Table of Contents

Procedural Considerations: Venue

Albright's reasoning "entirely untethered to the facts," says Fed. Cir. (08/03/21)

Private-interest factors for transfer motions:

  1. the relative ease of access to sources of proof*
  2. the availability of compulsory process to secure the attendance of witnesses*
  3. the cost of attendance for willing witnesses*
  4. all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious and inexpensive.

Public-interest factors for transfer motions:

  1. The administrative difficulties flowing from court congestion*
  2. the local interest in having localized interests decided at home;
  3. the familiarity of the forum with the law that will govern the case; and
  4. the avoidance of unnecessary problems of conflict of laws or in the application of foreign law

* Factors relied upon by Albright's transfer denial.

In In re Hulu, the Federal Circuit, in response to a mandamus petition by Hulu to transfer its case to California, picked apart each factor of 5th circuit jurisprudence for venue transfer motions, and concluded that “the district court clearly abused its discretion in evaluating Hulu's transfer motion and denying transfer.”

The court found the following errors in Albright's analysis (citations omitted) (emphasis in bold added):

News/Blogs:

Fed. Cir. finds Albright abused discretion in denying venue transfer (posted 07/06/21)

In In re. Samsung Electronics, the Federal Circuit issued a precedential opinion establishing:

Fed. Cir. Establishes meaning of "regular and established place of business" (posted 09/21/17)

In In re: Cray, Inc., the Federal Circuit articulated what constitutes a “regular and established place of business” for proper venue under § 1400(b), overruling Judge Gilstrap' interpretation of the same in E.D. Texas. The Order by the Fed. Cir. was in response to a mandamus petition by Cray.

A key finding by the circuit court was that merely having an employee who works from a home office within a particular district does not necessarily make that district fair game for proper venue. In fact, the Court laid out 3 key requirements for proper venue under the “regular and established place of business”: