Lexmark International, Inc. v. Impression Products, Inc. , 816 F.3d 721 ( 2016 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    LEXMARK INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Cross-Appellant
    v.
    IMPRESSION PRODUCTS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellant
    QUALITY CARTRIDGES, INC., JOHN DOES, 1-20,
    BLUE TRADING LLC, EXPRINT INTERNATIONAL,
    INC., LD PRODUCTS, INC., PRINTRONIC
    CORPORATION, TESEN DEVELOPMENT (HONG
    KONG) CO. LTD., BENIGNO ADEVA AND HIS
    COMPANIES,
    Defendants
    ______________________
    2014-1617, 2014-1619
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Ohio in No. 1:10-cv-00564-MRB,
    Judge Michael R. Barrett.
    ______________________
    Decided: February 12, 2016
    ______________________
    CONSTANTINE L. TRELA, JR., Sidley Austin LLP, Chi-
    cago, IL, argued for plaintiff-cross-appellant. Also repre-
    sented by ROBERT N. HOCHMAN; BENJAMIN BEATON,
    JOSHUA JOHN FOUGERE, Washington, DC; TIMOTHY COLIN
    2              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    MEECE, BRYAN MEDLOCK, JR., AUDRA C. EIDEM HEINZE,
    JASON S. SHULL, Banner & Witcoff, Ltd., Chicago, IL;
    STEVEN B. LOY, Stoll, Keenon & Park, LLP, Lexington,
    KY.
    EDWARD F. O’CONNOR, Avyno Law, P.C., Encino, CA,
    argued for defendant-appellant. Also represented by
    JENNIFER HERBST HAMILTON.
    ANDREW J. PINCUS, Mayer Brown LLP, Washington,
    DC, argued for amici curiae LG Electronics, Inc., Dell Inc.,
    Google Inc., Intel Corporation, L Brands Inc., Newegg
    Inc., Ninestar Image Tech Limited, QVC, Inc., Samsung
    Electronics Co., Ltd., SAS Institute, Inc., Xilinx, Inc. Also
    represented by JAMIE B. BEABER, KFIR LEVY, PAUL
    WHITFIELD HUGHES; JAMES SUH, LG Electronics Inc.,
    Seoul, Korea; MATTHEW R. HULSE, Intel Corporation,
    Santa Clara, CA.
    MELISSA N. PATTERSON, Appellate Staff, Civil Divi-
    sion, United States Department of Justice, Washington,
    DC, argued for amicus curiae United States. Also repre-
    sented by BENJAMIN C. MIZER, MARK R. FREEMAN.
    BARBARA A. FIACCO, Foley Hoag LLP, Boston, MA, ar-
    gued for amici curiae Biotechnology Industry Organiza-
    tion, CropLife International. Also represented by SARAH
    S. BURG.
    MARGRETH BARRETT, University of California-
    Hastings College of Law, The Sea Ranch, CA, as amicus
    curiae pro se.
    FREDERICK M. ABBOTT, Florida State University Col-
    lege of Law, Tallahassee, FL, as amicus curiae pro se.
    KRISTIN LEIGH YOHANNAN MOORE, Cadwalader, Wick-
    ersham & Taft LLP, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         3
    American Intellectual Property Law Association. Also
    represented by TIHUA HUANG; LISA K. JORGENSON, Ameri-
    can Intellectual Property Law Association, Arlington, VA.
    MEENAKSHI KALA SARVAIYA, SoCal IP Law Group
    LLP, Westlake Village, CA, for amicus curiae Conejo
    Valley Bar Association. Also represented by STEVEN C.
    SEREBOFF.
    NOAH LEIBOWITZ, Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, LLP,
    New York, NY, for amicus curiae New York Intellectual
    Property Law Association. Also represented by WALTER E.
    HANLEY, JR., Kenyon & Kenyon LLP, New York, NY;
    DAVID F. RYAN, Croton-On-Hudson, NY.
    CHARLES DUAN, Public Knowledge, Washington, DC,
    for amici curiae Public Knowledge, Electronic Frontier
    Foundation, Open Source Hardware Association, Digital
    Right to Repair Coalition, Public Citizen, Inc. Also repre-
    sented by MOHAMMED RAZA PANJWANI, SHERWIN SIY; VERA
    RANIERI, Electronic Frontier Foundation, San Francisco,
    CA.
    PETER JAMES WIED, Lee Tran Liang & Wang LLP, Los
    Angeles, CA, for amici curiae Quanta Computer, Inc.,
    Acer, Inc. Also represented by VINCENT K. YIP.
    JOHN R. ALISON III, Winston & Strawn LLP, Washing-
    ton, DC, for amici curiae HTC Corp., HTC America, Inc.
    Also represented by OWAIS AHMED SIDDIQUI, San Diego,
    CA; GINO CHENG, Los Angeles, CA.
    CHARLES LIFLAND, O'Melveny & Myers LLP, Los An-
    geles, CA, for amicus curiae SK Hynix Inc. Also repre-
    sented by SUSAN ROEDER, SUSAN VAN KEULEN, Menlo
    Park, CA.
    4              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    JAMES R. KLAIBER, Pryor Cashman LLP, New York,
    NY, for amicus curiae The Association of the Bar of the
    City of New York. Also represented by TIMOTHY P.
    HEATON, Troutman Sanders LLP, New York, NY; AARON
    LIGOURY JOSEPH PEREIRA, Buchanan Ingersoll & Rooney
    PC, New York, NY.
    STEVEN A. HIRSCH, Keker & Van Nest, LLP, San
    Francisco, CA, for amicus curiae SanDisk Corporation.
    Also represented by CHRISTA M. ANDERSON, ROBERT A.
    VAN NEST, LEO L. LAM.
    ROBERT T. HASLAM, Covington & Burling LLP, Red-
    wood Shores, CA, for amicus curiae Texas Instruments,
    Inc. Also represented by NATHAN SHAFFER; RANGANATH
    SUDARSHAN, Washington, DC.
    MATTHEW J. MOORE, Latham & Watkins LLP, Wash-
    ington, DC, for amici curiae Costco Wholesale Corp.,
    Retail Litigation Center, Inc. Also represented by JAMES
    SCOTT BALLENGER, MELISSA ARBUS SHERRY.
    PHILLIP R. MALONE, Stanford Law School, Juelsgaard
    Intellectual Property and Innovation Clinic, Mills Legal
    Clinic, Stanford, CA, for amici curiae American Antitrust
    Institute, Jeremy W. Bock, Esq., Irene Calboli, Michael A.
    Carrier, Andrew Chin, Samuel Ernst, Shubha Ghosh,
    Ariel Katz, Mark A. Lemley, Yvette Joy Liebesman, Brian
    J. Love, Mark P. McKenna, Michael J. Meurer, Tyler T.
    Ochoa, Mark R. Patterson, Esq., Aaron Perzanowski,
    John A. Rothchild, Pamela Samuelson, Sharon K.
    Sandeen, Kurt M. Saunders, Christopher B. Seaman,
    Katherine J. Strandburg, Jennifer M. Urban, Esq., Ryan
    Vacca, Sarah R. Wasserman-Rajec. Also represented by
    JEFFREY THEODORE PEARLMAN.
    ROBERT ANTHONY SURRETTE, McAndrews, Held &
    Malloy, Ltd., Chicago, IL, for amicus curiae Association of
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.             5
    Medical Device Reprocessors.           Also   represented   by
    CHRISTOPHER M. SCHARFF.
    WILLIAM DOUGLAS KARI, Arbitech, LLC, Irvine, CA,
    for amici curiae Association of Service and Computer
    Dealers International, Inc., Owners’ Rights Initiative.
    MATTHEW A. LEVY, Computer & Communications In-
    dustry Association, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae
    Computer & Communications Industry Association.
    DANIEL STRINGFIELD, Steptoe & Johnson, LLP, Chica-
    go, IL, for amicus curiae Licensing Executive Society
    (U.S.A. and Canada), Inc. Also represented by KATHERINE
    H. JOHNSON; BRIAN P. O'SHAUGHNESSY, Ratner Prestia,
    Washington, DC.
    MERRITT BLAKESLEE, The Blakeslee Law Firm, Wash-
    ington, DC, for amicus curiae Recycling Times Media
    Corporation.
    MARK SCHONFELD, Burns & Levinson, LLP, Boston,
    MA, for amicus curiae Imaging Supplies Coalition. Also
    represented by SARA BECCIA.
    GARRARD R. BEENEY, Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, New
    York, NY, for amicus curiae Dolby Laboratories, Inc. Also
    represented by ADAM R. BREBNER.
    ROBERT P. TAYLOR, Arnold & Porter, LLP, San Fran-
    cisco, CA, for amicus curiae Intellectual Property Owners
    Association. Also represented by HERBERT CLARE
    WAMSLEY, JR., Intellectual Property Owners Association,
    Washington, DC; KEVIN H. RHODES, 3M Innovative Prop-
    erties Company, St. Paul, MN; PHILIP STATON JOHNSON,
    Johnson & Johnson, New Brunswick, NJ.
    6              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    JOHN D. HAYNES, Alston & Bird LLP, Atlanta, GA, for
    amici curiae Nokia Technologies OY, Nokia USA Inc.
    KATHI A. COVER, iBiquity Digital Corporation, Colum-
    bia, MD, for amicus curiae iBiquity Digital Corporation.
    JOSEPH S. CIANFRANI, Knobbe, Martens, Olson &
    Bear, LLP, Irvine, CA, for amicus curiae Medical Device
    Manufacturers Association. Also represented by KENT N.
    SHUM.
    ROGER BROOKS, Cravath Swaine & Moore LLP, New
    York, NY, for amicus curiae Qualcomm Incorporated. Also
    represented by DAVID J. KAPPOS.
    JOHN NILSSON, Arnold & Porter LLP, Washington,
    DC, for amicus curiae Pharmaceutical Research and
    Manufacturers of America. Also represented by KRISTAN
    LYNN LANSBERY, SAMUEL DREZDZON; WILLOW WHITE
    NOONAN, San Francisco, CA.
    THEODORE LAWRENCE FIELD, South Texas College of
    Law, Houston, TX, as amicus curiae pro se.
    DAVID S. STEUER, Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich & Rosati,
    PC, Palo Alto, CA, for amicus curiae InterDigital, Inc.
    Also represented by MICHAEL BRETT LEVIN, MAURA L.
    REES.
    SETH DAVID GREENSTEIN, Constantine Cannon LLP,
    Washington, DC, for amici curiae International Imaging
    Technology Council, Auto Care Association, Automotive
    Parts Remanufacturers Association.
    ______________________
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, NEWMAN, LOURIE, DYK,
    MOORE, O’MALLEY, REYNA, WALLACH, TARANTO, CHEN,
    HUGHES, and STOLL, Circuit Judges.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            7
    Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge TARANTO, in
    which Chief Judge PROST and Circuit Judges NEWMAN,
    LOURIE, MOORE, O’MALLEY, REYNA, WALLACH, CHEN, and
    STOLL join.
    Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge DYK, in which
    Circuit Judge HUGHES joins.
    TARANTO, Circuit Judge.
    Congress has declared: “Except as otherwise provided
    in [the Patent Act], whoever without authority makes,
    uses, offers to sell, or sells any patented invention, within
    the United States or imports into the United States any
    patented invention during the term of the patent therefor,
    infringes the patent.” 35 U.S.C. § 271(a); see 
    id. § 154(a)
    (granting patentee “right to exclude others” from itemized
    actions). The doctrine of patent exhaustion (or “first sale”
    doctrine) addresses the circumstances in which a sale of a
    patented article (or an article sufficiently embodying a
    patent), when the sale is made or authorized by the
    patentee, confers on the buyer the “authority” to engage
    in acts involving the article, such as resale, that are
    infringing acts in the absence of such authority. There is
    nothing “otherwise provided” on the issue in the Patent
    Act. In that respect, the Patent Act differs from the
    Copyright Act, whose infringement, importation, and
    exclusive-rights provisions, 17 U.S.C. §§ 501, 602, 106, are
    all subject to a separate, overriding statutory provision
    that grants owners of certain copyrighted articles a right
    to sell those articles “without the authority” of the copy-
    right holder, 
    id. § 109(a).
        In this case, all of the initial sales at issue were made
    by the U.S. patentee, rather than by a licensee having
    authorization from the patentee. Some of the initial sales
    were made domestically, some abroad. All of the domestic
    sales, and an unknown portion of the foreign sales, were
    accompanied by clearly communicated restrictions on the
    buyer’s reuse and resale.
    8              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    We decided to hear this case en banc to consider
    whether two decisions of this court concerning the uncodi-
    fied doctrine of patent exhaustion—one decision from
    1992, the other from 2001—remain sound in light of later
    decisions of the Supreme Court. Today we reaffirm the
    principles of our earlier decisions.
    First, we adhere to the holding of Mallinckrodt, Inc. v.
    Medipart, Inc., 
    976 F.2d 700
    (Fed. Cir. 1992), that a
    patentee, when selling a patented article subject to a
    single-use/no-resale restriction that is lawful and clearly
    communicated to the purchaser, does not by that sale give
    the buyer, or downstream buyers, the resale/reuse author-
    ity that has been expressly denied. Such resale or reuse,
    when contrary to the known, lawful limits on the authori-
    ty conferred at the time of the original sale, remains
    unauthorized and therefore remains infringing conduct
    under the terms of § 271. Under Supreme Court prece-
    dent, a patentee may preserve its § 271 rights through
    such restrictions when licensing others to make and sell
    patented articles; Mallinckrodt held that there is no
    sound legal basis for denying the same ability to the
    patentee that makes and sells the articles itself. We find
    Mallinckrodt’s principle to remain sound after the Su-
    preme Court’s decision in Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG
    Electronics, Inc., 
    553 U.S. 617
    (2008), in which the Court
    did not have before it or address a patentee sale at all, let
    alone one made subject to a restriction, but a sale made
    by a separate manufacturer under a patentee-granted
    license conferring unrestricted authority to sell.
    Second, we adhere to the holding of Jazz Photo Corp.
    v. International Trade Comm’n, 
    264 F.3d 1094
    (Fed. Cir.
    2001), that a U.S. patentee, merely by selling or authoriz-
    ing the sale of a U.S.-patented article abroad, does not
    authorize the buyer to import the article and sell and use
    it in the United States, which are infringing acts in the
    absence of patentee-conferred authority. Jazz Photo’s no-
    exhaustion ruling recognizes that foreign markets under
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         9
    foreign sovereign control are not equivalent to the U.S.
    markets under U.S. control in which a U.S. patentee’s
    sale presumptively exhausts its rights in the article sold.
    A buyer may still rely on a foreign sale as a defense to
    infringement, but only by establishing an express or
    implied license—a defense separate from exhaustion, as
    Quanta holds—based on patentee communications or
    other circumstances of the sale. We conclude that Jazz
    Photo’s no-exhaustion principle remains sound after the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley &
    Sons, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 1351
    (2013), in which the Court did
    not address patent law or whether a foreign sale should
    be viewed as conferring authority to engage in otherwise-
    infringing domestic acts. Kirtsaeng is a copyright case
    holding that 17 U.S.C. § 109(a) entitles owners of copy-
    righted articles to take certain acts “without the authori-
    ty” of the copyright holder. There is no counterpart to
    that provision in the Patent Act, under which a foreign
    sale is properly treated as neither conclusively nor even
    presumptively exhausting the U.S. patentee’s rights in
    the United States.
    BACKGROUND
    The relevant facts are set forth in the limited record
    that the parties agreed was determinative of the result.
    Lexmark International, Inc. makes and sells printers as
    well as toner cartridges for its printers. Lexmark owns a
    number of patents that cover its cartridges and their use.
    The cartridges at issue here were first sold by Lexmark,
    some abroad and some in the United States. Some of the
    foreign-sold cartridges and all of the domestically sold
    cartridges at issue were sold, at a discount, subject to an
    express single-use/no-resale restriction.       Impression
    Products, Inc. later acquired the cartridges at issue in
    order to resell them in the United States—the restricted
    ones after a third party physically modified them to
    enable re-use in violation of the single-use/no-resale
    restriction. Impression has resold the patented Lexmark
    10             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    cartridges at issue in the United States, and has imported
    those it acquired abroad. In each case, it has acted with-
    out affirmative authorization from Lexmark and, for the
    restricted cartridges, in violation of the express denial of
    authorization to engage in resale and reuse. Impression’s
    actions infringe under 35 U.S.C. § 271—unless the fact
    that Lexmark initially sold the cartridges constitutes the
    grant of authority that makes Impression’s later resale
    and importation non-infringing under the doctrine of
    exhaustion. Whether Lexmark’s initial sales have that
    effect raises two questions—one regarding the single-
    use/no-resale restricted sales (wherever they occur), the
    other regarding the initial foreign sales of all cartridges,
    whether restricted or not.
    A
    Lexmark offers buyers a choice. A buyer may pur-
    chase a “Regular Cartridge” at full price, in which case
    the buyer is not subject to any sale terms restricting reuse
    or resale of the cartridge. Alternatively, a buyer may
    purchase a “Return Program Cartridge” at a discount of
    roughly 20 percent, subject to a single-use/no-resale
    restriction: the buyer may not reuse the cartridge after
    the toner runs out and may not transfer it to anyone but
    Lexmark once it is used, i.e., the buyer must “return” the
    cartridge “only” to Lexmark. J.A. 2559. 1 Lexmark and
    Impression stipulated in this case that the reduced price
    “reflects the value of the property interest and use rights
    conveyed to the purchaser under the express terms of the
    conditional sale contract and conditional single-use li-
    1  At oral argument, noting a reason the arrange-
    ment was not a lease, Lexmark stated that a Return
    Program Cartridge buyer is not absolutely required to
    return the cartridge to Lexmark. The restriction bars
    each of two acts: reusing the cartridge; transferring it to
    anyone else.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           11
    cense conferred by Lexmark.” 
    Id. The stipulation
    adds
    that “Lexmark has an express and enforceable contractu-
    al agreement with each of its end-user customers.” J.A.
    2562. And it is undisputed that all end users receive
    adequate notice of the restriction supporting the dis-
    counted price before they make their purchases.
    The distinctness of the options for buyers, which pro-
    duce different revenues for Lexmark, is not just a matter
    of different terms of sale. It also is reflected in a micro-
    chip in the cartridges that, among other things, communi-
    cates with the printer. For a Return Program cartridge,
    the chip and printer, by monitoring toner levels, prevent
    use of a refilled cartridge. For a Regular cartridge, the
    toner can be replenished and the cartridge reused. J.A.
    2559–60. “To circumvent this technological measure,”
    however, “third parties have ‘hacked’ Lexmark’s micro-
    chips and created their own ‘unauthorized replacement’
    microchips” that, when installed in a Return Program
    cartridge, fool the printer into allowing reuse of that
    cartridge. J.A. 2560. It is undisputed that various com-
    panies gather spent cartridges, replace the microchips,
    refill and “remanufacture” the cartridges, and sell them to
    resellers like Impression for marketing to consumers for
    use with Lexmark printers.
    Lexmark sells its cartridges in two channels of distri-
    bution. It sells directly to end users, and it sells to “re-
    sellers” (including wholesalers, dealers, and distributors).
    Lexmark offers the options of Return Program and Regu-
    lar cartridges in both channels; the resellers pay less for
    the Return Program cartridges; and the single-use/no-
    resale restriction applies to the resale by resellers. J.A.
    2564. There is no dispute about the adequacy of notice to
    resellers as well as end users or the binding nature of the
    Lexmark-reseller agreements.        J.A. 2562–64.      When
    Lexmark sells its cartridges to end users, that sale is the
    first sale; when it sells to resellers, that sale is the first
    12            LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    sale. When a reseller subsequently sells to end users,
    that sale is not the first sale.
    B
    Lexmark sued Impression, among other companies,
    for infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271. It alleged that
    Impression acquires spent cartridges, including some
    Return Program cartridges that have been altered by chip
    replacement and toner refilling, then sells them in the
    United States and, for the foreign-bought ones, imports
    them into the United States. 2 For a large number of
    patents directly covering the cartridges, Lexmark alleged
    direct infringement under § 271(a). For a few patents
    that only the end user directly infringes, Lexmark alleged
    that Impression is liable for contributory infringement
    under § 271(c). The operative complaint states the in-
    fringement allegations in a single count (Count I), cover-
    ing past and continuing activity.
    More specifically, the infringement allegations are
    limited to two groups of cartridges. One group consists of
    Return Program cartridges that Lexmark sold in the
    United States under the restriction denying authority for
    resale and reuse. As it later made clear, Lexmark did not
    allege infringement by Impression’s actions involving
    Regular cartridges Lexmark had first sold domestically.
    J.A. 1895–97, 2557. The second group consists of all
    cartridges that Lexmark sold abroad, including Return
    Program and Regular cartridges. It is undisputed that
    Lexmark never granted anyone permission to import
    2  Lexmark has not argued to us that the chip re-
    placement and ink replenishment result in new articles,
    which would be outside the scope of the exhaustion doc-
    trine. See Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement
    Co., 
    365 U.S. 336
    , 346 (1961) (Aro I).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         13
    those cartridges into, or sell or use them in, the United
    States.
    C
    The litigation progressed to the point at which no de-
    fendant remained except Impression, and only the single
    count of infringement remained against Impression.
    Impression came to agree that the patents covered the
    cartridges it was importing and selling, and it did not
    dispute the validity or enforceability of the patents. It
    contested liability for infringement on just one ground,
    namely, that Lexmark had exhausted its U.S. patent
    rights in the cartridges by its initial sales of them.
    Three defining aspects of Impression’s contention to
    the district court, and presentation to us, are worth
    noting here, because they narrow our focus. First, we
    discuss only Lexmark’s sales to end users (and the resales
    and reuses deriving from those sales), because neither
    party has made an argument for distinguishing
    Lexmark’s sales to resellers. Second, we take as a prem-
    ise that both the first purchaser and Impression as a re-
    purchaser had adequate notice of the single-use/no-resale
    restriction before they made their purchases; the adequa-
    cy of that notice is unchallenged. Thus, we do not have
    before us the questions that would arise, whether under
    principles governing bona fide purchasers or otherwise, if
    a downstream re-purchaser acquired a patented article
    with less than actual knowledge of such a restriction.
    Third, Impression has not contended that the particular
    restriction at issue gives rise to a patent-misuse defense,
    constitutes an antitrust violation, or exceeds the scope of
    the Patent Act’s express grant of exclusive rights over
    patented articles, 35 U.S.C. §§ 154, 271. Rather, Impres-
    sion contends that, although there is no other illegality or
    breach of statutory limits identified, the single-use/no-
    resale restriction is to be disregarded for exhaustion
    purposes. According to Impression, it has the authority to
    14              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    resell despite the known denial of such authority by
    Lexmark for the Return Program cartridges.
    Impression presented its exhaustion defense by filing
    motions to dismiss the infringement count, one motion for
    each of the two groups of cartridges at issue. For each
    motion, Impression did not contest that, under this court’s
    governing law, its exhaustion defense must fail: Mallinck-
    rodt for the cartridges initially sold in the United States,
    Jazz Photo for the cartridges initially sold abroad. But it
    argued that the Supreme Court’s more recent decisions
    had made Mallinckrodt and Jazz Photo no longer good
    law. In a pair of opinions issued the same day, the dis-
    trict court agreed with Impression about Mallinckrodt but
    disagreed about Jazz Photo.
    1
    The district court granted Impression’s motion to
    dismiss Lexmark’s claim of infringement involving the
    single-use cartridges Lexmark had first sold in the United
    States. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Ink Techs. Printer Supplies,
    LLC, No. 1:10-CV-564, 
    2014 WL 1276133
    (S.D. Ohio Mar.
    27, 2014) (Domestic Sale Opinion), modified at J.A. 34–35
    based on a joint stipulation of the parties, J.A. 2554–66.
    Like Impression, the court recognized that there is no
    exhaustion here under this court’s decision in Mallinck-
    rodt, which rejected an exhaustion defense in circum-
    stances similar to those presented here—namely, where a
    patentee sold a patented article subject to an otherwise-
    unobjectionable single-use restriction. 
    Id. at *4,
    *6. And
    the court recognized this court’s post-Mallinckrodt deci-
    sions as reiterating that a “ ‘conditional sale’ ” of that type
    does not cause exhaustion of the patentee’s preserved
    rights in the article. 
    Id. at *4,
    *6 (quoting Princo Corp. v.
    Int’l Trade Comm’n, 
    616 F.3d 1318
    , 1328 (Fed. Cir. 2010)
    (en banc)).
    In nevertheless finding exhaustion here, the district
    court examined a number of Supreme Court decisions on
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          15
    patent exhaustion. It noted the Court’s explanation in
    Bloomer v. McQuewan, 55 U.S. (14 How.) 539, 549–50
    (1853), that a patentee’s grant of a license to another to
    make and sell a patented article is not the same thing as
    the patentee’s sale of the article itself. Domestic Sale
    Opinion, 
    2014 WL 1276133
    , at *3. It noted, too, the
    Court’s rejection of an exhaustion defense in General
    Talking Pictures Corp. v. Western Electric Co., 
    304 U.S. 175
    , opinion on rehearing at 
    305 U.S. 124
    (1938), which
    held that a buyer of a patented article infringed when it
    used the article in a way forbidden by a known use re-
    striction, having bought the article from a manufacturer
    licensed by the patentee to make and sell the article only
    to buyers who complied with the use restriction. Domestic
    Sale Opinion, 
    2014 WL 1276133
    , at *3. The district court
    also noted that the Supreme Court in Quanta found
    exhaustion where “the Supreme Court determined that
    the agreements [at issue] broadly authorized Intel [the
    seller] to sell the licensed products without restrictions or
    conditions.” 
    Id. at *5
    (emphasis added).
    Despite that recognition of what Quanta involved, the
    district court concluded “that Quanta overruled Mallinck-
    rodt sub silentio.” 
    Id. at *5
    , *6. Although Return Pro-
    gram cartridges were sold under post-sale restrictions on
    reuse and resale, the district court held that “those post-
    sale use restrictions do not prevent patent rights from
    being exhausted given that the initial sales were author-
    ized and unrestricted.” 
    Id. The court
    thus dismissed the
    infringement claim regarding Impression’s actions involv-
    ing Return Program cartridges Lexmark had sold in the
    United States. 
    Id. at *7.
                                    2
    As to cartridges Lexmark had sold abroad, the court
    held that exhaustion did not apply, i.e., did not render
    Impression’s imports and domestic resales of those car-
    tridges non-infringing. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Ink Techs.
    16             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    Printer Supplies, LLC, 
    9 F. Supp. 3d 830
    (S.D. Ohio 2014)
    (Foreign Sale Opinion). The court recognized, and Im-
    pression did not dispute, that “under Jazz Photo, an
    initial authorized sale of a patented product outside of the
    United States would not exhaust the patent rights of the
    patent holder.” 
    Id. at 833.
    It then examined the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Kirtsaeng and rejected Impression’s
    contention that Kirtsaeng “overturns the Federal Circuit’s
    decision in Jazz Photo, 
    264 F.3d 1094
    , such that
    Lexmark’s patent rights were exhausted upon the first
    authorized sale abroad.” Foreign Sale Opinion, 
    9 F. Supp. 3d
    at 834 (footnote omitted).
    The court stated that “[t]he Supreme Court’s decision
    was rooted in interpretation of a statutory provision of
    copyright law,” namely, 17 U.S.C. § 109(a). Foreign Sale
    Opinion, 
    9 F. Supp. 3d
    at 833. The district court noted
    the absence from Kirtsaeng of any discussion of exhaus-
    tion in the patent field and the Supreme Court’s
    longstanding recognition that copyright law and patent
    law are not interchangeable. 
    Id. at 835
    (citing Bobbs-
    Merrill Co. v. Straus, 
    210 U.S. 339
    , 346 (1908)). It added
    that Kirtsaeng “is rooted in statutory and legislative
    interpretation of section 109(a) of the Copyright Act,” but
    “[n]oticeably absent from patent law is a codification of
    the exhaustion doctrine,” concluding: “the core statutory
    text that weighed in favor of a non-geographical interpre-
    tation is non-existent in the context of patent law.” 
    Id. The Patent
    Act, the court concluded, calls for its own
    analysis of “context, history and practical considerations.”
    
    Id. at 836.
        For those reasons, while recognizing that this court
    might reconsider Jazz Photo in light of Kirtsaeng, the
    district court held that Jazz Photo remains good law. 
    Id. at 837–38.
    The court therefore denied Impression’s
    motion to dismiss Lexmark’s claim of infringement involv-
    ing the Foreign-Sold Cartridges. 
    Id. at 838.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           17
    3
    Soon thereafter, with the parties’ agreement, the
    court entered a “Stipulated Final Judgment.” J.A. 1. The
    judgment was (a) for Impression (i.e., Impression does not
    infringe) as to the Return Program cartridges whose
    precursors Lexmark had sold in the United States and (b)
    for Lexmark (i.e., Impression infringes) as to cartridges
    whose precursors Lexmark had initially sold abroad. 
    Id. The parties
    agree that the judgment is final under 28
    U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1), even as to cartridges found to in-
    fringe.
    In agreeing to the final judgment of infringement as
    to the foreign-sold cartridges, which remained an open
    issue after the Rule 12(b)(6) rulings, Impression reasona-
    bly construed the district court’s Jazz Photo ruling to
    foreclose its exhaustion defense, even though all the
    district court had done was to deny Impression’s request
    for judgment in its favor based on that defense. In par-
    ticular, the district court’s rationale as to the unavailabil-
    ity of exhaustion did not depend on the facts in the record
    that Lexmark identifies as suggesting the “regional”
    character of its foreign-sold cartridges, facts that there-
    fore went unexplored in the district court. And, notably,
    when Impression agreed to a judgment of infringement as
    to foreign-sold cartridges, it did not preserve an implied-
    license defense, even though the Supreme Court made
    clear in Quanta the distinctness of implied-license and
    exhaustion 
    defenses. 553 U.S. at 637
    .
    D
    Impression appealed and Lexmark cross-appealed.
    This court has jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
    The parties submitted briefs and presented oral argument
    to a panel of this court, focused on whether Quanta had
    stripped Mallinckrodt of its controlling force and whether
    Kirtsaeng had stripped Jazz Photo of its controlling force.
    18              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    Shortly after oral argument, this court sua sponte
    took the case en banc. Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Impression
    Prods., Inc., 
    785 F.3d 565
    (Fed. Cir. 2015). We directed
    the parties to address the following issues:
    (a) The case involves certain sales, made
    abroad, of articles patented in the United States.
    In light of Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
    
    133 S. Ct. 1351
    (2013), should this court overrule
    Jazz Photo Corp. v. International Trade Commis-
    sion, 
    264 F.3d 1094
    (Fed. Cir. 2001), to the extent
    it ruled that a sale of a patented item outside the
    United States never gives rise to United States
    patent exhaustion[?]
    (b) The case involves (i) sales of patented arti-
    cles to end users under a restriction that they use
    the articles once and then return them and (ii)
    sales of the same patented articles to resellers
    under a restriction that resales take place under
    the single-use-and-return restriction. Do any of
    those sales give rise to patent exhaustion? In
    light of Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics,
    Inc., 
    553 U.S. 617
    (2008), should this court over-
    rule Mallinckrodt, Inc. v. Medipart, Inc., 
    976 F.2d 700
    (Fed. Cir. 1992), to the extent it ruled that a
    sale of a patented article, when the sale is made
    under a restriction that is otherwise lawful and
    within the scope of the patent grant, does not give
    rise to patent exhaustion?
    
    Id. at 566.
                             DISCUSSION
    I
    The Patent Act’s language defines the framework
    within which the two exhaustion questions arise. In
    1952, based on pre-existing uncodified understandings,
    Congress set forth a statutory prescription of what consti-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         19
    tutes patent “infringement.” See Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convert-
    ible Top Replacement Co., 
    377 U.S. 476
    , 483–84 (1964)
    (Aro II); Aro 
    I, 365 U.S. at 341
    –42 & n.8. In its current
    form, which includes a bar on importation and offers to
    sell added by a 1994 enactment, § 271(a) states that,
    unless another provision of the Act provides otherwise,
    whoever “without authority” during the term of a patent
    commits certain acts—“makes, uses, offers to sell, or sells
    any patented invention, within the United States or
    imports into the United States any patented invention”—
    “infringes the patent.” 35 U.S.C. § 271(a).
    Section 271(a) connects “make,” “sell,” “use,” and the
    other terms with the disjunction “or,” as does the related
    provision granting the patentee various rights to exclude
    others from the same activities, 
    id. § 154(a)
    . Congress
    has thus prescribed that whoever, “without authority,”
    does any one of the listed acts—“the making, using,
    offering to sell, selling, or importing of a patented inven-
    tion,” Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S.A., 
    131 S. Ct. 2060
    , 2065 (2011) (emphasis added)—is an infringer. See
    5 Donald S. Chisum, Chisum on Patents § 16.01 (2015)
    (“The exclusive rights are disjunctive: one may infringe by
    (1) making without selling or using, (2) using without
    making or selling or (3) selling without making or using.”)
    (footnote omitted); William C. Robinson, The Law of
    Patents §§ 903–906 (1890). The government observes:
    “Nothing in the text of the Patent Act expressly prevents
    a patentee from demanding compensation from each
    downstream user or reseller of an article embodying his
    invention.” U.S. Br. 5.
    Section 271(a)’s language embodies an understanding
    of “infringement” that was long recognized even before
    Congress enacted § 271 as part of the 1952 recodification
    of the patent laws. The pre-1952 statute included a right-
    to-exclude provision comparable to § 154, which, in lan-
    guage that varied over time, gave the patentee a right to
    exclude others (not a right to practice the invention). See
    20             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    35 U.S.C. § 40 (1946); Rev. Stat. § 4884; Bauer & Cie. v.
    O’Donnell, 
    229 U.S. 1
    , 9–10 (1913); 5 Chisum § 16.02[1].
    But while the pre-1952 statute provided for actions for
    “infringement,” e.g., 35 U.S.C. §§ 67, 70 (1948); Rev. Stat.
    §§ 4919, 4921, there was no provision prescribing what
    constitutes infringement. Nevertheless, the courts con-
    sistently understood infringement to mean what § 271
    came to say—committing the identified acts without
    authority (synonymously, without consent or permission):
    “The infringement of a patent, being the invasion of this
    exclusive right, therefore consists in the manufacture,
    use, or sale of the invention protected by the patent
    within the area and time described in the patent, by any
    person not duly authorized to do so by the patentee.”
    Robinson, § 890, at 43–44 (emphasis added); see 3 Antho-
    ny William Deller, Walker on Patents § 450, at
    1681 (1937) (“An infringement is the unauthorized mak-
    ing or using or selling of the patented invention.”). 3 Thus,
    the 1952 Act’s “without authority” language simply codi-
    fies an authority requirement long recognized to be the
    meaning of “infringement” of the enumerated rights to
    exclude. See Warner-Jenkinson Co. v. Hilton Davis Chem.
    Co., 
    520 U.S. 17
    , 26–27 (1997) (§ 271(a) left direct-
    infringement law intact); Aro 
    II, 377 U.S. at 483
    ; Aro 
    I, 365 U.S. at 342
    ; Giles S. Rich, Infringement Under Section
    271 of the Patent Act of 1952, 21 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 521,
    537 (1953).
    3 See, e.g., Global-Tech Appliances, 
    Inc., 131 S. Ct. at 2065
    n.2; General Talking 
    Pictures, 304 U.S. at 181
    –82;
    Crown Die & Tool Co. v. Nye Tool & Mach. Works, 
    261 U.S. 24
    , 38 (1923); Geneva Furniture Mfg. Co. v. S.
    Karpen & Bros., 
    238 U.S. 254
    , 257 (1915); Cantrell v.
    Wallick, 
    117 U.S. 689
    , 694 (1886); Blake v. Robertson, 
    94 U.S. 728
    , 733 (1876); Smith v. Nichols, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.)
    112, 118–19 (1875); Bloomer, 55 U.S. (14 How.) at 549.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         21
    The requirement of “authority” in order to avoid in-
    fringement, in its natural meaning, refers to a grant of
    permission.    Logically, permission might come from
    Congress, whether outside the Patent Act or within the
    Patent Act itself, as reflected in § 271(a)’s “[e]xcept as
    otherwise provided in [the Patent Act]” language, which
    explicitly bows to other contrary sections of the Patent
    Act. But it is undisputed that no other statutory provi-
    sion applies in this case. See U.S. Br. 5; compare 35
    U.S.C. § 262 (each joint owner of a patent may engage in
    making, using, selling, offering to sell, and importing
    without authority from other owners). Nothing in the Act
    supersedes the § 271 requirement of authority from the
    patentee before a person in Impression’s position may
    engage in the itemized acts without infringing.
    In this respect, the Patent Act differs from the Copy-
    right Act. In the copyright statute, Congress included a
    provision giving a right of sale to certain article owners,
    17 U.S.C. § 109(a), and made the infringement, importa-
    tion, and exclusive-rights provisions all subservient to
    that express guarantee. 4 The Patent Act does not contain
    4   17 U.S.C. § 501(a) defines “an infringer of the cop-
    yright” as “[a]nyone who violates any of the exclusive
    rights of the copyright owner as provided by sections 106
    through 122.” Section 106 gives the copyright owner “the
    exclusive rights to do and to authorize” certain actions,
    such as making copies and “distribut[ing] copies or
    phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale
    or other transfer of ownership,” 
    id. § 106(1),
    (3), but it
    declares that those rights are “[s]ubject to sections 107
    through 122”—hence to section 109(a). Similarly, § 602(a)
    declares importation to be “an infringement of the exclu-
    sive right to distribute copies or phonorecords under
    section 106, actionable under section 501.” Section 602
    makes the importation bar subservient to § 109(a) by
    22             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    a congressionally prescribed exhaustion rule, let alone a
    provision that makes the express definition of infringe-
    ment and rights to exclude (both of which now encompass
    importation) subservient to any congressionally expressed
    exhaustion rule. 5
    In the Patent Act, then, as relevant here, it is a con-
    ferral of “authority” by the patentee that is needed in
    order for the actions listed in § 271(a) not to constitute
    infringement. As the government says, noting the paral-
    lelism of § 271(a) and the § 154(a) grant of rights to
    exclude, what § 271(a) means is that “[w]hoever does any
    of these acts ‘without authority’ from the patentee infring-
    es the patent.” U.S. Br. 1 (emphasis added). In brief:
    § 271(a) by its terms requires that whoever engages in the
    enumerated acts receive permission from the patentee
    (directly or indirectly) for the acts being performed, which
    otherwise are infringing; and nothing in § 271(a) con-
    strains the patentee’s choices about whom to grant the
    required authority, if anyone, or about which acts (of
    manufacture, use, sale, etc.) to authorize, if any.
    Congress defines the existence and scope of patent
    rights. See, e.g., Octane Fitness, LLC v. ICON Health &
    Fitness, Inc., 
    134 S. Ct. 1749
    , 1755–56 (2014); Crown Die
    making it subservient to the § 106(3) right, which in turn
    is subservient to § 109(a), as the Supreme Court held in
    Quality King Distributors, Inc. v. L’anza Research Inter-
    national, Inc., 
    523 U.S. 135
    , 145 (1998), and reiterated in
    
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1354
    –55.
    5   Since 1999 Congress has provided a prior-use de-
    fense to infringement in certain circumstances and, in so
    doing, given a sale or disposition by a person having a
    prior-use defense the same exhaustion effect as a sale or
    disposition by a patent owner. See 35 U.S.C. § 273(d); 
    id. § 273(b)(2)
    (2006). But Congress has not defined the
    underlying patent-exhaustion rule.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         23
    & Tool 
    Co., 261 U.S. at 40
    ; Continental Paper Bag Co. v.
    Eastern Paper Bag Co., 
    210 U.S. 405
    , 423 (1908). Unless
    Congress has directed the courts to fashion governing
    rules in a particular statutory context (as in, e.g., the
    Sherman Act), “once Congress addresses a subject, even a
    subject previously governed by federal common law, the
    justification for lawmaking by the federal courts is greatly
    diminished. Thereafter, the task of the federal courts is
    to interpret and apply statutory law, not to create com-
    mon law.” Northwest Airlines, Inc. v. Transp. Workers
    Union of Am., 
    451 U.S. 77
    , 95 n.34 (1981); see City of
    Milwaukee v. Illinois, 
    451 U.S. 304
    , 315 (1981) (“Our
    commitment to the separation of powers is too fundamen-
    tal to continue to rely on federal common law by judicially
    decreeing what accords with common sense and the public
    weal when Congress has addressed the problem.”) (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted); Am. Elec. Power Co. v.
    Connecticut, 
    131 S. Ct. 2527
    , 2537 (2011).
    If ordinary congressional supremacy is to be respect-
    ed, exhaustion doctrine in the Patent Act must be under-
    stood as an interpretation of § 271(a)’s “without authority”
    language. And so it has been understood: some sales
    confer authority on the purchaser to take certain ac-
    tions—such as selling or using the purchased article in
    the United States or importing it into the United States—
    that would otherwise be infringing acts. See 5 Chisum
    § 16.03[2][a], at 16-362.8; U.S. Br. 1 (tying exhaustion to
    “authority” language of § 271(a)). We decide here (a)
    whether a sale, even though accompanied by a clearly
    communicated and otherwise-lawful denial of such au-
    thority, nonetheless has the legal effect of conferring such
    authority and (b) whether a foreign sale has the legal
    effect of conferring such authority where (as we must
    assume at present in this case) neither a grant nor a
    24             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    reservation of § 271(a) rights was communicated to the
    purchaser before the foreign sale. 6
    II
    The Mallinckrodt issue has been framed for us in
    clear terms. Suppose that Lexmark had granted another
    firm a nonexclusive license to make and sell Return
    Program cartridges. It is undisputed and clear under
    Supreme Court precedent—most prominently, the 1938
    decision in General Talking Pictures—that Lexmark
    would not have exhausted its patent rights in those
    6    Before 1952, the patent statute provided that
    “[e]very person who purchases of the inventor, . . . or with
    his knowledge and consent constructs any newly invent-
    ed . . . machine, or other patentable article, prior to the
    application by the inventor . . . for a patent, or who sells
    or uses one so constructed, shall have the right to use, and
    vend to others to be used, the specific thing so made or
    purchased, without liability therefor.” 35 U.S.C. § 48
    (1946); Rev. Stat. § 4899. That provision dated from 1870;
    a broader version (from 1839) did not depend on purchase
    from the inventor or construction with the inventor’s
    knowledge and consent. See Dable Grain Shovel Co. v.
    Flint, 
    137 U.S. 41
    , 42 (1890). The pre-1952 provision was
    viewed as a species of “implied license.” 3 Walker on
    Patents § 451, at 1682–83; Robinson, § 917, at 88.
    The Patent Act of 1952 repealed the provision, the
    House Report briefly explaining that it was “[r]edundant
    and unnecessary.” H.R. Rep. No. 82-1923, at 72 (1952).
    No argument for the significance of the repeal has been
    made to us—perhaps because (1) the provision did not
    depend on a sale; (2) it involved (pre-patent) conduct
    viewed as giving an “implied license,” which the Court has
    distinguished from “exhaustion,” 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 637
    ;
    and (3) it was not authoritatively construed to apply even
    to sales subject to authority-denying restrictions.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        25
    cartridges, upon the manufacturing licensee’s sale (the
    first sale), if a buyer with knowledge of the restrictions
    resold or reused them in violation of the restrictions.
    Impression and the government contend that a different
    result is required—that Lexmark automatically lost its
    patent rights—simply because Lexmark sold the Return
    Program cartridges itself, subject to the same communi-
    cated restriction, rather than having left the manufacture
    and sale to others under license. See U.S. Br. 7, 8, 10, 11
    (case turns on distinction between patentee sale and non-
    patentee licensee sale). (Impression has left the en banc
    briefing on this issue largely to the government.)
    We conclude otherwise, as we did in Mallinckrodt and
    subsequent decisions. A sale made under a clearly com-
    municated, otherwise-lawful restriction as to post-sale use
    or resale does not confer on the buyer and a subsequent
    purchaser the “authority” to engage in the use or resale
    that the restriction precludes. And there is no sound
    reason, and no Supreme Court precedent, requiring a
    distinction that gives less control to a practicing-entity
    patentee that makes and sells its own product than to a
    non-practicing-entity patentee that licenses others to
    make and sell the product.
    A
    Mallinckrodt involved a patentee’s sale of its medical
    device to hospitals, subject to a “single use only” re-
    striction. The device consisted of a nebulizer and associ-
    ated components for delivering to a patient, for diagnosis
    or treatment of lung diseases, a mist of radioactive or
    therapeutic material. It also trapped radioactive or toxic
    material when the patient exhaled. Mallinckrodt sold it
    under the single-use condition and with instructions for
    post-use disposal in a lead-shielded container. But some
    hospital purchasers instead sent used devices to Medipart
    for reconditioning and for replacement of certain compo-
    26             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    nents. When Mallinckrodt sued Medipart for direct and
    indirect infringement by virtue of the reuse in violation of
    the single-use restriction, the district court granted
    Medipart summary judgment of non-infringement, con-
    cluding that Mallinckrodt’s sale of the devices exhausted
    its ability to assert its patent rights in the units 
    sold. 976 F.2d at 701
    –02.
    This court reversed. 
    Id. at 709.
    The court stated its
    ruling: “The restriction here at issue does not per se
    violate the doctrine of patent misuse or the antitrust law.
    Use in violation of a valid restriction may be remedied
    under the patent law, provided that no other law prevents
    enforcement of the patent.” 
    Id. at 701.
        In explanation, the court observed that the patent
    grant of § 154 is a “right to exclude,” which “may be
    waived in whole or in part,” “subject to patent, contract,
    antitrust, and any other applicable law, as well as equita-
    ble considerations such as are reflected in the law of
    patent misuse.” 
    Mallinckrodt, 976 F.2d at 703
    . It noted
    that the Supreme Court had held that two particular
    types of restrictions in sales exceeded the legitimate scope
    of patent rights, so that the patentee did not retain its
    patent rights against a buyer’s sale or use of a patented
    article in violation of those particular conditions: resale-
    price-maintenance conditions, Bauer, 
    229 U.S. 1
    ; Straus
    v. Victor Talking Machine Co., 
    243 U.S. 490
    (1917); Bos-
    ton Store of Chicago v. American Graphophone Co., 
    246 U.S. 8
    (1918), and tying arrangements requiring use of
    non-patented articles with the patented one, Motion
    Picture Patents Co. v. Universal Film Mfg. Co., 
    243 U.S. 502
    (1917). 
    Mallinckrodt, 976 F.2d at 704
    . The Mallinck-
    rodt court explained that those cases “did not hold, and it
    did not follow, that all restrictions accompanying the sale
    of patented goods were deemed illegal.” 
    Id. LEXMARK INT’L,
    INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         27
    The court then described the key Supreme Court
    precedent, General Talking Pictures. As the Mallinckrodt
    court observed, in General Talking Pictures “the patentee
    had authorized the licensee to make and sell amplifiers
    embodying the patented invention for a specified use
    (home radios),” and “[t]he defendant had purchased the
    patented amplifier from the manufacturing licensee, with
    knowledge of the patentee’s restriction on use,” but used
    it contrary to the restriction. 
    Id. at 705.
    The Supreme
    Court held that the defendant was liable for infringement;
    it “observed that a restrictive license to a particular use
    was permissible, and treated the purchaser’s unauthor-
    ized use as infringement of the patent.” 
    Id. This court
    noted that the Supreme Court in General Talking Pictures
    “did not decide the situation where the patentee was the
    manufacturer” and seller. 
    Id. This court
    then held that
    to distinguish the patentee sale (at issue in Mallinckrodt)
    from the licensee sale (at issue in General Talking Pic-
    tures) would be to make “formalistic distinctions of no
    economic consequence.” 
    Id. Finally, the
    court described “a group of cases in which
    the Supreme Court considered and affirmed the basic
    principles that unconditional sale of a patented device
    exhausts the patentee’s right to control the purchaser’s
    use of the device; and that the sale of patented goods, like
    other goods, can be conditioned.” 
    Id. at 706.
    This court
    noted that, insofar as several cases ruling against patent-
    ees’ claims discussed or involved sales, the sales were not
    made under restrictions as to use. 
    Id. at 707
    (discussing
    Bloomer, 55 U.S. (14 How.) 539; Adams v. Burke, 84 U.S.
    (17 Wall.) 453 (1873); Keeler v. Standard Folding Bed Co.,
    
    157 U.S. 659
    (1895)). The court also noted the statement
    in Mitchell v. Hawley that “[s]ales of the kind may be
    made by the patentee with or without conditions,” 83 U.S.
    (16 Wall.) 544, 548 (1873), and the holding of Mitchell
    that a purchaser of a patented machine “licensed for use
    28              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    only during the original term of the patent” was liable for
    infringement for using the machine past that term when
    the patent term was 
    extended. 976 F.2d at 707
    .
    The court in Mallinckrodt concluded that “[u]nless the
    condition violates some other law or policy (in the patent
    field, notably the misuse or antitrust law, e.g., United
    States v. Univis Lens Co., 
    316 U.S. 241
    (1942)), private
    parties retain the freedom to contract concerning condi-
    tions of 
    sale.” 976 F.2d at 708
    . Thus, unless a sale re-
    striction is improper under some other body of law,
    whether within the Patent Act or outside it, a patentee’s
    own sale of its patented article subject to a clearly com-
    municated restriction does not confer authority to sell or
    use the article in violation of that restriction, i.e., does not
    exhaust the patentee’s § 271 rights against such conduct
    involving that article. Since Mallinckrodt, we have fol-
    lowed that principle. B. Braun Med., Inc. v. Abbott Labs.,
    
    124 F.3d 1419
    , 1426 (Fed. Cir. 1997); Princo Corp. v. Int’l
    Trade Comm’n, 
    616 F.3d 1318
    , 1328 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (en
    banc).
    B
    The district court concluded in this case that Quanta
    overturned the Mallinckrodt rule as to a patentee’s sale of
    a patented article subject to a clearly communicated
    single-use/no-resale restriction. But no issue as to such a
    sale was presented for decision or decided in Quanta. And
    the Supreme Court in Quanta did not address the distinc-
    tion between patentee sales and licensee sales on which
    the argument for overturning Mallinckrodt rests.
    Quanta did not involve a patentee’s sale at all, let
    alone one subject to a restriction or, more particularly, a
    single-use/no-resale restriction. Quanta involved a sale
    made (to computer maker Quanta) not by the patentee
    (LGE) but by a manufacturing licensee (chip maker Intel),
    which the patentee had authorized to make and sell the
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         29
    articles at issue (chips for installation in computers that
    would then be covered by LGE’s 
    patents). 553 U.S. at 623
    –25. And the patentee’s authorization to the licensee
    to make (the first) sales was not subject to any conditions,
    much less conditions to be embodied in those sales. 
    Id. at 636–38.
    While Intel had certain other contractual obliga-
    tions to LGE regarding notice to Intel’s purchasers, nei-
    ther party contended that Intel breached those
    obligations, and in any event, the Court repeatedly stated
    that the relevant LGE-Intel contract gave Intel an unre-
    stricted authorization to sell the articles. 
    Id. at 636–37
    (“Intel’s authority to sell its products embodying the LGE
    Patents was not conditioned on the notice or on Quanta’s
    decision to abide by LGE’s directions in that notice.”); 
    id. at 637
    (“The License Agreement authorized Intel to sell
    products that practiced the LGE Patents. No conditions
    limited Intel’s authority to sell products substantially
    embodying the patents.”); 
    id. at 638
    (“Nothing in the
    License Agreement limited Intel’s ability to sell its prod-
    ucts practicing the LGE Patents.”).
    In short, Quanta did not involve the issue presented
    here. The facts defining the issues for decision, and the
    issues decided, were at least two steps removed from the
    present case. There were no patentee sales, and there
    were no restrictions on the sales made by the licensee.
    The two main issues decided by the Court in Quanta
    have no bearing on the issue of restricted sales by a
    patentee. The Court decided that exhaustion applies to
    method claims. 
    Id. at 628–30.
    And the Court decided
    “the extent to which a product must embody a patent in
    order to trigger exhaustion.” 
    Id. at 630;
    see 
    id. at 630–35.
        Only the third issue addressed by the Court in Quan-
    ta concerns restrictions on sales—though not patentees’
    sales—and the Court’s discussion of that issue does not
    undermine Mallinckrodt’s ruling that a patentee can
    30             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    preserve its patent rights through restrictions on its sales.
    As just described, when LGE invoked precedent such as
    General Talking Pictures that make clear that patentees
    are able to preserve their patent rights through re-
    strictions on the sales they authorizes licensees to make,
    
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 636
    , the Court’s response was to
    conclude that there simply were no such restrictions on
    LGE’s grant to Intel of the authority to sell. 
    Id. at 636–
    38. The Court thus had prominently in view the principle
    that, through at least one path, a patentee can reserve its
    patent rights through sale restrictions. The Court found
    the principle inapplicable to the case before it because of
    the absence of any restriction, and the Court said nothing
    to cast doubt on the principle. Indeed, the Court indirect-
    ly underscored the principle when it quoted Motion Pic-
    ture Patents as stating “the rule” of exhaustion in terms
    expressly based on an “ ‘unconditional sale.’ ” 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 626
    (quoting Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 516
    ). And the Court did not consider whether or decide
    that the principle was limited to contracted-out, as distin-
    guished from in-house, manufacturing and sales, or even
    recognize and discuss such a distinction.
    Inferring disapproval of Mallinckrodt by the Supreme
    Court in Quanta is unwarranted for another reason. The
    decision of this court under review in Quanta relied
    centrally on Mallinckrodt and its successor case, B. Braun
    Medical. See LG Elecs., Inc. v. Bizcom Elecs., Inc., 
    453 F.3d 1364
    , 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2006). In the Supreme Court,
    the government prominently featured an argument that
    Mallinckrodt was incorrect and should be repudiated,
    U.S. Amicus Brief at 18–24, Quanta (No. 06-937), 
    2007 WL 3353102
    , and Quanta presented similar criticisms of
    Mallinckrodt, Brief for Petitioner at 13, 30–33, Quanta
    (No. 06-937), 
    2007 WL 3276505
    . Yet the Supreme Court
    said nothing about Mallinckrodt or B. Braun Medical.
    The evident explanation is that, at a minimum, no ques-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          31
    tion was presented for decision—or was being decided—as
    to the effect a restriction on the first sale, whether made
    by a patentee or by a manufacturing licensee, would have
    on preservation of § 271 rights.
    C
    For the foregoing reasons, the challenge to Mallinck-
    rodt in the present case cannot rest on what the Supreme
    Court in Quanta ruled about the issues it said it was
    addressing or the facts and issues presented for decision.
    The challenge asserts that any post-sale restriction in a
    patentee’s own sale fails, as a matter of law, to preserve
    the patentee’s § 271 rights against unauthorized sales or
    uses. The argument rests ultimately on language the
    Court used in Quanta in introducing the exhaustion
    doctrine before defining the specific issues for decision—
    as it has done elsewhere.
    The Court in Quanta said: “The longstanding doctrine
    of patent exhaustion provides that the initial authorized
    sale of a patented item terminates all patent rights to
    that 
    item.” 553 U.S. at 625
    . More recently, the Court
    used similar “authorized sale” language in introducing the
    exhaustion doctrine in Bowman v. Monsanto Co., which
    held that a patentee, by selling patented seeds, does not
    lose its § 271 right to prevent the buyer from making new
    seeds. The Court said: “Under the doctrine of patent
    exhaustion, the authorized sale of a patented article gives
    the purchaser, or any subsequent owner, a right to use or
    resell that article.” 
    133 S. Ct. 1761
    , 1764 (2013). See also,
    e.g., 
    Univis, 316 U.S. at 249
    (“authorized sale”); Dissent at
    3–5.
    The challenge to Mallinckrodt asserts that any sale of
    a patented article by a patentee, even when the rights
    granted are expressly restricted, is automatically an
    “authorized sale,” causing the patentee to lose all § 271
    rights in the item sold. That consequence follows, the
    32             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    argument goes, no matter how clearly the patentee states
    an otherwise-lawful restriction on what authority is being
    conferred and what authority is being withheld. In this
    view, exhaustion law embodies a sharp distinction be-
    tween a sale by a patentee (for which restrictions are to be
    disregarded) and a sale made by another person author-
    ized by the patentee to sell, i.e., a licensee as in General
    Talking Pictures (for which a patentee may preserve its
    § 271 rights by restricting the licensee’s authorized sales).
    That is an extraordinary doctrinal consequence to find
    established by the Supreme Court’s use of the phrase
    “authorized sale.” No one suggests that Bowman (con-
    cerning new articles) intended such consequences. And
    there are good reasons not to find any such implied mean-
    ing in Quanta either.
    1
    Most obviously, as discussed above, the Court was not
    addressing the patentee-sale/licensee-sale distinction.
    Among other things, the Court did not consider the issues
    presented by making such a distinction, such as where
    the line would sensibly be drawn along the spectrum that
    includes original patentees, assignees, exclusive licensees,
    and non-exclusive licensees. Such distinctions matter for
    determining who may bring infringement suits, but they
    can involve detailed inquiries into the contractual rela-
    tionships between an original patent owner and others
    (here, a first seller), based on information a buyer may
    have no ability or reason to acquire. See, e.g., Independ-
    ent Wireless Telegraph Co. v. Radio Corp. of Am., 
    269 U.S. 459
    , 464–69 (1926); Crown Die & 
    Tool, 261 U.S. at 40
    –41;
    E.W. Bliss Co. v. United States, 
    253 U.S. 187
    , 192 (1920);
    Pope Mfg. Co. v. Gormully & Jeffery Mfg. Co., 
    144 U.S. 248
    (1892); Waterman v. Mackenzie, 
    138 U.S. 252
    , 255–56
    (1891); 8 Chisum § 21.03. Nothing in Quanta suggests
    that the Court either considered such issues or intended
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          33
    to build such inquiries into the exhaustion doctrine by
    making the distinction the government now urges.
    2
    One cannot infer the contrary from the immediate
    context of the “authorized sale” phrase, i.e., from the
    several decisions that Quanta briefly describes in the
    paragraph it introduces with the “authorized sale” short-
    
    hand. 553 U.S. at 625
    . Those decisions did not involve
    restricted patentee sales of patented articles. And the
    Quanta Court, in describing those cases, said nothing to
    indicate adoption of a patentee-sale/licensee-sale distinc-
    tion.
    Thus, Bloomer v. McQuewan identifies no sale of a pa-
    tented article as involved in the case. During an initial
    patent term, a license granted to the defendants (via
    Collins and Smith, then Barnet, then Warner and
    McQuewan) the right to make patented machines and use
    them “without any limitation as to the time for which
    they were to be used.” 55 U.S. (14 How.) at 553; 
    id. at 540–41,
    548. When the defendants made and used such
    machines, and the patent term was later extended, the
    Supreme Court held that the unrestricted right to use did
    not end when the earlier patent term ended, because the
    right to use did not come from the patent statute, which
    grants only rights to exclude, not rights to practice. 
    Id. at 549–50.
    The Court discussed purchased articles, but with
    no restrictions at issue, it did not decide the effect that
    any restrictions would have. 
    Id. Bloomer v.
    Millinger, 68 U.S. (1 Wall.) 340 (1864), is
    similar in its facts to McQuewan. The Court held that
    Millinger, who “constructed the machines and put them in
    operation under the authority of the patentee or his
    assigns” during a first term extension, was not subject to
    an infringement action for continued use during a second
    term extension. 
    Id. at 349,
    350. The Court made no
    distinction between construction and purchase, or be-
    34             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    tween purchases “from the patentee . . . or from any other
    person by him authorized to” make the sale, on the issues
    addressed. 
    Id. at 350,
    351. In referring to a constructor
    or purchaser of a patented machine having “also acquired
    the right to use and operate it during the lifetime of the
    patent,” 
    id. at 350
    (emphasis added), the Court implicitly
    recognized that a purchaser might not acquire a full right
    to use an acquired article.
    And in Adams v. Burke, the Boston regional assignee
    (Lockhart & Seelye) sold patented coffin lids to Burke,
    “without condition or restriction.” 84 U.S. (17 Wall.) at
    455 (emphasis added). When Burke used the lids outside
    the Boston territory, for burials within a different territo-
    ry where Adams was the regional assignee, Adams sued.
    The Court held that, for such an unrestricted sale, “there
    is no restriction on their use to be implied for the benefit
    of the patentee or his assignees or licensees.” 
    Id. at 457
    (bold italics added).
    When the Supreme Court in Quanta moved beyond
    the Bloomer cases and Adams, it likewise did not advance
    a patentee-sale/licensee-sale 
    distinction. 553 U.S. at 625
    –
    26. The Court’s next paragraph recounts the develop-
    ments of the 1910s: The Court initially adopted a broad
    greater-includes-the-lesser approach allowing preserva-
    tion of patent rights through even otherwise-unlawful
    restrictions, such as tie-ins, Henry v. A.B. Dick Co., 
    224 U.S. 1
    (1912); but the Court quickly rejected that broad
    principle and its application to resale price maintenance,
    Bauer, 
    229 U.S. 1
    (1913), and then to tie-ins, Motion
    Picture Patents, 
    243 U.S. 502
    (1917), the latter expressly
    overruling A.B. Dick. The Court in Quanta, summarizing
    that history, said nothing about the patentee-
    sale/licensee-sale distinction; and it recognized that the
    “rule” that emerged, as quoted from Motion Picture Pa-
    tents, was one based on “ ‘a single, unconditional sale.’ 
    553 U.S. at 626
    (emphasis added).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          35
    The Court in Quanta then proceeded to a longer dis-
    cussion of Univis. That discussion made no patentee-
    sale/licensee-sale distinction.    Rather, it recounted
    Univis’s application of exhaustion to sales of articles that
    may not be strictly covered by the patent but that suffi-
    ciently embody the 
    patent. 553 U.S. at 627
    –28.
    In no part of the Court’s discussion did the Court con-
    sider which cases involved “patentee” sales and which
    “licensee” sales. Indeed, it is not always easy to tell where
    the facts of each case fall on the spectrum from original
    patentee through non-exclusive licensee. See, e.g., 
    Bauer, 229 U.S. at 8
    (seller was either “agent” or “licensee”). The
    Court in Quanta did not say that the inquiry mattered.
    And in Univis, the Court did the opposite of suggesting
    that the distinction matters: it affirmatively stated that it
    was treating the patent owner (Univis Corporation) and
    the licensee-seller (Lens Company) as the same for pur-
    poses of its 
    analysis. 316 U.S. at 243
    .
    3
    In these circumstances, it would read too much into
    the Court’s use of the phrase “authorized sale” to draw
    the government’s conclusion—making the sharp patentee-
    sale/licensee-sale distinction—without full analysis of
    statutory, precedential, and other considerations. Full
    analysis of the relevant legal context is necessary.
    Such analysis would be required regardless, but it is
    important to note that the phrase “authorized sale” does
    not, by its words alone, compel the government’s conclu-
    sion. It has long been a familiar feature of our legal
    landscape that property rights in a particular thing—like
    the separate interests in making, selling, using, etc., an
    invention—are viewed as a “bundle” of rights (or sticks)
    36             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    that can generally be transferred separately. 7 Of course,
    particular legal regimes, for various purposes, commonly
    identify the transfer of particular rights as determinative
    of a “sale.” In determining which transfers are decisive,
    context matters. And here the context is a statute that
    identifies separate rights of manufacture, sale, use, etc.,
    and the precedential setting is one that expressly recog-
    nizes the possibility of separating the rights in a patented
    article. See, e.g., Mitchell, 83 U.S. (16 Wall.) at 547 (ex-
    haustion exists when a patentee “has himself constructed
    a machine and sold it without any conditions, or author-
    ized another to construct, sell, and deliver it, or to con-
    struct and use and operate it, without any conditions . . .”;
    “the owner of the machine, whether he built it or pur-
    chased it, if he has also acquired the right to use and
    operate it during the lifetime of the patent, may continue
    to use it”) (emphases added); Bloomer v. Millinger, 68 U.S.
    (1 Wall.) at 350. Moreover, the statutory purpose of the
    inquiry here is to identify what sales confer “authority” on
    the buyer to engage in distinct, otherwise-infringing acts.
    7  See, e.g., Horne v. Dep’t of Agric., 
    135 S. Ct. 2419
    ,
    2428 (2015); Tahoe-Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe
    Reg’l Planning Agency, 
    535 U.S. 302
    , 327 (2002); New
    York Times Co. v. Tasini, 
    533 U.S. 483
    , 495–96 (2001);
    Keystone Bituminous Coal Ass’n v. DeBenedictis, 
    480 U.S. 470
    , 500–01 (1987); United States v. Sec. Indus.
    Bank, 
    459 U.S. 70
    , 75–76 (1982); Loretto v. Teleprompter
    Manhattan CATV Corp., 
    458 U.S. 419
    , 433 (1982); Kaiser
    Aetna v. United States, 
    444 U.S. 164
    , 176 (1979); Fidelity-
    Phila. Trust Co. v. Smith, 
    356 U.S. 274
    , 278–79 (1958);
    Guggenheim v. Rasquin, 
    312 U.S. 254
    , 257–58 (1941);
    Charles C. Steward Mach. Co. v. Davis, 
    301 U.S. 548
    ,
    580–81 (1937); Henneford v. Silas Mason Co., 
    300 U.S. 577
    , 582 (1937).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          37
    Context is particularly important where, as here, the
    phrase being interpreted comes from judicial opinions not
    directly deciding the point at issue. Chief Justice Mar-
    shall wrote for the Court almost 200 years ago: “It is a
    maxim not to be disregarded, that general expressions, in
    every opinion, are to be taken in connection with the case
    in which those expressions are used.” Cohens v. Virginia,
    19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 264, 399–400 (1821); see Armour & Co.
    v. Wantock, 
    323 U.S. 126
    , 132–33 (1944) (per Jackson, J.)
    (“[W]ords of our opinions are to be read in the light of the
    facts of the case under discussion. . . . General expressions
    transposed to other facts are often misleading.”). 8 We
    bear that maxim in mind in applying the body of Supreme
    Court case law on exhaustion: that body of precedent
    contains no decision against a patentee’s infringement
    assertion in the present circumstances, and the decisions
    on related circumstances require careful reading to de-
    termine the best understanding of what issues the Court
    actually decided.
    8    See also Ark. Game & Fish Comm’n v. United
    States, 
    133 S. Ct. 511
    , 520 (2012) (quoting Cohens); Unit-
    ed States v. Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
    , 2544–45 (2012);
    Illinois v. Lidster, 
    540 U.S. 419
    , 424 (2004); Reiter v.
    Sonotone Corp., 
    442 U.S. 330
    , 341 (1979); United Gas
    Improvement Co. v. Cont’l Oil Co., 
    381 U.S. 392
    , 404
    (1965); Wright v. United States, 
    302 U.S. 583
    , 593–94
    (1938); Sterling v. Constantin, 
    287 U.S. 378
    , 400 (1932)
    (“the general language of the opinion must be taken in
    connection with the point actually decided”); Pacific S.S.
    Co. v. Peterson, 
    278 U.S. 130
    , 136 (1928); Bramwell v.
    U.S. Fid. & Guar.Co., 
    269 U.S. 483
    , 489 (1926) (“It is a
    rule of universal application that general expressions
    used in a court’s opinion are to be taken in connection
    with the case under consideration.”).
    38             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    D
    We conclude that a patentee may preserve its § 271
    rights when itself selling a patented article, through
    clearly communicated, otherwise-lawful restrictions, as it
    may do when contracting out the manufacturing and sale.
    1
    That conclusion follows naturally from the statute.
    Congress straightforwardly prescribed, in § 271(a), that a
    sale or use of a patented article “without authority” is an
    infringement. Under that language, a clear denial of
    authority leaves a buyer without the denied authority.
    The exhaustion rule for unrestricted sales readily fits
    the language of § 271(a). It is reasonable for the courts to
    treat a patentee-made or patentee-authorized sale of a
    patented article (without distinction) as presumptively
    granting “authority” to the purchaser to use it and resell
    it. Such an approach recognizes the utility of having a
    default rule for determining whether authority has been
    conferred in the many circumstances where an express
    conferral is missing. And it chooses as the default a
    principle that sensibly accords with parties’ likely expec-
    tations as to a domestic sale.
    But it is quite a different matter to treat a sale as con-
    ferring on the buyer the very authority that is being
    denied through clearly communicated restrictions.
    Mallinckrodt sensibly rejects that counter-textual result.
    Unless granting “authority” is to be a legal fiction, a
    patentee does not grant authority by denying it. And that
    is so for patentee sales and licensee sales alike, i.e.,
    whether the patentee denies the authority to its direct
    purchaser or to one purchasing through a manufacturing
    licensee. For the same reason, the result does not reason-
    ably reflect market participants’ expectations: a buyer
    cannot reasonably expect that the seller is conferring
    authority that the seller is expressly denying, whether the
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           39
    seller is the patentee or a manufacturing licensee. The
    statutory question of authority neither allows denials to
    be grants nor logically depends on whether there is an
    intermediary between the patentee and the first buyer.
    In short, the government’s position would create a
    rule of court-made law that runs counter to, rather than
    accords with, the statutory definition of actionable in-
    fringement. An exhaustion rule should fit rather than
    contradict the statutory text.
    2
    Under longstanding Supreme Court precedent, a pa-
    tentee may preserve its patent rights against downstream
    buyers by arranging with someone else, even a non-
    exclusive licensee, to make and sell patented articles,
    under clearly stated restrictions on post-sale activities.
    There is no good reason that a patentee that makes and
    sells the articles itself should be denied the ability that is
    guaranteed to a non-practicing-entity patentee.           No
    precedent requires a contrary conclusion.
    a. The Supreme Court has recognized that a patentee
    may preserve its rights against infringement by establish-
    ing restrictions accompanying the sale of the patented
    article (communicated at the time of sale), including
    restrictions on the buyer’s post-acquisition use. That
    recognition is implicit in the Motion Picture Patents
    statement of the exhaustion rule as based on an “uncondi-
    tional” sale, as quoted in 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 626
    . More
    affirmatively, the Court upheld a claim of infringement on
    that basis in Mitchell v. Hawley, where the licensee seller
    was under a restriction as to the (temporal) scope of rights
    it could and did convey when selling the patented ma-
    chine. Mitchell involved a licensee seller, but the Court
    stated the exhaustion principles in terms keyed to the
    absence of conditions and applicable to patentee sales:
    40              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    [W]hen [the patentee] has himself constructed a
    machine and sold it without any conditions, or au-
    thorized another to construct, sell, and deliver it,
    or to construct and use and operate it, without
    any conditions, and the consideration has been
    paid to him for the thing patented, the rule is well
    established that the patentee must be understood
    to have parted to that extent with all his exclusive
    right, and that he ceases to have any interest
    whatever in the patented machine so sold and de-
    livered or authorized to be constructed and oper-
    ated.
    83 U.S. (16 Wall.) at 547; see 
    id. at 548
    (sales “may be
    made by the patentee with or without conditions, as in
    other cases, but where the sale is absolute, and without
    any conditions, the rule is well settled that the purchaser
    may continue to use the implement or machine purchased
    until it is worn out”). 9 Although Mitchell involved a
    licensee sale, its language did not distinguish licensees’
    sales from patentees’ sales in the respects discussed, and
    it was not long before the Court invoked those formula-
    tions in a patentee-sale case. 
    Keeler, 157 U.S. at 662
    –63.
    9   We do not see a sufficient basis to read Mitchell’s
    “without conditions” language as limited to sales in which
    title is not transferred until a condition is fulfilled (some-
    times called “conditional sales”). The terminology in
    Mitchell is not limited to “conditional sales,” and the
    Court later used the term “conditions” more broadly,
    including in discussions of Mitchell. See Motion Picture
    
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 506
    , 514–15; A.B. 
    Dick, 224 U.S. at 12
    , 16, 19; In re Paper-Bag Cases, 
    105 U.S. 766
    , 770–71
    (1882). In any event, the language of Mitchell is just one
    part of the analysis, of which General Talking Pictures is
    the most significant precedent.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         41
    Most importantly, the Court squarely held in the Gen-
    eral Talking Pictures case that a patentee could preserve
    its infringement rights against unauthorized uses by
    restricting manufacturing licensees’ authority to sell for
    such uses. General Talking Pictures Corp. v. Western
    Elec. Co., 
    304 U.S. 175
    , opinion on rehearing at 
    305 U.S. 124
    (1938). Companies holding patent rights in certain
    amplifiers (AT&T, Western Electric, RCA) licensed the
    American Transformer Company to make and sell ampli-
    fiers. The Transformer Company “was a mere licensee
    under a nonexclusive license, amounting to no more than
    ‘a mere waiver of the right to sue.’ 
    304 U.S. at 181
    (quoting De Forest Radio Telephone & Telegraph Co. v.
    United States, 
    273 U.S. 236
    , 242 (1927)). The license
    permitted sales only “for radio amateur reception, radio
    experimental reception, and home broadcast reception,”
    not “for use in theaters as a part of talking picture equip-
    ment.” 
    Id. at 180.
    The Transformer Company neverthe-
    less sold amplifiers to General Talking Pictures for
    theater use in violation of the restriction, and General
    Talking Pictures “had actual knowledge that [the Trans-
    former Company] had no license to make such a sale.” 
    Id. When the
    patentees sued General Talking Pictures (the
    buyer) for infringement, the Supreme Court, based on
    Mitchell, affirmed the judgment of infringement. 
    Id. at 181–82.
         The Court came to the same conclusion when it recon-
    sidered the question on rehearing. It said: “Any use
    beyond the valid terms of a license is, of course, an in-
    fringement of a 
    patent.” 305 U.S. at 126
    . Moreover,
    “[t]hat a restrictive license is legal seems clear.” 
    Id. at 127
    (citing Mitchell). The use restriction was a lawful
    one, the Court observed, and “[a]s the restriction was
    legal and the amplifiers were made and sold outside the
    scope of the license, the effect is precisely the same as if
    no license whatsoever had been granted to Transformer
    Company.” 
    Id. General Talking
    Pictures, knowing of the
    42             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    restriction, was “liable because it ha[d] used the invention
    without license to do so.” 
    Id. Thus, General
    Talking
    Pictures was held to be liable for patent infringement. It
    was not held liable for breach of contract; indeed, it had
    no contractual relationship with the patentees.
    b. The Supreme Court thus held that a patentee can
    preserve its patent rights by authorizing a manufacturing
    licensee to make and sell a patented article under an
    otherwise-proper restriction, including a restriction on the
    buyer’s post-purchase use. When the buyer, knowing of
    the restriction at the time of purchase, subsequently uses
    the article in violation of the restriction, the buyer is
    infringing.
    To distinguish the present patentee-sale situation, the
    government must contend that a patentee cannot pre-
    serve its patent rights against uses of a patented article
    contrary to known use restrictions if, instead of licensing
    someone else to make and sell the article, it chooses to
    make and sell the article itself. That contention would
    draw a sharp line between practicing-entity patentees
    (those who themselves make and sell the articles at issue)
    and non-practicing-entity patentees (those who do not).
    Non-practicing-entities would have greater power to
    maintain their patent rights than practicing entities.
    The government points to no basis in the policy of the
    patent statute for making that distinction. Nothing in the
    patent statute suggests that patentees should have to
    contract out their manufacture and sale of patented
    articles to preserve their § 271 rights. The essential
    tradeoff of the patent system—to provide a market-based
    reward in exchange for disclosure—is equally applicable
    whether the patentee sells or licenses another to make
    and sell. The Federal Trade Commission made the fun-
    damental point as follows: “A patentee can obtain a
    financial reward for its patent by producing a product
    that incorporates the invention or by transferring the
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          43
    technology through a patent license or sale to a manufac-
    turer who develops and produces a product. The market
    reward earned by the patentee in either case will depend
    upon the extent to which consumers prefer the patented
    invention over alternatives and prior technology, which
    helps determine the invention’s economic value.” See Fed.
    Trade Comm’n, The Evolving IP Marketplace: Aligning
    Patent Notice and Remedies with Competition 139 (2011)
    (footnote attached to “market reward” states: “The ‘mar-
    ket reward’ defined here is the amount the patentee could
    have earned by either selling a patented product or licens-
    ing the patented technology in the absence of infringe-
    ment.”). The distinction urged on us appears to be
    unjustifiably formalistic, not founded in relevant economic
    substance. 
    Mallinckrodt, 976 F.2d at 705
    .
    The proposed distinction would also introduce practi-
    cal problems. Where would the line be drawn along the
    spectrum from original patentees to assignees (e.g., re-
    gional assignees) to exclusive licensees (exclusivity being
    possible as to some but not all of the § 154 rights) to non-
    exclusive licensees? As we already have noted, patent law
    makes those distinctions for purposes of identifying who
    may bring infringement actions, but the distinctions are
    sometimes difficult to pin down and dependent on de-
    tailed inquiries into contractual provisions. When pur-
    chasing a patented article from a particular seller under
    specified restrictions that are not independently improp-
    er, how is the buyer to know where the seller falls along
    the spectrum—and, hence, whether the buyer may ignore
    the restrictions without fear of patent infringement?
    c. The government advances a doctrinal defense of the
    patentee-sale/licensee-sale distinction on which it rests its
    challenge to Mallinckrodt. The government begins its
    argument on the Mallinckrodt issue by first noting the
    absence of statutory text supporting its position and then
    turning, in the next sentence, to a passage from Bloomer
    v. McQuewan to supply a foundation for its argument.
    44             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    U.S. Br. 5. It asserts that “[t]his distinction stems from
    the fact that licensees exercise a portion of the patentee’s
    rights.” 
    Id. at 8
    (citing Bloomer v. McQuewan, 55 U.S. (14
    How.) at 549–50). But that key distinction is wrong as a
    matter of basic patent law, misreads Bloomer v. McQue-
    wan, and cannot distinguish General Talking Pictures
    from this case. A mere non-exclusive licensee, as in
    General Talking Pictures, possesses no portion of the
    rights granted by Congress in the patent.
    Patent rights are only rights to exclude, not rights to
    practice. See 5 Chisum § 16.02[1]. Among the “clearly
    established principles” of patent law, as the Supreme
    Court described them in Crown Die & Tool Co., are that
    “the government did not confer on the patentee the right
    himself to make, use or vend his own invention” and “in
    its essence all that the government conferred by the
    patent was the right to exclude others from making, using
    or vending his 
    invention.” 261 U.S. at 35
    ; see 
    Bauer, 229 U.S. at 10
    (“The right to make, use, and sell an invented
    article is not derived from the patent law. . . . The [patent
    statute] secured to the inventor the exclusive right to
    make, use, and vend the thing patented, and consequently
    to prevent others from exercising like privileges without
    the consent of the patentee.”); Continental Paper 
    Bag, 210 U.S. at 425
    ; Bloomer v. McQuewan, 55 U.S. (14 How.) at
    549 (“The franchise which the patent grants, consists
    altogether in the right to exclude every one from making,
    using, or vending the thing patented, without the permis-
    sion of the patentee. This is all that he obtains by the
    patent.”); Western Elec. Co. v. Pacent Reproducer Corp., 
    42 F.2d 116
    , 118 (2d Cir. 1930); see also Dawson Chem. Co. v.
    Rohm & Haas Co., 
    448 U.S. 176
    , 215 (1980) (“long-settled
    view that the essence of a patent grant is the right to
    exclude others from profiting by the patented invention”).
    It is for that reason, for example, that a patentee may be
    prevented from practicing its own patent by another’s
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            45
    patent. See 
    Cantrell, 117 U.S. at 694
    ; 
    Blake, 94 U.S. at 733
    ; Smith, 88 U.S. (21 Wall.) at 118–19.
    A patentee exercises its congressionally granted
    rights only when it invokes its power to exclude others,
    not when it sells its product. Similarly, the congressional-
    ly granted right to exclude may be viewed as being shared
    by certain exclusive licensees, who, in appropriate circum-
    stances (e.g., with joinder of the patent owner), may bring
    infringement actions against others to enforce exclusivity.
    See Independent 
    Wireless, 269 U.S. at 464
    –69 (discussing
    cases); 8 Chisum § 21.03[2]. But an exclusive licensee, in
    merely selling (or making, using, etc.) a patented article,
    is not exercising any power conferred by the patent stat-
    ute. That is a fortiori true of a non-exclusive licensee, like
    the licensee in General Talking Pictures, which has no
    exclusivity protections at all. Thus, although the gov-
    ernment’s assertion that “licensees stand in patentees’
    shoes” in sharing certain patent-granted rights is true in
    a significant respect as to exclusive licensees, U.S. Br. 8, it
    is not true as to non-exclusive licensees—like the licensee
    in General Talking Pictures. Accordingly, a patentee’s
    ability to preserve its patent rights (rights to exclude) by
    arranging for sales to be made by a non-exclusive licen-
    see, like the Transformer Company, cannot rest on a
    premise that “licensees exercise a portion of the patentee’s
    rights.” U.S. Br. 8.
    Bloomer v. McQuewan, on which the government re-
    lies from the outset of its argument, U.S. Br. 5, does not
    say otherwise. The government states that in Bloomer v.
    McQuewan “the Court explained that a purchaser of a
    patented article ‘stands on different ground’ than one who
    obtains a license under the patent,” because the latter
    “ ‘obtains a share in the monopoly . . . derived from, and
    exercised under’ the patent.” 
    Id. (emphasis added)
    (quot-
    ing Bloomer v. McQuewan, 55 U.S. (14 How.) at 549). But
    the Court did not say that about simply “one who obtains
    a license,” like the licensee in General Talking Pictures.
    46             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    What the Court said in Bloomer v. McQuewan—
    immediately after the sentences stating that the patent
    gives the patentee only “the right to exclude”—is that
    “when [the patentee] sells the exclusive privilege of mak-
    ing or vending [the invention] for use in a particular
    place,” the privilege ends with the patent that creates it.
    55 U.S. (14 How.) at 549 (emphasis added). That state-
    ment is about the exclusivity right, i.e., the right to ex-
    clude others, which an assignee or exclusive licensee
    obtains in whole or in part. By its terms, and consistent
    with the just-stated definition of the limited nature of the
    patent franchise, it says nothing about a non-exclusive
    licensee obtaining a share in the monopoly. The Court
    then contrasted, as “stand[ing] on different ground,” one
    who simply buys a patented device, which “[t]he inventor
    might lawfully sell to him, whether he had a patent or
    not, if no other patentee stood in his way.” 
    Id. The buyer,
    as mere owner and user of the device, lacks any patent-
    granted right to exclude, i.e., “exercises no rights created
    by the act of Congress,” so whatever rights it has do not
    end with the patent’s expiration. 
    Id. The distinction
    was
    not between a sale from a patentee and a sale from a bare
    (non-exclusive) licensee. In short, General Talking Pic-
    tures cannot be distinguished on the doctrinal basis the
    government invokes.
    d. No Supreme Court decision compels adoption of the
    distinction the government urges. As Impression noted at
    oral argument, it is undisputed that no Supreme Court
    decision has involved a single-use/no-resale restriction on
    a patentee’s sale and found the restriction insufficient to
    preserve the patentee’s infringement rights against a
    buyer engaging in the forbidden reuse or resale. More
    generally, no Supreme Court precedent denies a patentee
    the ability to preserve its § 271 rights, by a clear commu-
    nication of an otherwise-permissible restriction, when it
    sells the patented article itself, just as the patentee may
    do, under the General Talking Pictures principle, when
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        47
    contracting out the making and selling of the patented
    article.
    We have already noted the limitations on what was
    presented and decided in the Bloomer cases (rejecting
    implied temporal use restrictions) and Adams (rejecting
    implied geographic use restrictions). In 1881, the Su-
    preme Court summarized the relevant law: “The right of
    the owner of a patented machine, without any conditions
    attached to his ownership, to continue the use of his
    machine during an extended term of the patent, is well
    settled.” In re Paper-Bag 
    Cases, 105 U.S. at 770
    –71
    (emphasis added) (citing Bloomer v. McQuewan, Mitchell,
    Adams, and Chaffee v. Boston Belting Co., 63 U.S. (22
    How.) 217 (1859)). In so stating the law, in terms that
    tied exhaustion to the absence of conditions, the Paper-
    Bag Cases Court cited at least one case, Adams, involving
    a sale made by an assignee (a patentee under patent
    law). 10
    The Court in Hobbie v. Jennison, 
    149 U.S. 355
    (1893),
    described and followed the holding of Adams that, when
    an assignee sold machines, “there was no restriction on
    their use to be implied, for the benefit of the patentee or
    his assignees or 
    licensees.” 149 U.S. at 362
    (emphasis
    added). The Court held that an unrestricted sale of pipe
    in Michigan by the Michigan assignee (Jennison’s firm),
    with full rights to sell it, allowed the buyer to use it in
    Connecticut free of the patent rights belonging to the
    Connecticut assignee (Hobbie).
    10  In Chaffee, which involved Goodyear’s rubber pa-
    tents, the Supreme Court rejected the defendants’ invoca-
    tion of the Bloomer principle, again in a term-extension
    context, explaining that there was no evidence that the
    defendants had ever received any authority to practice the
    patented invention. 63 U.S. (22 How.) at 222–24.
    48             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    In its 1895 decision in Keeler, the Court applied its ex-
    isting precedents, especially Adams and Hobbie. The
    Massachusetts assignee (Standard Folding-Bed) sued
    Keeler when he bought patented beds from the Michigan
    assignee, subject to no restrictions, and brought them to
    Massachusetts for 
    sale. 157 U.S. at 660
    (stating facts
    before opinion starts). The Court noted that in Adams the
    patented articles “were sold to [Burke] without condition
    or restriction,” 
    id. at 663,
    and it concluded that Adams
    “was applicable,” 
    id. at 665.
    The Court also quoted as
    defining the law (in this patentee-sale case) the passage
    set out above from Mitchell (a licensee-sale case). 
    Id. at 663.
    In any event, with no restriction on the sale present,
    the Court followed Adams’ refusal to find one implied by
    the patent law.
    It was against that background that the Court then
    noted: “Whether a patentee may protect himself and his
    assignees by special contracts brought home to the pur-
    chasers is not a question before us,” but “such a question
    would arise as a question of contract, and not as one
    under the inherent meaning and effect of the patent laws.”
    
    Id. at 666
    (emphasis added). That language lends itself to
    use in the government’s argument that sale restrictions
    never preserve patent rights, but give only contract rights.
    But even in Keeler the language does not compel that
    reading, and the later decisional law—most importantly,
    General Talking Pictures—undermines the contract-only
    interpretation.
    Thus, in Keeler itself, the word “inherent” naturally
    ties the language to the modest point based on Adams
    that actually decided Keeler: with no contract restriction
    as part of the sale, an implied one cannot be found in
    patent law itself. That says nothing about the irrelevance
    of an actual contract restriction to preservation of patent
    rights. Moreover, in the licensee-sale context, General
    Talking Pictures establishes that contract restrictions can
    indeed preserve a patentee’s infringement rights and are
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         49
    not merely enforceable under contract law: General
    Talking Pictures, which had no contract with the patent-
    ees, was held liable for patent infringement, not breach of
    any contract with the patentees. Notably, then, in Quan-
    ta, a licensee-sale case like General Talking Pictures, the
    Court quoted the language from Keeler after discussing
    General Talking Pictures (without a hint of disapproval)
    and concluding that, as in Keeler, Adams, and Hobbie,
    there simply was no patentee-imposed contractual re-
    striction applicable to the sales at 
    issue. 553 U.S. at 637
    n.7. And in the present case, as in General Talking
    Pictures, there is no reason to think that the patentee has
    a contract remedy available as a substitute for patent
    infringement: as far as the record before us shows,
    Lexmark has no contractual relationship with Impression.
    In United States v. General Electric Co., 
    272 U.S. 476
    (1926), the Supreme Court rejected the government’s
    antitrust challenge to (among other things) General
    Electric’s licensing of Westinghouse to make and sell
    patented lamps under terms controlling resale prices. See
    Fed. Trade Comm’n v. Actavis, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 2223
    , 2232
    (2013) (describing General Electric). In making a general
    point about patentee sales (not involved in the case), the
    Court said: “It is well settled, as already said, that where
    a patentee makes the patented article, and sells it, he can
    exercise no future control over what the purchaser may
    wish to do with the article after his purchase. It has
    passed beyond the scope of the patentee’s 
    rights.” 272 U.S. at 489
    (citing cases). We read that language to deem
    “settled” only what was settled in the cited precedents—a
    patentee’s sales without restrictions exhaust patent rights
    in the item sold. The cited cases are Adams, Bloomer v.
    McQuewan, Hobbie, Keeler, and Mitchell. They do not go
    beyond that proposition.
    The prominent exhaustion decisions from the 1910s
    do not make the patentee-sale/licensee-sale distinction
    urged by the government here. After A.B. Dick adopted a
    50             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    broad principle that preserved a patentee’s patent-law
    rights against restriction-violating sale, use, etc., even if
    the restrictions were otherwise unlawful—in A.B. Dick, a
    tie-in requiring purchase of unpatented products—the
    Supreme Court repudiated A.B. Dick’s broad principle
    and held particular restrictions improper and therefore
    not effective at preserving patent rights against actions
    contrary to those restrictions. It did so as to tie-ins in
    Motion Picture Patents, overruling A.B. Dick and relying
    on the 1914 Clayton Act, 38 Stat. 730. 
    See 243 U.S. at 517
    . And it did so as to resale price maintenance in
    Bauer, Straus, and finally Boston Store, relying on the
    judicially adopted per se antitrust condemnation of that
    practice in Dr. Miles Medical Co. v. John D. Park & Sons
    Co., 
    220 U.S. 373
    (1911), overruled by Leegin Creative
    Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc., 
    551 U.S. 877
    (2007).
    See 
    Bauer, 229 U.S. at 12
    ; 
    Straus, 243 U.S. at 498
    ; Boston
    
    Store, 246 U.S. at 21
    . But the Court did not rule that all
    restrictions on a patentee’s sale were ineffective to pre-
    serve the patentee’s patent-law rights. Instead, it called
    for an inquiry—in accord with what Mallinckrodt later
    said—into whether a patentee’s restrictions were other-
    wise improper, as by “extend[ing] the scope of its patent
    monopoly.” Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 516
    . And
    the Court did not adopt the line the government suggests
    between patentee sales and licensee sales.
    In its 1942 decision in Univis, the Supreme Court re-
    jected a patent-based defense to the government’s anti-
    trust challenge to resale-price-maintenance restrictions in
    the licensing and selling of eyeglass lenses. The Court
    said that it had two questions before it: first, whether the
    restrictions were “excluded by the patent monopoly from
    the operation of the Sherman Act,” i.e., whether if the
    restrictions were illegal under the Sherman Act, they
    were saved by the patent law; and second, whether the
    restrictions were illegal under the Sherman Act. 316 U.S.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        51
    at 243. The Court said no on the first question, 
    id. at 249–52,
    and yes on the second, 
    id. at 252–54.
        The second answer (regarding the substance of anti-
    trust law) is immaterial here, and the first answer is in
    accord with Mallinckrodt’s ruling—which expressly
    recognizes that, as Univis held, restrictions that are
    otherwise unlawful do not preserve patent rights. Moreo-
    ver, although some language in Univis, like language in
    other decisions in the area, can be taken out of context
    and read as going beyond the specific restrictions in-
    volved, 
    id. at 249–51,
    the most the Court ruled, even as to
    patent law all by itself, was that a vertical price-control
    restriction was ineffective to preserve patent rights after
    sales of articles embodying the patents. While Univis is
    controlling on what it decided on the issues before it, we
    do not think it appropriate to give broad effect to lan-
    guage in Univis, taken out of context, to support an
    otherwise-unjustified conclusion here on a question not
    faced there. And that is particularly so today, given that
    the Univis opinion relied in part on strongly restrictive
    patent-misuse decisions that were repudiated by Congress
    after Univis was decided. 11
    11  Univis supports some of its broader statements
    about loss of patent rights with citations to some of the
    highly restrictive patent-misuse decisions—e.g., Leitch
    Manufacturing Co. v. Barber Co., 
    302 U.S. 458
    (1938);
    Morton Salt Co. v. G.S. Suppiger Co., 
    314 U.S. 488
    (1942);
    B.B. Chemical Co. v. Ellis, 
    314 U.S. 495
    (1942)—that were
    soon to culminate in the Mercoid decisions, Mercoid Corp.
    v. Mid-Continent Investment Co., 
    320 U.S. 661
    (1944);
    Mercoid Corp. v. Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co.,
    
    320 U.S. 680
    (1944). In the 1952 Patent Act, Congress, by
    adopting § 271(d), sharply limited the patent-misuse
    doctrine in response to that line of authority. See Dawson
    Chem. Co. v. Rohm & Haas Co., 
    448 U.S. 176
    , 204–15
    52             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    Most pointedly for present purposes, Univis does not
    support the distinction between patentee sales and licen-
    see sales the government urges in this case. The Univis
    case was decided just four years after General Talking
    Pictures, which confirmed that a patentee may preserve
    its patent rights by imposing otherwise-lawful restrictions
    on sales by its manufacturing licensees. Yet Univis says
    nothing to limit that prominent, recent ruling. Moreover,
    as we have already noted, Univis is explicit that it made
    no difference to the Court’s analysis whether the patentee
    (Univis Corporation) or the manufacturing licensee
    (Univis Lens Company) was doing the selling: the Court
    stated that the two companies “may for the purposes of
    this suit be treated as though they were a single corpora-
    
    tion.” 316 U.S. at 243
    . The Court also stated its point
    about the particular sale as equally applicable to a “[s]ale
    of a lens blank by the patentee or by his licensee.” 
    Id. at 249
    (emphasis added). 12
    For the foregoing reasons, we think that the best les-
    son to draw from the Supreme Court’s precedents, as
    applied to the question before us, is that a patentee may
    preserve its patent rights by otherwise-proper restrictions
    when it makes and sells patented articles itself and not
    only when it contracts out manufacturing and sales.
    3
    We see no basis for a different conclusion in Lord
    Coke’s description in 1628 of a British common-law prin-
    ciple, as quoted in 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    . Lord
    (1980); 
    Rich, supra, at 21
    . In 1988, Congress limited the
    patent-misuse doctrine still further. See Illinois Tool
    
    Works, 547 U.S. at 41
    –43.
    12  The government also cites Aro 
    II, 377 U.S. at 497
    ,
    but that case involved no issue about restrictions in the
    terms of authorized sales.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           53
    Coke described what British courts, in the absence of an
    overriding legislative prescription, would treat as an
    impermissible anti-alienation restriction on a seller’s
    disposition of “ ‘his whole interest’ ” in a chattel. 
    Id. Lord Coke’s
    formulation was part of the judicial formulation of
    background law for personal property generally, and it
    neither addressed possible differences among particular
    kinds of personal property nor suggested that a judicial
    rule would override specific legislative grants. Lord
    Coke’s formulation was a pertinent reference point in
    Kirtsaeng, because, as we have noted, the copyright
    statute, 17 U.S.C. § 109(a), states a rule that itself over-
    rides the otherwise-applicable statutory bars on infringe-
    ment and importation and grants of exclusive rights. In
    stating one common-law jurisdiction’s general judicial
    policy at one time toward anti-alienation restrictions,
    Lord Coke’s description confirmed that the otherwise-
    supported reading of § 109(a) fit a legal tradition.
    Lord Coke’s quote does not purport to address the ef-
    fect of a legislative prescription of broad rights to control
    sale and use. 13 That is what is present in the Patent Act,
    but not the copyright law. Sections 154(a) and 271(a)
    legislatively establish a patentee’s rights over sale and
    use, without subservience to a superseding grant of rights
    to one who owns a particular article. They grant those
    rights separately as to making, selling, using, etc., thus
    recognizing different sticks in the bundle of rights; they
    13  Lord Coke’s 1628 statement does not address the
    Statute of Monopolies, enacted just a few years earlier, to
    which American patent law has often been traced. See
    Pennock v. Dialogue, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) 1, 18, 20 (1829); J.M.
    Robinson & Co. v. Belt, 
    187 U.S. 41
    , 47 (1902). Lord Coke
    did discuss the Statute of Monopolies elsewhere. See
    Pennock, 27 U.S. (2 Pet.) at 20 (citing Edward Coke, Third
    Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England 184 (1644)).
    54             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    grant them without an exception keyed to the patentee’s
    prior ownership of a particular article embodying the
    invention; and they grant them unless, as relevant here,
    the patentee confers “authority.” Lord Coke’s quote does
    not address the Patent Act situation or suggest that
    federal courts may treat a denial of authority as a confer-
    ral of authority.
    Different policy choices can readily be made and justi-
    fied in this area, even as to background rules applicable to
    personal property generally. Some of the numerous,
    distinct common-law jurisdictions, including Lord Coke’s,
    have departed at various times from the background rule
    expressed by Lord Coke. See De Mattos v. Gibson, (1859)
    45 Eng. Rep. 108 (Ch. App.); Waring v. WDAS Broad.
    Station, Inc., 
    194 A. 631
    , 637–38 (Pa. 1937); Metro. Opera
    Ass’n v. Wagner-Nichols Recorder Corp., 
    101 N.Y.S.2d 483
    , 494–95 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1950), aff’d, 
    279 A.D. 632
    (N.Y.
    App. Div. 1951); Pratte v. Balatsos, 
    113 A.2d 492
    , 494–95
    (N.H. 1955); Nadell & Co. v. Grasso, 
    346 P.2d 505
    , 509–10
    (Cal. 1959); Clairol Inc. v. Cosmetics Plus, 
    325 A.2d 505
    ,
    508 (N.J. Sup. Ct. 1974); Zechariah Chafee, Jr., Equitable
    Servitudes on Chattels, 41 Harv. L. Rev. 945, 1007–13
    (1928); Zechariah Chafee, Jr., The Music Goes Round and
    Round: Equitable Servitudes and Chattels, 69 Harv. L.
    Rev. 1250, 1254–56 (1956); Glen O. Robinson, Personal
    Property Servitudes, 71 U. Chi. L. Rev. 1449, 1455–60
    (2004). In 1918, then-Dean Harlan Fiske Stone wrote:
    “The tendency in the United States has been to apply the
    doctrine of restrictive agreements to personal property
    when not regarded as an unlawful restraint of trade or in
    violation of public policy.” The Equitable Rights and
    Liabilities of Strangers to a Contract, 18 Colum. L. Rev.
    291, 310 (1918).
    In any event, and more specifically, whatever consid-
    erations might go into a jurisdiction’s choice as to the
    background rule for personal property in general, law-
    making authorities may reasonably make different choic-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          55
    es for particular kinds of property. Notably, as to intellec-
    tual property in its various forms, Congress, implement-
    ing the Constitution, has long deemed it important to
    incentivize creation and disclosure through grants to the
    creator of rights to exclude others for a time, the duration
    and scope based on features of the particular kind of
    intellectual property (e.g., patent terms are much shorter
    than copyright terms). The Patent Act expressly does so
    regarding patent rights, specifically giving separate rights
    to exclude others from making, using, selling, etc. That
    overriding legislative prescription removes the patented-
    article sale from the scope of Lord Coke’s 1628 description
    of his country’s general judicially fashioned property law,
    as British tribunals recognized long ago. See A.B. 
    Dick, 224 U.S. at 42
    –43 (quoting the judicial committee of the
    Privy Council, speaking through Lord Shaw in 1911: “the
    general doctrine of absolute freedom of disposal of chat-
    tels of an ordinary kind is, in the case of patented chat-
    tels, subject to the restriction that the person purchasing
    them, and in the knowledge of the conditions attached by
    the patentee, which knowledge is clearly brought home to
    himself at the time of sale, shall be bound by that
    knowledge and accept the situation of ownership subject
    to the limitations. These limitations are merely the
    respect paid and the effect given to those conditions of
    transfer of the patented article which the law, laid down
    by statute, gave the original patentee a power to impose.”)
    (quoting Nat’l Phonograph Co. v. Menck, [[1911] A.C. 336,
    349 (P.C. 1911 appeal taken from Aus.)]); Incandescent
    Gas Co. v. Cantelo, [1895] 12 R.P.C. 262, 264 (Eng.).
    In short, notwithstanding Lord Coke’s description of
    English general personal-property judge-made law, the
    patent-specific statutory analysis must govern here.
    4
    Finally, following the analytical method of Kirtsaeng,
    we consider what we can reliably gauge about the likely
    56             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    real-world consequences of one answer or another to the
    exhaustion question presented here. As indicated at the
    front of this opinion, we have received numerous amicus
    briefs making competing arguments, with varying degrees
    of reliable factual support, for the effect of Mallinckrodt
    on their interests or the interests they promote. We
    cannot assess those contentions and make policy choices
    in the way Congress can. We can say only that the ami-
    cus presentations give us no reason to depart from the
    application of § 271 we derive from the statute and prece-
    dent.
    In particular, we see no basis for predicting the ex-
    treme, lop-sided impacts the Court found plausible in
    Kirtsaeng in different circumstances. Mallinckrodt has
    been the governing case law since 1992 and has been
    reiterated in subsequent precedent. And yet we have
    been given no reliable demonstration of widespread
    problems not being solved in the marketplace. Given
    General Talking Pictures, the only question is about
    patentees’ ability to do for their own sales what they
    already can do by contracting out their manufacturing
    and sales. Regarding the specific scenario we are ad-
    dressing today—in which the patentee has sought to
    preserve its patent rights by conditioning its first sale on
    a single-use/no-resale restriction of which the accused
    infringer had adequate notice at the time of purchase—we
    have been given no proof of a significant problem with
    enforcing patent rights.
    At the same time, the conduct challenged here can
    have benefits.     Lexmark’s Return Program provides
    customers an immediate up-front benefit: a choice be-
    tween two options, one offering them a lower price in
    exchange for the single-use/no-resale limitation. And a
    company in Lexmark’s position could have a plausible
    legitimate interest in not having strangers modify its
    products and introduce them into the market with the
    quality of modifications (including ink refills) not subject
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         57
    to Lexmark’s control: lower quality of remanufactured
    cartridges could harm Lexmark’s reputation. See Chafee,
    41 Harv. L. Rev. at 946–47. A medical supplier in
    Mallinckrodt’s position plausibly may have similar reason
    to believe that reuse, when not under its own control,
    carries a significant risk of poor or even medically harm-
    ful performance, to the detriment of its customers and its
    own reputation. Such interests are hardly unrelated to
    the interests protected by the patent law—the interests
    both of those who benefit from inventions and of those
    who make risky investments to arrive at and commercial-
    ize inventions. See Robinson, 71 U. Chi. L. Rev. at 1480–
    1515 (surveying reasons for restrictions, particularly in
    intellectual-property area).
    We do not have a record on such interests in this case,
    as Impression has not claimed that the restrictions at
    issue violate antitrust, patent-misuse, or similar con-
    straints. And it is not our function to assess the strength
    of such interests against those which might pull the other
    way. Nor can we fairly assume the illegitimacy of the
    conduct here. Such an assumption would run counter to
    the large-scale changes in antitrust law and patent-
    misuse law, especially over the last four decades, that
    have displaced the strict condemnation of various vertical
    restrictions that characterized both areas of law in the
    first half of the twentieth century.
    Thus, the Supreme Court broadly held that non-price
    vertical restraints are to be judged by a rule of reason.
    See Continental T.V., Inc. v. GTE Sylvania Inc., 
    433 U.S. 36
    , 57–59 (1977), overruling United States v. Arnold,
    Schwinn & Co., 
    388 U.S. 365
    (1967). The Court aban-
    doned its “strong disapproval of tying arrangements” by
    insisting on market power in the tying product as a
    precondition to condemnation. See Illinois Tool 
    Works, 547 U.S. at 35
    –38; Jefferson Parish Hosp. Dist. No. 2 v.
    Hyde, 
    466 U.S. 2
    (1984). It overturned both the per se
    ban on vertical agreements setting maximum resale
    58             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    prices, State Oil Co. v. Khan, 
    522 U.S. 3
    , 7 (1997), overrul-
    ing Albrecht v. Herald Co., 
    390 U.S. 145
    (1968), and the
    per se ban on vertical agreements setting minimum resale
    prices, Leegin Creative Leather Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc.,
    
    551 U.S. 877
    , 900–01 (2007), overruling Dr. Miles Medical
    Co. v. John D. Park & Sons Co., 
    220 U.S. 373
    (1911).
    The absence of a general basis for finding market
    harm from vertical restrictions is recognized specifically
    in the patent area, too. Field-of-use restrictions in patent
    licenses have long been common, as Mallinckrodt points
    out and General Talking Pictures shows. In 1988, build-
    ing on an initial relaxation of patent-misuse standards in
    1952, Congress made clear that tying arrangements
    involving a non-patented product do not constitute patent
    misuse where the patentee lacks market power. 35
    U.S.C. § 271(d)(5). The Supreme Court, citing that de-
    termination, subsequently overturned its own longstand-
    ing antitrust presumption that patent (and copyright)
    owners have market power. Illinois Tool 
    Works, 547 U.S. at 41
    –42. And the two federal antitrust agencies have
    recognized that restrictions in intellectual-property li-
    censes can be procompetitive. See U.S. Dep’t of Justice &
    Fed. Trade Comm’n, Antitrust Guidelines for the Licens-
    ing of Intellectual Property § 2.3 (1995) (“Field-of-use,
    territorial, and other limitations on intellectual property
    licenses may serve procompetitive ends by allowing the
    licensor to exploit its property as efficiently and effective-
    ly as possible.”).
    For those reasons, we see no basis for departing from
    the legal analysis set out above. A patentee already may
    preserve its patent rights against downstream buyers
    (with notice) through otherwise-lawful restrictions, by
    licensing others to make and sell its patented articles.
    We conclude that the law does not forbid the patentee to
    do the same when making and selling the articles itself.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         59
    III
    The second question presented to us is whether
    Lexmark’s sales of its cartridges abroad conferred author-
    ity on its buyers, and derivatively on Impression, to
    import the cartridges into, and sell and use them in, the
    United States, which would be infringing acts in the
    absence of authorization. The question was decided by
    the district court, and is presented here, on the premise
    that Lexmark made the foreign sales without communi-
    cating a reservation of U.S. patent rights. And the ques-
    tion is presented only as an exhaustion question, because
    Impression did not press any implied-license defense,
    despite the fact that Quanta made clear that the doctrines
    are distinct.
    The absence of an implied-license defense in this case
    sharpens the definition of the issue presented. There is
    no doubt that a U.S. patentee, when selling a U.S.-
    patented article abroad, could give the buyer permission,
    expressly or by implication from the circumstances, to
    import the purchased article into the United States and
    sell and use it here. Such a license would make those acts
    non-infringing. The question for decision is whether, if
    there is no proof of any such license (express or implied),
    there is nonetheless a legal rule that such a foreign sale
    confers authority on the overseas buyer to import the
    patented article into the United States and sell and use it
    here. If there is such a legal rule of authorization, the
    next question is whether the authorization is conclusive,
    effective even in the face of the U.S. patentee’s reserva-
    tion of U.S. rights, or only presumptive, with the U.S.
    patentee able to reserve its U.S. rights if it can demon-
    strate with adequate certainty that it has taken the steps
    needed to do so.
    We conclude, as we did in Jazz Photo, that there is no
    legal rule that U.S. rights are waived, either conclusively
    or presumptively, simply by virtue of a foreign sale, either
    60             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    made or authorized by a U.S. patentee. The government,
    we note, agrees that a conclusive-exhaustion rule should
    be rejected but argues for a presumptive-exhaustion rule
    regarding a U.S. patentee’s foreign sales. In the govern-
    ment’s view, a U.S. patentee can reserve its U.S. rights
    when selling abroad (but not if selling domestically, under
    the government’s view that Mallinckrodt is wrong). We
    conclude that neither a conclusive- nor a presumptive-
    exhaustion rule is legally justified.
    A
    This court’s 2001 decision in Jazz Photo reviewed the
    International Trade Commission’s finding that Jazz Photo
    (and others) infringed patents of Fuji Photo Film by
    importing refurbished disposable cameras originally sold
    by or with the authorization of Fuji Photo. 
    264 F.3d 1094
    ,
    1098. Two groups of cameras sold by or with the authori-
    zation of Fuji Photo were at issue: those sold initially in
    the United States, refurbished abroad, and imported back
    into the United States; and those initially sold abroad,
    refurbished abroad, and imported into the United States.
    This court drew different conclusions about infringement
    regarding those two groups of imported cameras.
    Disagreeing with the Commission on the central issue
    in the case, the court held that a specifically described set
    of refurbishment changes (involving insertion of new film
    into the used casings) were mere repairs, not reconstruc-
    tions that amounted to creation of new articles. 
    Id. at 1102–07.
    Therefore, the court ruled, for the “used camer-
    as whose first sale was in the United States with the
    patentee’s authorization,” and that were subjected to only
    those changes (with disclosure to the Commission), Jazz
    Photo’s importations were not infringing: repair main-
    tained the identity of the article initially sold, and the
    domestic sale exhausted the patentee’s rights in the
    article sold (but not in newly created articles). 
    Id. at 1098–99,
    1102–05 (discussing, for example, Aro I, 365
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., 
    INC. 61 U.S. at 346
    ); see 
    Bowman, 133 S. Ct. at 1766
    . As to those
    used cameras, the court reversed the 
    Commission. 264 F.3d at 1099
    .
    The court held, however, that a different result was
    required for any of the imported cameras that previously
    had been “sold only overseas,” even if the changes in them
    amounted only to repair. 
    Id. at 1105
    (emphasis added).
    Relying on Boesch v. Graff, 
    133 U.S. 697
    , 701–03 (1890),
    the court ruled that “United States patent rights are not
    exhausted by products of foreign provenance,” i.e., prod-
    ucts previously sold only 
    abroad. 264 F.3d at 1105
    . Thus,
    the court’s non-infringement ruling (and reversal of the
    Commission) applied only to used cameras “for which the
    United States patent right has been exhausted by first
    sale in the United States” and whose refurbishing was
    limited as described. 
    Id. The imported
    cameras not
    previously sold in the United States, in contrast, “are not
    immunized from infringement of United States patents by
    the nature of their refurbishment.” 
    Id. There is
    no sug-
    gestion that Jazz Photo argued that Fuji Photo had ex-
    pressly or impliedly licensed importation in making or
    authorizing the foreign sales, and the court said nothing
    to foreclose such a defense to infringement. Accordingly,
    as to cameras “whose prior sale was not in the United
    States,” the court affirmed the Commission’s infringement
    finding and remedies against Jazz Photo. 
    Id. at 1111.
        The court followed Jazz Photo in Fuji Photo Film Co.,
    Ltd. v. Jazz Photo Corp., 
    394 F.3d 1368
    , 1370 (Fed. Cir.
    2005), which affirmed a district court’s judgment of in-
    fringement by Jazz Photo (and others) in favor of Fuji
    Photo in litigation involving the same dispute as Jazz
    Photo. This court rejected Jazz Photo’s argument for
    exhaustion as to first sales made abroad. The court in
    Fuji Photo explained that in Jazz Photo “this court ex-
    pressly limited first sales under the exhaustion doctrine
    to those occurring within the United States.” 
    Id. at 1376.
    62             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    Accordingly, exhaustion of U.S. rights is not triggered by
    “[t]he patentee’s authorization of an international first
    sale.” 
    Id. In Fuji
    Photo, as in Jazz Photo, the court did
    not foreclose any argument about express or implied
    licenses conferred in particular foreign sales.
    In short, this court has held since 2001 that the for-
    eign sale of a U.S.-patented article, when the sale is
    either made or authorized by the U.S. patentee, does not,
    standing alone, confer on the buyer “authority” to import
    the item into the United States or to sell and use it here,
    and so does not save those acts from being infringing
    under § 271(a). See Ninestar Tech. Co. v. Int’l Trade
    Comm’n, 
    667 F.3d 1373
    , 1378 (Fed. Cir. 2012). 14 The
    14 In Ninestar, this court rejected the argument that
    
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 632
    n.6, upset Jazz Photo. Quanta’s
    footnote 6 does not address or decide whether a foreign
    sale can trigger exhaustion. It makes a different point,
    stated in the textual assertion the footnote supports:
    “LGE has suggested no reasonable use for the Intel Prod-
    ucts other than incorporating them into computer systems
    that practice the LGE Patents.” 
    Id. at 632.
    That asser-
    tion applies the Court’s standard for when an article not
    covered by a patent nevertheless embodies the patent.
    Footnote 6 responds to footnote 10 in LGE’s brief, Brief
    for Respondent 21–22 n.10, Quanta (No. 06-937), 
    2007 WL 4244683
    , which does not rely on a foreign sale of the
    Intel Products, but argues that the (first-sale) Intel Prod-
    ucts do not embody the patents because they have sub-
    stantial non-infringing uses, namely, wholly foreign
    making, selling, and using of computers covered by the
    patents. Quanta’s footnote 6 responds that such foreign
    acts with those computers “would still be practicing the
    patent, even if not infringing it,” which is what counts for
    the “embody” 
    inquiry. 553 U.S. at 632
    n.6.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         63
    court has not curtailed the ability of an accused infringer
    to show that the patentee conferred such authority by
    words or implications. Exhaustion cannot rest on a
    foreign first sale, but an express or implied license might
    be found based on the circumstances of particular foreign
    sales.
    B
    The Supreme Court’s decision in Kirtsaeng does not
    undermine the no-exhaustion conclusion of Jazz Photo. In
    Kirtsaeng, the Court interpreted § 109(a) of the Copyright
    Act, which states that “the owner of a particular
    copy . . . lawfully made under this title . . . is entitled,
    without the authority of the copyright owner, to sell or
    otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy . . . .” 17
    U.S.C. § 109(a). The Court held that § 109(a)’s guarantee
    is not limited to copies manufactured in the United
    States, but applies regardless of the place of manufacture,
    as long as the maker of the copies had permission from
    the copyright owner to make them. 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1355
    –71.
    For various reasons, that ruling does not answer the
    question presented under the Patent Act. Kirtsaeng says
    Neither in footnote 6 nor elsewhere does Quanta refer
    to LGE’s final footnote, Brief for Respondent 53 n.19, in
    which LGE cited Boesch, suggested that Intel’s sales
    might have been made abroad, and said that this was an
    open question for remand. Quanta replied that LGE had
    waived any foreign-sale-location contention, so that
    reversal, not remand, was required. Reply Brief for
    Petitioners 3 n.2, Quanta (No. 06-937), 
    2007 WL 4613423
    .
    The Court evidently agreed with Quanta. Without dis-
    cussing Boesch or any issue about foreign-sale exhaustion
    law, the Court reversed, holding that “LGE can no longer
    assert its patent rights against 
    Quanta.” 553 U.S. at 638
    .
    64             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    nothing about patent law; and it does not address, even in
    the context of copyright law, the exhaustion question
    presented by the Patent Act. Whether a sale constitutes a
    grant to a buyer of (conclusive or presumptive) “authority”
    to engage in otherwise-prohibited acts of importation,
    sale, and use is the question here. It is not the question
    presented by the Copyright Act. That Act contains no
    right to exclude anyone from “use,” and § 109(a) of the Act
    expressly overrides the copyright holder’s rights to ex-
    clude from importing or selling copies, permitting acts
    “without the authority” of the rights owner—in circum-
    stances that undisputedly have nothing to do with the
    place of sale. The Court in Kirtsaeng merely interpreted
    § 109(a) and resolved the dispute about whether the place
    of manufacture matters under § 109(a), holding—for a
    number of reasons “taken together”—that it does 
    not. 133 S. Ct. at 1358
    , 1371. The Kirtsaeng question thus is
    several steps removed from the question presented under
    the Patent Act, which requires a quite different analysis.
    To elaborate: In Kirtsaeng, the Supreme Court did not
    advert to the foreign-exhaustion issue under patent law.
    Nor did it cite, even to distinguish, its own leading case on
    exhaustion and foreign sales in the patent area, namely,
    Boesch—which has no counterpart in the copyright area.
    More generally, the Court nowhere relied on the wealth of
    exhaustion cases in the patent area. The absence of such
    references to patent law, even at a general level, reinforc-
    es the need for a distinct patent-law analysis.
    The Court has long recognized the distinctness of the
    copyright and patent regimes and observed that particu-
    lar questions require separate analysis for each body of
    law. For example, the Court has noted that the patent
    right is broader in scope than the copyright right in at
    least one important respect: the patent statute gives a
    right to exclude others from “use,” whereas the copyright
    statute does not. 
    Bauer, 229 U.S. at 13
    –14. In a decision
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         65
    relied on in 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    , the Court stated
    more generally that copyright-law conclusions and patent-
    law conclusions do not necessarily align, so that a conclu-
    sion about copyright law does not automatically carry
    over to patent law. 
    Bobbs-Merrill, 210 U.S. at 345
    –46. In
    Sony Corp. of America v. Universal City Studios, Inc., the
    Court, noting that patent and copyright law “are not
    identical twins,” required “caution . . . in applying doc-
    trine formulated in one area to the other.” 
    464 U.S. 417
    ,
    439 n.19 (1984). In Eldred v. Ashcroft, the Court ex-
    plained that “patents and copyrights do not entail the
    same exchange.” 
    537 U.S. 186
    , 216 (2003).
    The answer to a particular question therefore requires
    analysis of the specifics of the relevant statute. The Court
    in Kirtsaeng conducted just such an analysis for the
    copyright-law question before it. It analyzed a copyright-
    specific text, namely, § 109(a), and stressed that it was
    determining “the best reading of § 
    109(a).” 133 S. Ct. at 1370
    (emphasis in original). See 
    id. at 1371
    (“we do no
    more here than try to determine what decision Congress
    has taken”); 
    id. at 1357
    (“We must decide whether the
    words ‘lawfully made under this title’ restrict the scope of
    § 109(a)’s ‘first sale’ doctrine geographically.”). And the
    structure of the Court’s analysis confirms the primacy of
    the statutory text: The Court began its analysis with an
    extensive consideration of the text of § 
    109(a). 133 S. Ct. at 1358
    –60. It concluded that “[t]he language of § 109(a)
    says nothing about geography”; reading “made under this
    title” to mean made with the rights holder’s permission,
    not to mean made in the United States, “is sim-
    ple, . . . promotes a traditional copyright objective (com-
    batting piracy), and . . . makes word-by-word linguistic
    sense”; while the made-in-the-United-States interpreta-
    tion “bristles with linguistic 
    difficulties.” 133 S. Ct. at 1358
    . The Court then found various contextual, histori-
    66             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    cal, and practical considerations to support that textual
    conclusion. 
    Id. at 1358–62.
        The text construed in Kirtsaeng has no counterpart in
    the Patent Act. And that text presents a sharply different
    question from the statutory question presented by the
    Patent Act. By its terms, far from calling for a determina-
    tion of whether any kind of sale constitutes the conferring
    of “authority” from the rights holder, § 109(a) defines the
    circumstances (ownership of a copy lawfully made) that,
    when present, give a copy owner a right to sell or dispose
    of the owned copy “without the authority of the copyright
    owner.” 17 U.S.C. § 109(a) (emphasis added). Moreover,
    as we have explained, and as the Court ruled in Kirtsaeng
    and Quality King, the Copyright Act makes the provisions
    on exclusivity, infringement, and importation all subser-
    vient to § 109(a). In the Copyright Act, the § 109(a) grant
    to copy owners overrides other requirements of authority
    from the rights holder, specifically those governing impor-
    tation and sale. That is not so in the Patent Act, under
    which exhaustion textually can be nothing but an answer
    to a statutory question of when a patentee has, by a sale,
    conferred such authority.
    Section 109(a)’s language, which gives an owner an
    entitlement to resell “without the authority of the copy-
    right owner,” does not make that entitlement depend on
    an assessment of whether a first sale made or authorized
    by the copyright holder confers resale authority on the
    buyer. The right to resell is given to the “owner” of an
    article “lawfully made” under the Act. The “owner” lan-
    guage—whose meaning was not at issue in Kirtsaeng—
    says nothing about where ownership is acquired and does
    not require a prior sale at all: a copy made by the person
    who owns it, as long as the making was authorized, is
    within § 109(a)’s language. 
    See 133 S. Ct. at 1361
    (dis-
    cussing 17 U.S.C. § 115); 2 Melville B. Nimmer & David
    Nimmer, Nimmer on Copyright § 8.12[B][3][c] (2015).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          67
    Even when ownership comes from a sale, moreover, the
    provision prescribes the result for the owner’s resale
    entitlement in terms not dependent on “authority” from
    the copyright holder but as independent of any such
    authority. And the remaining requirement stated by the
    language at issue in Kirtsaeng—“lawfully made under
    this title”—undeniably refers only to the manufacture of
    the copy and whether that manufacture was lawful. That
    language, like the “owner” language, leaves no place for
    consideration of the location of a prior sale (if there was
    one), which is the issue here.
    Years before deciding Kirtsaeng, the Court in Quality
    King had made clear that the language of § 109(a) makes
    sale location irrelevant: under that language, “the owner
    of goods lawfully made under the Act is entitled to the
    protection of the first sale doctrine in an action in a Unit-
    ed States court even if the first sale occurred 
    abroad.” 523 U.S. at 145
    n.14. The Court in Kirtsaeng confirmed
    the 
    point. 133 S. Ct. at 1371
    (noting the “holding in
    Quality King that § 109(a) is a defense in U.S. courts even
    when ‘the first sale occurred abroad’ ”). Not surprisingly,
    neither party in Kirtsaeng argued that the provision could
    be read to refer to the sale location. 15 And the Court
    15  The Second Circuit in Kirtsaeng had held that
    § 109(a) was inapplicable whenever the copy had been
    made abroad, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Kirtsaeng, 
    654 F.3d 210
    , 222 (2d Cir. 2011), and Kirtsaeng’s “question
    presented” to the Supreme Court was “whether the copy-
    right owner is entitled to control downstream sales just
    because it opts to manufacture the copies abroad.” Brief
    for Petitioner at i, Kirtsaeng (No. 11-697), 
    2012 WL 2641850
    . Kirtsaeng noted once in passing that a sale-
    location standard “sacrifices any pretense of fidelity to the
    statutory text” of § 109(a). 
    Id. at 25.
    Wiley similarly
    recognized that “[t]he question presented is whether
    68             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    readily dismissed a sale-location view as “not defensible”
    and facing “linguistic and other hurdles that . . . are
    insurmountable.” 
    Id. at 1366.
    With sale location off the
    table, the dispute in Kirtsaeng was simply between two
    different interpretations of the statutory reference to
    manufacture (“lawfully made under this title”)—whether
    it referred to where manufacture occurred (the “geograph-
    ic” interpretation) or to whether the manufacture was
    lawful under the standards of the Copyright Act (e.g.,
    with the copyright owner’s permission, as opposed to
    pirated). For that reason, whether an “implied license”
    would arise from sales in some circumstances was imma-
    terial to the statutory question being debated, and the
    Court did not comment on that notion, despite its mention
    in the 
    dissent, 133 S. Ct. at 1389
    & n.25 (Ginsburg, J.,
    dissenting), and the government’s brief, Brief for the
    United States as Amicus Curiae Supporting Respondent
    at 21, Kirtsaeng (No. 11-697), 
    2012 WL 3902599
    .
    In short, given the nature of the question framed by
    § 109(a), the Court in Kirtsaeng did not have occasion to
    decide, and did not decide, whether a foreign sale (by or
    authorized by the U.S. rights holder) is properly treated
    as conferring on the buyer, conclusively or presumptively,
    the authority to resell. The Court did not decide, even for
    copyrights, the question presented here for patents.
    copies made outside the United States are ‘lawfully made
    under this title’ within the meaning of Section 109(a).”
    Brief for Respondent at i, Kirtsaeng (No. 11-697), 
    2012 WL 3836936
    . Wiley explained that the relevance of sale
    location was not being argued; and it nowhere argued
    that the sale of the books outside the United States, as
    opposed to their manufacture outside the United States,
    defeated exhaustion. 
    Id. at 37–38.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          69
    The nature of the statutory question decided in
    Kirtsaeng also shows why the Court’s discussion of con-
    siderations supporting its textual conclusion cannot be
    transposed to the patent-law setting at issue here. The
    discussion of the statutory history and certain provisions
    of the Copyright 
    Act, 133 S. Ct. at 1360
    –62, 1370, is
    statute-specific. And the Court’s discussion of the absence
    of any constitutional history or congressional action
    permitting market division was limited to the copyright
    area. 
    Id. at 1370–71.
    Compare 35 U.S.C. § 261 (patentee
    may assign rights “to the whole or any specified part of
    the United States”).
    Similarly, the Court’s discussion of Lord Coke’s 1628
    description of his country’s general judicial personal-
    property law, 
    id. at 1363–64,
    is inapplicable here. That
    description, as already explained, is apt background for a
    provision, like § 109(a), that is superior to any legislative
    grant of rights that cover post-purchase activities of a
    buyer. The Patent Act contains no such override of the
    Act’s grant of rights to patentees. And the Court in
    Kirtsaeng drew from Lord Coke’s description only a gen-
    eral recognition of “the importance of leaving buyers of
    goods free to compete with each other when reselling or
    otherwise disposing of those goods,” adding that American
    antitrust law recognizes a similar 
    point. 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    . That observation merely confirms that the result of
    the § 109(a) analysis is sensible because it fits one policy
    found in aspects of American and British law containing
    no specific statutory override. And the Court then cited
    Bobbs-Merrill, which construed the pre-1909 copyright
    statute not to contain an override in the circumstances at
    
    issue, 210 U.S. at 349
    –51, and noted that the next year,
    Congress adopted that result by enacting the statutory
    predecessor of § 109(a). 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    –64.
    In addition, the Court’s account of the potential real-
    world consequences of the statutory interpretation it was
    70             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    rejecting, though it mentions sale location a few times, is
    pervasively tied to the issue actually in dispute—whether
    a foreign manufacture location makes § 109(a) inapplica-
    
    ble. 133 S. Ct. at 1364
    –67. Under that interpretation, the
    Court stated, the rights holder would have “permanent”
    control, 
    id. at 1362,
    “perpetual downstream control,” 
    id. at 1371
    , of copies circulating in the United States as long as
    those copies had been made abroad: § 109(a) would not
    kick in to give resale rights to purchasers of those copies
    even if the copyright holder sold the article in the United
    States. See also 
    id. at 1366
    (referring to “the absurd
    result that the copyright owner can exercise downstream
    control even when it authorized the import or first sale”).
    As the government notes to us, the Patent Act, which
    lacks a provision like § 109(a), is quite different: “there is
    no concomitant risk of ‘perpetual downstream control’
    over patented goods.” U.S. Br. 24. At the very least, an
    unrestricted patentee-made or -authorized sale in the
    U.S. triggers exhaustion as to the article sold.
    Moreover, the “copyright-related consequences” em-
    phasized by the Court in 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1367
    ,
    were to a large extent, though not entirely, tied to the
    distinctive problems of museums, libraries, and
    booksellers. 
    Id. at 1364–67.
    To that extent, the Court’s
    overall analysis of plausible practical effects—of an inter-
    pretation keeping every foreign-made copy forever outside
    § 109(a)—was copyright-specific. The Court in Kirtsaeng
    also concluded that circuit-court precedent on § 109(a)
    was too fractured to give meaningful comfort that the
    practical problems from the Court’s adoption of Wiley’s
    view of § 109(a) were unlikely to materialize. 
    Id. at 1366.
    In contrast, our exclusive jurisdiction and clear rule since
    2001, together with the pre-2001 precedents from other
    courts, provide considerably more reason to discount
    predictions that adhering to a territorial line to make
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          71
    exhaustion unavailable based on a foreign sale will result
    in serious practical problems.
    For all of those reasons, Kirtsaeng is not controlling in
    this case. The patent-law issue presented here requires a
    separate analysis in its own legal setting.
    C
    The Patent Act question is whether a foreign sale of a
    U.S.-patented article made or authorized by a U.S. pa-
    tentee, standing alone, confers on the buyer authority to
    import the article into the United States and sell and use
    it here, even though such an act would be infringing in
    the absence of authority. The best answer to that ques-
    tion, we conclude, is that such a foreign sale does not
    confer such authority. A U.S. patentee, simply by making
    or authorizing a foreign sale of an article, does not waive
    its U.S. rights to exclude regarding that article, either
    conclusively (no matter how clear the reservation of U.S.
    rights) or only presumptively (subject to sufficiently clear
    preservation of U.S. rights).
    1
    The combined logic of the statutory grant of patent
    rights and the long-recognized basis for exhaustion leads
    naturally to rejecting exhaustion based on a foreign sale.
    The statute gives patentees the reward available from
    American markets. A patentee cannot reasonably be
    treated as receiving that reward from sales in foreign
    markets, and exhaustion has long been keyed to the idea
    that the patentee has received its U.S. reward.
    Thus, what the statute expressly provides to a U.S.
    patentee is the reward available from the right to exclude
    “in the United States.”     See 35 U.S.C. §§ 154(a)(1),
    72             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    271(a). 16 The reward is inherently a market reward: “it is
    one of the legal beauties of the system that what is given
    by the people through their government—the patent
    right—is valued automatically by what is given by the
    patentee. His patent has value directly related to the
    value of his invention, as determined in the marketplace.”
    In re Kirk, 
    376 F.2d 936
    , 964 (CCPA 1967) (Rich, J.,
    dissenting). 17 And the market reward, under the statute,
    is explicitly the reward available from American markets
    subject to American laws, a reward obtained by selling or
    authorizing sales in those markets.
    16 Congress has added certain limited extensions to
    foreign conduct. See 35 U.S.C. § 271(f). Those limited
    extensions are not applicable here and only strengthen
    the essential guarantee of a U.S.-market reward.
    17 See Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats,
    Inc., 
    489 U.S. 141
    , 150–51 (1989) (“The federal patent
    system thus embodies a carefully crafted bargain for
    encouraging the creation and disclosure of new, useful,
    and nonobvious advances in technology and design in
    return for the exclusive right to practice the invention for
    a period of years.”); Fed. Trade Comm’n, Evolving IP
    Marketplace 138–39 (“An important benefit of the patent
    system, in contrast to other methods of encouraging
    innovation, like direct prizes, is that it allows each inven-
    tion to be valued directly through a market mechanism.”)
    (citing Kenneth W. Dam, The Economic Underpinnings of
    Patent Law, 23 J. Legal Stud. 247, 248–49 (1994); Joseph
    Farrell, John Hayes, Carl Shapiro & Theresa Sullivan,
    Standard Setting, Patents and Hold-Up, 74 Antitrust L.J.
    603 (2007)); see also Aro 
    II, 377 U.S. at 507
    (patent “dam-
    ages” tied to market valuation); Dowagiac Mfg. Co. v.
    Minnesota Moline Plow Co., 
    235 U.S. 641
    , 648 (1915)
    (reasonable royalty measures “the value of what was
    taken” by infringement, necessarily a market value).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            73
    At the same time, the Supreme Court has “explained
    the basis for [exhaustion] doctrine” in terms of the pa-
    tentee’s receipt of the reward given by the statute. Bow-
    
    man, 133 S. Ct. at 1766
    . “ ‘The purpose of the patent law
    is fulfilled with respect to any particular article when the
    patentee has received his reward . . . by the sale of the
    article.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting Univis,
    316 U.S. at 251, itself citing
    earlier authorities). Only when it is appropriate to as-
    sume the receipt of that reward does the sale support an
    inference of conferral of authority on an article’s buyer (in
    the absence of clearly communicated restrictions on the
    authority conferred).
    Whatever other issues may be presented by determin-
    ing when a patentee has “received his reward,” the terri-
    torial nature of the statutory guarantee supplies a simple,
    strong reason to exclude foreign sales. The guarantee is
    the reward from sales in American markets, not from
    sales in foreign markets. A sale in a foreign market
    therefore does not furnish “the basis for” exhaustion—
    even for a presumption that authority is being conferred
    on the buyer to exploit the article in American markets by
    the actions (importation, sale, use, etc.) that are infring-
    ing in the absence of patentee-conferred authority.
    American markets differ substantially from markets
    in many other countries, and not just because of dispari-
    ties in wealth that can lead to dramatically different
    prices (especially for low-marginal-cost products). Gov-
    ernment policies differ dramatically, including policies on
    price regulation and, most particularly, policies on the
    availability and scope of patent protection. Patents
    74               LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    involve costly government-approval processes, and the
    standards vary. 18 The government explains:
    The independence of national patent sys-
    tems . . . is one of the defining principles of the in-
    ternational legal regime governing the protection
    of inventions. The United States has ratified the
    Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial
    Property, originally adopted more than a century
    ago, which specifically provided in Article 4bis
    18  See, e.g., Robert Patrick Merges & John Fitzgerald
    Duffy, Patent Law and Policy: Cases and Materials 55
    (5th ed. 2011); Graeme B. Dinwoodie, William O. Hennes-
    sey, & Shira Perlmutter, International and Comparative
    Patent Law § 2.03 at 53–54 (2002); John Gladstone Mills
    III, A Transnational Patent Convention for the Acquisition
    and Enforcement of International Patent Rights, 88 J. Pat.
    & Trademark Off. Soc’y 958, 958–59 (2006); Margaret A.
    Boulware, Jeffrey A. Pyle, & Frank C. Turner, An Over-
    view of Intellectual Property Rights Abroad, 16 Hous. J.
    Int’l L. 441, 458–59 (1994).
    A few dollar figures provide some context. For a U.S.
    patent, the minimum application fee is $2,560 (covering
    only the basic filing, search, examination, and issue fees).
    See USPTO Fee Schedule, U.S. Patent & Trademark
    Office, http://www.uspto.gov/learning-and-resources/fees-
    and-payment/uspto-fee-schedule. As for lawyers’ charges
    for preparing and prosecuting a patent application, a 2015
    report indicated that the median charge to prepare a
    minimally complex utility patent application is $7,000,
    with responses to Office Actions ranging from $2,000 to
    $3,200 each. Am. Intellectual Prop. Law Ass’n, Report of
    the Economic Survey 29 (2015). For an example of filing
    fees for patents abroad, see European Patent Office,
    Schedule of Fees, http://www.epoline.org/myepoline_eofp
    _portletapp-2.8.3/fees/pdf?language=en.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           75
    that “Patents applied for in the different contract-
    ing States . . . shall be independent of the patents
    obtained for the same invention in the other
    States . . . .” 32 Stat. 1936 (Aug. 25, 1902). While
    international agreements facilitate the ability of
    inventors in one country to seek patent protection
    in others, the patents laws of each country are not
    reciprocal in their protections for particular in-
    ventions. As every patent attorney knows, the
    United States may issue a patent while another
    country denies protection for the same invention,
    or approves claims significantly different in scope.
    U.S. Br. 15–16.
    Copyrights are different. They generally spring into
    being without any government approval, and standards
    hardly vary compared to patenting standards. As the
    government says, “patent law is different from copyright
    law, under which authors automatically ‘enjoy copyright
    protection in nations across the globe’ pursuant to the
    Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and
    Artistic Works.” U.S. Br. 16 (quoting Golan v. Holder,
    
    132 S. Ct. 873
    , 878 (2012)); see 
    Golan, 132 S. Ct. at 878
    (referring to “Berne’s 164 member states”). 19 And there is
    no reason to think that the costs of copyright registration
    (not even a prerequisite to all copyright protection) are
    19   It has been noted that, as a matter of statutory
    text, “of the three principal forms of [federally protected]
    intellectual property [copyright, patent, trademark],
    patent rights are the most explicitly territorial.” Donald
    S. Chisum, Normative and Empirical Territoriality in
    Intellectual Property: Lessons from Patent Law, 37 Va. J.
    Int’l L. 603, 605 (1997); see Dinwoodie et al., § 1.03 at 30.
    76             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    generally comparable to those of securing patent protec-
    tion. 20
    Given the varying standards, and the separate exam-
    ination processes and fees, a U.S. patentee may choose
    not even to seek patent protection in particular foreign
    countries. And those seeking protection may not obtain
    it, or may not obtain protection comparable to that of the
    U.S. patent. In either event, foreign sales in such circum-
    stances may not occur under protections likely to produce
    market returns comparable to the reward contemplated
    by our patent law. Such country-to-country differences in
    patent law, moreover, are only part of the likely differ-
    ences affecting foreign sales, supplementing differences in
    economic circumstances and in governments’ price and
    other non-patent regulations bearing on sales.
    For those reasons, a foreign sale, standing alone, is
    not reasonably viewed as providing the U.S. patentee the
    reward guaranteed by U.S. patent law. Such a sale is not
    reasonably viewed as itself a waiver by the patentee of its
    U.S. patent rights to prevent the buyer or others from
    bringing that article into the United States and selling or
    using it to satisfy a U.S.-market demand that the patent-
    ee could otherwise help satisfy at U.S.-market prices, as
    guaranteed by the Patent Act.
    20  The application fee for a U.S. copyright registra-
    tion    is   $35.      Fees,    U.S.   Copyright    Office,
    http://copyright.gov/ about/fees.html.    The same 2015
    Survey that gives a median charge of $7,000 for legal
    services for preparing a minimally complex patent appli-
    cation (before the back-and-forth of prosecution occurs)
    gives a figure of $400 for services to prepare an applica-
    tion for a copyright registration. Am. Intellectual Prop.
    Law Ass’n, Report at 29.
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        77
    2
    The only Supreme Court decision directly addressing
    the effect of a foreign sale on U.S. patent rights is the
    1890 decision in Boesch v. Graff, 
    133 U.S. 697
    . Albert
    Graff and J.F. Donnell, by assignments, held an 1883 U.S.
    patent on certain lamp burners. Without their permis-
    sion, Emile Boesch and Martin Bauer sold patent-covered
    burners in the United States. Boesch and Bauer had
    bought those burners from a supplier in Germany, with-
    out permission from the holders of the rights under Ger-
    man patents (dated 1879–1880), which had been issued to
    the same individuals as the U.S. patent. The German
    supplier was authorized to make the sale to Boesch and
    Bauer, not by the German patentees, but by a German
    law that allowed continuation of certain preparatory
    activities that began before the application for the Ger-
    man patents was 
    filed. 133 U.S. at 698
    –99, 701–02.
    When Graff and Donnell sued Boesch and Bauer for
    infringement, the single-judge circuit court for the North-
    ern District of California found infringement, and the
    Supreme Court affirmed that holding. 
    Id. The Court
    rejected Boesch and Bauer’s defense that
    they “could not be held for infringement, because they
    purchased the burners in Germany from a person having
    the right to sell them there, though not a licensee under
    the German patents.” 
    Id. at 699.
    The Court stated “the
    exact question presented [a]s whether a dealer residing in
    the United States can purchase in another country arti-
    cles patented there, from a person authorized to sell them,
    and import them to and sell them in the United States,
    without the license or consent of the owners of the United
    States patent.” 
    Id. at 702.
    In answering the question, the
    Court recited the then-leading decisions on domestic
    exhaustion, culminating in Adams, which, the Court
    observed, held that, within the confines of the United
    States, the courts would not add an unexpressed territo-
    78               LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    rial limit to the rights conferred by an unrestricted sale by
    a regional assignee. 
    Id. at 703.
    The Court then concluded
    that the cross-border situation was different. Its full
    rationale was as follows:
    The right which [the German seller] had to make
    and sell the burners in Germany was allowed him
    under the laws of that country, and purchasers
    from him could not be thereby authorized to sell
    the articles in the United States in defiance of the
    rights of patentees under a United States patent.
    A prior foreign patent operates under our law to
    limit the duration of the subsequent patent here,
    but that is all. The sale of articles in the United
    States under a United States patent cannot be
    controlled by foreign laws.
    
    Id. That rationale
    by its terms does not make relevant
    whether the foreign sale was made under a foreign pa-
    tent. Indeed, the second sentence says that a “prior
    foreign patent” does not cause loss of U.S. patent rights.
    Rather, the rationale turns only on the fact that the
    foreign sale was made under foreign law. 21 The last
    sentence states the territorial principle: “The sale of
    articles in the United States under a United States patent
    cannot be controlled by foreign laws.” 
    Id. That principle
    does not preclude an accused infringer
    from establishing that the U.S. patentee actually gave it a
    21The “duration” language refers to a sentence in
    Rev. Stat. 4887 that tied certain U.S. patents’ expiration
    dates to those of related foreign patents. See Robinson,
    § 337, at 461. Congress deleted the provision in 1897.
    Act of Mar. 3, 1897, ch. 391, § 3, 29 Stat. 693; see H.R.
    Rep. No. 1923, at 38 (1952).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          79
    license, expressly or by implication. It means that the
    exhaustion doctrine does not treat a foreign sale, lawful
    abroad for whatever reason, as having the cross-border
    legal effect of authorizing otherwise-infringing U.S. acts
    involving the purchased article. And that is how the
    principle has been understood by the Supreme Court. See
    
    Keeler, 157 U.S. at 664
    –65 (“The exact question presented
    was whether a dealer residing in the United States could
    purchase in another country articles patented there from
    a person authorized there to sell them, and import them
    to and sell them in the United States without the license
    or consent of the owners of the United States patent, and
    the court held that the sale of articles in the United
    States under a United States patent cannot be controlled
    by foreign laws. In this case neither the patentee nor any
    assignee had ever received any royalty or given any
    license to use the patented article in any part of the
    United States.”); A. Bourjois & Co. v. Katzel, 
    260 U.S. 689
    ,
    692 (1923) (trademark case, explaining: “Ownership of
    [particular] goods . . . does not necessarily carry the right
    to sell them at all in a given place. If the goods were
    patented in the United States a dealer who lawfully
    bought similar goods abroad from one who had a right to
    make and sell them there could not sell them in the
    United States. Boesch . . . .”).
    The principle of Boesch, precluding foreign control of
    U.S. rights, has a mirror-image counterpart in the territo-
    riality principle of U.S. patent law that broadly denies
    projection of U.S. patent rights to cover foreign conduct.
    In Brown v. Duchesne, 60 U.S. (19 How.) 183 (1857), the
    Supreme Court, referring to the patent statutes, said that
    “these acts of Congress do not, and were not intended to,
    operate beyond the limits of the United States.” 
    Id. at 195.
    The Court also explained the guaranteed reward
    from domestic markets: the patent laws “secure to the
    inventor a just remuneration from those who derive a
    80              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    profit or advantage, within the United States, from his
    genius and mental labors.” Id.; see, e.g., 
    Dowagiac, 235 U.S. at 650
    (“The right conferred by a patent under our
    law is confined to the United States and its territories
    (Rev. Stat. § 4884, Comp. Stat. 1913, § 9428), and in-
    fringement of this right cannot be predicated of acts
    wholly done in a foreign country.”).
    The Supreme Court relied on the strength of the
    territorial principle in Deepsouth Packing Co. v. Laitram
    Corp., 
    406 U.S. 518
    (1972), which rejected a claim of
    infringement against Deepsouth just because the ultimate
    combination covered by the patent was made abroad,
    after Deepsouth shipped all the parts from the United
    States. The Court explained:
    Our patent system makes no claim to extraterri-
    torial effect; “these acts of Congress do not, and
    were not intended to, operate beyond the limits of
    the United States,” Brown v. 
    Duchesne, 19 How., at 195
    (1856), and we correspondingly reject the
    claims of others to such control over our markets.
    Cf. Boesch v. Graff, 
    133 U.S. 697
    , 703 
    (1890). 406 U.S. at 531
    .
    In Microsoft Corp. v. AT&T Corp., 
    550 U.S. 437
    (2007),
    the Supreme Court quoted the foregoing passage from
    Deepsouth as support for “[t]he traditional understanding
    that our patent law ‘operate[s] only domestically and
    do[es] not extend to foreign activities,’ . . . [which] is
    embedded in the Patent Act itself, which provides that a
    patent confers exclusive rights in an invention within the
    United States. 35 U.S.C. § 154(a)(1) (patentee’s rights
    over invention apply to manufacture, use, or sale
    ‘throughout the United States’ and to importation ‘into
    the United States’).” 
    Id. at 455.
    And the Court added:
    As a principle of general application, moreover, we
    have stated that courts should “assume that legis-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           81
    lators take account of the legitimate sovereign in-
    terests of other nations when they write American
    laws.” F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd. v. Empagran
    S. A., 
    542 U.S. 155
    , 164 (2004); see EEOC v. Ara-
    bian American Oil Co., 
    499 U.S. 244
    , 248 (1991).
    Thus, the United States accurately conveyed in
    this case: “Foreign conduct is [generally] the do-
    main of foreign law,” and in the area here in-
    volved, in particular, foreign law “may embody
    different policy judgments about the relative rights
    of inventors, competitors, and the public in patent-
    ed inventions.” Brief for United States as Amicus
    Curiae 28.
    
    Id. (emphasis added)
    . The Court then applied the pre-
    sumption of congressional respect for territorial limits in
    patent law to interpret the very provision, § 271(f), that
    Congress had enacted (in 1984) to supersede Deepsouth,
    explaining that the presumption “remains instructive in
    determining the extent of the statutory exception” to the
    strict territorial limits elsewhere stated in the statute.
    
    Id. at 456.
        The principles thus expressed, perhaps especially the
    sentence highlighted in the quote just above, recognize
    what we noted above: Patent law is especially territorial,
    and laws vary considerably from country to country. The
    Supreme Court’s recognition of those points reinforces our
    conclusion that foreign markets are not the predictable
    equivalent of the American markets in which the U.S.
    patentee is given a right to exclude and the rewards from
    that exclusivity. The Court’s closest patent-law prece-
    dents thus support our holding that sales in foreign
    markets should not be presumed to confer on the buyer
    authority to displace sales in American markets.
    82             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    3
    Congress has not enacted a general provision of the
    Patent Act specifically addressed to foreign-sale exhaus-
    tion of U.S. patent rights. Congress has left the general
    issue to judicial resolution.
    When the subject arose in the Uruguay round of mul-
    tilateral negotiations that led to the Agreement on Trade-
    Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS),
    the parties agreed not to address the subject, stating, in
    article 6, that “nothing in this Agreement shall be used to
    address the issue of the exhaustion of intellectual proper-
    ty rights.” TRIPS, Apr. 15, 1994, 33 I.L.M. 1197, 1200,
    quoted in 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1383
    (Ginsburg, J.,
    dissenting). And when Congress implemented the inter-
    national agreement through the 1994 legislation that
    (among other things) added the new importation ban to
    § 271(a), the accompanying Statement of Administrative
    Action—which Congress deemed authoritative, 19 U.S.C.
    § 3512(d)—stated that “[t]he Agreement . . . does not
    affect U.S. law or practice relating to parallel importation
    of products protected by intellectual property rights.”
    H.R. Rep. No. 103-316, at 633, 981 (1994), reprinted in
    1994 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4040, 4280. The recent Trans Pacific
    Partnership agreement includes a similar disclaimer,
    reserving the parties’ rights to make other international
    agreements on the subject. See Trans-Pacific Partnership
    art. 18.11 & n.8, Oct. 5, 2015, https://ustr.gov/trade-
    agreements/free-trade-agreements/trans-pacific-partnersh
    ip/tpp-full-text.
    Congress did act in three specific instances formally
    to guarantee a U.S. patentee the right to retain its U.S.
    rights despite selling abroad. Congress so provided
    through legislation, adopted by both houses and signed by
    the President, that approved three international agree-
    ments. United States-Morocco Free Trade Agreement
    Implementation Act, Pub. L. No. 108-302, 118 Stat. 1103
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        83
    (2004); 22 United States-Australia Free Trade Agreement
    Implementation Act, Pub. L. No. 108-286, 118 Stat. 919
    (2004); 23 United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement
    Implementation Act, Pub. L. No. 108-78, 117 Stat. 948
    (2003). 24 In doing so, Congress did not provide the prom-
    22   Article 15.9.4 of the U.S.-Morocco agreements
    says: “Each Party shall provide that the exclusive right of
    the patent owner to prevent importation of a patented
    product, or a product that results from patented process,
    without the consent of the patent owner shall not be
    limited by the sale or distribution of that product outside
    its territory.” A footnote attached to the provision adds:
    “A Party may limit application of this paragraph to cases
    where the patent owner has placed restrictions on impor-
    tation by contract or other means.” United States-
    Morocco Free Trade Agreement, Morocco-U.S., June 15,
    2004, 44 I.L.M. 544 (2005).
    23  Article 17.9.4 of the U.S.-Australia agreement
    says: “Each Party shall provide that the exclusive right of
    the patent owner to prevent importation of a patented
    product, or a product that results from a patented process,
    without the consent of the patent owner shall not be
    limited by the sale or distribution of that product outside
    its territory, at least where the patentee has placed
    restrictions on importation by contract or other means.”
    United States-Australia Free Trade Agreement, Aus.-
    U.S., May 18, 2004, KAV 6422 (2005).
    24  Article 16.7.2 of the U.S.-Singapore agreement
    says: “Each Party shall provide a cause of action to pre-
    vent or redress the procurement of a patented pharma-
    ceutical product, without the authorization of the patent
    owner, by a party who knows or has reason to know that
    such product is or has been distributed in breach of a
    contract between the right holder and a licensee, regard-
    less of whether such breach occurs in or outside its terri-
    84             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    ised rights other than through the existing Patent Act
    provisions of §§ 154, 271.
    Those congressionally approved guarantees would be
    negated if Impression’s view of the Patent Act were
    adopted: U.S. patentees would lose their U.S. patent
    rights by selling abroad. An interpretation of a statute
    that produces such a contradiction with other enactments
    is to be avoided, at least where other considerations
    already point against such an interpretation. See FDA v.
    Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp., 
    529 U.S. 120
    , 143
    (2000); Vimar Seguros y Reaseguros, S.A. v. M/V Sky
    Reefer, 
    515 U.S. 528
    , 539 (1995); W. Va. Univ. Hosps., Inc.
    v. Casey, 
    499 U.S. 83
    , 100 (1991). The three congressional
    enactments thus provide a further reason to reject Im-
    pression’s view. At the same time, they leave to our
    internal law—the Patent Act, as judicially interpreted—
    whether even a presumptive-exhaustion rule governs.
    The agreements say nothing to undermine our reasons for
    rejecting a presumptive-exhaustion rule.
    The only other legislative enactment presented for our
    consideration is 21 U.S.C. § 381(d)(1)–(2). Paragraph (1)
    of that subsection states a general rule that “no drug
    subject to section 353(b) of this title [concerning prescrip-
    tion-necessitating drugs] or composed wholly or partly of
    insulin which is manufactured in a State and exported
    may be imported into the United States unless the drug is
    imported by the manufacturer of the drug.” The general
    rule is subject to one exception, stated in paragraph (1),
    tory.” A footnote attached to that sentence adds: “A Party
    may limit such cause of action to cases where the product
    has been sold or distributed only outside the Party’s
    territory before its procurement inside the Party’s territo-
    ry.” United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement,
    Sing.-U.S., May 6, 2003, 42 I.L.M. 1026 (2003).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        85
    for certain prescription drugs imported by pharmacists
    and wholesalers from Canada, as regulated under 21
    U.S.C. § 384. And it is subject to a second exception
    stated in paragraph (2), which authorizes the Secretary of
    Health and Human Services to permit importation other-
    wise within the paragraph (1) ban “if the drug is required
    for emergency medical care.” 21 U.S.C. § 381(d)(2).
    That provision does not alter our conclusion. The
    provision does not purport to limit patentees’ rights
    regarding importations under 35 U.S.C. §§ 154, 271. It
    adds an express government-enforced ban on certain
    importations, and it makes certain exceptions to the
    added ban, authorizing the Secretary to allow certain
    importations. Perhaps where the Secretary does so, an
    injunctive remedy might be unavailable to the patentee
    under 35 U.S.C. § 283, for public-interest reasons. See
    eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 
    547 U.S. 388
    (2006).
    But nothing in 21 U.S.C. § 381(d) makes non-infringing
    any conduct that otherwise would be infringing.
    Congress may modify patentees’ rights under the Pa-
    tent Act. It may do so with respect to particular articles,
    without modifying the general exhaustion rule for foreign
    sales under the Patent Act—though § 381(d) does not do
    even that. Or it may more generally prescribe a general
    exhaustion rule for patented articles, specifying the
    conditions for exhaustion, as it did in the Copyright Act
    for copyrighted works. But it has not done that either.
    4
    Our no-exhaustion conclusion—which leaves undis-
    turbed the availability of an express- or implied-license
    defense to infringement—is broadly consistent with the
    decisions of courts other than the Supreme Court, with
    the apparent exception of a trial-court decision that pre-
    dates Boesch.
    86             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    The pre-Boesch decision is Holiday v. Mattheson, 
    24 F. 185
    (C.C.S.D.N.Y. 1885), in which few facts are set out.
    The defendants bought some U.S.-patented article in
    England from “a vendee of the patentee,” “without re-
    striction or conditions.” 
    Id. at 185.
    The court denied the
    patentee’s motion for a preliminary injunction against
    U.S. activities involving the article. It reasoned that,
    whether or not an article is patented, “[w]hen the owner
    sells an article without any reservation respecting its use,
    or the title which is to pass,” “[t]he presumption arising
    from such a sale is that the vendor intends to part with
    all his rights in the thing sold”; and a patentee-seller
    “parts with his monopoly” as to that article—“unless by
    the conditions of the bargain the monopoly right is im-
    pressed upon the thing purchased,” i.e., unless “the owner
    of a patent sells the patented article under circumstances
    which imply that the purchaser is not to acquire an
    unqualified property in the thing purchased.” 
    Id. at 185–
    86. That description, with its emphasis on the absence or
    presence of patentee-conveyed restrictions on post-
    purchase use, is taken entirely from domestic exhaustion
    law. The court said nothing to recognize that a distinct
    issue is presented when the sale was made abroad; and
    the opinion, describing few facts, does not make clear
    even indirectly if the circumstances would have given rise
    to an implied-license defense. In any event, just a few
    years after the trial-court decision in Holiday, the Su-
    preme Court in Boesch made clear how much the crossing
    of international boundaries matters.
    After Boesch, the Second Circuit in Dickerson v.
    Matheson, 
    57 F. 524
    (2d Cir. 1893), affirmed a finding of
    infringement against Matheson & Co., which had ac-
    quired from a German seller in 1887, and brought into the
    United States for sale and use here, batches of a coloring
    agent that was subject to a U.S. patent and a German
    patent, both assigned to the Bayer Company. The Ger-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         87
    man seller (the Berlin Company) was a licensee of the
    Bayer Company, with the right to sell both in Europe and
    the United States, and it made clear that importation into
    the United States was prohibited. 
    Id. at 525–26.
    In the
    suit brought by Dickerson, to whom the Bayer Company
    assigned the U.S. patent in 1888, the Second Circuit
    rejected Matheson’s defense to infringement. It read
    Boesch to establish that “[a] purchaser in a foreign coun-
    try of an article patented in that country and also in the
    United States, from a licensee under the foreign patent
    only, does not give the purchaser a right to import the
    article into, and to sell it in, the United States, without
    the license or consent of the owner of the United States
    patent.” 
    Id. at 527.
        The Eighth Circuit reached a similar result in Dicker-
    son v. Tinling, 
    84 F. 192
    (8th Cir. 1897), involving Bayer
    & Co.’s phenacetine product. The court noted that “it
    appears that no patent [on the product] had ever been
    issued in Germany” and that “every package of phenace-
    tine that had ever been sold by Bayer & Co. in a foreign
    country had a prohibition against its importation into and
    sale within the United States printed upon it, and was
    sold subject to that prohibition.” 
    Id. at 193.
    It was un-
    clear whether Tinling bought the phenacetine at issue
    from Bayer & Co. (or its vendees) or from “others,” but it
    did not matter to the outcome. 
    Id. at 194.
    “If he bought it
    of others than Bayer & Co. or their vendees, he bought
    with it no right to sell it in the United States, because no
    one but Bayer & Co. and their vendees had that right in
    this country.” 
    Id. “On the
    other hand, if [Tinling] bought
    the phenacetine he is selling in a foreign country from
    Bayer & Co., or from its vendees, subject to the express
    condition that it should not be imported into the United
    States, or sold within their limits, the exclusive right to
    sell the patented article within the United States which
    88             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    was granted to Bayer & Co. by the patent was not
    abridged by that purchase.” 
    Id. The Eighth
    Circuit pointedly noted that it did not
    have to decide what the result would be if no restrictions
    attended a sale made or approved by Bayer. It said:
    “Conceding—but not deciding—that one who buys a
    patented article without restriction in a foreign country
    from the owner of the United States patent” is clear of the
    U.S. patent for domestic sale and use, 
    id. at 195
    (citing
    Holiday and Matheson), “there can be no doubt that a
    patentee has the same right and power to sell the patent-
    ed article upon conditions or with restrictions that he has
    to sell it at all,” 
    id. With Bayer
    having “sold on the ex-
    press condition that [the phenacetine] should not be
    imported into or sold within the United States,” Tinling’s
    domestic sale of the purchased product was infringing.
    
    Id. The Eighth
    Circuit thus reversed the trial court’s
    denial of an injunction and ordered an injunction to issue.
    
    Id. The Second
    Circuit likewise reversed the denial of in-
    fringement relief in Daimler Manufacturing Co. v.
    Conklin, 
    170 F. 70
    (2d Cir. 1909). The U.S. holder of
    certain automobile-component patents (Daimler) sought
    to enjoin the use in the United States of a vehicle contain-
    ing such components. Conklin had bought the vehicle in
    Europe, under no restrictions as to importation into or use
    within the United States, from a company licensed to sell
    it in Europe by the holder of European patent rights—a
    company distinct from the U.S. patent-holding company,
    though with common origins and some overlapping own-
    ership involving the inventor Maybach, see Daimler
    Manufacturing Co. v. Conklin, 
    160 F. 679
    (C.C.S.D.N.Y.
    1908). The Second Circuit, based on Boesch, concluded:
    “The use of articles covered by a United States patent
    within the United States can no more be controlled by
    foreign law than the sale can. The sale by a German
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.        89
    patentee of a patented article may take it out of the
    monopoly of the German patent, but how can it take it out
    of the monopoly of the American patentee who has not
    
    sold?” 170 F. at 72
    .
    In 1920, the Second Circuit affirmed the denial of re-
    lief where it was clear from the circumstances that the
    U.S. patentee had granted permission for otherwise-
    infringing U.S. activities with airplanes bought in Cana-
    da. Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Corp. v. United Aircraft
    Eng’g Corp., 
    266 F. 71
    (2d Cir. 1920). Curtiss was the
    holder of U.S. patents on various airplane-engine technol-
    ogies. During World War I, an 83-percent-owned Canadi-
    an subsidiary of Curtiss (which the court treated as
    indistinguishable from Curtiss) granted a license—
    covering its Canadian patents and applications and any
    further inventions it owned or controlled involving chang-
    es to the engines at issue—to an entity created by the
    British government, authorizing the latter to make air-
    planes for sale to and use by the British government. 
    Id. at 72–74.
    The British government bought planes during
    the war and, after the war ended, sold some of them to
    United Aircraft, which brought them into the United
    States for sale and use here. 
    Id. at 72,
    74. When Curtiss
    sued, the dispute was over whether “the authorization to
    make was general and unrestricted or subject to qualifica-
    tion and conditions, as to the disposition of the planes by
    the British government.” 
    Id. at 77;
    id. at 75.
    
         The Second Circuit, agreeing with the district court,
    concluded that the authorization gave the British gov-
    ernment freedom from U.S. patent constraints on what it
    could do with the planes. The court relied on “the very
    nature of things” and “the language used in the agree-
    ments.” 
    Id. at 75.
    It explained that “[a]n aeroplane has
    been said to be the most mobile article manufactured, and
    it is not confined by geographical boundaries,” id.; that
    the British had used airplanes in numerous countries
    90             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    during the war, id.; and that “the aviation fields in Texas
    and in other states were placed at the disposal of the
    British authorities and were actually used by them as
    training fields for Canadian aviators,” 
    id. It concluded:
    “[Curtiss] and the British government alike understood
    and intended that the aeroplanes to be manufactured by
    that government as well as those to be supplied to it by
    [Curtiss] were to become the absolute property of the
    government, and were to be disposed of as the latter
    should see fit. The express language of the contract is
    that the aeroplanes and other articles should ‘become and
    be the absolute property of the British government.’ ” 
    Id. Some decisions
    of district courts from decades later
    round out the picture of case law predating Jazz Photo.
    Judge Lord rejected an exhaustion defense in Griffin v.
    Keystone Mushroom Farm, Inc., 
    453 F. Supp. 1283
    (E.D.
    Pa. 1978). Griffin was the owner of the U.S. patent, as
    well as Italian patents, covering certain machinery.
    Keystone bought several machines in Italy from Griffin’s
    exclusive licensee in Italy and brought them into the
    United States, one for use, two for sale. Griffin sued
    Keystone for infringement, and Keystone sought sum-
    mary judgment based on exhaustion. Judge Lord rejected
    the defense.
    He read Boesch to apply, because in Boesch “[t]he
    source of the alleged infringer’s authorization under
    foreign law . . . was without significance in the Court’s
    reasoning.” 
    Id. at 1285.
    Therefore, it did not matter
    whether Griffin “owned concurrent United States and
    Italian patents and had entered into analogous licensing
    agreements concerning the same inventions,” giving
    Griffin a share of royalties from the Italian and American
    exclusive licensees. 
    Id. “[T]he basic
    thrust of the Boesch
    decision” was “that the ‘sale of articles in the United
    States under a United States patent cannot be controlled
    by foreign laws.’ ” 
    Id. at 1286
    (quoting 133 U.S. at 703
    ).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          91
    In Sanofi, S.A. v. Med-Tech Veterinarian Products,
    Inc., 
    565 F. Supp. 931
    (D.N.J. 1983), Judge Sarokin
    denied a preliminary injunction to U.S. patentee Sanofi,
    S.A., but granted one to U.S. exclusive licensee American
    Home Products. A Sanofi subsidiary in France sold to an
    American processor certain pharmaceutical products
    covered by Sanofi’s U.S. patent; the subsidiary “placed no
    restrictions in the sales contract,” and Sanofi had no
    French patent. 
    Id. at 938;
    see also 
    id. at 934–35.
    When
    the buyer brought the products to the United States for
    sale, both Sanofi and American Home Products sued.
    The court concluded first that “if Sanofi were permit-
    ted to impose restrictions upon the resale of its patented
    product, the expectations of the purchaser would be
    defeated.” 
    Id. at 938
    (emphasis added). “[W]here the
    owner of a patent exhibits conduct from which one dealing
    with him may properly infer that the owner consents to
    his use of the patent, an implied license will arise.” 
    Id. at 940
    (citing De Forest 
    Radio, 273 U.S. at 241
    ). But a
    different conclusion was required as to American Home
    Products, the U.S. exclusive licensee, the court reasoned,
    which did not cede its patent rights. “Because the pur-
    chaser is under an obligation to inquire of the seller as to
    the existence of any outstanding licenses, the purchaser
    cannot claim that his expectations have been frustrated if
    he fails to make the necessary inquiry and later discovers
    that an outstanding license interferes with his right of
    enjoyment.” 
    Id. “If the
    court were to hold that Sanofi’s
    sale of the product exhausted the patent, it would be
    crediting Sanofi with greater rights than the patentee
    actually had. Sanofi had no right to allow its product to
    92             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    enter this country without the permission of its exclusive
    licensee.” 
    Id. at 941.
    25
    All of the foregoing decisions after Boesch reflect both
    (a) the Boesch principle that foreign laws do not control
    domestic patent rights and (b) some assessment of the
    particular circumstances and language of foreign sales to
    determine if the U.S. patentee gave permission for impor-
    tation. The pre-Boesch decision in Holiday aside, the
    results accord with the Jazz Photo no-exhaustion rule
    coupled with the availability of a defense based on an
    express or implied license. That combination of princi-
    ples, supported in the statute and Supreme Court doc-
    trine, provides a clear doctrinal statement that fits the
    pre-Jazz Photo case law from outside the Supreme Court.
    5
    Finally, we consider what we can reliably gauge about
    the likely real-world consequences of one answer or an-
    other to the exhaustion question presented here. As on
    the first issue before us, the amicus briefs filed here
    present competing arguments about the effect of one
    foreign-sale exhaustion rule or another on their interests
    and the interests they promote, offering varying amounts
    of empirical support. Such arguments necessarily play a
    much more limited role for us than they might for Con-
    gress. As on the first issue, all that we can conclude is
    that we see no basis for altering the conclusion we think
    warranted by the legal sources already considered.
    a. We have not been shown that substantial problems
    have arisen with the clear rule of Jazz Photo, which has
    25 See also Kabushiki Kaisha Hattori Seiko v. Refac
    Tech. Dev. Corp., 
    690 F. Supp. 1339
    (S.D.N.Y. 1988)
    (interpreting settlement agreement to bar patentee Refac
    from suing purchasers of goods from Hattori).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           93
    been in place since 2001, or with the comparable legal
    understandings based on a century of case law in the
    area. There is, of course, the possibility—noted by the
    Dissent at 27, citing amici’s assertions—of unintended
    infringement by buyers of goods in foreign countries who
    bring them into the United States, whether to use them
    as components in new goods they make, to sell them, or to
    use them as consumers. But that possibility is limited by
    the availability of an implied-license defense from the
    circumstances of a sale (perhaps, e.g., an unrestricted
    patentee sale at a seaport or airport to a buyer loading or
    boarding a vessel or plane bound for the United States).
    In addition, a large share of such possible unintended
    infringement, according to the most common policy com-
    plaint by electronics-industry amici, is by definition
    immaterial to any exhaustion—namely, infringement of
    patents asserted by non-practicing entities that have
    neither made nor authorized the sale of patent-covered
    articles. The only scenario relevant to exhaustion is one
    involving patentee-made or -authorized foreign sales, and
    we simply have no reliable evidence that the possibility of
    unintended infringement in that scenario is actually a
    significant issue in practice. The absence of such evidence
    in the many years since Jazz Photo, and the still longer
    period since Boesch, provides good reason to think other-
    wise.
    Indeed, it has long been a feature of the patent-law
    landscape that there can be instances of innocent in-
    fringement, because § 271(a) sets a “strict-liability”
    standard. Commil USA, LLC v. Cisco Systems, Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 1920
    , 1926 (2015). Thus, even domestic purchasers
    of products from domestic sellers who have not obtained
    authority from the owners of patents covering the prod-
    ucts’ components could find themselves in that position.
    But Congress has left strict liability in place, even in light
    of the scenario not relevant to exhaustion, i.e., patent
    94             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    infringement claimed by non-practicing-entity patentees
    that have neither made nor authorized the sales at issue.
    In any event, despite the law in place since Jazz Photo
    and for decades earlier, there is no reason to think that
    this is a distinctive problem for foreign-purchased goods,
    much less a problem affecting a meaningful share of
    foreign sales leading to imports.
    In this respect, we have no reason to think that the
    most serious real-world problems described in Kirtsaeng
    carry over to the patent arena. Prominent among the
    problems in Kirtsaeng were those that would be faced,
    under the rejected interpretation of § 109(a), by libraries,
    museums, and bookshops. Those entities often would be
    dealing on a regular basis with changing inventories of
    large numbers of individually distinct long-shelf-life
    works subject to copyrights that have multiple owners
    and that last for periods far longer than the terms of
    patents (and variable with the life of the authors). See
    
    Eldred, 537 U.S. at 194
    –96 (describing copyright terms).
    And there was good reason to think that they built up
    “deeply embedded” reliance interests in the absence of
    clear law pointing against § 109(a)’s applicability just
    because a work was made abroad. 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1366
    . If there is a counterpart to such situations in the
    patent arena, it has not been shown to loom large in the
    full range of circumstances governed by the answer to the
    question of foreign-sale-exhaustion.
    b. Overturning Jazz Photo would plausibly cause sig-
    nificant disruption of existing practices adopted under the
    contrary law established by Jazz Photo and decades of
    prior case law. Such disruption is most likely if exhaus-
    tion of U.S. rights were held to follow from a foreign sale
    without the U.S. patentee having the ability to reserve its
    U.S. rights. While a conclusive-exhaustion rule is op-
    posed by the government, it is the rule urged by Impres-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         95
    sion and certain amici that stress the possibility of unin-
    tended infringement we have just discussed.
    An example of likely disruption involves pharmaceuti-
    cal products. There seems to be no dispute that U.S.-
    patented medicines are often sold outside the United
    States at substantially lower prices than those charged
    here and, also, that the practice could be disrupted by the
    increased arbitrage opportunities that would come from
    deeming U.S. rights eliminated by a foreign sale made or
    authorized by the U.S. patentee. 26 One official recogni-
    tion of both the fact of low prices abroad and the linkage
    of such prices to territorial resale protection appears in a
    2003 World Trade Organization decision made with the
    agreement of the United States. The WTO there waived
    certain TRIPS patent-recognition provisions in order to
    allow certain countries to import generic versions of
    needed medicines. The WTO took care, however, to
    condition the waiver on agreement by the importing
    countries “to control re-exportation of drugs they import
    in this fashion.” Ganslandt & Maskus, at 1036 (discuss-
    26  See, e.g., Mattias Ganslandt & Keith E. Maskus,
    Parallel Imports and the Pricing of Pharmaceutical Prod-
    ucts: Evidence from the European Union, 23 J. of Health
    Econ. 1035, 1036 (2004) (discussing WTO General Coun-
    cil, Implementation of paragraph 6 of the Doha Declara-
    tion on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, Aug. 30,
    2003, www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/implem_para6
    _e.htm); Mainak Mazumdar & Dyuti S. Banerjee, On
    Price Discrimination, Parallel Trade and the Availability
    of Patented Drugs in Developing Countries, 32 Int’l Rev. L.
    & Econ. 188, 189–93 (2012); Daniel Jacob Hemel & Lisa
    Larrimore Ouellette, Trade and Tradeoffs: The Case of
    International Patent Exhaustion, 115 Colum. L. Rev.
    Sidebar (forthcoming 2016), http://ssrn.com/abstract
    =2667338.
    96             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    ing WTO General Council, Implementation of paragraph
    6 of the Doha Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and
    Public Health, Aug. 30, 2003, www.wto.org/english/tratop
    _e/trips_e/implem_para6_e.htm). Reversing Jazz Photo
    and replacing it with a conclusive-exhaustion rule would
    likely upset such established practices.
    c. A presumptive-exhaustion rule, subject to some
    kind of preservation of U.S. rights by the U.S. patentee
    when making or authorizing a foreign sale, would be less
    consequential. After all, to try to negate a potential
    implied-license defense, U.S. patentees would have an
    incentive to make express reservations of U.S. rights in
    making or authorizing foreign sales, simply to make clear
    that no license was being conferred. But even for the U.S.
    patentees that recognize the incentive and try to act on it,
    whether there is a presumptive loss of U.S. rights makes
    a difference. In particular, it makes a difference—though
    we cannot say just how significant—who has the burden
    of proof on the issue: must the patentee prove a reserva-
    tion (communicated to the accused infringer) to avoid
    exhaustion, or must the accused infringer prove a license?
    A U.S. patentee that wishes to reserve its U.S. rights
    may not be able to do so. For a foreign sale, the required
    reservation is an act in a foreign country. And the foreign
    sovereign, or local governments in the country, may
    prohibit sellers from stating reservations of rights that
    would make importation into and sale in the United
    States more difficult.
    A presumptive-exhaustion rule would place a U.S. pa-
    tentee’s preservation of U.S. rights within foreign sover-
    eign control. For doctrinal reasons already emphasized,
    we should avoid attributing to Congress such a ceding of
    control over domestic rights to foreign sovereigns without
    clearer reason than we have seen here. The Supreme
    Court’s final statement of its rationale in Boesch says as
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          97
    much: “The sale of articles in the United States under a
    United States patent cannot be controlled by foreign
    
    laws.” 133 U.S. at 703
    . Indeed, such foreign control of
    U.S. rights is a mirror image of projecting U.S. patent
    rights into foreign sovereigns’ territories. The Supreme
    Court has long recognized that the latter is strongly
    disfavored in reading the Patent Act. See pages 
    79–81, supra
    . And since Boesch, the Court has twice recognized
    the symmetric impropriety of reading the Patent Act to
    allow projection of foreign sovereigns’ decisions to control
    rights in U.S. territory: “Our patent system makes no
    claim to extraterritorial effect; ‘these acts of Congress do
    not, and were not intended to, operate beyond the limits
    of the United States,’ Brown v. 
    Duchesne, 19 How., at 195
    ;
    and we correspondingly reject the claims of others to such
    control over our markets. Cf. Boesch v. Graff, 
    133 U.S. 697
    , 703 (1890).” 
    Deepsouth, 406 U.S. at 531
    ; see Mi-
    
    crosoft, 550 U.S. at 455
    .
    In practical terms, moreover, there is a plausible
    problem with adopting a presumptive-exhaustion rule,
    compared to leaving the matter to express- or implied-
    license doctrine. Intermediary companies between the
    foreign purchase and the importation into the United
    States may be created that make it difficult for the U.S.
    patentee to carry an affirmative burden of proving ade-
    quate notice of reservations attached to a foreign-sold
    article. Once the article leaves the hands of the initial
    seller (the U.S. patentee or its authorized seller), the U.S.
    patentee seems likely to have limited knowledge about
    the movement of the article to U.S. markets, through
    what may be multiple hands. On the other hand, if the
    burden is on the U.S. importer/seller to establish a confer-
    ral of authority, as it is under the express- or implied-
    license doctrine, there would be incentives to communi-
    cate a conferral of authority reliably throughout the chain
    of custody on the way to the U.S. importer and seller.
    98             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    That is because the latter, at the end of supply chain,
    would have the incentive to insist on ultimately receiving
    such information in order to establish the license defense.
    A related point may be made about the reasonable
    expectations of a potential U.S. reseller of goods acquired
    abroad in sales made or authorized by a U.S. patentee.
    As to the reseller’s freedom from the patentee’s U.S.
    rights, the difference between a rule leaving the matter to
    the reseller’s affirmative proof of a license (express or
    implied) and a rule of presumptive exhaustion (subject to
    disproof by the U.S. patentee) is significant just when
    there are genuine uncertainties about whether a license
    could be established. But in that situation the reseller is
    not entitled to a strong expectation that it has permission
    to conduct its otherwise-infringing activities in the United
    States.
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that, when a patentee sells a patented article
    under otherwise-proper restrictions on resale and reuse
    communicated to the buyer at the time of sale, the pa-
    tentee does not confer authority on the buyer to engage in
    the prohibited resale or reuse. The patentee does not
    exhaust its § 271 rights to charge the buyer who engages
    in those acts—or downstream buyers having knowledge of
    the restrictions—with infringement. We also hold that a
    foreign sale of a U.S.-patented article, when made by or
    with the approval of the U.S. patentee, does not exhaust
    the patentee’s U.S. patent rights in the article sold, even
    when no reservation of rights accompanies the sale. Loss
    of U.S. patent rights based on a foreign sale remains a
    matter of express or implied license.
    Under our first holding, we reverse the district court’s
    judgment of non-infringement as to the Return Cartridges
    first sold in the United States. Under our second holding,
    we affirm the district court’s judgment of infringement as
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.      99
    to the cartridges first sold abroad. The case is remanded
    for entry of a judgment of infringement for Lexmark and
    for any further proceedings necessary upon entry of such
    judgment.
    Costs awarded to Lexmark.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND
    REMANDED
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    LEXMARK INTERNATIONAL, INC.,
    Plaintiff-Cross-Appellant
    v.
    IMPRESSION PRODUCTS, INC.,
    Defendant-Appellant
    QUALITY CARTRIDGES, INC., JOHN DOES, 1-20,
    BLUE TRADING LLC, EXPRINT INTERNATIONAL,
    INC., LD PRODUCTS, INC., PRINTRONIC
    CORPORATION, TESEN DEVELOPMENT (HONG
    KONG) CO. LTD., BENIGNO ADEVA AND HIS
    COMPANIES,
    Defendants
    ______________________
    2014-1617, 2014-1619
    ______________________
    Appeals from the United States District Court for the
    Southern District of Ohio in No. 1:10-cv-00564-MRB,
    Judge Michael R. Barrett.
    ______________________
    DYK, Circuit Judge, dissenting, with whom Circuit Judge
    HUGHES joins.
    I respectfully dissent from the majority’s holding that
    Mallinckrodt, Inc. v. Medipart, Inc., 
    976 F.2d 700
    (Fed.
    Cir. 1992), and Jazz Photo Corp. v. International Trade
    Commission, 
    264 F.3d 1094
    (Fed. Cir. 2001), remain good
    2              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    law. First, I agree with the government that Mallinckrodt
    was wrong when decided, and in any event cannot be
    reconciled with the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
    Quanta Computer, Inc. v. LG Electronics, Inc., 
    553 U.S. 617
    (2008). We exceed our role as a subordinate court by
    declining to follow the explicit domestic exhaustion rule
    announced by the Supreme Court.
    Second, I would retain Jazz Photo insofar as it holds
    that a foreign sale does not in all circumstances lead to
    exhaustion of United States patent rights. But, in my
    view, a foreign sale does result in exhaustion if an author-
    ized seller has not explicitly reserved the United States
    patent rights.
    I. DOMESTIC EXHAUSTION
    A
    Both here and in Mallinckrodt the patentee itself sold
    the patented item to the purchaser. In Mallinckrodt, “the
    device [was] manufactured by [the patent owner], who
    [sold] it to hospitals as a unitary 
    kit.” 976 F.2d at 702
    .
    Here, as the majority recognizes, “Lexmark sells its
    cartridges . . . directly to end users, and [] to ‘resellers’
    (including wholesalers, dealers, and distributors).” Maj.
    Op. at 11. Lexmark’s sales of so-called “Return Program
    Cartridges” were subject to a single-use/no-resale re-
    striction that barred the purchaser from reusing the
    cartridge, or transferring a used cartridge to anyone
    besides Lexmark. See Maj. Op. at 10 & n.1. Those sales
    were authorized by the patent holder and transferred title
    to the purchaser.
    Beginning in the 1850s, the Supreme Court recog-
    nized that such authorized sales exhaust the patentee’s
    patent rights in the items sold. The patentee’s right to
    exclude under the Patent Act expires with an authorized
    sale. The question of whether the seller has “authorized”
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.              3
    the buyer to use or resell the item is simply irrelevant.
    The Court’s language is unequivocal:
    •   “[W]hen the machine passes to the hands of the
    purchaser, it is no longer within the limits of the
    monopoly. It passes outside of it, and is no longer
    under the protection of the act of Con-
    gress. . . . Contracts in relation to it are regulated
    by the laws of the State, and are subject to State
    jurisdiction.”
    Bloomer v. McQuewan, 
    55 U.S. 539
    , 549–50 (1852).
    •   “[W]hen [patentees] have made and vended to oth-
    ers to be used one or more of the things patented,
    . . . they have parted with their exclusive right. . . .
    By a valid sale and purchase the patented machine
    becomes the private individual property of the pur-
    chaser, and is no longer specially protected by the
    laws of the United States, but by the laws of the
    State in which it is situated. . . . [I]f a person legal-
    ly acquires a title to that which is the subject of let-
    ters patent, . . . he may repair it or improve upon it
    as he pleases, in the same manner as if dealing
    with property of any other kind.”
    Bloomer v. Millinger, 
    68 U.S. 340
    , 350–52 (1863).
    •   “[W]hen [the patented article] rightfully passes
    from the patentee to the purchaser, [it] ceases to be
    within the limits of the monopoly.”
    Mitchell v. Hawley, 
    83 U.S. 544
    , 548 (1872).
    •   “The true ground on which [McQuewan, Millinger,
    and Mitchell] rest is that the sale by a person who
    has the full right to make, sell, and use such a ma-
    chine carries with it the right to the use of that ma-
    chine to the full extent to which it can be used in
    point of time. . . . [I]t is open to the use of the pur-
    4                LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    chaser without further restriction on account of the
    monopoly of the patentees.”
    Adams v. Burke, 
    84 U.S. 453
    , 455–56 (1873).
    •   “[W]hen the patentee . . . sells a machine or in-
    strument whose sole value is in its use, he receives
    the consideration for its use, and parts with the
    right to restrict that use . . . . [I]t is open to the use
    of the purchaser, without further restriction on ac-
    count of the monopoly of the patentee . . . .”
    Hobbie v. Jennison, 
    149 U.S. 355
    , 361–62 (1893).
    •   “[O]ne who buys patented articles of manufacture
    from one authorized to sell them becomes possessed
    of an absolute property in such articles, unrestrict-
    ed in time or place.”
    Keeler v. Standard Folding Bed Co., 
    157 U.S. 659
    ,
    666 (1895).
    •   “[B]y virtue of the patent law one who had sold a
    patented machine and received the price and had
    thus placed the machine so sold beyond the con-
    fines of the patent law, could not by qualifying re-
    strictions as to use keep under the patent monopoly
    a subject to which the monopoly no longer applied.”
    Bos. Store of Chi. v. Am. Graphophone Co., 
    246 U.S. 8
    , 25 (1918).
    •   “[W]here a patentee makes the patented article,
    and sells it, he can exercise no future control over
    what the purchaser may wish to do with the article
    after his purchase. It has passed beyond the scope
    of the patentee's rights.”
    United States v. Gen. Elec. Co., 
    272 U.S. 476
    , 489
    (1926).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         5
    •    “The first vending of any article manufactured un-
    der a patent puts the article beyond the reach of
    the monopoly which that patent confers.”
    United States v. Univis Lens Co., 
    316 U.S. 241
    , 252
    (1942).
    Thus, by the mid-1850s and continuing for the next
    century, even before Quanta, the Supreme Court repeat-
    edly held that the authorized sale of a patented article
    exhausted all of the patentee’s patent rights in that
    article, and freed the article from any restrictions on use
    or sale based on the patent laws. Post-sale restrictions
    were enforceable only as a matter of state contract law. 1
    B
    The sole Supreme Court case to depart from that
    principle, Henry v. A.B. Dick Co., 
    224 U.S. 1
    (1912), was
    explicitly overruled five years later by Motion Picture
    Patents Co. v. Universal Film Manufacturing Co., 
    243 U.S. 502
    , 518 (1917). See 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 625
    –26. In
    Henry v. A.B. Dick Co., the A.B. Dick Company sold a
    rotary mimeograph, and affixed to it a restriction stating
    that it could only be used with stencil paper, ink, and
    other supplies made by the 
    patentee. 224 U.S. at 11
    . The
    Supreme Court in A.B. Dick upheld that restriction, and,
    more broadly, held that
    1    See, e.g., 
    Keeler, 157 U.S. at 666
    (“Whether a pa-
    tentee may protect himself and his assignees by special
    contracts brought home to the purchasers is not a ques-
    tion before us, and upon which we express no opinion. It
    is, however, obvious that such a question would arise as a
    question of contract, and not as one under the inherent
    meaning and effect of the patent laws.”) (emphasis add-
    ed); see also 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 637
    n.7.
    6              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    [t]he property right to a patented machine may
    pass to a purchaser with no right of use, or with
    only the right to use in a specified way, or at a
    specified place, or for a specified purpose. The un-
    limited right of exclusive use which is possessed
    by and guaranteed to the patentee will be granted
    if the sale be unconditional. But if the right of use
    be confined by specific restriction, the use not
    permitted is necessarily reserved to the patentee.
    If that reserved control of use of the machine be
    violated, the patent is thereby invaded.
    
    Id. at 24–25
    (emphasis added). The Court reasoned, in
    part, that the patent owner’s “larger right” of excluding
    all others from using the patent “embraces the lesser of
    permitting others to use upon such terms as the patentee
    chooses to prescribe.” 
    Id. at 35.
        The holding of A.B. Dick, that a patent owner has the
    right to impose post-sale restrictions under the patent
    law, provided the purchaser has sufficient “notice that he
    buys with only a qualified right of use,” 
    id. at 26,
    is the
    same as the panel’s holding in Mallinckrodt and the
    majority’s holding in this case.
    A.B. Dick was quickly overruled in Motion Picture
    
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 518
    , which stands as compelling
    authority against the majority’s conclusion. 2 There, the
    2    Even before Motion Picture Patents, the Court had
    declined to follow A.B. Dick. The Court had held that a
    packaging notice that set a minimum retail price for a
    patented tonic, Bauer & Cie v. O’Donnell, 
    229 U.S. 1
    , 8
    (1913), and a purported “License Notice” that operated to
    fix the price at which phonographs could be resold, Straus
    v. Victor Talking Mach. Co., 
    243 U.S. 490
    , 500–501
    (1917), were not enforceable under the patent laws. In
    Straus, the Court stated that courts “would be perversely
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.           7
    licensee-manufacturer sold film projectors subject to an
    attached notice restricting their use to unpatented films
    made by the Motion Pictures Patents Company, and other
    restrictions “not stated in the notice, but which are to be
    fixed, after sale.” 
    Id. at 505–09.
    When a purchaser used
    the projector to display films made by another company,
    the Motion Picture Patents Company sued for infringe-
    ment. 
    Id. at 508.
    The question was whether the re-
    strictions were enforceable after the sale. The Court
    rejected the basic rationale of A.B. Dick that, since the
    “patentee may withhold his patent altogether from public
    use, he must logically and necessarily be permitted to
    impose any conditions which he chooses upon any use
    which he may allow of it,” 
    id. at 514,
    and concluded that
    A.B. Dick “must be regarded as overruled,” 
    id. at 518.
    Instead, the Court reaffirmed that “the right to vend is
    exhausted by a single, unconditional sale, the article sold
    being thereby carried outside the monopoly of the patent
    law and rendered free of every restriction which the
    vendor may attempt to put on it.” 
    Id. at 516.
        The majority attempts to distinguish Motion Picture
    Patents, on the ground that it only “held particular re-
    strictions improper . . . relying on the 1914 Clayton Act,”
    but “did not rule that all restrictions on a patentee’s sale
    were ineffective to preserve the patentee’s patent-law
    rights.” Maj. Op. at 50. That is not accurate. Motion
    Picture Patents did not leave behind the remnants of A.B.
    Dick—minus tie-ins and resale price maintenance. To the
    contrary, the Court in Motion Picture Patents found that
    blind if they failed to look through such an attempt as
    [the] ‘License Notice’ thus plainly is to sell property for a
    full price, and yet to place restraints upon its further
    alienation, such as have been hateful to the law from Lord
    Coke’s day to ours, because obnoxious to the public inter-
    est.” 
    Id. 8 LEXMARK
    INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    “[t]he patent law furnishes no warrant for” the re-
    strictions imposed by the patent 
    owner. 243 U.S. at 516
    .
    The passage of the Clayton Act only “confirmed” the
    Patent Act holding reached in Motion Picture Patents. 
    Id. at 517.
        In later cases, the Court characterized Motion Picture
    Patents as having broadly settled the ineffectiveness of all
    post-sale restrictions under the patent law. In Boston
    Store of Chicago v. American Graphophone Co., Motion
    Picture Patents was viewed as “concern[ing] whether the
    monopoly of the patent law can be extended beyond the
    scope of that law or, in other words, applied to articles
    after they have gone beyond its 
    reach.” 246 U.S. at 26
    (emphasis added). The Court stated that Motion Picture
    Patents accordingly settled “the general question of the
    power of the patentee to sell and yet under the guise of
    license or otherwise to put restrictions which in substance
    were repugnant to the rights which necessarily arose from
    the sale which was made.” 
    Id. at 24.
    Resting on patent
    exhaustion principles, Motion Picture Patents “decided
    that as by virtue of the patent law one who had sold a
    patented machine and received the price, and had thus
    placed the machine so sold beyond the confines of the
    patent law, could not by qualifying restrictions as to use
    keep under the patent monopoly a subject to which the
    monopoly no longer applied.” 
    Id. at 25
    (emphasis added).
    In Quanta, the Court reiterated the broad patent ex-
    haustion rule and left no room for a resurrection of A.B.
    Dick. LG Electronics (“LG”) owned system and method
    patents related to computer technology. 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 621
    –22. LG licensed Intel to manufacture microproces-
    sors and chipsets that used the LG patents. 
    Id. at 623.
    The licensing agreement stipulated that no license was
    given to Intel’s customers to combine the licensed Intel
    products with non-Intel components in ways that prac-
    ticed the LG patents. 
    Id. A separate
    master agreement
    required Intel to provide a notice to its customers that
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            9
    they were not licensed to practice the LG patents by
    combining Intel products with non-Intel products. 
    Id. at 623–24.
    Quanta purchased microprocessors and chipsets
    covered by the LG patents from Intel but combined them
    with non-Intel products to manufacture computers. LG
    filed suit against Quanta for patent infringement. 
    Id. at 624.
         The Court found that the Intel products embodied the
    LG patents and that Intel had authority to sell its prod-
    ucts to Quanta. 
    Id. at 635,
    636–37. It then expansively
    held that “[t]he authorized sale of an article that substan-
    tially embodies a patent exhausts the patent holder’s
    rights and prevents the patent holder from invoking
    patent law to control postsale use of the article.” 
    Id. at 638.
    Significantly, Quanta described Motion Picture
    Patents as having “reiterated the rule that ‘the right to
    vend is exhausted by a single, unconditional sale, the
    article sold being thereby carried outside the monopoly of
    the patent law and rendered free of every restriction
    which the vendor may attempt to put upon it.’
    553 U.S. at 626
    (quoting Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 516
    ).
    After Quanta, the Court confirmed again that the
    “doctrine of patent exhaustion limits a patentee's right to
    control what others can do with an article embodying or
    containing an invention. Under the doctrine, ‘the initial
    authorized sale of a patented item terminates all patent
    rights to that item.’” Bowman v. Monsanto Co., 
    133 S. Ct. 1761
    , 1766 (2013) (quoting 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 625
    ). 3
    3   The majority relies on the fact that the Supreme
    Court in Quanta did not expressly overrule Mallinckrodt,
    as urged by both the petitioner and the government. The
    majority cites no authority for the proposition that the
    Court’s failure to explicitly overrule circuit authority is an
    implicit endorsement of that authority. Influential com-
    10             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    The patent exhaustion doctrine, as stated by Quanta,
    admits of no exception. Authorized sales “prevent[] the
    patent holder from invoking patent law to control postsale
    use.” 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 638
    .
    Contrary to the majority, Quanta’s reference to an
    “unconditional sale,” 
    id. at 626,
    a reference appearing as
    well in other exhaustion cases, can hardly be read to
    contradict the Court’s central holding that post-sale
    restrictions are unenforceable under the patent laws. The
    language referring to “conditions” imposed on sale or
    “unconditional” sales is used in these cases in two differ-
    ent senses. On the one hand, there are cases in which
    such language is used to denote the existence of post-sale
    restrictions imposed by the patent holder. A.B. Dick and
    Motion Picture Patents fall into this category. A.B. Dick
    stated that exhaustion applied only if the sale was “un-
    conditional[],” i.e., free of post-sale 
    restrictions. 224 U.S. at 19
    . Motion Picture Patents, in overruling A.B. Dick,
    rejected the notion that a seller could impose “conditions,”
    i.e., restrictions on post-sale 
    use. 243 U.S. at 514
    –15. The
    use of such language in those cases refutes the majority’s
    theory, since Motion Picture Patents holds that conditions
    (i.e., restrictions) are not permissible under the patent
    laws.
    In the few other cases that use the “unconditional
    sales” language, the reference to an “unconditional” sale is
    mentators have viewed the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Quanta as having overruled our decision in Mallinckrodt.
    See, e.g., 12 Phillip A. Areeda & Herbert Hovenkamp,
    Antitrust Law ¶2044, at 300 & 301 n.15 (3d ed. 2012) (“In
    its Quanta Computer decision the Supreme Court re-
    affirmed a strong version of the first-sale doctrine, strik-
    ing down more relaxed Federal Circuit precedent. . . . To
    the extent that Mallinckrodt relaxed the first-sale doc-
    trine, it was overruled by Quanta Computer . . . .”).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          11
    to a sale in which title passes, not to a sale in which no
    restrictions are imposed. 4 The contemporaneous under-
    standing of “conditional sale” was as a security device,
    i.e., an “agreement to sell upon a condition to be per-
    formed.” Harkness v. Russell, 
    118 U.S. 663
    , 665 (1886); see
    also Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 520
    –21 (Holmes,
    J., dissenting) (“[A] conditional sale retaining the title
    until a future event after delivery has been decided to be
    lawful again and again by this court.”). 5
    That the use of the term “unconditional” in those cas-
    es is not referring to a sale without restrictions is crystal
    clear from Quanta itself, where the Court stated that
    Motion Picture Patents “reiterated the rule that ‘the right
    to vend is exhausted by a single, unconditional sale, the
    article sold being thereby carried outside the monopoly of
    the patent law and rendered free of every restriction
    which the vendor may attempt to put upon it.’
    553 U.S. at 626
    (quoting Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 516
    ).
    4   Mitchell stated that “where the sale is absolute,
    and without any conditions, the rule is well settled that”
    the patentee’s rights are 
    exhausted. 83 U.S. at 548
    ; see
    also Motion Picture 
    Patents, 243 U.S. at 516
    ; In re Paper
    Bag Cases, 
    105 U.S. 766
    , 770–71 (1881) (“The right of the
    owner of a patented machine, without any conditions
    attached to his ownership, to continue the use of his
    machine during an extended term of the patent, is well
    settled.”).
    5   See also 1 Grant Gilmore, Security Interests in
    Personal Property § 3.7, at 81 (1965) (“For most lawyers
    the term [‘conditional sale’] came to have a reasonably
    precise meaning: a purchase money security transaction,
    subject in most states to statute, in which title to the
    goods was retained by the seller or his assignee until the
    full purchase price had been paid, usually in periodic
    installments.”).
    12               LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    In other words, a sale with restrictions could nonetheless
    be an “unconditional” sale in which title passes, with the
    restrictions invalid under the patent laws because of
    exhaustion.
    C
    The rule articulated in the Supreme Court’s cases is
    consistent with the common law rule against restraints on
    the use or alienation of chattels, which formed the back-
    ground of the patent statute. In Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley &
    Sons, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 1351
    , 1363 (2013), the Court noted,
    in the context of copyright law, that the “‘first sale’ doc-
    trine is a common law doctrine” traceable to “the common
    law’s refusal to permit restraints on the alienation of
    chattels.” The Court cited Lord Coke’s 17th century
    observation that
    [If] a man be possessed of . . . a horse, or of any
    other chattel . . . and give or sell his whole inter-
    est . . . therein upon condition that the Donee or
    Vendee shall not alien[ate] the same, the [condi-
    tion] is voi[d], because his whole interest . . . is out
    of him, so as he hath no possibilit[y] of a Reverter,
    and it is against Trade and Traffi[c], and bargain-
    ing and contracting betwee[n] man and man . . . .
    
    Id. (quoting 1
    Edward Coke, Institutes of the Laws of
    England § 360, at 223 (1628)). Kirtsaeng concluded that
    “[a] law that permits a copyright holder to control the
    resale or other disposition of a chattel once sold is similar-
    ly ‘against Trade and Traffi[c], and bargaining and con-
    
    tracting.’” 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    .
    So too a rule permitting a patent holder to enact post-
    sale restraints would be contrary to the general common
    law. Post-sale restraints would “cast a cloud of uncertain-
    ty over every sale,” Tessera, Inc. v. Int’l Trade Comm’n,
    
    646 F.3d 1357
    , 1370 (Fed. Cir. 2011). The Supreme Court
    has repeatedly instructed us not to ignore traditional
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         13
    legal principles to fashion rules “unique to patent dis-
    putes.” eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., 
    547 U.S. 388
    ,
    393 (2006); see also Global-Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB
    S.A., 
    131 S. Ct. 2060
    , 2069 (2011); MedImmune, Inc. v.
    Genentech, Inc., 
    549 U.S. 118
    , 132 n.11 (2007). We should
    decline to do so here. There is no indication in the patent
    laws that there should be a special exception for patent
    holders to the general longstanding common law doctrine
    that promotes free competition in the resale market and
    certainty in commercial transactions. Allowing the patent
    holder to impose conditions on the sale of a patented item
    would indeed largely eviscerate the exhaustion doctrine,
    by permitting the imposition of all manner of post-sale
    restrictions except for tie-ins, price-fixing, and other
    violations of the patent misuse and antitrust law.
    D
    The majority’s justifications for refusing to follow Su-
    preme Court authority establishing the exhaustion rule
    misconceive our role as a subordinate court.
    First, the majority characterizes the statement of the
    exhaustion rule in the Supreme Court cases as mere
    dictum because in those cases there was either no re-
    striction imposed or the restriction would otherwise
    violate the antitrust laws. 6 But the cases impose no such
    qualification on the rule announced. The Supreme Court
    has repeatedly advised the courts of appeals that our task
    is to follow the rules proclaimed by the Court, and not to
    attempt to distinguish Supreme Court cases on their
    6     See Maj. Op. at 51 (“[A]lthough some language in
    Univis, like language in other decisions in the area, can
    be taken out of context . . . we do not think it appropriate
    to give broad effect to language in Univis, taken out of
    context, to support an otherwise unjustified conclusion
    here . . . .”).
    14             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    facts. See, e.g., Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc., 
    511 U.S. 298
    , 312 (1994) (“[O]nce the Court has spoken, it is the
    duty of other courts to respect that understanding of the
    governing rule of law.”); Thurston Motor Lines, Inc. v.
    Jordan K. Rand, Ltd., 
    460 U.S. 533
    , 534–35 (1983) (per
    curiam) (A court of appeals must not “confus[e] the factual
    contours of [a Supreme Court decision] for its unmistaka-
    ble holding” in an effort to reach a “novel interpretation”
    of that decision.).
    Previously we have faithfully adhered to this rule. See
    Ariad Pharm., Inc. v. Eli Lilly & Co., 
    598 F.3d 1336
    , 1347
    (Fed. Cir. 2010) (en banc) (“As a subordinate federal court,
    we may not so easily dismiss [the Supreme Court’s]
    statements as dicta but are bound to follow them.”); Stone
    Container Corp. v. United States, 
    229 F.3d 1345
    , 1349–50
    (Fed. Cir. 2000) (“[W]e do not share the Supreme Court’s
    latitude in disregarding the language in its own prior
    opinions.”). 7 We cannot appropriately depart from it here.
    7  See also Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc. v. Nuclear
    Regulatory Comm’n, 
    216 F.3d 1180
    , 1189 (D.C. Cir. 2000)
    (“[C]arefully considered language of the Supreme Court,
    even if technically dictum, generally must be treated as
    authoritative.”) (quotation marks and citation omitted);
    Alston v. Redman, 
    34 F.3d 1237
    , 1246 (3d Cir. 1994)
    (“Though this passage . . . is essentially dicta . . . we must
    consider it with deference, given the High Court’s para-
    mount position in our three-tier system of federal courts,
    and its limited docket.”) (quotation marks and citation
    omitted); Hendricks Cty. Rural Elec. Membership Corp. v.
    N.L.R.B., 
    627 F.2d 766
    , 768 n.1 (7th Cir. 1980) (“A dictum
    in a Supreme Court opinion may be brushed aside by the
    Supreme Court as dictum when the exact question is later
    presented, but it cannot be treated lightly by inferior
    federal courts until disavowed by the Supreme Court.”)
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            15
    Second, the majority relies on 35 U.S.C. §§ 271(a) and
    154(a)(1) to suggest that a broad reading of the exhaus-
    tion doctrine is inconsistent with statutory language
    making an act of infringement, inter alia, any use or sale
    of a patented invention “without authority” of the patent
    owner, and providing the patent owner with a “right to
    exclude.” Maj. Op. at 19, 22–23. That reliance is mis-
    placed. Patent exhaustion is a limit on the patentee’s
    statutory right to control what purchasers can do with an
    article embodying or containing a patented invention. See
    
    Bowman, 133 S. Ct. at 1766
    & n.2 (recognizing that
    patent exhaustion removes restrictions imposed by
    §§ 271(a) and 154(a)(1)). The focus of patent exhaustion is
    not whether the buyer has been expressly or impliedly
    authorized to sell or use a product in a certain way after
    the sale. Instead, it begins and ends with an inquiry of
    whether the seller had authorization to make a sale. The
    exhaustion doctrine is simply a limit on the scope of the
    patent monopoly, that is, a limit on the exclusive rights of
    the patentee. The right to exclude expires (or is “exhaust-
    ed”) by an authorized sale. 8
    (citation omitted), rev’d on other grounds, 
    454 U.S. 170
    (1981).
    8   See, e.g., 
    Quanta, 553 U.S. at 636
    –38 (concluding
    “[t]he authorized sale of an article that substantially
    embodies a patent exhausts the patent holder's rights”);
    
    Univis, 316 U.S. at 249
    (“[T]he authorized sale of an
    article which is capable of use only in practicing the
    patent is a relinquishment of the patent monopoly with
    respect to the article sold.”); Bos. Store of 
    Chi., 246 U.S. at 25
    (Sale “placed the machine so sold beyond the confines
    of the patent law . . . .”); 
    Mitchell, 83 U.S. at 548
    (“[W]hen
    [the patented article] rightfully passes from the patentee
    to the purchaser, [it] ceases to be within the limits of the
    monopoly.”); 
    McQuewan, 55 U.S. at 549
    (“[W]hen the
    16             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    Third, the majority claims that giving full sweep to
    the articulation of the exhaustion doctrine in Quanta and
    other cases would be inconsistent with the Supreme
    Court’s decision in General Talking Pictures Corp. v.
    Western Electric Co., 
    304 U.S. 175
    (1938), aff’d on reh’g,
    
    305 U.S. 124
    (1938). The majority asserts that General
    Talking Pictures “held that a patentee can preserve its
    patent rights by authorizing a manufacturing licensee to
    make and sell a patented article under an otherwise-
    proper restriction, including a restriction on the buyer’s
    post-purchase use.” Maj. Op. at 42. The majority suggests
    it would be incongruous if “a patentee cannot preserve its
    patent rights against uses of a patented article . . . if,
    instead of licensing someone else to make and sell the
    article, it chooses to make and sell the article itself.” 
    Id. The majority
    urges there is “no sound legal basis” for
    distinguishing restrictions on a purchaser from re-
    strictions on a licensee. 
    Id. at 8
    . 9
    In General Talking Pictures, a patent owner granted a
    non-exclusive license to a licensee to manufacture and sell
    patented sound amplifier 
    products. 304 U.S. at 180
    . The
    license contained a field-of-use restriction: the licensee
    could only make and sell amplifiers for non-commercial
    use. 
    Id. Nonetheless, in
    violation of the license terms, the
    licensee made and sold the products knowing that they
    were to be used in a commercial theater, and the buyer
    had actual knowledge that the licensee lacked authority
    to make such a sale. 
    Id. The Court
    stated the “controlling
    machine passes to the hands of the purchaser, it is no
    longer within the limits of the monopoly.”).
    9   See also Maj. Op. at 25 (“no sound reason”); 
    id. at 27
    (“formalistic distinctions of no economic consequence”)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted); 
    id. at 39
    (“no good
    reason”); 
    id. at 42
    (“no basis in the policy of the patent
    statute”); 
    id. at 43
    (“unjustifiably formalistic”).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.            17
    facts” as, “[t]he patent owner did not sell to petitioner the
    amplifiers in question or authorize [the licensee] to sell
    them or any amplifiers for use in theaters or any other
    commercial use. The sales made by the [licensee] were
    outside the scope of its license and not under the patent.”
    
    Id. at 180.
    There had been no authorized first sale, for the
    licensee “could not convey to [the ultimate purchaser]
    what both knew it was not authorized to sell,” and thus
    both were liable for infringement. 
    Id. at 181–82.
        There is nothing anomalous about General Talking
    Pictures. The Supreme Court has clearly distinguished
    between sales and licenses, holding that while a patentee
    cannot impose post-sale restrictions on an authorized
    sale, it can impose restrictions on a licensee. See Gen.
    
    Elec., 272 U.S. at 489
    –90; 
    McQuewan, 55 U.S. at 549
    –50;
    6A Donald S. Chisum, Chisum on Patents § 19.04[3][h]
    (2015).
    That the exhaustion of rights applies only to sales and
    not licenses was clear in Kirtsaeng, which stated that
    under the copyright “first sale” doctrine, 17 U.S.C.
    § 109(a), because many movie theater owners “were
    lessees, not owners, of their copies [of copyrighted films],
    . . . they (like bailees and other lessees) cannot take
    advantage of the ‘first sale’ 
    doctrine.” 133 S. Ct. at 1361
    . 10
    Thus, in Quanta, the Court stated that General Talk-
    ing Pictures “held that exhaustion did not apply because
    10  Similarly, the Court explained in Mitchell that
    purchasers “who buy goods from one not the owner, and
    who does not lawfully represent the owner, however
    innocent they may be, obtain no property whatever in the
    goods, as no one can convey . . . any better title than he
    owns, unless the sale is made in market overt, or under
    circumstances which show that the seller lawfully repre-
    sented the 
    owner.” 83 U.S. at 550
    .
    18              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    the manufacturer [licensee] had no authority to sell the
    amplifiers for commercial 
    use.” 553 U.S. at 636
    . But
    Quanta held that where the licensee does have authority
    to sell, the authorized sale results in exhaustion. In
    Quanta, Intel, a licensee, did have authority to make
    sales to purchasers, and “exhaustion turns only on Intel’s
    own license to sell products practicing the [patentee’s
    patents].” 
    Id. at 637.
    11
    The majority makes much of the fact that the sale
    from the licensee to the ultimate purchaser in General
    Talking Pictures did not result in exhaustion. See Maj.
    Op. at 42, 48–49. But this is not surprising. The licensee
    infringed the patent by its manufacture and sale of the
    item. The sale of the amplifier by the infringer to the
    ultimate purchaser was the antithesis of an authorized
    sale, and it is hardly surprising that an infringer’s unau-
    thorized sale did not result in exhaustion.
    In any event, even if there were some tension between
    the Supreme Court’s broad statement of the exhaustion
    rule and General Talking Pictures, it is not our task to
    ignore Supreme Court rulings as “unjustifi[ed]” or
    “[un]sound” because they are purportedly inconsistent
    with other Supreme Court cases. The distinction between
    restrictions on sales (impermissible) and restrictions on
    licensees (permissible) exists in the Court’s precedent,
    and it is not for us to decide if it is a sound distinction. “If
    a precedent of th[e] Court has direct application in a case,
    yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line
    11  The Supreme Court has never even decided that
    an authorized sale by a licensee with a limited license
    does not exhaust the patentee’s patent rights in the item
    sold. That question was reserved by the Court in General
    Talking 
    Pictures. 305 U.S. at 127
    (“Nor have we occasion
    to consider the effect of a ‘licensee’s notice’ which purports
    to restrict the use of articles lawfully sold.”).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          19
    of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case
    which directly controls, leaving to th[e] Court the preroga-
    tive of overruling its own decisions.” Rodriguez de Quijas
    v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc., 
    490 U.S. 477
    , 484 (1989);
    see also State Oil Co. v. Khan, 
    522 U.S. 3
    , 20 (1997) (Even
    if a Supreme Court precedent contains many “infirmities”
    and rests upon “wobbly, moth-eaten foundations,” it
    remains the “Court’s prerogative alone to overrule one of
    its precedents.”).
    Finally, the majority proposes that we should some-
    how sustain the restriction here because it may be pro-
    competitive. Exhaustion does not turn on whether a
    particular post-sale restriction is desirable or undesirable,
    pro-competitive or anti-competitive, but whether the sale
    was authorized and the item has passed beyond the scope
    of the patent monopoly. In any case, the Court has sug-
    gested that a prohibition on resale is “manifestly anti-
    competitive.” 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    . 12
    12   
    Id. (stating that
    “competition, including freedom
    to resell, can work to the advantage of the consumer” and
    noting that “restraints with ‘manifestly anticompetitive
    effects’ are per se illegal”) (quoting Leegin Creative Leath-
    er Prods., Inc. v. PSKS, Inc., 
    551 U.S. 877
    , 886 (2007)).
    Even on its own terms, the majority’s view that
    Lexmark’s post-sale restrictions can be pro-competitive is
    questionable. The majority posits that Lexmark’s single-
    use/no-resale restriction may not be inconsistent with the
    antitrust laws because “non-price vertical restraints are
    to be judged by a rule of reason.” Maj. Op. at 57. But
    Lexmark’s single-use/no-resale restriction imposed on the
    defendants is not a vertical restraint. “Restraints imposed
    by agreement between competitors have traditionally
    been denominated as horizontal restraints, and those
    imposed by agreement between firms at different levels of
    distribution as vertical restraints.” Bus. Elecs. Corp. v.
    20             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    There is, in sum, no colorable basis for the majority’s
    failure to follow the exhaustion rule for domestic sales as
    articulated by the Court in Quanta and numerous other
    cases.
    II. FOREIGN EXHAUSTION
    The second issue here concerns foreign exhaustion.
    Lexmark sold patented ink cartridges outside the United
    States to foreign purchasers. As the majority recognizes,
    “Lexmark made the foreign sales without communicating
    a reservation of U.S. patent rights.” Maj. Op. at 59. These
    were, in other words, authorized sales by the holder of
    United States patent rights, and the sales of so-called
    Regular Cartridges did not contain “any sale terms re-
    stricting reuse or resale.” Maj. Op. at 10. If those latter
    sales had been made in the United States, even under the
    majority’s cramped view of exhaustion, there is no ques-
    tion that the sales would have exhausted Lexmark’s
    domestic patent rights. The issue is whether the foreign
    Sharp Elecs. Corp., 
    485 U.S. 717
    , 730 (1988). A restriction
    on the defendants’ resale is not a restraint on “firms at
    different levels of distribution,” as between a manufactur-
    er and a dealer. The restraint is applied to competitors in
    the sale of Lexmark ink cartridges. Reconditioned durable
    products compete with new products in the same market.
    See United States v. Aluminum Co. of Am., 
    148 F.2d 416
    ,
    424–25 (2d Cir. 1945) (Hand, J.). And horizontal re-
    straints of trade are ordinarily per se unlawful under the
    antitrust laws. See Nat’l Collegiate Athletic Ass’n v. Bd. of
    Regents of Univ. of Okla., 
    468 U.S. 85
    , 100 (1984); see also
    2 Herbert Hovenkamp, Mark D. Janis, Mark A. Lemley,
    & Christopher R. Leslie, IP and Antitrust § 30.2, at 30-2
    (2d ed. Supp. 2010) (“A restraint is ‘horizontal’ when at
    least two of the relevant participants are (1) actual rivals
    or (2) would or could be actual rivals but for the re-
    straint.”).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          21
    location of the sale should lead to a different result, as we
    previously held in Jazz 
    Photo, 264 F.3d at 1111
    .
    Like the majority I would retain Jazz Photo insofar as
    it holds that a mere foreign sale does not in all circum-
    stances lead to exhaustion of United States patent rights.
    But the government argues, and I agree, that the foreign
    sale should result in exhaustion if the authorized seller
    does not explicitly reserve its United States patent rights.
    A
    Let us first consider the centerpiece of the majority’s
    holding that there is a doctrinal blanket ban on foreign
    exhaustion, namely the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Boesch v. Graff, 
    133 U.S. 697
    (1890). Boesch announced
    no such blanket ban. It did not even involve an authorized
    sale by the holder of U.S. patent rights but rather a sale
    by a third party under a foreign law’s prior use exception.
    In that case, a seller in Germany sold patented lamp
    burners to two individuals, Boesch and Bauer. 
    Id. at 701.
    The seller was not the U.S. patent holder, or a German
    patent holder, nor was he even a licensee. 
    Id. Under German
    law, the seller could make and sell the burners
    because he had made preparations to manufacture them
    prior to the filing of the German patent by the holder of
    the U.S. patent rights. 
    Id. When Boesch
    and Bauer im-
    ported and sold the lamp burners in the United States,
    the American assignees sued for infringement. 
    Id. at 698.
    The Court affirmed the holding of infringement, finding
    that Boesch’s and Bauer’s sales were “in defiance of the
    rights [of] patentees under a United States patent. . . .
    The sale of articles in the United States under a United
    States patent cannot be controlled by foreign [(i.e., Ger-
    man)] laws.” 
    Id. at 703.
        Thus Boesch does not apply here because the foreign
    sales were made by Lexmark—the U.S. patent rights
    holder—itself. The accused infringer does not rely on
    22             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    foreign law as the source of its authority but the doctrine
    of exhaustion resulting from an authorized sale by a U.S.
    rights holder.
    Just as Boesch is inapposite, so too is the doctrine of
    extraterritoriality, reflected in Deepsouth Packing Co. v.
    Laitram Corp., 
    406 U.S. 518
    (1972); Dowagiac Manufac-
    turing Co. v. Minnesota Moline Plow Co., 
    235 U.S. 641
    (1915); and Brown v. Duchesne, 
    60 U.S. 183
    (1856). See
    Maj. Op. at 79–80. The question here is not whether the
    manufacture or use of a patented product wholly outside
    of the United States is patent infringement under U.S.
    law, see 
    Deepsouth, 406 U.S. at 527
    , or whether foreign
    law creates a defense to infringement in the United
    States, see 
    Boesch, 133 U.S. at 703
    . Rather, the question
    is whether United States patent law recognizes exhaus-
    tion that occurs abroad from an authorized foreign sale by
    the holder of the U.S. patent rights and without reserva-
    tion of U.S. rights. 13 The majority itself admits that
    foreign activity, such as express or implied license, can
    have an impact on the rights of a United States patent
    owner. See Maj. Op. at 9.
    B
    Strikingly, every one of the lower court decisions be-
    fore Jazz Photo applied exactly the rule for which the
    government argues. When the sale was made by an entity
    not holding U.S. patent rights, as in Boesch, or when the
    authorized foreign seller clearly reserved U.S. rights,
    there was no exhaustion. See Sanofi, S.A. v. Med-Tech
    Veterinarian Prods., Inc., 
    565 F. Supp. 931
    , 934–35
    (D.N.J. 1983) (foreign sale not authorized by U.S. exclu-
    sive licensee); Griffin v. Keystone Mushroom Farm, Inc.,
    13 Foreign law cannot affect, of course, the signifi-
    cance of the reservation of U.S. patent rights. See 
    Boesch, 133 U.S. at 703
    .
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          23
    
    453 F. Supp. 1283
    , 1285, 1287 (E.D. Pa. 1978) (foreign
    sale not authorized by U.S. exclusive licensee); Daimler
    Mfg. Co. v. Conklin, 
    170 F. 70
    , 70, 72–73 (2d Cir. 1909)
    (foreign sale was not authorized by U.S. patent holder);
    see also Dickerson v. Tinling, 
    84 F. 192
    , 193 (8th Cir.
    1897) (foreign sale made with prohibition on import into
    and sale within United States); Dickerson v. Matheson, 
    57 F. 524
    , 525–26 (2d Cir. 1893) (foreign sale with prohibi-
    tion on import into United States).
    But the cases uniformly recognize or assume that
    where the foreign sale was made by a seller holding U.S.
    patent rights without a contractual reservation of U.S.
    rights, exhaustion occurred as a result of an authorized
    foreign sale. In Holiday v. Mattheson, 
    24 F. 185
    , 185
    (C.C.S.D.N.Y. 1885), the U.S. patentee sold its patented
    article in England “without restriction or conditions” to a
    first purchaser. A second purchaser obtained the article
    from the first, and brought the article back to the United
    States. 
    Id. The circuit
    court affirmed the trial court’s
    judgment of noninfringement, stating, “[w]hen the owner
    sells an article without any reservation respecting its use
    . . . the purchaser acquires the whole right of the vendor
    in the thing sold . . . . The presumption arising from such
    a sale is that the vendor intends to part with all his rights
    in the thing sold.” 
    Id. In Dickerson
    v. Matheson, in 1893,
    the Second Circuit concluded that “[a] purchaser in a
    foreign country, of an article patented in that country and
    also in the United States, from the owner of each patent,
    or from a licensee under each patent, who purchases
    without any restrictions . . . acquires an unrestricted
    ownership in the article, and can use or sell it in this
    
    country.” 57 F. at 527
    . Similarly in Dickerson v. Tinling,
    in 1897, the Eighth Circuit “[c]onced[ed,] [but did not
    decide,] that one who buys a patented article without
    restriction in a foreign country from the owner of the
    United States patent has the right to use and vend it in
    this 
    country.” 84 F. at 195
    . The Second Circuit also found
    24             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    foreign exhaustion in Curtiss Aeroplane & Motor Corp. v.
    United Aircraft Engineering Corp., 
    266 F. 71
    (2d Cir.
    1920). There, the U.S. patent owner licensed a corporation
    to build airplanes in Canada with “no restriction or limi-
    tation as to time, or place, or manner of use of the aero-
    planes.” 
    Id. at 8
    0. A buyer who purchased the airplanes in
    Canada and then brought them back to the United States
    was not liable for infringement. See 
    id. In Sanofi,
    S.A. v.
    Med-Tech Veterinarian Products, Inc., in 1983, the district
    court found exhaustion because even “assuming that
    Sanofi had a right to enjoin the reselling of the goods in
    [the United States], it waived that right by not placing
    any written restrictions upon the purchaser at the time of
    
    sale.” 565 F. Supp. at 938
    .
    This uniform approach, existing well before the 1952
    Patent Act and continuing thereafter, strongly supports
    the government’s position. There is indeed a strong argu-
    ment that the 1952 Act should be read as adopting these
    earlier cases. See SCA Hygiene Prods. Aktiebolag v. First
    Quality Baby Prods., LLC, 
    807 F.3d 1311
    , 1321 (Fed. Cir.
    2015) (en banc) (well-established doctrine of laches codi-
    fied by 1952 Patent Act).
    C
    So too congressional legislation described by the ma-
    jority, far from contradicting the government’s approach,
    confirms it. Each bilateral trade agreement cited by the
    majority requires preservation of U.S. patent rights only
    where the U.S. rights have been expressly reserved. 14
    14 Even if these trade agreements were to the con-
    trary, the acts implementing each agreement make clear
    that they cannot override U.S. patent law. See United
    States-Morocco Free Trade Agreement Implementation
    Act, Pub. L. No. 108-302, § 102, 118 Stat. 1103 (2004) (“No
    provision of the Agreement, nor the application of any
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.          25
    This is illustrated by the U.S.-Australia agreement, where
    the patentee’s domestic rights must be preserved “where
    the patentee has placed restrictions on importation by
    contract or other means.” United States-Australia Free
    Trade Agreement, Aus.-U.S., art. 17.9.4, May 18, 2004,
    KAV 6422 (2005). Likewise the U.S.-Singapore agreement
    requires recognition of an action to prevent or redress the
    unauthorized procurement of a patented pharmaceutical
    product, including where it was first sold abroad, but only
    where someone “knows or has reason to know that such
    product is or has been distributed in breach of a contract
    between the right holder and a licensee.” United States-
    Singapore Free Trade Agreement, Sing.-U.S., art. 16.7.2,
    May 6, 2003, 42 I.L.M. 1026 (2003). And the U.S.-Morocco
    agreement permits the United States to limit foreign
    exhaustion, as it did previously with Australia and Sin-
    gapore, “to cases where the patent owner has placed
    restrictions on importation by contract or other means.”
    United States-Morocco Free Trade Agreement, Morocco-
    U.S., art. 15.9.4, n.10, June 15, 2004, 44 I.L.M. 544
    (2005).
    such provision to any person or circumstance, which is
    inconsistent with any law of the United States shall have
    effect. . . . Nothing in this Act shall be construed . . . to
    amend or modify any law of the United States.”); United
    States-Australia Free Trade Agreement Implementation
    Act, Pub. L. No. 108-206, § 102, 118 Stat. 919 (2004) (“No
    provision of the Agreement, nor the application of any
    such provision to any person or circumstance, which is
    inconsistent with any law of the United States shall have
    effect.”); United States-Singapore Free Trade Agreement
    Implementation Act, Pub. L. No. 108-78, § 102, 117 Stat.
    948 (2003) (same).
    26             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    D
    This brings us to the Supreme Court’s decision in
    Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 
    133 S. Ct. 1351
    (2013). I agree with the majority that Kirtsaeng does not
    compel identity between the “first sale” doctrine in copy-
    right and patent exhaustion, due to the differences be-
    tween copyright and patent law.
    But unlike the majority, I think that Kirtsaeng pro-
    vides significant guidance and cannot be dismissed as
    simply a copyright case, or as limited to the “first sale”
    provision of the Copyright Act. 15 The policies that ani-
    mated Kirtsaeng are in large part applicable to patent
    exhaustion. The Court emphasized the importance of
    leaving purchasers free to resell goods to enhance compe-
    tition in the marketplace. 
    Id. at 1363.
    The Court found
    that the “first sale” doctrine “frees courts from the admin-
    istrative burden of trying to enforce restrictions upon
    difficult-to-trade, readily movable goods.” 
    Id. The Court
    also found significant the plea of technology companies,
    who informed the Court that “automobiles, microwaves,
    calculators, mobile phones, tablets, and personal comput-
    ers contain copyrightable software programs or packag-
    ing.” 
    Id. at 1365
    (internal quotation marks omitted). “A
    geographical interpretation [of the ‘first sale’ doctrine]
    would prevent the resale of, say, a car, without the per-
    mission of the holder of each copyright on each piece of
    copyrighted automobile software. . . . Without that per-
    mission a foreign car owner could not sell his or her used
    car.” 
    Id. 15 Kirtsaeng
    recognized that the “first sale” doctrine
    “played an important role in American copyright law”
    even before its first codification by the Copyright Act of
    1909, § 41, 35 Stat. 
    1084. 133 S. Ct. at 1363
    (citing Bobbs-
    Merrill Co. v. Straus, 
    210 U.S. 339
    (1908)).
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.             27
    Those commercial consequences are equally applica-
    ble to patent exhaustion. Automobiles, microwaves,
    calculators, mobile phones, tablets, and personal comput-
    ers also contain patented components. To paraphrase, “a
    geographical interpretation [of patent exhaustion] would
    prevent the resale of, say, a car, without the permission of
    the holder of each [patent] on each piece of [patented]
    automobile [software or hardware]. . . . Without that
    permission a foreign car owner could not sell his or her
    used car.”
    Refusing to find presumptive exhaustion by foreign
    sales would have serious adverse consequences in the
    patent area, just as in the area of copyright. Technology
    companies have echoed the concerns in Kirtsaeng and
    report that “modern devices include components from
    dozens—if not hundreds—of suppliers.” Brief for LG
    Electronics, Inc., Dell Inc., Google Inc., Intel Inc., et al. as
    Amici Curiae 2. The majority’s rule would require a
    manufacturer to “trace the patent rights of every compo-
    nent it purchases and then negotiate appropriate license
    arrangements with the component manufacturer (as well
    as any sub-component manufacturer),” and ultimately “it
    is consumers who suffer most directly through higher
    prices.” 
    Id. at 5,
    8. A major retailer informs us that it
    “often sells patented products that, although genuine,
    were not purchased directly from the patent holder” and
    that “[s]ome of those products were first sold outside of
    the United States.” Brief for Costco Wholesale Corp. et al.
    as Amici Curiae at 1. A domestic-only patent exhaustion
    rule would seriously impair international trade.
    Kirtsaeng emphasized the “ever-growing importance
    of foreign trade to 
    America,” 133 S. Ct. at 1367
    , which
    includes trade not just in artwork and books but also
    automobiles, appliances, mobile phones, tablets, and
    personal computers. The Court concluded:
    28              LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    [T]he fact that harm has proved limited so far
    may simply reflect the reluctance of copyright
    holders so far to assert geographically based re-
    sale rights. They may decide differently if the law
    is clarified in their favor. Regardless, a copyright
    law that can work in practice only if unenforced is
    not a sound copyright law. It is a law that would
    create uncertainty, would bring about selective
    enforcement, and, if widely unenforced, would
    breed disrespect for copyright law itself.
    
    Id. at 1366.
    So too with patent law.
    E
    Despite these significant policy considerations favor-
    ing foreign exhaustion for both copyright and patent,
    there are significant differences between copyright and
    patent law that cut the other way. The premise of exhaus-
    tion is that the rights holder has been compensated for its
    efforts. See 
    Univis, 316 U.S. at 251
    (“The reward he was
    demanded and received is for the article and the invention
    which it embodies . . . . He has thus parted with his right
    to assert the patent monopoly with respect to it . . . .”). In
    the area of copyright, given the uniform international
    protection of copyrights, it is reasonable to assume that
    the rights holder will receive compensation for a foreign
    sale. But patent law is different. It is not uniform from
    country to country. Indeed, there are typically significant
    differences from country to country. Many countries offer
    no realistic protection or very little protection for items
    patented under U.S. law. In other words, there is reason
    to doubt that the rights holder has been fully compen-
    sated for a foreign sale. This suggests an accommodation
    between the interests of the rights holder and the unsus-
    pecting buyer must be found.
    Even the majority recognizes the need for such an ac-
    commodation. The majority acknowledges that the law
    should accommodate the potential of “unintended in-
    LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.         29
    fringement by buyers of goods in foreign countries who
    bring them into the United States,” but believes that
    problem could be solved by the availability of an express
    or a vague implied license defense. See Maj. Op. at 93, 98.
    That defense provides little comfort, however, because it
    places the burden on the purchaser to obtain a statement
    from each patentee of a patented component in a product
    that it has permission to import the component into the
    United States, or else prove in court that the circum-
    stances of each patentee’s sale of its component to the
    manufacturer constituted an implied license to import
    into the United States.
    In my view, the necessary accommodation between
    the interests of the rights holder and the unsuspecting
    buyer can only be achieved by the government’s proposal
    to put the burden on the U.S. rights holder to provide
    notice of a reservation of U.S. rights to the purchaser, an
    approach supported by the earlier lower court decisions
    and legislative action.
    In other words, the country-to-country differences in
    patent laws, and the different economic choices patentees
    must make as a result, suggest that patentees should be
    able to reserve their U.S. patent rights when making or
    authorizing foreign sales. 16 But Kirtsaeng’s policy con-
    cerns indicate that that right should not extend to situa-
    tions where the patentee is silent or unclear. If a patentee
    wishes to reserve its U.S. rights, it should be required to
    16  There is significant uniformity and reciprocity in
    international copyright law, see 
    Kirtsaeng, 133 S. Ct. at 1359
    –60 (observing that American copyright laws protect
    “works ‘first published’ in any one of the nearly 180
    nations that have signed a copyright treaty with the
    United States”), but as the majority describes, the availa-
    bility and scope of patent protection differ from country to
    country. See Maj. Op. at 73–76.
    30             LEXMARK INT’L, INC.   v. IMPRESSION PRODS., INC.
    do so unmistakably. The patentee is in a better position to
    reserve its rights than the purchaser is to inquire into any
    reservation. A rule requiring reservation would protect
    both the interests of the authorized seller and the unsus-
    pecting buyer.
    *****
    In conclusion, I would overrule our decision in
    Mallinckrodt as inconsistent with governing Supreme
    Court authority and overrule Jazz Photo to the extent
    that it imposes a blanket ban on foreign exhaustion. I
    would recognize foreign exhaustion where the U.S. rights
    holder has not notified the buyer of its retention of the
    U.S. patent rights. I respectfully dissent from the majori-
    ty’s contrary holdings.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2014-1617, 2014-1619

Citation Numbers: 816 F.3d 721, 117 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1817, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 2452

Judges: Prost, Newman, Lourie, Dyk, Moore, O'Malley, Reyna, Wallach, Taranto, Chen, Hughes, Stoll, Judged

Filed Date: 2/12/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

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