Bayer Cropscience Ag v. Dow Agrosciences LLC

680 F. App'x 985
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedMarch 1, 2017
Docket2016-1530; 2016-1623
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 680 F. App'x 985 (Bayer Cropscience Ag v. Dow Agrosciences LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayer Cropscience Ag v. Dow Agrosciences LLC, 680 F. App'x 985 (Fed. Cir. 2017).

Opinion

This case involves an international arbitration tribunal’s decision on a contract claim, under French law, and patent-infringement claims, under U.S. law, in a dispute between Bayer CropScience NV and Bayer CropScience AG (sometimes collectively, Bayer), on one side, and Dow *988 Agrosciences LLC, Mycogen Plant Science, Inc., Agrigenetics, Inc., and Phyto-gen Seed Co. (collectively, Dow), on the other. Bayer initially sued Dow for patent infringement, but the district court stayed the action pending arbitration. The arbitral tribunal awarded Bayer approximately $455 million, including damages for breach of contract and patent infringement, and set a rate for post-award interest. The district court, in the patent-infringement case, confirmed the arbitral award. The court rejected Dow’s arguments against the award and also denied Dow’s motion to clarify that interest from the date of the district court’s judgment would accrue at the statutory rate for post-judgment interest rather than the tribunal’s higher post-award rate. Dow appeals.

We conclude that the district court correctly confirmed the award, but abused its discretion regarding post-judgment interest. We modify the judgment to state that interest from the date of the district court’s judgment accrues at the federal statutory rate. We affirm the judgment as modified.

I

A

Bayer CropScience NV, a successor of Plant Genetic Systems NV, owns or co-owns the Leemans patent family, which includes U.S. Patent Nos. 5,561,236, 5,646,-024, 5,648,477, 7,112,665, and RE44,962. The patents describe and claim various technologies related to the pat gene, which confers resistance to the herbicide glufosi-nate. The Leemans patents issued from continuations of U.S. Patent Application No. 07/131,140 and have similar specifications.

Bayer CropScience AG, a successor of Hoechst AG, owns the Strauch patent family,'including U.S. Patent Nos. 5,273,894 and 5,276,268 (Strauch ’268). Although not asserted by Bayer CropScience AG, the Strauch patents are indirectly at issue, as the basis for Dow’s double-patenting challenge to the Leemans patents. Bayer CropScience AG and Bayer CropScience NV are wholly owned subsidiaries of non-party Bayer AG.

Dow AgroSciences LLC produces the Enlist E3, Enlist E3 + IR, Enlist Soybean, Enlist Cotton, Widestrike, and Widestrike 3 products through its subsidiaries, Myco-gen Plant Science, Inc., Agrigenetics, Inc., and Phytogen Seed Co. Each of those products contains the pat gene. The Enlist E3 products also contain a molecular stack of the aad-12 and dmmg genes. Like the pat gene, the aad-12 and dmmg genes confer resistances to herbicides.

In June 1992, Hoechst AG and Lubrizol Genetics, Inc., Dow’s predecessor, agreed to cross-license certain technologies to which they had rights. That agreement (the 1992 Agreement) granted Lubrizol licenses to certain patents, including the Strauch and the Leemans patents. At the time of the agreement, Hoechst owned the Strauch patents and exclusively licensed the Leemans patents from Plant Genetic Systems NV.

Article 4 of the 1992 Agreement restricts the parties’ úse of the licensed technology:

No right or license is hereby granted, to either party, either expressly or by implication, to use any other proprietary technology owned by or available to the other in connection with the licenses granted hereunder.
Both parties are entitled to grant subli-cences or distribution rights for their Transformants. Hoechst is furthermore entitled to grant sublicences for gene promoter constructs containing a Pro *989 moter in conjunction with any gene of which Hoechst can dispose.

J.A. 886, 4147. Article 12 states that the agreement is to be governed by and construed in accordance with French law and that all controversies or disputes are to be “decided by arbitration in accordance with the Rules of Conciliation and Arbitration of the International, Chamber of Commerce.” J.A. 889,4150.

Between 2007 and 2008, Dow and non-party MS Technologies, LLC entered into a series of agreements regarding the pat and dmmg genes. In September 2007, MS Tech granted Dow access to the dmmg gene, to which MS Tech had a license under a 2004 agreement with Bayer Crop-Science AG. In April 2008, Dow transferred soybean seed transformants containing the aad-12, pat, and dmmg genes to MS-Tech. Dow and MS Tech’s collaboration resulted in the creation of the Enlist E3 products.

In November 2007, Bayer CropScience AG and MS Tech entered into a new agreement, which involved the dmmg gene and which transferred ownership of Event FG72 to MS Tech. The agreement required MS Tech to pay Bayer CropScience AG a percentage—in this case, determined to be 50%—of the net trait revenues associated with Event FG72 until 2030.

B

In January 2012, Bayer CropScience AG terminated the 1992 Agreement after accusing Dow of materially breaching Article 4. The same month, Bayer CropScience AG and Bayer CropScience NY sued Dow in the Eastern District of Virginia for infringement of the ’236, ’024, ’477, and ’665 patents. Dow moved to dismiss or stay the action based on the agreement’s arbitration clause. The district court stayed the action. See 9 U.S.C. § 3.

In September 2013, Bayer CropScience NV filed a reissue application for the ’665 patent. See 35 U.S.C. § 251. In its application, Bayer CropScience NV stated that reissuance was appropriate in view of the Supreme Court’s decision in Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics, Inc., — U.S.—, 133 S.Ct. 2107, 186 L.Ed.2d 124 (2013). The ’665 patent reissued as the RE’962 patent, which expires in 2023. The other patents at issue expired no later than July 2014.

• Between November 2014 and August 2015, Dow filed six requests- for inter partes reexamination of the ’236, ’024, ’447, and RE’962 patents. See Ex Parte Leemans, Control Nos. 90/013,394, 90/013,449, 90/013,452, 90/013,453, 90/013,515, 90/013,-563. Dow alleged that claims 8, 9, 12, 15, 18, and 19 of the ’236 patent; 1, 15, and 16 of the ’024 patent; 1, 2, 15-17, and 19 of the ’477 patent; and 1 and 2 of the RE’962 patent were invalid for obviousness-type double patenting over Strauch ’268 and ’894 and U.S. Patent No. 5,633,434. See Control Nos. -394, -449, -452, -453, - 515. Dow also alleged that claim 2 of the RE’962 patent would have been obvious over certain prior-art references. Control No. -563. At the examiner level, the Office has issued final rejections in four proceedings, Control Nos. -394, -449, -515, -563, and non-final rejections in the others, Control Nos. -452, -453. Those proceedings remain pending in the Office and do not alter our resolution of this appeal. See 35 U.S.C. § 294; Fresenius USA, Inc. v.

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