Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-2022
Journal Title
American University Law Review
ISSN
0003-1454
Abstract
When adjudicating high-value cases involving the licensing of patents covering industry standards such as Wi-Fi and 5G (standards-essential patents or SEPs), courts around the world have increasingly issued injunctions preventing one party from pursuing parallel litigation in another jurisdiction (anti-suit injunctions or ASIs). In response, courts in other jurisdictions have begun to issue anti-anti-suit injunctions, or even anti-anti-anti suit injunctions, to prevent parties from hindering the proceedings in those courts. Most of these activities have been limited to the United States and Europe, but in 2020 China emerged as a powerful new source of ASIs in global SEP litigation. The comparative law literature uses the notion of legal transplant to describe the introduction of a foreign legal concept, rule, or procedure. Taking the view that the emergence of ASIs in China represents a new form of transplant from Western legal systems, this Article analyzes the transplantation of this procedural mechanism to China. This recent development can be viewed as both surprising, given China’s civil law tradition, and predictable, considering the country’s prominence in global technology markets. Equally predictable have been the strong reactions of foreign courts and policymakers to China’s use of this mechanism, which has now proceeded at a pace that outstrips that of any other country. This Article traces the emergence of ASIs in China by examining how the Chinese legal system has adapted a procedural mechanism that has been repeatedly used in the United States and other jurisdictions. The Article further elucidates the internal and external forces that led to the mechanism’s rapid adoption in China. It sheds new light on the process of legal transplantation in the twenty-first century as well as its global ramifications.
First Page
1537
Last Page
1618
Num Pages
82
Volume Number
71
Issue Number
4
Publisher
American University (Washington College of Law)
Recommended Citation
Peter K. Yu, Jorge L. Contreras & Yu Yang,
Transplanting Anti-Suit Injunctions,
71
Am. U. L. Rev.
1537
(2022).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.tamu.edu/facscholar/1561
File Type
Included in
Comparative and Foreign Law Commons, Intellectual Property Law Commons, International Trade Law Commons