Using data on all patent cases in front of German courts between 2010 and 2015 we find that plaintiffs in patent infringement cases mainly chose the venue where to sue by the speed with which courts dispose of their cases. We also find that quality – measured, both, as the fraction of cases challenged in the next instance and the ratio of successful appeals in the year before filing – has an impact on court choice by patent plaintiffs. We can further show that plaintiffs merely shop between three German courts, namely Duesseldorf, Munich and Mannheim. Moreover, we find that once one of these three courts introduces an additional panel of three judges, thereby working faster, the other two courts increase their working speed, too. This indicates that, indeed, courts actively compete for cases. However, we do not find evidence for courts reacting to a competitor’s increase in speed by deciding in the plaintiffs favor more often or by deteriorating quality of decisions.
SAFE Working Paper No. 443