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No. 10424121
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Honeywell International, Inc. v. OPTO Electronics Co., Ltd.
No. 10424121 · Decided April 29, 2025
No. 10424121·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
April 29, 2025
Citation
No. 10424121
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
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PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 23-1850
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC.; HAND HELD PRODUCTS, INC.;
METROLOGIC INSTRUMENTS, INC.,
Plaintiffs – Appellants,
v.
OPTO ELECTRONICS CO., LTD.,
Defendant – Appellee.
No. 23-2038
HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL, INC.; HAND HELD PRODUCTS,
INCORPORATED; METROLOGIC INSTRUMENTS, INC.,
Plaintiffs – Appellees,
v.
OPTO ELECTRONICS CO., LTD.,
Defendant – Appellant.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina,
at Charlotte. Kenneth D. Bell, District Judge. (3:21-cv-00506-KDB-DCK)
Argued: October 30, 2024 Decided: April 29, 2025
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Before GREGORY, RICHARDSON, and BENJAMIN, Circuit Judges
Dismissed by published opinion. Judge Richardson wrote the opinion, in which Judge
Gregory and Judge Benjamin joined.
ARGUED: Matthew Scott Stevens, ALSTON & BIRD LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina,
for Appellants/Cross-Appellees. Brian David Schmalzbach, MCGUIREWOODS, LLP,
Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant. ON BRIEF: Kirk T. Bradley, S.
Benjamin Pleune, Stephen R. Lareau, Nicholas C. Marais, Lauren N. Griffin, ALSTON &
BIRD LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees. York M. Faulkner,
YORKMOODYFAULKNER, Tokyo, Japan, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
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RICHARDSON, Circuit Judge:
Honeywell International and OPTO Electronics come before us on cross-appeal of
a dispute over a patent-licensing agreement. Each party challenges the district court’s
decision below. But we cannot reach the merits because the United States Court of Appeals
for the Federal Circuit possesses exclusive appellate jurisdiction over this appeal. We
instead dismiss the appeal so that the parallel appeal pending in the Federal Circuit may
proceed.
I. BACKGROUND
Honeywell International, a Delaware corporation, and OPTO Electronics, a
Japanese company, are competitors in the market for barcode-scanning equipment and
technology. In May 2019, Honeywell sued OPTO for patent infringement in both the
United States International Trade Commission and the United States District Court for the
District of Delaware, alleging that the barcode products OPTO imported into the United
States infringed seven patents held by Honeywell. In January 2020, the two parties reached
a truce by settling all pending patent-infringement litigation through a patent-licensing
agreement. The 2020 licensing agreement provided OPTO with licenses on Honeywell’s
entire U.S. patent portfolio in exchange for royalty payments on OPTO’s revenues for “2D
Barcode Products.”
Honeywell did not have to take OPTO’s word on their “2D Barcode Products”
revenue. The agreement permitted Honeywell to audit OPTO’s books to confirm that
OPTO’s revenue representations were accurate and to impose fines for unreported
revenues. Trouble unfolded after Honeywell concluded its audit in March 2021 and
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claimed that OPTO had undersold its revenues by several million dollars. The gap arose
from a disagreement between Honeywell and OPTO on the definition of “2D Barcode
Products”: Honeywell asserted that some laser-scanning barcode readers OPTO had
classified as “1D barcode products” were actually “2D Barcode Products.” OPTO
disagreed.
Unable to resolve the scope of “2D barcode products,” Honeywell sued OPTO for
breach of contract in the Western District of North Carolina on September 24, 2021.
Honeywell alleged that OPTO had failed to pay the full amount of royalties owed on both
its past gross revenues and its ongoing gross revenues of “2D Barcode Products.” OPTO
denied the allegations and asserted various defenses to Honeywell’s breach-of-contract
claim.
Crucially for this case, OPTO also filed several counterclaims, one of which was a
declaratory judgment action asserting that Honeywell’s conduct amounted to patent
misuse. OPTO claimed that Honeywell’s attempt to collect royalties on OPTO’s laser-
scanning barcode readers “results in unreasonable restraint on competition by unlawfully
extending the reach of [Honeywell’s] licensed patents . . . thereby limiting OPTO’s ability
to compete in an alternative market for 1D barcode readers” and “raising the price for
consumers generally in that market.” OPTO’s Answers/Counterclaims (D. Ct. Dkt. ECF
No. 17) at 30. In both the body of its counterclaim complaint and in its ultimate prayer for
relief, OPTO sought as relief a declaration that Honeywell’s licensed patents were
unenforceable because of that misuse. OPTO sought other relief too, including a second
declaration that the agreement’s royalty-payment provisions were unenforceable due to
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patent misuse, as well as a refund of all prior payments made to Honeywell under the
licensing agreement.
The number of claims and counterclaims below resulted in splintered litigation, the
details of which are unnecessary to recount. At the end, a jury found that OPTO’s laser-
scanning barcode readers counted as “2D barcode products” but only awarded $859,741 to
Honeywell. The district court subsequently conducted a bench trial and rejected OPTO’s
counterclaim, concluding that Honeywell had not engaged in patent misuse as a matter of
law. The district court then denied post-trial motions from both sides, rejecting
Honeywell’s claim to attorney’s fees and OPTO’s motion to set aside the jury verdict.
Honeywell filed a notice of appeal to this Court, and OPTO timely cross-appealed,
each side seeking to overturn its losses while defending its wins below. But shortly
afterward, Honeywell decided that the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit had exclusive appellate jurisdiction, not us. Honeywell thus filed a second notice
of appeal, this time to the Federal Circuit; OPTO timely cross-appealed there too.
Honeywell also moved to dismiss the first notice of appeal in this Court. OPTO opposed
the motion in this Court while filing a mirror-image motion to dismiss in the Federal
Circuit. In short, Honeywell seeks to litigate this appeal in the Federal Circuit, while OPTO
seeks to keep the appeal here.
Because we received the appeal first, the Federal Circuit placed their parallel appeal
in abeyance pending our resolution of the jurisdictional question. We now answer that
question.
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II. DISCUSSION
The judicial power of the federal courts of appeals extends only so far as Congress
ordains. U.S. Const., art. III, § 1. “Congress may determine a lower federal court’s subject
matter jurisdiction,” and in doing so it can choose to place jurisdiction over particular
matters in particular courts. Kontrick v. Ryan, 540 U.S. 443, 452-53 (2004). Because
“[w]ithout jurisdiction the court cannot proceed at all,” we must assess whether we have
subject matter jurisdiction before we consider the merits. Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better
Env’t, 523 U.S. 83, 94 (1998) (quoting Ex parte McCardle, 74 U.S. (7 Wall.) 506, 514
(1868)). We determine that we do not; only the Federal Circuit does. So we must dismiss
this appeal.
A. The Federal Circuit Has Exclusive Jurisdiction Over Appeals
Containing Patent Claims and Counterclaims.
Congress created the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit in 1982
“to reduce the widespread lack of uniformity and uncertainty of legal doctrine that exist[ed]
in the administration of patent law.” Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp., 486 U.S.
800, 813 (1988) (quoting H.R. Rep. No. 97-312, at 23 (1981)). The Federal Circuit was
given “exclusive jurisdiction” over appeals from federal district courts where the district
court’s jurisdiction “was based, in whole or in part, on section 1338.” Federal Courts
Improvement Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-164, § 1295, 96 Stat. 25, 37. Section 1338, in
turn, gave district courts original jurisdiction over “any civil action arising under any Act
of Congress relating to patents” and stripped state courts of the ability to hear the same. 28
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U.S.C. § 1338(a). Taken together, the newly created Federal Circuit was the only court
able to hear appeals of civil actions “arising under” the federal patent laws.
But Congress failed in its first attempt to make the Federal Circuit the singular
decider of patent appeals. In Holmes Group, Inc. v. Vornado Air Circulation Systems, Inc.,
the Supreme Court held that a civil action does not “arise under” federal patent law when
the patent issue first appears in the defendant’s counterclaim. 535 U.S. 826, 830 (2002).
As worded, the Federal Circuit’s jurisdictional statute tracked the language of 28 U.S.C.
§ 1331, the federal question jurisdiction statute. And the phrase “arising under” in the latter
was interpreted in Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Mottley to limit federal-question
jurisdiction to cases where federal law is properly presented in the “plaintiff’s original
cause of action,” rather than coming up as a defense. 211 U.S. 149, 152–53 (1908). By
analogy, then, the Federal Circuit’s jurisdiction did not cover patent law claims that
appeared outside “the face of the plaintiff’s” “well-pleaded complaint,” Holmes Grp., 535
U.S. at 830–31, creating the possibility that the Federal Circuit and the regional circuits
would split in their adjudications of the same patent issue. Holmes Group thus highlighted
a hole in the Federal Circuit’s exclusive appellate jurisdiction that threatened the
uniformity of patent law.
Congress patched the Holmes Group hole in 2011 by expressly expanding the
Federal Circuit’s jurisdiction to cases where the patent law issue first appears in a party’s
compulsory counterclaim. See Leahy-Smith America Invents Act, Pub. L. No. 112-29,
§ 19, 125 Stat. 284, 331-32 (2011); see also Vermont v. MPHJ Tech. Invs., LLC, 803 F.3d
634, 644 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (noting that the 2011 amendments “are commonly referred to as
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the ‘Holmes Group fix’”). The Federal Circuit now has exclusive appellate jurisdiction
over all “appeal[s] from a final decision of a district court of the United States . . . in any
civil action arising under, or in any civil action in which a party has asserted a compulsory
counterclaim arising under, any Act of Congress relating to patents.” 28 U.S.C.
§ 1295(a)(1) (emphasis added). That is, the Federal Circuit’s exclusive appellate
jurisdiction no longer depends on which party first brings the patent law claim.
The amended text of § 1295(a)(1) vests exclusive appellate jurisdiction in the
Federal Circuit when a counterclaim is filed and two conditions obtain: (1) the
counterclaim is “compulsory”; and (2) the counterclaim is one “arising under[] any Act of
Congress relating to patents.” Here, OPTO, the defendant below, asserted a counterclaim
seeking a declaration that Honeywell’s licensed patents were unenforceable due to patent
misuse. Because that counterclaim is both compulsory and arises under the patent laws,
§ 1295(a)(1) mandates that the Federal Circuit hear this appeal.
B. OPTO’s Patent-Misuse Counterclaim is Compulsory.
Section 1295(a)(1) first requires that a defendant’s counterclaim be “compulsory”
to be relevant for Federal Circuit jurisdiction. 1 The term “compulsory counterclaim” is not
defined in § 1295. But we understand Congress to have incorporated the term’s “well-
established legal meaning[]”—and the “cluster of ideas [ ] attached to” it—from Rule 13(a)
1
The parties appear to agree that OPTO’s counterclaim is compulsory. This does
not absolve us of the need to conduct our own analysis, however, as parties cannot bind the
courts by stipulating to questions of law. See, e.g., Young v. United States, 315 U.S. 257,
258-59 (1942); see also 22A Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Fed. Prac. & Proc.
Evid. § 5194.1 (2d ed.) (“[P]arties cannot use stipulations to alter the law.”).
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of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. United States v. Hansen, 599 U.S. 762, 774 (2023)
(citing Morissette v. United States, 342 U.S. 246, 263 (1952)); see also McLean v. United
States, 566 F.3d 391, 396 (4th Cir. 2009). We therefore look to what Rule 13(a) requires
for compulsory counterclaims. See, e.g., ABS Glob., Inc. v. Inguran, LLC, 914 F.3d 1054,
1064 (7th Cir. 2019); In re Rearden LLC, 841 F.3d 1327, 1332 (Fed. Cir. 2016).
Rule 13(a) defines a compulsory counterclaim as one that “arises out of the
transaction or occurrence that is the subject matter of the opposing party’s claim.” That
definition alone makes clear OPTO’s counterclaim is compulsory. In this case, the
“opposing party’s claim” is Honeywell’s breach-of-contract claim for OPTO’s failure to
pay royalties. The subject matter of that breach-of-contract claim is the 2020 licensing
agreement. The very same 2020 licensing agreement forms the basis of OPTO’s patent-
misuse counterclaim, which asserts that the agreement constitutes an “unreasonable
restraint on competition by unlawfully extending the reach of the licensed patents.”
OPTO’s Answers/Counterclaims at 30 (emphasis added). Thus, to resolve OPTO’s patent-
misuse counterclaim, we would need to compare the scope of the licensing agreement to
the scope of Honeywell’s underlying patents because “patent misuse covers only activity
falling outside of the patent grant.” Monsanto Co. v. Scruggs, 459 F.3d 1328, 1341 (Fed.
Cir. 2006). Half the subject matter of that comparison, of course, is the licensing
agreement. So both claim and counterclaim straightforwardly arise out of the same
transaction or occurrence—the 2020 licensing agreement—making OPTO’s counterclaim
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compulsory. 2 We turn now to the second requirement needed for exclusive Federal Circuit
appellate jurisdiction—that the counterclaim is one “arising under” the federal patent laws.
C. OPTO’s Patent-Misuse Counterclaim “Arises Under” the Federal
Patent Laws.
A claim can arise under the federal patent laws by one of two avenues. Either (1)
federal patent law “creates the cause of action asserted,” or (2) the claim involves a patent
issue that is “necessarily raised,” “actually disputed,” “substantial,” and “capable of
resolution in federal court without disrupting the federal-state balance approved by
Congress.” Gunn v. Minton, 568 U.S. 251, 257–58 (2013). The two avenues are each
independently sufficient for “arising under” jurisdiction. Id. We do not consider the
second avenue because we determine that OPTO’s counterclaim arises under the federal
patent laws by the first: The patent-infringement statute, 35 U.S.C. § 271, created the cause
of action for OPTO’s counterclaim seeking a declaration of patent unenforceability due to
patent misuse.
Key to our conclusion is the fact that OPTO’s counterclaim is a declaratory
judgment action, which alters how we determine its cause of action. OPTO is arguing that
Honeywell committed patent misuse. See Morton Salt Co. v. G.S. Suppiger Co., 314 U.S.
488, 493 (1942), abrogated on other grounds by Ill. Tool Works Inc. v. Indep. Ink, Inc.,
2
We sometimes consider four inquiries to guide our Rule 13(a) analysis. See
Painter v. Harvey, 863 F.2d 329, 331 (4th Cir. 1988) (asking whether the issues of fact and
law in the claim and counterclaim are essentially the same; whether res judicata would bar
a subsequent suit on the counterclaim absent the compulsory counterclaim rule; whether
the same evidence would support or refute the claim and the counterclaim; and whether
there is a logical relationship between the claim and the counterclaim.). We need not do
so here where the shared subject matter giving rise to the parties’ claims is evident.
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547 U.S. 28, 42–43 (2006). Ordinarily patent misuse cannot be brought as a claim, as it
“is simply an affirmative defense.” B. Braun Med., Inc. v. Abbott Labs., 124 F.3d 1419,
1427 (Fed. Cir. 1997). In other words, OPTO ordinarily would have to wait for Honeywell
to attack first with a lawsuit before defending itself by raising patent misuse as a shield.
But the Declaratory Judgment Act allows defenses—including patent misuse, see id. at
1428—to be preemptively asserted in a request for the court to “declare the rights and other
legal relations of any interested party seeking such a declaration, whether or not further
relief is or could be sought.” 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a); see Pub. Serv. Comm’n of Utah v.
Wycoff Co., 344 U.S. 237, 248 (1952). That’s precisely what OPTO did here.
The question now is what law created the cause of action in OPTO’s counterclaim.
Somewhat unintuitively, the answer is not the Declaratory Judgment Act. See Medtronic,
Inc. v. Mirowski Fam. Ventures, LLC, 571 U.S. 191, 197–98 (2014). That is because the
Declaratory Judgment Act merely “enlarges the range of remedies available in the federal
courts but did not extend their jurisdiction.” Skelly Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 339
U.S. 667, 671 (1950). Were the Act itself to provide a cause of action, it would extend
federal court jurisdiction to most any case where a plaintiff sought a declaration—including
cases involving issues previously barred at the courthouse doors. The Supreme Court tells
us that cannot be so. Id.
Nor can the cause of action be OPTO’s asserted defense of patent misuse. That
would directly contravene the longstanding “Mottley rule” discussed above, which
continues to apply in declaratory judgment actions. See id. at 673–74. Under Mottley it
must be the attack, not the defense, that determines jurisdiction. Were the Act to permit
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defenses to establish federal-question jurisdiction, it would also extend the jurisdiction of
the federal courts. That, again, cannot be so.
Instead, “[w]here the complaint in an action for declaratory judgment seeks in
essence to assert a defense . . . it is the character of the threatened action, and not of the
defense,” that determines jurisdiction. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 344 U.S. at 248 (emphasis
added). That is, the relevant cause of action for determining whether OPTO’s counterclaim
“arises under” the patent laws is the “hypothetical threatened action” that could have been
brought by “the declaratory judgment defendant”—here, Honeywell. Medtronic, 571 U.S.
at 197–98. So we ask: Hypothetically, what action could Honeywell bring that would
cause OPTO to raise its patent-misuse defense? The most natural answer is: A suit for
patent infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271.
Arriving at this answer requires an understanding of how the Declaratory Judgment
Act intersects with the patent-misuse defense. Patent misuse is a defense “born from the
equitable doctrine of unclean hands” that prevents a patent holder from recovering from
another when the patent holder has “impermissibly broadened the physical or temporal
scope of the patent grant with anticompetitive effect.” 3 B. Braun Med., 124 F.3d at 1426
(quoting Windsurfing Int’l, Inc. v. AMF, Inc., 782 F.2d 995, 100–102 (Fed. Cir. 1986)); see
Dawson Chem. Co. v. Rohm and Haas Co., 448 U.S. 176, 180, 186 (1980). As with many
equitable defenses, patent misuse can flexibly be raised against more than one type of
action. See Princo Corp. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n, 616 F.3d 1318, 1328 (Fed. Cir. 2010)
3
The focus on “anticompetitive effect” is due patent misuse’s historically close
relationship with antitrust doctrine. See Ill. Tool Works Inc., 547 U.S. at 33–40.
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(“the patentee loses its right to sue for infringement or breach of contract” (emphasis
added)). This flexibility adds an extra step in the declaratory judgment analysis when
patent misuse is preemptively asserted. When a defense can be raised only against a single
type of action, the label of the defense alone can be enough to determine the sole possible
hypothetical threatened action. Cf. Medtronic, 571 U.S. at 196–97. But when the label of
the defense is not itself dispositive of the set of hypothetical threatened actions—as it is
not with patent misuse—we must look elsewhere. 4
Beyond the label of the defense, the relief sought under the defense is a sensible
place to look. What relief the defense is being asserted for helps determine what
hypothetical actions the defense could be asserted against. And here, OPTO’s requested
relief makes the declaratory judgment analysis straightforward. OPTO has asserted its
patent-misuse defense to request “a declaration that [Honeywell’s] licensed patents under
4
A myopic label-only approach is most clearly nonsensical when considering a
defense that could be mounted against an inordinately wide range of lawsuits, such as the
equitable doctrine of laches that bars untimely claims. See Romag Fasteners, Inc. v. Fossil,
Inc., 590 U.S. 212, 216–17 (2020) (giving “laches” as an example of a “transsubstantive”
equitable principle that “appl[ies] more systematically across claims and practice areas”).
Alone, the fact a declaratory judgment plaintiff asserted laches as a defense would give a
court little foothold to discern the declaratory judgment defendant’s hypothetical
threatened action. See, e.g., Belmora LLC v. Bayer Consumer Care AG, 987 F.3d 284, 294
(4th Cir. 2021) (applying laches to claims made under § 43(a) of the Lanham Act); White
v. Daniel, 909 F.2d 99, 100 (4th Cir. 1990) (applying laches to claims made under Section
2 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965); Giddens v. Isbrandtsen Co., 355 F.2d 125, 126–27
(4th Cir. 1966) (applying laches to maritime claims under admiralty law in the absence of
any applicable statute). Somewhat ironically, one of the few areas where laches is
inapplicable is patent law, as the Supreme Court recently determined that Congress
supplanted the doctrine of laches for patent-infringement suits by prescribing statutes of
limitations. See SCA Hygiene Prods. AB v. First Quality Baby Prods. LLC, 580 U.S. 328,
331 (2017).
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the Agreement are unenforceable due to patent misuse.” OPTO’s Answers/Counterclaims
at 32 (emphasis added). As the name suggests, patent unenforceability is relief from the
enforcement of a patent. And the enforcement of a patent against a noncomplying party
comes in the form of a patent-infringement suit. See, e.g., Princo, 616 F.3d at 1321. So
the most natural hypothetical threatened action that could have been brought by Honeywell,
against which a patent-misuse defense seeking the relief of patent unenforceability would
be raised, is a patent-infringement suit. 5 This is an altogether unremarkable conclusion;
patent infringement is the paradigmatic action against which patent misuse is raised. See
id.
All that is left is to understand what law creates the cause of action in a patent-
infringement suit. This question is easier to answer than the last: A patent-infringement
suit is brought pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 271, the patent-infringement statute. Undoubtedly,
then, “patent law creates the cause of action” for a patent-infringement suit. Medtronic,
571 U.S. at 197–98 (quoting Christianson, 486 U.S. at 809). Thus, since jurisdiction over
OPTO’s declaratory counterclaim looks to this hypothetical patent-infringement suit, the
counterclaim is a “civil action arising under . . . any Act of Congress relating to patents.”
5
While OPTO’s request for the relief of patent unenforceability is sufficient for us
to easily determine that the relevant hypothetical threatened action is patent infringement
in this case, it may not be necessary. Depending on how the universe of hypothetical
threatened actions is defined and what information the analysis can take into account, it is
possible that patent infringement could be a hypothetical threatened action even without
an explicit request for patent unenforceability. We leave for another day the question of
how to determine the hypothetical threatened action when the relief sought is not so clear.
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28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1). That gives the Federal Circuit exclusive appellate jurisdiction over
this appeal.
D. OPTO’s Counterarguments Are Unavailing.
OPTO resists this conclusion with three counterarguments. All are unpersuasive.
a. The overall nature of the dispute is irrelevant.
First, OPTO stresses that the dispute before us is fundamentally about breach of
contract. We readily concede that this is true. As OPTO notes, the claim brought by
Honeywell is for breach of contract, and the interpretation of the licensing agreement is
central to all claims and counterclaims. But we fail to see why this matters. Neither the
cause-of-action avenue of jurisdiction in § 1295(a)(1) nor the Declaratory Judgment Act
operate any differently when the case is more fairly described as a contract dispute.
As laid out above, the Federal Circuit’s exclusive jurisdiction under § 1295(a)(1)
extends over any appeal when federal patent law creates the cause of action for any claim
or counterclaim asserted in the case. See Gunn, 568 U.S. at 257; Leahy-Smith America
Invents Act § 19. This cause-of-action basis for jurisdiction does not depend on the overall
nature of the dispute in the case. 6 “The existence of a single claim created by federal patent
law is sufficient to trigger the Federal Circuit’s exclusive appellate jurisdiction over the
entire case.” VersaTop Support Sys., LLC v. Georgia Expo, Inc., 921 F.3d 1364, 1368
(Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting Amity Rubberized Pen v. Market Quest Grp. Inc., 793 F.3d 991,
6
The second avenue for Federal Circuit jurisdiction—when the case presents a
substantial issue of patent law—could vary depending on the nature of the dispute. See
Gunn, 568 U.S. at 258 (requiring the patent issue to be “actually disputed” and not merely
touched on in passing).
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995 (9th Cir. 2015)). Indeed, the fact that “non-patent issues will predominate” is
“immaterial.” Id.
This insensitivity to the overall nature of the dispute can be seen in the statutory
text. Congress chose to vest exclusive jurisdiction in the Federal Circuit over the entire
“appeal from a final decision of a district court” whenever “a party has asserted a
compulsory counterclaim arising under” the federal patent laws. § 1295(a)(1) (emphases
added). A case can, and often does, involve many claims and counterclaims. By tying
jurisdiction over the entire appeal to the existence of a single patent claim or counterclaim,
Congress rendered the existence of additional non-patent claims irrelevant, even when they
form the heart of the case. Cf. United States v. Hohri, 482 U.S. 64, 75–76 (1987) (holding
that the adjacent provision of § 1295(a)(2) gives exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal
Circuit in “mixed case[s] presenting” both Little Tucker Act and Federal Tort Claims Act
claims).
Nor does the nature of the dispute matter when determining the character of the
hypothetical threatened action under the Declaratory Judgment Act. In fact, that theory is
essentially what the Supreme Court rejected in Medtronic. 571 U.S. at 197–98. In
Medtronic, two medical device companies, Medtronic and Mirowski, entered into a
licensing agreement allowing Medtronic to use Mirowski’s patents in return for royalty
payments. Id. at 194. 7 Medtronic, the licensee, later sought to sell new medical devices
7
Medtronic involved a plaintiff’s claims, not a defendant’s counterclaims, and was
applying the old version of § 1295(a)(1) that existed before the “Holmes Group fix” in the
Leahy-Smith America Invents Act of 2011. This difference does not matter, however.
(Continued)
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that it believed were not covered by Mirowski’s patents. Id. at 195. To avoid paying
royalties under the licensing agreement, Medtronic brought a declaratory judgment action
alleging that its new devices did not infringe Mirowski’s patents and therefore fell outside
the licensing agreement. Id.
An amicus asserted that the Federal Circuit below lacked jurisdiction over the case
because, fundamentally, the nature of the dispute between Medtronic and Mirowski was
over the amount of contractually required royalties, while the infringement issue was
merely ancillary. Id. at 196–97. Thus, the amicus argued, Medtronic’s claim seeking a
declaration of noninfringement should have been understood as a defense against a
hypothetical breach-of-contract claim from Mirowski for failure to pay royalties because
“an infringement suit would be unlikely.” Id. at 197. That would have deprived the Federal
Circuit of jurisdiction under § 1295(a)(1).
The Supreme Court disagreed, holding instead that the analysis of jurisdiction for
declaratory judgment actions is indifferent to the likelihood of the hypothetical threatened
action. Id. at 197. Indeed, even if the prospect of Medtronic actually facing an
infringement suit were “remote, if not nonexistent,” it wouldn’t matter. Id. at 197–98
(quoting MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 549 U.S. 118, 128 (2007)). Under the
contract, it was possible for Mirowski to “terminate the license and bring an ordinary
federal patent law action for infringement,” and possibility was all that was needed. Id. at
197; see also MedImmune, 549 U.S. at 128–29 (“[W]e do not require a plaintiff to expose
Medtronic’s reasoning regarding declaratory judgment actions applies equally to
counterclaims as well as claims after the Leahy-Smith America Invents Act.
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himself to liability before bringing suit.”). 8 That the dispute centered around the licensing
agreement did not change this fact—and, accordingly, did not change whether Medtronic’s
declaratory judgment action arose under the federal patent laws.
Like the dispute in Medtronic, this dispute between Honeywell and OPTO could
fairly be characterized as a dispute over royalties owed under a licensing agreement. But,
just as in Medtronic, the licensing agreement between Honeywell and OPTO allows
Honeywell to unilaterally terminate the licensing agreement if OPTO fails to pay royalties.
J.A. 77 (“This Agreement may not be terminated except . . . by [Honeywell] in the event
[OPTO] fails to pay undisputed amounts due and owing under this Agreement.”). Upon
the agreement’s termination, Honeywell could file suit for patent infringement—just as it
did in 2019 before the existence of the licensing agreement. 9 And in response, OPTO could
8
This does not mean that the Declaratory Judgment Act permits litigants to seek
relief for speculative conflicts. The statute requires that there already be “a case of actual
controversy within [the court’s] jurisdiction” before declaratory relief can be sought,
tracking Article III’s case-or-controversy requirement. 28 U.S.C. § 2201(a); U.S. Const.,
art. III, § 2. To bring a declaratory judgment action, a party must still be embroiled in a
dispute that is “‘definite and concrete, touching the legal relations of parties having adverse
legal interests’; and that it be ‘real and substantial’ and ‘admi[t] of specific relief . . . as
distinguished from an opinion advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of
facts.’” MedImmune, Inc., 549 U.S. at 127 (quoting Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth, 300
U.S. 227, 240–41 (1937)). The point is only that within an existing definite, concrete, and
substantial dispute, a party can seek declaratory relief from hypothetical threatened actions
that are possible but, for various practical reasons, unlikely to occur.
9
Though it is irrelevant for our jurisdictional analysis, we note in passing that
Honeywell’s history of patent-infringement litigation against OPTO makes it quite sensible
for OPTO to have preemptively sought relief against infringement suits. The parties
entered into the licensing agreement precisely to avoid litigation over patent infringement.
So if Honeywell were to terminate the licensing agreement, it would be natural for
Honeywell to recommence its prior patent-infringement litigation. Such litigation is all the
(Continued)
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defend itself by arguing that Honeywell’s misuse under the contract renders its patents
unenforceable. See Morton Salt Co., 314 U.S. at 493. So the only thing that matters here
is that OPTO asked for a declaration of patent unenforceability due to patent misuse.
And—once again, like in Medtronic—such a declaration would be relief from a threatened
suit for patent infringement, not a suit for breach of contract. That is sufficient for Federal
Circuit jurisdiction.
OPTO attempts to distinguish Medtronic by arguing that it would be unable to raise
patent misuse as a defense after Honeywell’s termination of the contract. As OPTO tells
it, the alleged misuse is the agreement itself, so the defense can be asserted only while the
agreement still exists. But patent misuse is not so ephemeral. Even after Honeywell
terminates the licensing agreement, OPTO would be able to raise a patent-misuse defense
to seek patent unenforceability because such unenforceability can last until “it is made to
appear that the improper [licensing agreement] has been abandoned and that the
consequences of the misuse of the patent have been dissipated.” Morton Salt Co., 314 U.S.
at 493 (emphasis added). The consequences of Honeywell’s misuse through its allegedly
improper licensing agreement might linger beyond the agreement’s termination if, for
example, the misuse resulted in improper market concentration that would take time to
unwind. See id. Far from a fanciful hypothetical, OPTO has, in fact, suggested exactly
that in its complaint, which speaks of Honeywell’s misuse “limiting OPTO’s ability to
compete in an alternative market” and “raising the price for consumers generally in that
more likely given that OPTO conceded below that some of Honeywell’s numerous patents
may cover aspects of its products.
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market.” OPTO’s Answers/Counterclaims at 30. So if Honeywell terminated the contract
and sued OPTO for patent infringement, OPTO could still then raise precisely what it raised
in its declaratory judgment counterclaim here: a defense of patent misuse seeking the relief
of patent unenforceability.
There is thus no meaningful distinction between OPTO’s declaratory patent-misuse
claim and Medtronic’s declaratory patent-noninfringement claim for jurisdictional
purposes. Both defend against a hypothetical patent infringement suit that, however
unlikely to occur, is still possible. As the Supreme Court found Federal Circuit jurisdiction
in Medtronic, we so find Federal Circuit jurisdiction here.
b. OPTO cannot disclaim the relief it requested in its complaint.
Second, OPTO argues that we cannot consider its request for patent unenforceability
in our jurisdictional analysis. Its theory is that it disclaimed such relief in various briefs
and statements before the district court and now only raises a patent-misuse defense to seek
a declaration of contract unenforceability. But OPTO’s briefs and statements cannot alter
the relief it requested in its counterclaim complaint. Instead, “the determination of
jurisdiction is based only on the allegations in” the “well-pleaded complaint.” Royal Canin
U.S.A., Inc. v. Wullschleger, 604 U.S. 22, 26 (2025). Of course, OPTO could always have
formally amended its complaint. If it did, jurisdiction would have depended on its
amended, not original, complaint. Id. at 30. But it failed to do so. And courts have never
permitted jurisdiction to be altered through subsequent briefing and statements; the
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document that controls is always the complaint. 10 Id. at 35 (“[A]s the usual procedural
principle holds—jurisdiction follows from (and only from) the operative pleading.”).
Because OPTO’s complaint still contains a request for patent unenforceability, our
jurisdictional analysis does too.
To be sure, OPTO also requested the relief of contract unenforceability in its
counterclaim complaint. This was sensible; a successful patent-misuse defense can also
result in the relief of contract unenforceability when the misuse stems from a contract. See
Princo Corp., 616 F.3d at 1328. But that just means that under the Declaratory Judgment
Act, there are multiple hypothetical threatened actions and thus multiple causes of action
in OPTO’s complaint—something that commonly occurs whenever a party alleges
violations of more than one law. OPTO’s request for contract unenforceability in no way
erases its separate request for patent unenforceability. And federal patent law creates the
cause of action for that separate request. So OPTO has still “asserted a compulsory
counterclaim arising under” “patent[]” law. § 1295(a); see also VersaTop Support Sys.,
10
Contrary to OPTO’s assertion, our decision in Old Dominion Electric
Cooperative v. PJM Interconnection, LLC, 24 F.4th 271 (4th Cir. 2022), counsels no
differently. Old Dominion only reiterates that when considering the propriety of federal
removal, specifically, courts have always been able to take notice of jurisdictional facts in
“other pleadings or the notice of removal” alongside the complaint. Id. at 284 n.9 (quoting
14C Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 3734 (rev. 4th
ed. 2021)). That conclusion is compelled by the removal statute itself, which requires the
defendant to submit “a short and plain statement of the grounds for removal.” 28 U.S.C.
§ 1446(a). Such a requirement would be pointless if courts could not consult the
statement—which lies outside the complaint—when determining removal jurisdiction. See
Wright & Miller, Federal Prac. & Proc. Juris. § 3734. But nothing in the above reasoning,
which relies heavily on the text of the removal statute, allows a complainant to freely
modify the legal substance of their complaint via later non-amendment filings or otherwise
displaces the supremacy of the complaint in the ordinary jurisdictional analysis.
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921 F.3d at 1368 (existence of other non-patent claims “immaterial” to Federal Circuit
jurisdiction).
c. Nothing in this decision creates a circuit split.
Third, OPTO warns us that sending this appeal to the Federal Circuit would create
a circuit split with the Third Circuit’s recent decision in Ares Trading S.A. v. Dyax Corp.,
which also involved a declaratory judgment claim asserting patent misuse in a licensing-
agreement dispute. 114 F.4th 123 (3d Cir. 2024). But the sole declaratory patent-misuse
claim in Ares Trading was a specific subspecies of the patent-misuse defense under the
Supreme Court’s decision in Brulotte v. Thys Co., 379 U.S. 29 (1964). And Brulotte patent
misuse cannot serve as a defense against patent infringement. The Third Circuit therefore
had no occasion to address the jurisdictional issue before us today that arises because of
OPTO’s separate request for patent unenforceability. There can be no circuit split.
In Brulotte, the Supreme Court dealt with an attempt to extend the effective life of
a patent by contract. The Court determined that the “exaction of royalties” through a
licensing agreement “after the patent is expired” constitutes an illicit “assertion of
monopoly power.” Id. at 33. 11 The Court held that any “attempt to project [a patent] into
11
Some background on patents might be helpful to understand the nature of Brulotte
claims. See generally Jonathan S. Masur & Lisa Larrimore Ouellette, Patent Law: Cases,
Problems, and Materials (3d. ed. 2023). A patent is a government-granted monopoly over
new technology. This promised monopoly incentivizes individuals to engage in the costly
and uncertain process of invention and creation. But because monopolizing is ordinarily
illegal for its detrimental effects consumers, the boundaries of the patent monopoly are
constrained to reflect Congress’s considered balance between its benefits and its harms.
One such constraint is temporal: The patent only lasts for a finite period of time—
generally, 20 years, see 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(2)—and a party may only exclude competitors
(Continued)
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another term by continuation of [a] licensing agreement” through a post-expiration royalty
provision “is unenforceable.” Id. at 34. Patent misuse under Brulotte thus refers to the
illicit extension of a patent’s temporal longevity beyond its expiration, rather than the illicit
extension of a patent’s physical scope to “restrain competition in an unpatented product.”
B. Braun Med., 124 F.3d at 1426; see also Ares Trading, 114 F.4th at 145 (“Brulotte does
not apply to patent misuse involving the enlargement of a patent’s scope.”). So by
definition, Brulotte is relevant only after a patent has expired. And since a patent cannot
be infringed after its expiration, see 35 U.S.C. § 271(a) (limiting infringement to those
actions taken “during the term of the patent”), the only possible suit that a former patent
holder could threaten against a former-licensee for post-expiration use of a patent would
be for breach of contract. See Kimble v. Marvel Ent., LLC, 576 U.S. 446, 453 (2015) (“The
Brulotte rule, like others making contract provisions unenforceable . . .”).
Consistent with this contract-only understanding of Brulotte, the declaratory-
judgment plaintiff in Ares Trading relied on Brulotte to seek only the unenforceability of
the royalty provision in its licensing agreement. See Ares Trading, 114 F.4th at 131 (“Ares
asked for a declaratory judgment that its royalty obligation to Dyax is unenforceable under
Brulotte.”). The hypothetical threatened action against which a party would seek contract
for that period. When the period expires, the patent holder is no longer any more privileged
with respect to the technology than anyone else. Attempts to cheat and effectively extend
the length of the government-granted monopoly are thus impermissible—including, as the
Supreme Court held in Brulotte, by contract. Brulotte, 379 U.S. at 33 (“A patent empowers
the owner to exact royalties [by contract]. . . with the leverage of [his] monopoly. But to
use that leverage to project those royalty payments beyond the life of the patent is . . . to
enlarge the monopoly”).
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unenforceability due to patent misuse is, of course, breach of contract. And since a party
cannot bring a patent-infringement suit based on an expired patent, there is no possibility
that such a suit would be a hypothetical threatened action under the Declaratory Judgment
Act. Thus, the Third Circuit was correct to conclude that the federal patent laws did not
create the cause of action for Ares’s declaratory judgment Brulotte claim. Id. at 133.
Nothing in Ares Trading conflicts with our decision today. Had OPTO only asserted
Brulotte patent misuse to seek contract unenforceability, we would similarly have found
jurisdiction over this appeal. 12 But OPTO’s counterclaim complaint was not so limited.
By also using the patent-misuse defense to seek a declaration of patent unenforceability,
OPTO defended against the different hypothetical threatened action of patent infringement,
thereby placing jurisdiction with the Federal Circuit.
* * *
The parties before us first clashed in a pair of patent-infringement suits brought by
Honeywell against OPTO. They were able to reach a truce a year later in the form of a
12
OPTO also raised Brulotte as part of its theory of patent misuse. See OPTO
Op./Resp. Br. at 75–78. But unlike the declaratory judgment plaintiff in Ares Trading,
OPTO raised Brulotte only as to some of the patents in question. Id. at 75 (“Honeywell
committed per se misuse by trying to control . . . the expired ’849, ’740, and ’009
patents.”). As to other non-expired patents, OPTO raised a different theory of patent
misuse—that Honeywell attempted to illicitly enlarge the physical scope of a patent. See
id. at 78–81 (“Independently, Honeywell committed per se patent misuse by conditioning
a license to its general-purpose patents on [OPTO’s payment of royalties for] an ability
over which Honeywell has no patent rights.”). OPTO’s requested relief of patent
unenforceability would flow from this latter theory. See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine
Rsch., Inc., 395 U.S. 100, 135 (1969) (“[C]onditioning the grant of a patent license upon
payment of royalties on products which do not use the teaching of the patent does amount
to patent misuse.”).
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patent-licensing agreement. But that truce was short lived. Moving from one dispute to
the next, Honeywell brought another suit against OPTO, this time for breach of the
licensing agreement. Yet, perhaps wary of the possibility of renewed patent-infringement
litigation, OPTO not only contested Honeywell’s breach of contract suit, but also
preemptively asserted its own patent-misuse counterclaim seeking a declaration that would
render Honeywell’s patents unenforceable. Because that declaration would defend against
a hypothetical patent-infringement suit, OPTO’s declaratory counterclaim “arises under”
the federal patent laws. That resolves this case. Although OPTO’s counterclaim is only
one of many claims before us, Congress has determined that a single counterclaim arising
under the patent laws is enough to place the entire appeal within the exclusive jurisdiction
of the Federal Circuit. We are bound by Congress’s determination. The appeal is
DISMISSED.
25
Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1850 Doc: 89 Filed: 04/29/2025 Pg: 1 of 25 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 23-1850 Doc: 89 Filed: 04/29/2025 Pg: 1 of 25 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
0223-1850 HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL INC.; HAND HELD PRODUCTS, INC.; METROLOGIC INSTRUMENTS, INC., Plaintiffs – Appellants, v.
0323-2038 HONEYWELL INTERNATIONAL, INC.; HAND HELD PRODUCTS, INCORPORATED; METROLOGIC INSTRUMENTS, INC., Plaintiffs – Appellees, v.
04Appeals from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, at Charlotte.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1850 Doc: 89 Filed: 04/29/2025 Pg: 1 of 25 PUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for Honeywell International, Inc. v. OPTO Electronics Co., Ltd. in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on April 29, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10424121 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.