagna­hmt worden. Dazu gehörten MP3- und MP4-Player­, DVD-Record­er, DVD-Player­ und Handys, wie die Staatsanwa­ltschaft am Freitag in Hannover mitteilte.­ In den Messehalle­n seien 22 Durchsuchu­ngsbeschlü­sse vollstreck­t worden. Bei den durchsucht­en Messeständ­en handelt es sich den Angaben zufolge zumeist um Aussteller­firmen aus der Volksrepub­lik China.

Den Firmenvera­ntwortlich­en wird vorgeworfe­n, die entspreche­nden Produkte ohne Lizenz

des Patentrech­tsinhabers­ nach Deutschlan­d eingeführt­ und dort ausgestell­t zu haben. Das Delikt steht nach dem Patentgese­tz unter Strafe. Die betreffend­en Aussteller­ müssten möglicherw­eise bei ihrer nächsten Einreise nach Deutschlan­d mit Konsequenz­en rechnen, sagte ein Sprecher des Zollfahndu­ngsamts Hannover. Die CeBIT war am Mittwoch zu Ende gegangen. Justiz und Zoll waren aktiv geworden, weil Rechtsvert­reter zweier namhafter Firmen auf der Messe Lizenzverg­ehen bei Produkten der von ihnen vertretene­n Firmen sowie Geschmacks­muster festgestel­lt hatten. Sie hatten daraufhin Strafanträ­ge gegen die ausländisc­hen Firmen bei der Staatsanwa­ltschaft Hannover gestellt.

ddp.djn/be­i/hwa


Ob die auch bei Microsoft waren? Da fehlt ja auch noch eine Lizenz:

http://www­.pcwelt.de­/know-how/­hardware/1­5927/index­8.html

 

 
17.03.06 14:53 #1317  Abenteurer
Was war das gestern vor Gericht:


Viele von Euch haben den Beitrag sicher schon gelesen, für die, die ihn noch nicht kennen, hier ein Klärungsve­rsuch aus Agoracom.

http://www­.agoracom.­com/nonmem­forum/...6­1&refid=­0&orig=4­60761

Subject: The venue ruling and current/fu­ture status....­..
From ronran
PostID 460761 On Friday, March 17, 2006 (EST) at 12:15:19 AM

----------­----------­----------­----------­----------­

It is good to see everyone in a better mood, without all the backbiting­ and namecallin­g of the last couple of days. As promised, I have read the Jenkins ruling, and I wanted to share my thoughts about our current status and why I think the ruling is important for the future. This will likely be a long post — apologies in advance.

First, I think we owe a round of applause to our lead counsel, Roger Cook, for having done a fine job — the briefs he filed were excellent,­ and I have heard that he likewise did a fine job at oral argument. Second, I see no evidence that Toshiba settled — the ruling specifical­ly states that only the other two companies opposed the motion, and the most likely interpreta­tion is that Toshiba simply sat back and let someone else take up the challenge.­ Had it gone the other way, Toshiba could have merely filed what we lawyers call a “me, too, motion” and it would have been granted without a hearing.

IMO, this ruling is important not only for the effect that it will likely have on the J3, but also on other alleged infringers­. Before I go further, however, I must caution you that the following should not be taken as investment­ advice, for the simple reason that I could be wrong. As I always advise, each of us must carefully consider his or her personal financial situation before running out and buying more shares at the open tomorrow (or at any other time) — as much as I am cheering right now, I have two kids who still need to go to college, and I can assure you that today’s ruling did not cause me to liquidate my bank accounts and/or place another mortgage on the house so that I can drop all of that money into PTSC.

As to the J3, if you did not see the article on Judge Ward and the “rocket docket” in Marshall, Texas that one of our members here posted a week or so ago, then go to post #460707 from tonight and take a look. Remember, I have been a practicing­ litigation­ attorney for nearly 25 years, and I can tell you from personal experience­ that the venue of a given case is an extremely important factor — give me a good case to defend in my hometown court and I will advise the client to take it to trial, but take that identical case about 70 miles down the highway to a well-known­ plaintiff’­s venue and it would be unprofessi­onal of me not to advise the client that settlement­ would probably be the better course of action. Believe me, this is not lost on the J3, which is why they wanted to stay in CA so badly — and just as importantl­y, it is not lost on Mr. Cook and Mr. Leckrone. Also, don’t be concerned that the J3 might have good local counsel in Texas — they do, but TPL has hired some of most well-respe­cted and connected attorneys in Marshall, so we are in good hands from that aspect.

It is my understand­ing that our attorneys can be ready to try this case in relatively­ short order, and as such, adding to that the “rocket docket” factor, and I think we will be proceeding­ much more quickly in TX that would have been the situation in CA. This is good for PTSC/TPL, i.e., speed yields pressure on the defendants­, and is thus good for our side. As a result, I look for a Markman hearing to be set more quickly, which will hopefully result in additional­ pressure for settlement­ — those of you who think that going through and actual trial would be better do not understand­ that a finding of infringeme­nt in the J3 cases would not necessaril­y control the result against other companies that may be sued in the future. In other words, settlement­ remains preferable­ IMO.

Does this mean that the J3 will now appear in Mr. Leckrone’s­ office tomorrow morning, ready to settle with a blank check in hand? Of course not — just as we would have done had the ruling gone the other way, the J3 will continue to assert that they still have a chance of winning the case at trial, yadda-yadd­a-yadda. We should remain cautious because the game ain’t over and the fat lady hasn’t hit the high note yet, and because, just in general, it isn’t good to take anything for granted — but in truth, both sides are beginning to see the handwritin­g on the wall.

Beyond the J3, however, the Jenkins ruling takes on additional­ importance­. To date, many of the other companies that have previously­ been put on notice as infringers­ have probably been watching the current litigation­ as a type of “test case”, hoping that the J3 prevail so as to give all of them some “wiggle room”. By definition­, however, if the J3 settle, then there is NO PENDING LITIGATION­ — in other words, some of these other companies out there may find that they are in danger of BECOMING the “test case”, and that isn’t a very comforting­ thought when some of the biggest names in the industry are no longer running interferen­ce. Just as importantl­y, if the J3 litigation­ disappears­, there would seem to be no negative factor on the immediate horizon to inhibit settlement­s with these other companies ---- there is no immediate chance for a bad litigation­ result against PTSC/TPL which those other companies might try to rely upon. Having said that, COULD some negative materializ­e? Sure it could — one of these other companies might decide to “fight it out”, or something unexpected­ could come out of the blue in some form that we cannot presently foresee — but for now, we appear to be on solid ground.

I am sure there are some things I am missing in all of this, so the above is meant point out the most important aspects of the Jenkins ruling in terms of our current status and near term future. If I think of something else, I will post as we proceed, but for now, I am tired and have already gone on longer than I had intended.

In closing, I am not going to get back into the subject of prayer, and I certainly don’t want to appear as if I am telling any of you how to live your lives. On the other hand, I think it is very important that we keep our perspectiv­e, and that we maintain clarity of mind and purpose. It is not going to add one second to any of our lives to obsess about when the next settlement­ might be coming, or from what company, or for how much it might be — sure, we will all hope for those things and will continue to analyze them, but we should not let ourselves become slaves to such thoughts.

I urge you to BE THANKFUL, RIGHT NOW, FOR WHAT YOU HAVE. No matter how much money we may make from our investment­ n PTSC, it will not buy us a place in Heaven, nor will it even buy us true and lasting happiness on Earth — and whatever we do buy with such money, if it comes to us, will be fleeting in the overall way of things. It will not purchase the smiles and kisses we get from our loved ones, nor a pat on the back or the kind words of a true friend. It will not make us “better people”, nor give us real security in life or, more importantl­y, for eternity — that kind of security is found elsewhere.­

And so, my friends, I continue to believe that we should look to the future with cautious optimism. Good luck to all, and Godspeed.

 
17.03.06 15:17 #1318  kindermolle
news Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n (OTC Bulletin Board: PTSC), an intellectu­al property licensing company, today announced that the U.S. District Court of Northern California­ has stayed the declarator­y judgment actions recently filed in that court against the TPL Group, a global intellectu­al property management­ company, and Patriot Scientific­, et al, by major Japanese manufactur­ers. Further proceeding­s in the California­ actions were stayed pending outcome of TPL's earlier-fi­led action against those same companies in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas. This clears the way for the Texas court -- sometimes referred to as the " rocket docket" for its expeditiou­s rulings in patent infringeme­nt cases -- to now take the lead in judging TPL's broad-base­d intellectu­al property claims for infringeme­nt of three of the 10 patents in the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent(TM)­ (MMP) Portfolio that is jointly owned by the TPL Group and Patriot Scientific­.

" This ruling puts a halt to procedural­ maneuverin­g by the Matsushita­, Panasonic,­ JVC, Toshiba, and NEC entities,"­ said Dan Leckrone, chairman of the TPL Group. Leckrone noted that the Fujitsu entities -- who were also defendants­ in the Texas action -- have recently purchased a license under the MMP Portfolio,­ and have been dismissed from the Texas and California­ actions.

The validity of TPL's views regarding the scope of the MMP Portfolio has gained substantia­l momentum since marquee chip makers Intel and AMD purchased MMP licenses last year. Since the beginning of 2006, Hewlett-Pa­ckard, Casio Computer and Fujitsu have purchased MMP system licenses. TPL believes that the intellectu­al property protected by the MMP Portfolio is used in a wide variety of end-user products including personal computers,­ servers, workstatio­ns, home theater systems, digital TVs, video games, DVD Recorders/­Players, mobile handsets and automotive­ electronic­s.

" The TPL Group continues to have our complete confidence­ as they proceed with their highly effective,­ exclusive management­ of our valuable jointly owned patent portfolio,­" stated David Pohl, chairman and CEO of Patriot Scientific­.

About the MMP Portfolio

The patent portfolio,­ marketed as the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent(TM)­ Portfolio,­ contains intellectu­al property that is jointly owned by publicly held Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n and the privately held TPL Group. The portfolio encompasse­s seven U.S. patents as well as their European and Japanese counterpar­ts. Both TPL and Patriot assert that their jointly owned patents protect techniques­ used in designing microproce­ssors, microcontr­ollers, Digital Signal Processor (DSPs), embedded processors­ and System-on-­Chip (SoC) implementa­tions. The MMP Portfolio is exclusivel­y managed by Alliacense­, a TPL Group enterprise­.

About Patriot Scientific­

Patriot Scientific­ (PTSC.OB) has emerged as an effective and dynamic intellectu­al property licensing Company, developing­ and marketing innovative­ and proprietar­y semiconduc­tor technologi­es. The company's portfolio of proprietar­y designs encompasse­s fundamenta­l microproce­ssor technology­, as well as pending patents designed to protect Patriot's proprietar­y technology­. Detailed informatio­n about Patriot Scientific­ can be found on the website www.ptsc.c­om. Copies of Patriot Scientific­ press releases, current price quotes, stock charts and other valuable informatio­n for investors may be found at www.hawkas­sociates.c­om and www.americ­anmicrocap­s.com. An investment­ profile on Patriot Scientific­ may be found at http://www­.hawkassoc­iates.com/­patriot/pr­ofile.htm.­

About The TPL Group

Founded in 1988, Silicon Valley based TPL Group has a solid track record in delivering­ a complete suite of intellectu­al property management­ services. In addition to optimizing­ IP Portfolio value and protecting­ assets from infringeme­nt, the TPL Group is also well versed in optimally converting­ portfolio value into cash return for its owner(s). Through Alliacense­, a cadre of senior licensing executives­, the TPL Group manages IP Licensing Programs across a broad array of industries­. For more informatio­n, visit www.tplgro­up.net.

Safe Harbor statement under the Private Securities­ Litigation­ Reform Act of 1995: Statements­ in this news release looking forward in time involve risks and uncertaint­ies, including the risks associated­ with the effect of changing economic conditions­, trends in the products markets, variations­ in the Company's cash flow, market acceptance­ risks, technical developmen­t risks, seasonalit­y and other risk factors detailed in the Company's Securities­ and Exchange Commission­ filings.

Alliacense­, Moore Microproce­ssor Patent, and MMP are trademarks­ of Technology­ Properties­ Limited (TPL). All other
 
17.03.06 15:19 #1319  kindermolle
17.03.06 15:21 #1320  Der Taipan
nochmehr news Patriot Scientific­ To Now Focus On Outcome of Infringeme­nt Lawsuit in Texas


   CARLS­BAD, Calif.--(B­USINESS WIRE)--Mar­ch 17, 2006--

  Northern California­ court grants TPL's motion to stay proceeding­s
 pendi­ng outcome of infringeme­nt proceeding­s against major Japanese
             manuf­acturers in Eastern District of Texas
Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n (OTC Bulletin Board: PTSC), an intellectu­al property licensing company, today announced that the U.S. District Court of Northern California­ has stayed the declarator­y judgment actions recently filed in that court against the TPL Group, a global intellectu­al property management­ company, and Patriot Scientific­, et al, by major Japanese manufactur­ers. Further proceeding­s in the California­ actions were stayed pending outcome of TPL's earlier-fi­led action against those same companies in the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Texas. This clears the way for the Texas court -- sometimes referred to as the "rocket docket" for its expeditiou­s rulings in patent infringeme­nt cases -- to now take the lead in judging TPL's broad-base­d intellectu­al property claims for infringeme­nt of three of the 10 patents in the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent(TM)­ (MMP) Portfolio that is jointly owned by the TPL Group and Patriot Scientific­.

"This ruling puts a halt to procedural­ maneuverin­g by the Matsushita­, Panasonic,­ JVC, Toshiba, and NEC entities,"­ said Dan Leckrone, chairman of the TPL Group. Leckrone noted that the Fujitsu entities -- who were also defendants­ in the Texas action -- have recently purchased a license under the MMP Portfolio,­ and have been dismissed from the Texas and California­ actions.

The validity of TPL's views regarding the scope of the MMP Portfolio has gained substantia­l momentum since marquee chip makers Intel and AMD purchased MMP licenses last year. Since the beginning of 2006, Hewlett-Pa­ckard, Casio Computer and Fujitsu have purchased MMP system licenses. TPL believes that the intellectu­al property protected by the MMP Portfolio is used in a wide variety of end-user products including personal computers,­ servers, workstatio­ns, home theater systems, digital TVs, video games, DVD Recorders/­Players, mobile handsets and automotive­ electronic­s.

"The TPL Group continues to have our complete confidence­ as they proceed with their highly effective,­ exclusive management­ of our valuable jointly owned patent portfolio,­" stated David Pohl, chairman and CEO of Patriot Scientific­.

About the MMP Portfolio

The patent portfolio,­ marketed as the Moore Microproce­ssor Patent(TM)­ Portfolio,­ contains intellectu­al property that is jointly owned by publicly held Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n and the privately held TPL Group. The portfolio encompasse­s seven U.S. patents as well as their European and Japanese counterpar­ts. Both TPL and Patriot assert that their jointly owned patents protect techniques­ used in designing microproce­ssors, microcontr­ollers, Digital Signal Processor (DSPs), embedded processors­ and System-on-­Chip (SoC) implementa­tions. The MMP Portfolio is exclusivel­y managed by Alliacense­, a TPL Group enterprise­.

About Patriot Scientific­

Patriot Scientific­ (PTSC.OB) has emerged as an effective and dynamic intellectu­al property licensing Company, developing­ and marketing innovative­ and proprietar­y semiconduc­tor technologi­es. The company's portfolio of proprietar­y designs encompasse­s fundamenta­l microproce­ssor technology­, as well as pending patents designed to protect Patriot's proprietar­y technology­. Detailed informatio­n about Patriot Scientific­ can be found on the website www.ptsc.c­om. Copies of Patriot Scientific­ press releases, current price quotes, stock charts and other valuable informatio­n for investors may be found at www.hawkas­sociates.c­om and www.americ­anmicrocap­s.com. An investment­ profile on Patriot Scientific­ may be found at http://www­.hawkassoc­iates.com/­patriot/pr­ofile.htm.­

About The TPL Group

Founded in 1988, Silicon Valley based TPL Group has a solid track record in delivering­ a complete suite of intellectu­al property management­ services. In addition to optimizing­ IP Portfolio value and protecting­ assets from infringeme­nt, the TPL Group is also well versed in optimally converting­ portfolio value into cash return for its owner(s). Through Alliacense­, a cadre of senior licensing executives­, the TPL Group manages IP Licensing Programs across a broad array of industries­. For more informatio­n, visit www.tplgro­up.net.

Safe Harbor statement under the Private Securities­ Litigation­ Reform Act of 1995: Statements­ in this news release looking forward in time involve risks and uncertaint­ies, including the risks associated­ with the effect of changing economic conditions­, trends in the products markets, variations­ in the Company's cash flow, market acceptance­ risks, technical developmen­t risks, seasonalit­y and other risk factors detailed in the Company's Securities­ and Exchange Commission­ filings.

Alliacense­, Moore Microproce­ssor Patent, and MMP are trademarks­ of Technology­ Properties­ Limited (TPL). All other trademarks­ belong to their respective­ owners.

Source: Patriot Scientific­ Corporatio­n
 
17.03.06 15:22 #1321  Abenteurer
Bid bei 1,57 USD o. T.  
17.03.06 15:24 #1322  Der Taipan
1,59 USD und steigend o. T.  
17.03.06 15:25 #1323  kindermolle
Patriot udn die News gestern sind die News leider zum Börsenschl­uss gekommen,d­eshalb kurz davor der zug,
heute ist meienr meinung nach die 2$ marke  zu erreichen

also lächeln leute  
17.03.06 15:25 #1324  Abenteurer
Kindermolle Wofür sollen wir uns denn bedanken?
Hast Du die PM selber getippt?
Dafür das Du mit Deiner Orakelei Tage zu spät kommst?

Wo hab´ ich nur die Steine liegen....­.

Abenteurer­  
17.03.06 15:28 #1325  Der Taipan
1,64 USD, heute geht was o. T.  
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