Tag Archives: Licenses

Supreme Court Closer to Reviewing Hatch-Waxman Safe Harbor Patent Case

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Merck v. Integra LifeSciences (On petition for writ of cert. at the Supreme Court).

The Drug Price Competition and Patent Term Extension Act (Hatch-Waxman) created a safe harbor that permits drug manufacturers to perform the experiments needed to obtain FDA approval of their drugs without incurring liability for patent infringement, even if their activities infringe others patent rights.

However, the statute, codified at 35 USC § 271(e)(1), was limited by a 2003 decision by the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.  The Federal Circuit affirmed a lower court’s finding that the safe harbor against patent infringement does not apply to pre-clinical activities to identify and develop new drugs that will eventually be subject to FDA approval — and thus, that Merck was liable to Integra for patent infringement.

The Case: Integra alleged that Merck and Scripps infringed patents owned by Integra relating to peptides involved in interactions between cell surfaces and the extracellular matrix.  Under contract from Merck, Scripps identified several potential anti-tumor peptide candidates and selected the most promising peptide by conducting in vivo and in vitro experiments to evaluate the specificity, efficacy, and toxicity of the peptide candidates for various diseases. Scripps also performed tests to assess the histopathology, toxicology, circulation, diffusion, plasma half-life, and proper mode of administering of the peptides candidates.

The Appeals Court held that these activities did not fall under the safe harbor (§ 271(e)(1)) because they were not done "solely for purposes reasonably related to the development and submission of information" to the FDA.

"the focus of the entire exemption is the provision of information to the FDA . . . [a]ctivities that do not directly produce information for the FDA are already straining the relationship to the central purpose of the safe harbor." (CAFC Opinion).

"Expansion of § 271(e)(1) to include the Scripps-Merck activities would effectively vitiate the exclusive rights of patentees owning biotechnology tool patents."

Supreme Court:

Merck has now appealed the case to the Supreme Court of the United States, petitioning the High Court to hear the question:

Under 35 U.S.C. 271(e)(1), it is generally not an act of infringement to use a patented invention “solely for uses reasonably related to the development and submission of information under a Federal law” regulating the manufacture, use, or sale of drugs. The question presented is whether the court of appeals erred in limiting that exemption to clinical studies designed to provide information for Food and Drug Administration approval of a new drug.

Only a small percentage of cases appealed to the Supreme Court are accepted for hearing.  However, the Merck case took a major step closer to being heard last week.  On request from the Court, the Solicitor General of the U.S. submitted the Government’s view that the case should be heard.  The Government brief makes two major points, one legal and the other social:

Gov’t Brief: The decision of the court of appeals reflects an incorrect view of the law, and is likely to restrict significantly the development of new drugs. Fairly read, the decision below holds that “pre-clinical” research regarding a potential new drug is not protected by the FDA exemption because that exemption is limited to “clinical” research necessary to obtain ultimate FDA approval of a new drug. That holding is inconsistent with the text of the FDA exemption, reflects a mistaken and unduly narrow view of the types of information relevant to the FDA’s two-step process for evaluating potential new drugs, and is in tension with this Court’s decision in Eli Lilly & Co. v. Medtronic, Inc., 496 U.S. 661 (1990). Moreover, the court of appeals’ decision poses a direct and substantial threat to new drug research by dramatically narrowing the scope of protections enacted by Congress in Section 271(e)(1). Although this case is not an ideal vehicle for considering the issue, see p. 18, infra, the potential impact of the court of appeals’ legal conclusion is sufficiently important that the petition for a writ of certiorari should be granted.

The Court is expected to decide whether to hear the case within the next two months. Wyeth, the AARP, and Eli Lilly are each expected to file Amicus Briefs in support of the petition to rehear the case.

Judge Richard Posner (In Lessig Blog) has advocated the creation of a fair-use exception for patents on research tools:

Link: For example, a generic drug manufacturer is permitted to use the patented drug to demonstrate that its generic equivalent is indeed therapeutically equivalent (the “testing” exception created by the Hatch-Waxman Act). More broadly, an inventor can use the information in the patent to try to invent around the patent. And Landes and I advocate an expansion of the patent fair-use principle to allow scientists to use patented research tools (such as the oncomouse) without license–provided the scientists aren’t allowed to use the tools to produce their own patented products!

In response, Lichtman has noted that Judge Posner’s proposal “is problematic for the simple reason that, often, the key market for research tools is to sell those tools to other researchers. If a researcher’s use of patented research tool is fair use, that would significantly degrade the incentive to create those research tools inthe first place. Moreover, even if your approach works, it is in sharp conflict with the Bayh-Dole instinct that society might very well be better off in a world where academic researchers patent their work. As you know, that legislation was passed in response to evidence that university breakthroughts were sitting on the shelves both because (a) they could not be owned exclusively under old NIH rules; and (b) universities had too little incentive to bring their work to the attention of industry.”

Eolas v. Microsoft On Appeal

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Eolas v. Microsoft (04-1234)(On appeal at the Federal Circuit)

At the district court level, Eolas won a $500 million+ verdict for Microsoft’s alleged patent infringement.  The technology at issue involves a method of using a web browser to open third-party applications using plug-ins.  Now, the case is on appeal at the Federal Circuit, with oral arguments being held today, December 9, 2004. Microsoft is expected to argue both improper claim construction and error in including Microsoft’s foreign sales in damage calculations.

The foreign sales portion of the case falls under 35 U.S.C. 271(f).  271(f)(1) provides for liability for causing components of a patented invention to be supplied for assembly abroad.  In Eolas, however, no physical component of the patented invention had shipped from the U.S.  However, the District Court ruled that Microsoft’s shipment of information on a "golden master" disk created a sufficient nexus with the U.S. 

The foreign damages are expected to be overturned by the Federal Circuit appeals court based on its holding in the recent case of Pellegrini v. Analog.  In Pellegrini, the Federal Circuit essentially held that there is no liability for patent infringement unless components of a patented invention are physically shipped from the United States.  Two weeks ago, the Supreme Court denied Pellegrini’s petition for writ of certiorari.

The asserted patents are also undergoing a reexamination at the United States Patent Office.

Parties Involved:

The asserted patents are owned by the University of California but exclusively licensed to Eolas.  The two reportedly have an agreement that Eolas will pay the University 25% off the top of any award.  Microsoft is the defendant.  In addition to the parties, a number of amicus briefs were filed by interested parties.  These parties include: AOL; Association for Competitive Technology; Autodesk; Bentley Systems; Intel; Macromedia; Netscape; Oracle; Professor Joe Miller; Sun Microsystems; and Wacom Technology. 

Comment:

Although I have not reviewed these amicus briefs, I expect that they generally support Microsoft’s contention that the Eolas patents are invalid and that the reach of the patents should not extend beyond the borders of the U.S.  Paul Festa at cNet has written a brief article on the appeal.

Commerce One Auctions Patents: Public Interest Groups Complain

It is right there in the Patent Act.  Patents are a form of personal property and are freely assignable.  35 U.S.C. §261.  They may be bought & sold, licensed exclusively and otherwise. 

Now, some patent groups (EFF) are up in arms because a bankrupt company, Commerce One has auctioned its patent portfolio that reportedly covers computerized methods of paying bills and obtaining supplies.  Their objection: “the buyer is to require a substantial rate of return.” 

Give me a break — what kind of objection is that? The underpinning of the American economy is based on the exchange of property and obtaining a return on investment. 

 

Military Contractor Forfeits Patent Rights: Company Failed to Properly Disclose Invention

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Campbell Plastics v. Les Brownlee, Secretary of the Army (Fed. Cir. November 10, 2004) (03-1512). 

The Case:

In 1992, Campbell Plastics (as it is now known) entered into a cost-plus-fixed-fee contract with the Army to develop components of an aircrew protective mask. Section I of the contract required Campbell to disclose any invention developed pursuant to the government contract and further provided that the government could obtain title if Campbell failed to disclose the invention within two months.

Campbell invented a new type of gas mask, but the company did not disclose the invention to the Government. Campbell then obtained a patent on the invention, noting that the Government has a "paid-up license in this invention." 

The government, however, wanted more than just a license.  In a decision by the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, ruled that Campbell had forfeited title to the patent by failing to comply with disclosure requirements of the contract.

The Appeal:

The Federal Circuit Court of Appeals, interpreting both the Bayh-Dole Act and the contract, sided with the Army.

Campbell Plastics failed to comply with the disclosure provisions of the parties’ contract. The contract unambiguously provides that in such a case, the government may obtain title to the subject invention. The decision of the Board to deny Campbell Plastic’ appeal is affirmed.

The Result:

Campbell failed comply with its contract to disclose inventions to the Army.  As a result, the Army may obtain title to the related patents.

Comment: This case should serve as a warning to government contractors. You cannot rely on the friendly face of the Technology Tranfer Office always being there. Contractors should implement a regular practice of documenting engineering work associated with government contracts to ensure that inventions are accurately reported in a timely manner.

Federal Court has no jurisdiction over suit to recover patent-infringement litigation proceeds

General Technology Applications v. Exro (4th Cir. 2004).

GTA and Exro pursued a joint business venture to produce and market a drag reduction additive (DRA) for petrolium products.  The startup company, EXG, never successfully produced or marketed any DRA.  However, GTA successfully sued Conoco for infringement of its DRA patents — $60 million.  Neither EXG or Exro were parties to that litigation. 

Once Exro learned of the award, it demanded its share.  According to Exro, EXG held an exclusive license to the GTA patents, thus making the infringement award property of EXG.  However, the district court dismissed Exro’s claims on summary judgment.

On appeal, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals reversed — finding that the district court lacked diversity jurisdiction over the claims.  The case remanded to Virginia state court.

Trademarks granted on Mies van der Rohe’s 1929 furniture designs.

Knoll has received trademark registrations on several Mies van der Rohe furniture designs.  (NYTimes Article). These pieces, originally designed in 1929, have been increasingly copied by furniture importers.  A Knoll spokesman noted that the registration “gives a green light to U.S. customs to stop unauthorized products from reaching this country.”  Knoll’s licensed version of the Barcelona Chair retails at just under $5,000.  Ernest Beck reported that the registration has the potential to “reduce the availability of replicas of [the] classic modern furniture.”

Ludwig Mies van der Rohe was a famous German architect who left for Chicago in the late 1930’s to head the architecture program at the Illinois Institute of Technology. He is known for the International Style of Modernism and for his catch-phrase “less is more.”

 

 

California Appeals Court Upholds Genentech Verdict

Genentech v. City of Hope

City of Hope v. Genentech (Cal. App. 2004) (B161549). 

Decision: A California state appellate court has upheld a $500 million verdict against Genentech for back payment of royalties on drug sales from a 1976 agreement with City of Hope National Medical Center.  The court found that Genentech breached a fiduciary duty to City of Hope.

Genentech does not dispute that it failed to disclose various licenses and pay royalties on those licenses. Rather, it contends that it did not breach any fiduciary duty so long as it was adhering to an erroneous but legally tenable interpretation of the agreement. In essence, Genentech would have us hold that even if it followed an interpretation it knew was contrary to what the parties intended and agreed upon, it could not be held liable so long as that interpretation was objectively sustainable under the law. . . . None of [the cases cited by Genentech] allows a party to profit from a legally tenable contract interpretation when the party knows that the agreement has a wholly different meaning. In any event, it would be antithetical to the very nature of the obligations imposed on fiduciaries for us to hold that a fiduciary could act in the manner suggested by Genentech.

To the extent Genentech contends that its interpretation of the agreement was held in good faith, that contention fails. The jury’s finding of fraud or malice demonstrates that it believed that Genentech acted in bad faith. That finding . . . is supported by substantial evidence and is sufficient for concluding that Genentech breached its fiduciary duty.

According to a California based patent attorney, several amici curiae — including Intel Corp., TechNet and the California Chamber of Commerce — pleaded with the court to reverse the judgment, saying that imposing fiduciary status as a cost of using third-party intellectual property would impede innovation.  Genentech has announced its plans to appeal the decision to the California Supreme Court.

About the Case: In 1978, City of Hope biologists Arthur Riggs and Keiichi Itakura developed a technique for splicing into a bacteria gene the DNA for human insulin, which became the world’s first biotechnology drug. Genentech agreed to pay City of Hope 2% on net sales of products that were tied to the DNA provided by the cancer center.  (see Patent No. 4,704,362). Royalties had been paid for sales of insulin and on sales growth hormone products, but the cancer center is asking for royalties on products made under 20 other license agreements. 

Honeywell Enforces LCD Patent

This week, Honeywell sued some of the biggest names in the consumer technology industry for infringement of its patents related to liquid crystal display (LCD) technology. (Patent No. 5,280,371).  The patent claims a backlight diffuser consisting of two sheets of cylindrical lenses between the backlight and the screen. 

Included on the list of defendants are Apple, Casio, Dell, Kodak, Fuji, Fujitsu, Nikon, Nokia, Pentax, Sony, Toshiba, and more. The two largest producers of flat panel monitors, LG Philips and Samsung, have already taken licenses under the patent. 

Patents for sale (not babies)

The Patent Offices publishes the Official Gazette (OG) in an online version every Tuesday. One section of the OG includes patents that are available for license or sale. Patentees can list patents they have available in a high-tech garage sale.

This week’s patents for sale include a Caulking Gun (U.S. Patent 6,435,373), A credit card for apartment renters (the card always had enough credit in reserve to pay the monthly rental fee) (U.S. Patent 6,738,751), and a diaper restraint system. (U.S. Patent 6,755,198).  Contact information for the inventors is is available here.

Question: Is this type of listing ever successful? E-mail your story.

Experimental Use must be Non-Educational

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Madey v. Duke University (M.D.N.C. Sept 20, 2004) (97CV01170).

Before arriving at Duke as a professor, Dr. Madey obtained several patents for microwave electric guns for use in free electron studies. (E.g., Patent 4,641,103). After Duke & Madey had a falling out, and the professor left the university.

Dr. Madley now asserts in a patent infringement suit that Duke continued to use his patented technology without license.

Duke requested summary judgment based on the experimental use defense. Duke contended that its use of the plaintiff’s patents was done “for the sole purpose of gratifying a philosophical taste, or curiosity, or for mere amusement,” and thus, that the use was experimental.

The court held that 1) the burden of proof for experimental use lies with the accused infringer, in this case Duke; and 2) the defense of experimental use cannot be applied to this case simply because the invention is used in a lab. “Duke [failed to establish] that its alleged use of Plaintiff’s patented inventions was not in keeping with its legitimate business as an educational institution but was instead solely for amusement, . . .”

Federal Circuit: Injunction to “not infringe the patent” is overly broad.

International Rectifier (IR) v. IXYS (Fed. Cir. 2004) (04-1014).

On the day that its patent issued, IR filed a patent infringement suit against IXYS.  IR’s patent relates to semiconductor device (MOSFET) packages having a higher current capacity without increased size. (U.S. Patent No. 6,476,481).  The issue for appeal is “whether the [permanent] injunction granted the patentee is overly broad, and, if so, what is the proper remedy.”

The Federal Circuit rejected the injunction because it was overly broad under Rule 65(d) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. 

In the patent infringement context, this court has rejected as overly broad a permanent injunction that simply prohibits future infringement of a patent. … [T]he trial court’s injunction in this case does not meet the specificity requirements of Rule 65(d).  The injunctive language set forth in the trial court’s judgment prohibits infringement by “any device covered by one or more of Claims 1 through 5” of the ‘481 patent. 

Thus, the Appellate Panel vacated the injunction entered by the trial court and remanded the case with instructions to issue an injunction that meets the specificity requirements of Rule 65(d).

Comment: One interesting dichotomy is that the International Trade Commission (ITC) commonly issues broad injunctions or import restrictions that prohibit unlicensed entry of products that infringe certain patents.  For example, in the recent plastic bag case, the ITC issued a general exclusion order prohibiting the unlicensed entry of plastic grocery bags that infringe patent 5,188,235.

 

IBM and Intel license blade server specifications, but not associated patents

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IBM and Intel have announced a general license agreement on their patented blade server technology. This move is expected to create a level of standardization in the blade server market. (The Register).

The license (PDF) is directed at “copyright and trade secret rights in the Specification, to use the Specification for the limited purpose of designing and manufacturing Licensed Products, and to reproduce a limited number of copies of the Specification as is reasonably necessary to design and manufacture Licensed Product.”

Most notably, the license does not extend to patents, patent application, or trademarks.

Licensors grant no license … under any patents, patent applications, mask works or trademarks of the Licensors. Licenses under any patents of IBM or Intel will be addressed in separate patent license agreements.

Instructions for registering for a license are available here.

Note: This move falls in line with IBM’s open source philosophy. However, it is important to note that IBM and Intel may likely retain control over much of this technology through their vast patent portfolios.

Fair-Use: Scientific Research Exception?

7th Circuit Judge Richard Posner is writing Larry Lessig’s Blog for the rest of the week. In his latest post, Judge Posner outlined a proposal for expansion a fair-use exception for patent law. Specifically, he and Professor Bill Landes have promoted the concept of allowing unlicensed use of scientific research tools by researchers who have no plans to patent their results.

Landes and I advocate an expansion of the patent fair-use principle to allow scientists to use patented research tools (such as the oncomouse) without license–provided the scientists aren’t allowed to use the tools to produce their own patented products!

Their monograph (The Political Economy of Intellectual Property Law) is available as a free download. (Link)

ITC: Plastic Bag Import Restrictions

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The International Trade Commission (ITC) has issued a general exclusion order prohibiting the unlicensed entry of plastic grocery and retail bags that infringe Superbag’s patented technology. (U.S. Patent No. 5,188,235). The Commission also determined that “public interest factors” do not preclude the issuance of the exclusion order.

Superbag had filed a complaint against four parties:

Thai Plastic Bags of Thailand; Hmong Industries of St. Paul, Minnesota; Spectrum Plastics of Cerritos, California; and Pan Pacific Plastics of Union City, California.

Read the full order here.
Thanks to IP-Updates for the link.

ThermoGenesis v. PharmaStem

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The USPTO has announced a reexamination request of PharmaStem Therapeutics patent on technology for the “preservation of fetal and neonatal hematopoeitic stem and progenitor cells of the blood.” (U.S. Patent 5,004,681). The reexam was requested by a competitor, ThermoGenesis.

ThermoGenesis commented that it “made the request for re-examination based on our assessment that these patent claims do not distinguish over the “prior art,” including the publication of several medical journal articles describing similar techniques that predated the patents.” According to Nicholas Didier, President and CEO of PharmaStem, approximately two thirds of the cord blood banking industry operates under a PharmaStem license.

The patent at suit issued in 1991 and survived a first reexamination in 2000.

Taser Prevails in Patent Infringement Appeal at Federal Circuit

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McNulty v. Taser (Fed. Cir. July 7, 2004) (NONPRECEDENTIAL)

Plaintiff McNulty is the exclusive licensee of a patent entitled “Stun Gun with Low Battery Indicator and Shutoff Timer.” (U.S. Patent 5,193,048). The district court granted summary judgment of non-infringement to Taser and the other co-defendants (Cities of Los Angeles, Ontario, and Buena Park California).

On appeal, the Federal Circuit affirmed,

Accepting all of McNulty’s evidence as true and drawing all inferences in his favor, we agree with the district court that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that Taser’s U3400 and M-series products do not infringe the “trigger means” limitation…. Accordingly, the decision of the district court is affirmed.

Update from TASER’s Press Release:

“We were confident that the District Court’s ruling would be upheld,” said Doug Klint, Vice President and General Counsel for TASER International, Inc. “Our intellectual property portfolio is very strong, and there was never any evidence that TASER International infringed on Mr. McNulty’s patent. We feel vindicated that both the District Court and the Court of Appeals have ruled in our favor,” concluded Mr. Klint.

Hockerson-Halberstadt v. JSP and FUBU

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Hockerson-Halberstadt, Inc. v. JSP Footware, Inc. and FUBU The Collection (Fed. Cir. June 23, 2004) (not citable as precedent)

(RADER) The appellate court reversed a summary judgement against the patentee, holding that the plaintiff had met its section 287 notice obligation by sending a letter to a third party who was thought to control manufacture of the patented stabilized athletic shoes. (U.S. Patent 4,322,896).

In dissent, MICHEL argued that the section 287 notice requirement should not be satisfied by giving notice to a third party that has no corporate relationship with the defendant except for a trademark license.

Nokia – NTP settle over BlackBerry Patent Infringement

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ZD Net is reporting that Nokia has obtained a licensing agreement from NTP for use of patents that allegedly cover RIM’s BlackBerry device. BlackBerry enabled Nokia devices should be available in the U.S. “in two to three months.”

The patent infringement case between RIM and NTP is ongoing. The Federal Circuit recently heard oral arguments in an appeal of the district court’s patent infringement finding. A ruling is expected within the next several weeks. Read more about the lawsuit here.

Although the terms of the agreement have not been made public, the license gives Nokia two big advantages. First, it allows Nokia to hedge its bets against the outcome of the RIM lawsuit. Second, and perhaps more important, Nokia is setting itself up to get a “first-mover” advantage over other carriers.

“There is a reasonable likelihood that they might not get all the patents thrown out,” said patent lawyer Brad Hulbert of McDonnell, Boehnen, Hulbert & Berghoff LLP in Chicago. “It’s better to pay now than pay more later.” (Bloomberg)

(Drawing is from RIM’s U.S. Design Patent D479,233).

Jacobs v. Nintendo

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Jacobs v. Nintendo of America, Inc. (Fed. Cir. May 28, 2004).

Jacobs owns a patent on a tilt sensitive controller. (U.S. Patent No. 5,059,958). In a prior suit over the same technology, Jacobs settled with Analog. Under the terms of the settlement agreement, Analog was given a full license to practice the patented technology.

In the present case, Jacobs sued Nintendo, asserting that Nintendo’s “Kirby Tilt ‘n Tumble” for Game Boy. Nintendo responded, and the lower court agreed, that Nintendo’s actions fell under the settlement agreement, since the accelerometers for the game were purchased from Analog.

On appeal, the Federal Circuit (J. Bryson) affirmed the lower court’s dismissal on summary judgment.

We agree with the district court that the clause granting Analog the right to sell its accelerometers for use in tilt-sensitive control boxes barred Jacobs from interfering with that right by prohibiting Analog’s customers from using the accelerometers for that authorized purpose by making, using, and selling control boxes incorporating Analog’s devices. That interpretation is in accordance with the basic contract law principle that a party may not assign a right, receive consideration for it, and then take steps that would render the right commercially worthless.

Additionally, the Appellate Panel held that the “noninfringing use” doctrine did not apply.

The “noninfringing use” doctrine applies when a patentee or its licensee sells an article and the question is whether the sale carries with it a license to engage in conduct that would infringe the patent owner’s rights. In that setting, absent an express agreement between the parties, determining whether the sale conveys with it the implied right to use the article in an infringing manner may depend on whether there is any noninfringing use for the article. If there is no noninfringing use, it may be reasonable to infer that there has been “a relinquishment of the patent monopoly with respect to the article sold.” United States v. Univis Lens Co., 316 U.S. 241, 249 (1942) … This case is quite different … because the [settlement] agreement must be understood to authorize Analog to sell its accelerometers for [otherwise infringing] uses.