Harold Johnson
Partner
Overview
With more than three decades of experience to his credit, Harry Johnson brings an unequalled perspective to client counseling and litigation. Whether he is providing authoritative opinions on infringement, validity and freedom to operate, or leading business-critical patent, trade secret and unfair competition cases, Harry helps clients enforce intellectual property rights without losing sight of business goals.
Career & Education
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- Michigan Technological University, B.S., electrical engineering, 1978
- Albany Law School of Union University, J.D., cum laude, 1984
- Illinois
- Supreme Court of the United States
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
- U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
- U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois
- U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Trial Bar
- U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan
- U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
- American Bar Association Member, Litigation Section
- Federal Circuit Bar Association
- Chicago Bar Association
- American Intellectual Property Law Association
- Licensing Executives Society
Representative Matters
- Eastman Kodak v. HTC (ITC). International Trade Commission case alleging that smartphones produced by HTC infringed on Kodak’s patents, and requesting a limited exclusion order banning the importation and sale of the infringing products. Case settled after the close of discovery but before the administrative hearing with a favorable result for HTC.
- Star Scientific, Inc. v. R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company (D. M). Multi-patent infringement case involving two patents relating to tobacco curing barns and methods for treating tobacco to yield low tobacco-specific nitrosamines. Star Scientific sought damages in excess of $1 billion. On June 16, 2009, after a four-week trial, a 12-person jury ruled in favor of RJR on all issues. The jury ruled that tobacco farmers who supplied tobacco to RJR did not infringe the Star patents and that both of the Star patents in question were invalid (based on anticipation, obviousness, failure to disclose the best mode and indefiniteness).
- Seirus Innovative Accessories v. Do-Gree Fashions Ltd. (D. Utah). Multi-patent case relating to skiwear. Case settled shortly after client received a favorable claim interpretation ruling, but before the pending motions for summary judgment of non-infringement were decided.
- Langeman Manufacturing, Inc. v. Rhino Linings USA, Inc. (W.D. Wis.). Multi-patent case relating to spray-on truck bed liners, and methods and products for trimming them. Settled shortly before trial.
- Girafa.com, Inc. v. Exalead S.A., et al., (D. Del.). Multi-defendant suit relating to features of Internet browsers. Case against Exalead settled while court was considering parties' respective claim interpretation and summary judgment motions.
- Herman Miller, Inc. v. Teknion Corp. and Okamura Corp. (N.D. Ill). Patent infringement action against Teknion and Okamura relating to Herman Miller's iconic Aeron® chair. Herman Miller obtained summary judgment that the accused chair literally infringed. Case settled shortly thereafter.
Recognition
- Illinois Super Lawyers, Intellectual Property Law, 2011-2017
- Leading Intellectual Property Lawyer, Leading Lawyers Network, Law Bulletin Publishing Company, 2004-2012, 2016