Gunn v. Minton
72/20/2013
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Chief Justice Roberts delivered the opinion of the Court. Federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction over cases âarising under any Act of Congress relating to patents.â 28 U. S. C. § 1338 (a). The question presented is whether a state law claim alleging legal malpractice in the handling of a patent case must be brought in federal court. I In the early 1990â , respondent Vernon Minton developed a computer program and telecommunications network designed to facilitate securities trading. In March 1995, he leased the systemâknown as the Texas Computer Exchange Network, or TEXCENâto R. M. Stark & Co., a securities brokerage. A little over a year later, he applied for a patent for an interactive securities trading system that was based *254 substantially on TEXCEN. The U. S. Patent and Trademark Office issued the patent in January 2000. Patent in hand, Minton filed a patent infringement suit in Federal District Court against the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (NASD), and the NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc. He was represented by Jerry Gunn and the other petitioners. NASD and NASDAQ moved for summary judgment on the ground that Mintonâs patent was invalid under the âon saleâ bar, 35 U. S. C. § 102 (b). That provision specifies that an inventor is not entitled to a patent if âthe invention was ... on sale in [the United States], more than one year prior to the date of the application,â and Min-ton had leased TEXCEN to Stark more than one year prior to filing his patent application. Rejecting Mintonâs argument that there were differences between TEXCEN and the patented system that precluded application of the on-sale bar, the District Court granted the summary judgment motion and declared Mintonâs patent invalid. Minton v. National Assn. of Securities Dealers, Inc., 226 F. Supp. 2d 845, 873, 883-884 (ED Tex. 2002). Minton then filed a motion for reconsideration in the District Court, arguing for the first time that the lease agreement with Stark was part of ongoing testing of TEXCEN and therefore fell within the âexperimental useâ exception to the on-sale bar. See generally Pfaff v. Wells Electronics, Inc., 525 U. S. 55, 64 (1998) (describing the exception). The District Court denied the motion. Minton v. National Assn. of Securities Dealers, Inc., No. 9:00-cv-00019 (ED Tex., July 15, 2002). Minton appealed to the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. That court affirmed, concluding that the District Court had appropriately held Mintonâs experimental-use argument waived. See Minton v. National Assn. of Securities Dealers, Inc., 336 F. 3d 1373, 1379-1380 (CA Fed. 2003). *255 Minton, convinced that his attorneysâ failure to raise the experimental-use argument earlier had cost him the lawsuit and led to invalidation of his patent, brought this malpractice action in Texas state court. His former lawyers defended on the ground that the lease to Stark was not, in fact, for an experimental use, and that therefore Mintonâs patent infringement claims would have failed even if the experimental-use argument had been timely raised. The trial court agreed, holding that Minton had put forward âless than a scintilla of proofâ that the lease had been for an experimental purpose. App. 213. It accordingly granted summary judgment to Gunn and the other lawyer defendants. On appeal, Minton raised a new argument: Because his legal malpractice claim was based on an alleged error in a patent case, it âarisjes] underâ federal patent law for purposes of 28 U. S. C. § 1338 (a). And because, under § 1338(a), â[n]o State court shall have jurisdiction over any claim for relief arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents,â the Texas courtâwhere Minton had originally brought his malpractice claimâlacked subject matter jurisdiction to decide the case. Accordingly, Minton argued, the trial courtâs order should be vacated and the case dismissed, leaving Min-ton free to start over in the Federal District Court. A divided panel of the Court of Appeals of Texas rejected Mintonâs argument. Applying the test we articulated in Grable & Sons Metal Products, Inc. v. Darue Engineering & Mfg., 545 U. S. 308, 314 (2005), it held that the federal interests implicated by Mintonâs state law claim were not sufficiently substantial to trigger § 1338 âarising underâ jurisdiction. It also held that finding exclusive federal jurisdiction over state legal malpractice actions would, contrary to Grableâs commands, disturb the balance of federal and state judicial responsibilities. Proceeding to the merits of Mintonâs malpractice claim, the Court of Appeals affirmed the trial courtâs determination that Minton had failed to establish ex *256 perimental use and that arguments on that ground therefore would not have saved his infringement suit. The Supreme Court of Texas reversed, relying heavily on a pair of cases from the U. S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. 355 S. W. 3d 634, 641-642 (2011) (discussing Air Measurement Technologies, Inc. v. Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, L. L. P., 504 F. 3d 1262 (2007); Immunocept, LLC v. Fulbright & Jaworski, LLP, 504 F. 3d 1281 (2007)). The court concluded that Mintonâs claim involved âa substantial federal issueâ within the meaning of Grable âbecause the success of Mintonâs malpractice claim is reliant upon the viability of the experimental use exception as a defense to the on-sale bar.â 355 S. W. 3d, at 644 . Adjudication of Min-tonâs claim in federal court was consistent with the appropriate balance between federal and state judicial responsibilities, it held, because âthe federal government and patent litigants have an interest in the uniform application of patent law by courts well-versed in that subject matter.â Id., at 646 (citing Immunocept, supra, at 1285-1286; Air Measurement Technologies, supra, at 1272). Justice Guzman, joined by Justices Medina and Willett, dissented. The dissenting justices would have held that the federal issue was neither substantial nor disputed, and that maintaining the proper balance of responsibility between state and federal courts precluded relegating state legal malpractice claims to federal court. We granted certiorari. Post, p. 936. II âFederal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction, possessing âonly that power authorized by Constitution and statute.â Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America, 511 U. S. 375, 377 (1994). There is no dispute that the Constitution permits Congress to extend federal court jurisdiction to a case such as this one, see Osborn v. Bank of United States, 9 Wheat. 738, 823-824 (1824); the question is whether Con *257 gress has done so, see Powell v. McCormack, 395 U. S. 486, 515-516 (1969). As relevant here, Congress has authorized the federal district courts to exercise original jurisdiction in âall civil actions arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States,â 28 U. S. C. § 1331 , and, more particularly, over âany civil action arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents,â § 1338(a). Adhering to the demands of â[linguistic consistency,â we have interpreted the phrase âarising underâ in both sections identically, applying our § 1331 and § 1338(a) precedents interchangeably. See Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp., 486 U. S. 800, 808-809 (1988). For cases falling within the patent specific arising under jurisdiction of § 1338(a), however, Congress has not only provided for federal jurisdiction but also eliminated state jurisdiction, decreeing that â[n]o State court shall have jurisdiction over any claim for relief arising under any Act of Congress relating to patents.â § 1338(a). To determine whether jurisdiction was proper in the Texas courts, therefore, we must determine whether it would have been proper in a federal district courtâwhether, that is, the case âaris[es] under any Act of Congress relating to patents.â For statutory purposes, a case can âaris[e] underâ federal law in two ways. Most directly, a case arises under federal law when federal law creates the cause of action asserted. See American Well Works Co. v. Layne & Bowler Co., 241 U. S. 257, 260 (1916) (âA suit arises under the law that creates the cause of actionâ). As a rule of inclusion, this âcreationâ test admits of only extremely rare exceptions, see, e. g., Shoshone Mining Co. v. Rutter, 177 U. S. 505 (1900), and accounts for the vast bulk of suits that arise under federal law, see Franchise Tax Bd. of Cal. v. Construction Laborers Vacation Trust for Southern Cal., 463 U. S. 1, 9 (1983). Mintonâs original patent infringement suit against NASD and NASDAQ, for example, arose under federal law in this manner because it was authorized by 35 U. S. C. §§271 , 281. *258 But even where a claim finds its origins in state rather than federal lawâas Mintonâs legal malpractice claim indisputably doesâwe have identified a âspecial and small categoryâ of cases in which arising under jurisdiction still lies. Empire HealthChoice Assurance, Inc. v. McVeigh, 547 U. S. 677, 699 (2006). In outlining the contours of this slim category, we do not paint on a blank canvas. Unfortunately, the canvas looks like one that Jaekson Pollock got to first. See 13D C. Wright, A. Miller, E. Cooper, & R. Freer, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3562, pp. 175-176 (3d ed. 2008) (reviewing general confusion on question). In an effort to bring some order to this unruly doctrine several Terms ago, we condensed our prior cases into the following inquiry: Does the âstate-law claim necessarily raise a stated federal issue, actually disputed and substantial, which a federal forum may entertain without disturbing any congressionally approved balance of federal and state judicial responsibilities?â Grable, 545 U. S., at 314 . That is, federal jurisdiction over a state law claim will lie if a federal issue is: (1) necessarily raised, (2) actually disputed, (3) substantial, and (4) capable of resolution in federal court without disrupting the federal-state balance approved by Congress. Where all four of these requirements are met, we held, jurisdiction is proper because there is a âserious federal interest in claiming the advantages thought to be inherent in a federal forum,â which can be vindicated without disrupting Congressâs intended division of labor between state and federal courts. Id., at 313-314 . IâI HH h-H Applying Grableâs inquiry here, it is clear that Mintons legal malpractice claim does not arise under federal patent law. Indeed, for the reasons we discuss, we are comfortable concluding that state legal malpractice claims based on underlying patent matters will rarely, if ever, arise under .federal patent law for purposes of § 1338(a). Although such *259 eases may necessarily raise disputed questions of patent law, those cases are by their nature unlikely to have the sort of significance for the federal system necessary to establish jurisdiction. A To begin, we acknowledge that resolution of a federal patent question is ânecessaryâ to Mintonâs case. Under Texas law, a plaintiff alleging legal malpractice must establish four elements: (1) that the defendant attorney owed the plaintiff a duty; (2) that the attorney breached that duty; (3) that the breach was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injury; and (4) that damages occurred. See Alexander v. Turtur & Associates, Inc., 146 S. W. 3d 113, 117 (Tex. 2004). In cases like this one, in which the attorneyâs alleged error came in failing to make a particular argument, the causation element requires a âcase within a easeâ analysis of whether, had the argument been made, the outcome of the earlier litigation would have been different. 355 S. W. 3d, at 639 ; see 4 R. Mallen & J. Smith, Legal Malpractice §37:15, pp. 1509-1520 (2012). To prevail on his legal malpractice claim, therefore, Minton must show that he would have prevailed in his federal patent infringement case if only petitioners had timely made an experimental-use argument on his behalf. 355 S. W. 3d, at 644 . That will necessarily require application of patent law to the facts of Mintonâs case. B The federal issue is also âactually disputedâ hereâindeed, on the merits, it is the central point of dispute. Minton argues that the experimental-use exception properly applied to his lease to Stark, saving his patent from the on-sale bar; petitioners argue that it did not. This is just the sort of â âdispute ... respecting the . . . effect of [federal] lawâ â that Grable envisioned. 545 U. S., at 313 (quoting Shulthis v. McDougal, 225 U. S. 561, 569 (1912)). *260 c Mintonâs argument founders on Grableâs next requirement, however, for the federal issue in this case is not substantial in the relevant sense. In reaching the opposite conclusion, the Supreme Court of Texas focused on the importance of the issue to the plaintiffâs case and to the parties before it. 355 S. W. 3d, at 644 (âbecause the success of Mintonâs malpractice claim is reliant upon the viability of the experimental use exception as a defense to the on-sale bar, we hold that it is a substantial federal issueâ); see also Air Measurement Technologies, 504 F. 3d, at 1272 (âthe issue is substantial, for it is a necessary element of the malpractice caseâ). As our past cases show, however, it is not enough that the federal issue be significant to the particular parties in the immediate suit; that will always be true when the state claim ânecessarily raise[s]â a disputed federal issue, as Grable separately requires. The substantiality inquiry under Grable looks instead to the importance of the issue to the federal system as a whole. In Grable itself, for example, the Internal Revenue Service had seized property from the plaintiff and sold it to satisfy the plaintiffâs federal tax delinquency. 545 U. S., at 310-311 . Five years later, the plaintiff filed a state law quiet title action against the third party that had purchased the property, alleging that the Internal Revenue Service had failed to comply with certain federally imposed notice requirements, so that the seizure and sale were invalid. Ibid. In holding that the case arose under federal law, we primarily focused not on the interests of the litigants themselves, but rather on the broader significance of the notice question for the Federal Government. We emphasized the Governmentâs âstrong interestâ in being able to recover delinquent taxes through seizure and sale of property, which in turn ârequire[d] clear terms of notice to allow buyers ... to satisfy themselves that the Service has touched the bases necessary for good title.â Id., at 315 . The Governmentâs âdirect in *261 terest in the availability of a federal forum to vindicate its own administrative actionâ made the question âan important issue of federal law that sensibly belong[ed] in a federal court.â Ibid. A second illustration of the sort of substantiality we require comes from Smith v. Kansas City Title & Trust Co., 255 U. S. 180 (1921), which Grable described as â[t]he classic exampleâ of a state claim arising under federal law. 545 U. S., at 312 . In Smith , the plaintiff argued that the defendant bank could not purchase certain bonds issued by the Federal Government because the Government had acted unconstitutionally in issuing them. 255 U. S., at 198 . We held that the case arose under federal law, because the âdecision depends upon the determinationâ of âthe constitutional validity of an act of Congress which is directly drawn in question.â Id., at 201 . Again, the relevant point was not the importance of the question to the parties alone but rather the importance more generally of a determination that the Government âsecurities were issued under an unconstitutional law, and hence of no validity.â Ibid.) see also Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. v. Thompson, 478 U. S. 804, 814, n. 12 (1986). Here, the federal issue carries no such significance. Because of the backward-looking nature of a legal malpractice claim, the question is posed in a merely hypothetical sense: 7/Mintonâs lawyers had raised a timely experimental-use argument, would the result in the patent infringement proceeding have been different? No matter how the state courts resolve that hypothetical âcase within a case,â it will not change the real-world result of the prior federal patent litigation. Mintonâs patent will remain invalid. Nor will allowing state courts to resolve these cases undermine âthe development of a uniform body of [patent] law.â Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc., 489 U. S. 141, 162 (1989). Congress ensured such uniformity by vesting exclusive jurisdiction over actual patent cases in the fed *262 eral district courts and exclusive appellate jurisdiction in the Federal Circuit. See 28 U. S. C. §§ 1338 (a), 1295(a)(1). In resolving the nonhypothetical patent questions those cases present, the federal courts are of course not bound by state court case-within-a-case patent rulings. See Tafflin v. Levitt, 493 U. S. 455, 465 (1990). In any event, the state court case-within-a-case inquiry asks what would have happened in the prior federal proceeding if a particular argument had been made. In answering that question, state courts can be expected to hew closely to the pertinent federal precedents. It is those precedents, after all, that would have applied had the argument been made. Cf. ibid. (âState courts adjudicating civil RICO claims will ... be guided by federal court interpretations of the relevant federal criminal statutes, just as federal courts sitting in diversity are guided by state court interpretations of state lawâ). As for more novel questions of patent law that may arise for the first time in a state court âcase within a case,â they will at some point be decided by a federal court in the context of an actual patent case, with review in the Federal Circuit. If the question arises frequently, it will soon be resolved within the federal system, laying to rest any contrary state court precedent; if it does not arise frequently, it is unlikely to implicate substantial federal interests. The present case is âpoles apart from Grable,â in which a state courtâs resolution of the federal question âwould be controlling in numerous other cases.â Empire HealthChoice Assurance, Inc., 547 U. S., at 700 . Minton also suggests that state courtsâ answers to hypothetical patent questions can sometimes have real-world effect on other patents through issue preclusion. Brief for Respondent 33-36. Minton, for example, has filed what is known as a âcontinuation patentâ application related to his original patent. See 35 U. S. C. § 120 ; 4A D. Chisum, Patents § 13.03 (2005) (describing continuation applications). He argues that, in evaluating this separate application, the *263 patent examiner could be bound by the Texas trial courtâs interpretation of the scope of Mintonâs original patent. See Brief for Respondent 35-36. If is unclear whether this is true. The Patent and Trademark Officeâs Manual of Patent Examining Procedure provides that res judicata is a proper ground for rejecting a patent âonly when the earlier decision was a decision of the Board of Appealsâ or certain federal reviewing courts, giving no indication that state court decisions would have preclusive effect. See Dept, of Commerce, Patent and Trademark Office, Manual of Patent Examining Procedure §706.03(w), p. 700-79 (rev. 8th ed. 2012); 35 U. S. C. §§ 134 (a), 141,145; Reply Brief 9-10. In fact, Minton has not identified any case finding such preclusive effect based on a state court decision. But even assuming that a state courtâs case-within-a-case adjudication may be preclu-sive under some circumstances, the result would be limited to the parties and patents that had been before the state court. Such âfact-bound and situation-specificâ effects are not sufficient to establish federal arising under jurisdiction. Empire HealthChoice Assurance, Inc., supra, at 701. Nor can we accept the suggestion that the federal courtsâ greater familiarity with patent law means that legal malpractice cases like this one belong in federal court. See Air Measurement Technologies, 504 F. 3d, at 1272 (âThe litigants will also benefit from federal judges who have experience in claim construction and infringement mattersâ); 355 S. W. 3d, at 646 (âpatent litigants have an interest in the uniform application of patent law by courts well-versed in that subject matterâ). It is true that a similar interest was among those we considered in Grable. 545 U. S., at 314 . But the possibility that a state court will incorrectly resolve a state claim is not, by itself, enough to trigger the federal courtsâ exclusive patent jurisdiction, even if the potential error finds its root in a misunderstanding of patent law. There is no doubt that resolution of a patent issue in the context of a state legal malpractice action can be vitally im *264 portant to the particular parties in that case. But something more, demonstrating that the question is significant to the federal system as a whole, is needed. That is missing here. D It follows from the foregoing that Grableâs fourth requirement is also not met. That requirement is concerned with the appropriate âbalance of federal and state judicial responsibilities.â Ibid. We have already explained the absence of a substantial federal issue within the meaning of Grable. The States, on the other hand, have âa special responsibility for maintaining standards among members of the licensed professions.â Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Assn., 436 U. S. 447, 460 (1978). Their âinterest... in regulating lawyers is especially great since lawyers are essential to the primary governmental function of administering justice, and have historically been officers of the courts.â Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U. S. 773, 792 (1975) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have no reason to suppose that Congressâin establishing exclusive federal jurisdiction over patent casesâmeant to bar from state courts state legal malpractice claims simply because they require resolution of a hypothetical patent issue. * * â As we recognized a century ago, â[t]he Federal courts have exclusive jurisdiction of all cases arising under the patent laws, but not of all questions in which a patent may be the subject-matter of the controversy.â New Marshall Engine Co. v. Marshall Engine Co., 223 U. S. 473, 478 (1912). In this case, although the state courts must answer a question of patent law to resolve Minton's legal malpractice claim, their answer will have no broader effects. It will not stand as binding precedent for any future patent claim; it will not even affect the validity of Mintonâs patent. Accordingly, there is no âserious federal interest in claiming the advan *265 tages thought to be inherent in a federal forum,â Grable, supra, at 313 . Section 1338(a) does not deprive the state courts of subject matter jurisdiction. The judgment of the Supreme Court of Texas is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. It is so ordered.
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- 2025-12-16T15:02:02.436230
- citation count
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