Skilled in the Art: A Farewell to Judge Jeremy Fogel

Welcome to Skilled in the Art. I'm law.com IP reporter Scott Graham. Yesterday I had the pleasure of attending a symposium honoring the career of U.S. District Judge Jeremy Fogel, who retired from the bench last month and began a new career running the Berkeley Judicial Institute. Fogel is a giant in the field of judicial education – and having sat in San Jose more than 30 years, no small contributor to IP law, either. I've got some notes from the latter discussion below (and will have more on the overall ceremony later in The Recorder). Please feel free to email me your own thoughts and follow me on Twitter.








Farewell to Judge Fogel



Today's dispatch starts with a pop quiz: Which judge has appeared in the most U.S. courtrooms in the country? A good bet would be Jeremy Fogel, who narrates a Federal Judicial Center video that introduces jurors to patent cases.

I've borrowed this quiz question from former U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Grewal, who popped it Thursday at a Stanford Law School/Federal Bar Associationsymposium honoring Fogel's career and unveiling his official portrait. Whether its with litigators in Wilmington, Delaware or Marshall, Texas, Grewal said that whenever he mentions his former colleague, “They'll say, 'Oh yeah, the video guy!'”

Fogel retired last month after spending 37 years on the bench, including the last seven as director of the Federal Judicial Center. His contributions to the judiciary and to intellectual property extend far beyond the video, of course.

That point was driven home Thursday when retired U.S. District Judge Ronald Whyte, the patent law pioneer, recalled litigating a business dispute in Fogel's state law courtroom some 30 years ago, before Whyte had ever taken the bench. (Whyte said Fogel ruled in his favor, so they got off to a good start).

On the federal bench, one of Fogel's best known cases was Lenz v. Universal Music,a.k.a. the Dancing Baby case. A YouTube poster sued after the 30-second video of her toddler dancing to Prince's Let's Go Crazy was removed from the internet. Fogel ruled that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act implicitly requires copyright holders to consider fair use before issuing takedown notices. The Ninth Circuit affirmed him.

Grewal, who now works at Facebook, described Lenz as a seminal ruling that touches “nearly every aspect of our digital life.”

Whyte was equally enthused, though not as much for the video itself. “It's very disappointing,” he said.

Weil Gotshal & Manges partner Ed Reines, who helped Grewal organize the event, noted that Fogel sat as a visiting judge frequently at the Federal Circuit. “He handled patent cases with great ease,” Reines said. “He would have been an excellent CAFC judge and was seriously considered for that court.”

Many of Thursday's tributes touched on Fogel's work in judicial education, especially his focus on emotional intelligence. He'll be continuing that work as director of the new Berkeley Judicial Institute at UC-Berkeley School of Law.

Berkeley Law professor Peter Menell, who teaches judges about intellectual property, will collaborate with Fogel as the institute's faculty adviser.

Portrait of Judge Jeremy Fogel by Scott Johnston.