Other major issues in patent litigation, particularly within Europe, include appointing experts and trying to get them to do what they're supposed to do, the assessment of costs and engagement of forensic accountants, different rules regarding interim relief and disclosure of information, divergent time-scales [like "mediation", the word "urgent" does not appear to have a single shared meaning, this Kat notes].
Design cases are also increasingly complex in Europe today, given the overlay of different IP rights and their respective remedies and defences. Trade mark cases, which are in theory simple, are tough to resolve given the difficulty of applying Court of Justice rules to the facts of ordinary cases. Market survey evidence (if admitted), as well as statistical evidence, can be costly. In all these instances, someone has to pay for this.
Mediations can avoid all of this. A good mediator can be a psychologist as well as a head-banger when it comes to costs, all of which helps both to bring the parties together and to keep them focused. His parting shot -- the one piece of advice Michael offered before closing -- was that, whatever else a mediator does, before he leaves the room he should make sure that whatever the parties have a written and signed version of what they've actually agreed. If not, he said, it's dollars to donuts that one or other of them will come up with something that's been left out of it.
Michael Fysh's presentation was followed by a paper, "Negotiation, Mediation and Arbitration: Comparisons and Synergies", by Mark Appel (Senior Vice President International Centre for Dispute Resolution / American Arbitration Association). Negotiation, mediation and arbitration were not mutually exclusive alternatives, Mark said: they were complementary tools that could be used in conjunction with one another. Points initially made by Mark included the need for familiarity with the industrial sector and with corporate structures, flexibility and other positive indicators for managing dispute regulation. "Fitting the Forum to the Fuss" was a good maxim to follow.
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Joined-up: ever the best policy ... |