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False FTO Clearance: Risks of Inadequate Opinions

False FTO Clearance Risks

False FTO clearance can create a dangerous sense of certainty when the underlying patent review is incomplete. You’ve conducted FTO analysis. You’ve identified some patent risks. Now you’re considering obtaining a legal opinion stating that your product has freedom to operate. But before you do, you need to understand: What are the risks of obtaining a false or inadequate FTO clearance opinion?

This article explains how FTO opinion review can reduce the risk of false clearance and help ensure that any legal opinion you obtain is accurate and defensible.

What is an FTO Clearance Opinion?

Definition

An FTO clearance opinion (also called a “freedom to operate opinion” or “clearance opinion”) is a written legal opinion from a patent attorney stating that a product or business activity does not infringe third-party patents.

Purpose of Clearance Opinions

Clearance opinions serve several purposes:

Business Decision Support:

  • Provides basis for commercialization decision
  • Supports board approval for product launch
  • Supports investor confidence

Litigation Defense:

  • May reduce damages if infringement is later found
  • May support good faith defense
  • May reduce willfulness findings

Insurance:

  • May be required for patent infringement insurance
  • Provides basis for insurance coverage
  • May affect insurance premiums

Licensing Negotiations:

  • May support licensing negotiations
  • May establish reasonable royalty rates
  • May support settlement discussions

The Risks of False or Inadequate Clearance Opinions

Risk 1: Reliance on Inadequate Analysis

The Problem: The clearance opinion is based on inadequate FTO analysis.

Example: The attorney conducted a limited patent search, missing relevant patents.

Consequence: The opinion states freedom to operate when significant patent risks actually exist.

Litigation Impact: If infringement is later found, the inadequate analysis undermines the opinion’s credibility.

Risk 2: Misinterpretation of Patent Claims

The Problem: The attorney misinterprets patent claim language.

Example: The attorney interprets a broad claim narrowly, concluding no infringement when infringement actually exists.

Consequence: The opinion provides false assurance of freedom to operate.

Litigation Impact: The misinterpretation can be used against you in litigation.

Risk 3: Failure to Run equivalents analysis

The Problem: The attorney analyzes only literal infringement, ignoring doctrine of equivalents.

Example: The attorney concludes no literal infringement but fails to analyze whether the product infringes under doctrine of equivalents.

Consequence: The opinion provides incomplete analysis.

Litigation Impact: The incomplete analysis can be used against you in litigation.

Risk 4: Inadequate Validity Analysis

The Problem: The attorney fails to conduct adequate validity analysis for high-risk patents.

Example: The attorney concludes that a patent is valid without analyzing prior art or obviousness.

Consequence: The opinion fails to address validity risks.

Litigation Impact: If the patent is later found invalid, the inadequate validity analysis undermines the opinion.

Risk 5: Scope Limitations Not Clearly Stated

The Problem: The opinion’s scope and limitations are not clearly stated.

Example: The opinion states freedom to operate without clearly stating what products or markets are covered.

Consequence: Misunderstanding about what the opinion covers.

Litigation Impact: Disputes about what the opinion actually covers.

Risk 6: Reliance on Outdated Information

The Problem: The opinion is based on outdated patent information.

Example: The opinion is based on patent search results from six months ago, missing patents granted in the interim.

Consequence: The opinion fails to account for new patents.

Litigation Impact: New patents may pose infringement risks not addressed in the opinion.

privilege review

Clearance opinions are typically protected by attorney-client privilege:

  • Communications between attorney and client
  • For purpose of obtaining legal advice
  • Protected from disclosure in litigation

Important: Disclosing the opinion can waive privilege.

Admissibility in Litigation

If a clearance opinion is disclosed in litigation:

  • The opinion can be used as evidence
  • The opinion can be used against you
  • Inadequate analysis can undermine your defense

Willfulness Implications

A clearance opinion can affect willfulness findings:

  • Obtaining a clearance opinion may reduce willfulness findings
  • Following the opinion’s advice may reduce willfulness findings
  • Ignoring the opinion’s advice may increase willfulness findings

Important: An inadequate clearance opinion may not provide willfulness protection.

Real-World Examples: False Clearance Opinions

A company obtained a clearance opinion based on a limited patent search. The opinion stated freedom to operate. Six months after commercialization, the company received a cease-and-desist letter from a patent holder whose patent was not identified in the search.

Lesson: Inadequate patent search leads to inadequate clearance opinions.

Example 2: Misinterpretation of Claims

A company obtained a clearance opinion concluding no infringement based on a narrow interpretation of patent claims. In litigation, the court interpreted the claims more broadly and found infringement.

Lesson: Misinterpretation of claims can lead to false clearance opinions.

Example 3: Inadequate Validity Analysis

A company obtained a clearance opinion concluding that a patent was valid. In post-grant review, the patent was found invalid. The company had relied on the opinion and failed to challenge the patent earlier.

Lesson: Inadequate validity analysis can lead to false clearance opinions.

How to Ensure Adequate Clearance Opinions

Step 1: Select qualified counsel

Choose an attorney with:

  • Patent law expertise
  • Experience with FTO analysis
  • Experience in your technology area
  • Credibility with courts
  • Adequate resources for thorough analysis

Step 2: Clearly Define Scope

Clearly define what the opinion covers:

  • Specific products or product versions
  • Specific markets or jurisdictions
  • Specific time period
  • Specific patent universe (which patents are covered)

Example: “This opinion covers the Smart Home Occupancy framework v2.0 as described in the attached specifications, for sale in the United States, based on patents granted as of [date].”

Step 3: Require Comprehensive Analysis

Require the attorney to conduct:

  • Comprehensive patent searching
  • Detailed claim charting
  • Validity analysis for high-risk patents
  • Doctrine of equivalents analysis
  • Design-around analysis

Step 4: Require Detailed Documentation

Require the opinion to include:

  • Search strategy and results
  • Claim charting for each relevant patent
  • Validity analysis for high-risk patents
  • Infringement analysis
  • Limitations and assumptions
  • Conclusions

Step 5: Clearly State Limitations

Require the opinion to clearly state:

  • Scope of the opinion
  • Patents covered and not covered
  • Assumptions made
  • Limitations of the analysis
  • Conditions for reliance

Step 6: Obtain Written Opinion

Obtain a written opinion that:

  • Is signed by the attorney
  • Clearly states conclusions
  • Provides detailed reasoning
  • Clearly states limitations
  • Is suitable for litigation

Step 7: Update Opinion Periodically

Update the opinion:

  • When product design changes significantly
  • When new patents are granted
  • When patent litigation occurs
  • Periodically (annually or as circumstances change)

Best Practices for Clearance Opinions

1. Don’t Rely Solely on Clearance Opinions

Clearance opinions are one component of FTO analysis, not a substitute for thorough analysis.

2. Understand Opinion Limitations

Understand what the opinion covers and what it doesn’t cover.

3. Maintain Privilege

Conduct FTO analysis by or at direction of counsel to maintain privilege.

4. Document Assumptions

Document the assumptions underlying the opinion.

5. Update Opinions

Update opinions as circumstances change.

6. Avoid Waiving Privilege

Avoid disclosing opinions unless necessary, as disclosure can waive privilege.

If you obtain a clearance opinion, follow the attorney’s advice.

8. Monitor for Changes

Monitor for new patents and changes in the patent landscape.

9. Obtain Multiple Opinions for High-Risk Patents

For high-risk patents, consider obtaining opinions from multiple attorneys.

10. Consult Counsel on Disclosure

Before disclosing a clearance opinion, consult with counsel about privilege implications.

Conclusion

Clearance opinions can provide valuable support for FTO analysis and litigation defense, but only if they are based on adequate analysis. By selecting qualified counsel, clearly defining scope, requiring comprehensive analysis, and clearly stating limitations, companies can:

  • Obtain defensible clearance opinions
  • Support business decisions
  • Reduce litigation risk
  • Achieve better litigation outcomes

The key is to ensure that any clearance opinion is based on thorough, well-documented FTO analysis.


Key Takeaway: Clearance opinions are only as good as the FTO analysis they’re based on. Ensure that any opinion you obtain is based on comprehensive analysis, clearly states scope and limitations, and is suitable for litigation.

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