Judge Kinkeade Tosses Patent Infringement Case Due to Lack of Standing

Judge Kinkeade issued an order in Optimal Golf v. Altex Corp. (available here) finding that the plaintiffs lacked standing when the case was filed. The Court was not happy, writing:

This is now the second case involving the same patent and same Plaintiff where the Court found Optimal had no standing to bring this suit. The procedural history of this case paints the picture that Optimal, along with the other Plaintiffs GPS and OGSI, hastily filed this second suit before determining who would be the proper plaintiff(s) to prosecute it. The Plaintiffs in both cases appear to have given no thought to actual ownership of the ‘093 Patent until years into litigation. This has been incredibly frustrating to the Court, and surely to the parties defending these suits. Two cases now have been dismissed for jurisdictional issues related solely to standing and it has been a waste of judicial resources, as well as those of the Defendants. The Court warns that any future jurisdictional defects involving standing related to this patent and these plaintiffs will likely result in sanctions.

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