Biomet, Inc. v. Barnes & Thornburg

791 N.E.2d 760, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 1207, 2003 WL 21525314
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 8, 2003
Docket02A05-0205-CV-197
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 791 N.E.2d 760 (Biomet, Inc. v. Barnes & Thornburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Biomet, Inc. v. Barnes & Thornburg, 791 N.E.2d 760, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 1207, 2003 WL 21525314 (Ind. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

Biomet, Inc. appeals the trial court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Barnes & Thornburg (B & T) in an action for legal malpractice. 1 Biomet raises the following restated issues for review:

1. Did the trial court err in determining that the statute of limitations should not be tolled until the conclusion of the patent infringement litigation brought by Pedro Ramos against Biomet?
2. Did Biomet, as a matter of law, release B & T for any alleged failure to properly represent Biomet’s interest, including its disclosure to DePuy, Inc. (DePuy) of privileged communication with Biomet, by executing a joint representation agreement?

We reverse and remand.

The facts most favorable to Biomet, the nonmovant, are that on March 23, 1988, Niles Noblitt of Biomet met with Pedro Ramos, M.D., to discuss Ramos’s Universal Hip Prosthesis. After the meeting with Ramos, Noblitt sent B & T patent attorney William Coffey drawings of a device manufactured by DePuy, another manufacturer of orthopedic devices and a competitor of Biomet, as well as Ramos’s pending patent application and a letter. Noblitt’s letter included the following:

The device that DePuy introduced did undergo some modification by DePuy prior to its introduction and is not specifically like the device described by the inventor. The modifications do represent an improvement; we would undoubtedly want to make some such similar modification if we come to terms with the inventor.

Appellant’s Appendix, Vol. 2 at 146.

On April 19, 1983 Coffey sent Noblitt a letter stating that the proposed DePuy device might well infringe the Ramos patent if issued without modification. Coffey requested a full file history and all prior art references. On June 1, 1983, Coffey received from Noblitt a copy of the Ramos patent as issued. On June 23, 1983, Cof *762 fey sent Noblitt an opinion that the DePuy device did not infringe the Ramos patent as issued. The opinion noted that it was based on a study of the patent and study of the drawings provided by Biomet of the DePuy prosthesis. The opinion included the following:

The claims which issued in the Ramos patent are significantly narrower in their scope of coverage than the claims presented in the original application. The features of the Ramos device. Since we have not seen the file history of the patent, we do not know why the claims were narrowed; but in the likely event that it was in response to a rejection on the prior art, Ramos will not be allowed to interpret the claims broadly enough to recover any of the subject matter that was given up. Putting it another way, the added structural features would be explicitly limiting, and DePuy would not infringe claim 1 when interpreted in this way.
Our study has been limited to the DePuy device, pending finalization of the design of the proposed Biomet device. If the latter differs in any significant way from DePu/s, further study will be required, in addition to the projected examination of the Ramos file history.

Appellant’s Appendix, Vol. 2 at 193-94. Coffey also recommended that a patent search be conducted for prostheses which are similar to the DePuy and Ramos devices if Biomet went forward with a design. On July 7, 1983, Noblitt sent Coffey a letter stating they had decided on a bipolar cup design. He also stated his doubt that a further patent search was necessary.

Anthony Fleming, a design engineer, came to work for Biomet in July 1983 and was asked to design a bi-polar device by September 1983. He first designed one similar to a drawing he had been given. That design was not accepted. He then designed a device that went into production and sale by Biomet in the fall of 1983.

On February 9, 1990, Biomet was sued for patent infringement by Ramos in federal district court in Florida (the Ramos litigation). The suit alleged, among other things, that Biomet was infringing Ramos’s United States Patent No. 4,380,090 by the manufacture and sale of its Bipolar Hip System.

Ramos had also filed, at the same time, another lawsuit raising similar claims against DePuy. A decision was made that B & T would defend both Biomet and DePuy against the Ramos claims. On August 14, 1990, an agreement was entered into between Biomet, DePuy, and B & T setting forth some of the considerations, terms, and effects of the joint defense (the Agreement). In the Agreement, the parties acknowledged and waived some of the conflicts of interest inherent with a joint defense and arranged for the sharing of defense costs. Both Biomet and DePuy consented to B & T’s release to the other of certain confidential information that would otherwise be protected by the attorney-client privilege as deemed necessary for B & T to properly defend both parties in the Ramos litigation.

On July 13, 1990, after the Ramos suit was filed, Bobby Gillenwater of B & T sent a letter to Daniel Hann, General Counsel of Biomet, expressing the opinion that the Biomet device did not infringe the Ramos patent. Prior to the conclusion of the trial, B & T made a decision not to offer into evidence either the July 13, 1990 opinion letter or the opinions sought and obtained from B & T during the development of its prosthesis, prior to the commencement of the Ramos litigation. B & T also did not offer into evidence the background design drawings prepared by Biomet personnel *763 two years prior to seeing the Ramos device.

B & T’s defense of Biomet in the Ramos litigation was technical in nature, claiming that Biomet’s prosthesis did not infringe the Ramos patent. Further, B & T alleged that by waiting nearly seven years to bring suit after becoming aware of the alleged infringement, Ramos was guilty of laches that precluded his right to recover. After a two-week bench trial, the trial court found that 1) Biomet’s manufacture and sale of its prosthesis infringed the Ramos patent, 2) the infringement was willful because the Biomet prosthesis was inspired by Ramos’s invention, and Biomet had not taken the required step of obtaining a sound opinion of competent patent counsel as a basis for any good faith belief in non-infringement, and 3) Biomet’s failure to obtain a sound opinion of counsel and have a good faith belief in the validity of its actions constituted unclean hands which barred it from obtaining the effects of any equitable defenses such as laches, even though Ramos had waited nearly seven years after becoming aware of Biomet’s alleged infringement before bringing suit. Ramos was awarded compensatory damages of nearly $2 million, which by statute was trebled to nearly $6 million in light of the willfulness finding.

Biomet received notice in August 1993 of the district court’s judgment in favor of Ramos. Biomet conferred with B & T about the prospects for appeal of that judgment.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

ABEL JR. v. MODESTO
S.D. Indiana, 2024
Krieg DeVault LLP v. WGT V, LLC
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2023
James E. Saylor v. Allan W. Reid
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2019
RUCKELSHAUS v. COWAN
S.D. Indiana, 2019
Evelyn Messmer v. KDK Financial Services, Inc.
83 N.E.3d 774 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2017)
Larry Warren v. Carl L. Epstein (mem. dec.)
Indiana Court of Appeals, 2017
Price v. Charles Brown Charitable Remainder Unitrust Trust
27 N.E.3d 1168 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2015)
Dickes v. Felger
981 N.E.2d 559 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
791 N.E.2d 760, 2003 Ind. App. LEXIS 1207, 2003 WL 21525314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biomet-inc-v-barnes-thornburg-indctapp-2003.