North Dakota Code § 51-36-03

Factors for bad faith assertion of infringement
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
A court may consider any of the following factors as evidence a person made a bad faith 
assertion of patent infringement:
1. The demand letter does not contain the following information:
a. The patent number;
b. The name and address of the patent owner and assignee, if any; or
c. Factual allegations concerning the specific areas in which the target's product, 
service, or technology infringe the patent or are covered by the claim in the 
patent.
2. Before sending the demand letter, the person fails to conduct an analysis comparing 
the claim in the patent to the target's product, service, or technology, or such an 
analysis was done but does not identify the specific area in which the product, service, 
or technology is covered by the claim in the patent.
3. The demand letter lacks the information described in subsection 1, the target requests 
the information, and the person fails to provide the information within a reasonable 
period of time.
4. The demand letter demands payment of a license fee or a response within an 
unreasonably short period of time.
5. The person offers to license the patent for an amount that is not based on a 
reasonable estimate of the value of the license.
6. The claim of patent infringement is unenforceable and the person knew, or should 
have known, the claim is unenforceable.
7. The claim of patent infringement is deceptive.
8. The person, a subsidiary, or an affiliate previously filed or threatened to file a lawsuit 
based on the same or a similar claim of patent infringement and:
a. The threat or lawsuit lacked the information described in subsection 1; or
b. The person attempted to enforce the claim of patent infringement in litigation and 
a court found the claim to be unenforceable.
9. The person making the assertion of infringement of a patent does not own or have the 
right to enforce or license the patent.
10. The person sent the same demand or substantially same demand to multiple 
recipients and made assertions against a variety of products and systems without 
reflecting product and system differences in a reasonable manner in the demands.
11. The person threatens legal action that cannot legally be taken or that is not intended to 
be taken.

12. The person represents a complaint has been filed alleging the target has infringed the 
patent when no complaint has been filed.
13. The claim of patent infringement is based on a patent or a claim of a patent that has 
expired or previously been held invalid or unenforceable in a final unappealable or 
unappealed judicial or administrative decision.
14. Any other factor the court finds relevant.

‹ Prev All North Dakota sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.