EDWARD J. DAVILA, District Judge.
There can be no dispute that arbitration as an alternative to the formalities of traditional litigation "has become an accepted and favored method of resolving disputes, praised by the courts as an expeditious and economical method of relieving overburdened civil calendars."
As will be explained in more detail, the underlying royalties dispute between Amkor and Tessera that began in arbitration was permitted to branch, in one form or another, into the California state courts, then into the United States District Court for District of Delaware, and then into this court when Amkor removed the California state court action; the same action it initiated, then initially lost, and then appealed.
Tessera now moves to remand.
Accordingly, Tessera's motion will be granted.
In or about 1996, Tessera and Amkor entered into a licensing agreement which granted to Amkor certain rights to Tessera's patents and technology in exchange for the payment of royalties. The license agreement contained an arbitration clause. Thus, when Tessera in 2006 believed that Amkor was not paying all royalties due under the agreement, it initiated an arbitration proceeding against Amkor in California. On January 9, 2009, the arbitrators
Amkor then initiated another arbitration against Tessera in or about 2009. In that proceeding, Amkor sought an award in the form of a declaratory judgment that its royalty payments after December 1, 2008, were in full compliance with the licensing agreement. Amkor also ceased paying royalties to Tessera while this subsequent proceeding was pending. In response to Amkor's non-payment, Tessera terminated the parties' agreement on February 17, 2011. Amkor, however, continued to use Tessera's technology even after the agreement was terminated.
On July 6, 2012, the arbitrators resolved the proceeding initiated by Amkor by issuing Award No. 3. There, the tribunal determined that Tessera's termination of the agreement on February 17, 2011, was effective under California law, and that Tessera was entitled to the payment of royalties from Amkor from the termination date through the date of Award No. 3. The tribunal did not calculate the amount of royalties owed by Amkor in Award No. 3, but instead left that determination as the subject of a further award.
On the same day it received notice of Award No. 3, Tessera filed a Complaint for patent infringement against Amkor in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware. Amkor answered the Complaint on August 14, 2012, and filed a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment of non-infringement.
On February 27, 2013, Amkor initiated an action in San Francisco County Superior Court by filing a Petition to Correct an Arbitration Award pursuant to California Code of Civil Procedure §§ 1285 and 1286.6. In that filing, Amkor asserted that the tribunal exceeded its power when it found, as part of Award No. 3, that Amkor remained liable for royalty payments after Tessera terminated the licensing agreement. Amkor therefore sought an order from the Superior Court striking that finding from Award No. 3. Tessera opposed the Petition (and subsequent motion placing the issue on calendar), and the Superior Court denied Amkor's request for relief in an order filed on June 25, 2013.
Amkor appealed from the June 25th order, which proceeding was pending before the First District Court of Appeal at time of removal.
After the issuance of Award No. 3, Tessera and Amkor were eventually able to agree on the calculation of royalties due thereunder. Thus, on May 9, 2014, the arbitrators issued Award No. 5, which adopted the parties' stipulated calculation and ordered Amkor to pay additional royalties to Tessera.
Amkor then filed, on May 27, 2014, a Motion to Vacate Award No. 5, not in the California state court action, but in the Delaware patent infringement action. The argument remained the same, though, despite the difference in venue: Amkor asserted, much like it did in California previously, that the tribunal exceeded its power by awarding royalties for the period after the licensing agreement was terminated. On June 20, 2014, Tessera filed a Motion to Strike Amkor's Motion to Vacate. Those motions were pending before the Delaware District Court when this case was removed.
On July 14, 2014, Tessera filed a Petition to Confirm Award No. 5 in the California state court action, which was scheduled to be heard on August 26, 2014. In response, Amkor filed a number of documents in the California action on August 8, 2014, including an opposition to Tessera's Petition to Confirm Award No. 5 and a new, separate Petition to Vacate, Modify or Correct Award No. 5. But unlike the petition that Amkor filed to initiate the California state court action, its new Petition invoked the Federal Arbitration Act ("FAA") in addition to state statutes governing challenges to arbitration awards. Amkor's Petition also included another notable enhancement: a count for a "Declaratory Judgment of No Liability under Federal Patent Laws" along with a request for an "order and declaratory judgment that Amkor owes no royalties, damages or any other amounts to Tessera on account of or based in any way" on the infringement of Tessera's patent.
Based on the assertion of federal relief in its own Petition, Amkor filed the Notice of Removal that brought the instant action before this court.
Removal jurisdiction is a creation of statute.
Citing to the declaratory judgment count it inserted into its most recent state court Petition and to other issues it believes arise under federal law,
The analysis begins by clarifying Amkor's position on the nature of the arbitration proceedings. Prior to termination of the licensing agreement by Tessera, it is undisputed that the parties' royalty disputes arose under the agreement and were submitted to arbitration because the agreement required it. Indeed, both parties recognized this fact because they each invoked the agreement's arbitration clause by initiating different proceedings before the tribunal.
What is presently disputed by Amkor, however, is the tribunal's power to award unpaid royalties to Tessera for the period after February 17, 2011, the date upon which Tessera terminated the licensing agreement. Amkor believes, as stated in the Notice of Removal, that the only remedy available to Tessera for this period was "to seek damages for the alleged invasion of its patent rights" through an infringement action filed in federal court.
The problems with Amkor's argument are many. To begin, Amkor's characterization of Tessera's confirmation Petition and the motivation underlying it appears to be a mischaracterization of both the motive and the Petition. Nothing presented here suggests that Tessera attempted to evade federal court jurisdiction when it sought to confirm Award No. 5. Instead, Tessera did exactly what parties are instructed to do by California law under these circumstances, in much the same way that Amkor had previously sought to correct Award No. 3.
But even if Amkor is correct that Tessera sought to circumvent federal court jurisdiction when it filed the confirmation Petition in California state court, such a development would not permit Amkor to insert an issue into a proceeding where it does not belong. Amkor disregarded California law when it included the declaratory judgment count in its Petition challenging Award No. 5.
Moreover, in an interesting twist on its own argument, the series of events surrounding the removal at best imply, or at worst confirm, that it is actually Amkor who is seeking to evade a court's jurisdiction. Here, after obtaining an adverse ruling from the California Superior Court on essentially the same exact challenge it now raises against Award No. 5,
Amkor argues for federal jurisdiction based on "three fundamental patent issues" that it believes are actually raised by and substantial to this action. This argument is unpersuasive because the ultimate disposition of this case with regard to Award No. 5 does not necessarily depend on the resolution of a substantial question of federal law.
Because Amkor's declaratory judgment count is improper under California law, and because issues of patent law need not be decided to resolve this case in any event, the court finds that it lacks subject matter over this action. Removal under 28 U.S.C. § 1454 was therefore improper. This jurisdictional issue is dispositive, and for that reason the court does not address the parties' additional arguments. Tessera's Motion will be granted and this case will be remanded according to the order below.
Based on the foregoing, the Motion to Remand (Docket Item No. 32) is GRANTED for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1447(c).
All other pending matters are TERMINATED and the hearing scheduled for September 12, 2014, is VACATED. The Clerk shall REMAND this action to San Francisco County Superior Court and close the file.