Cook Inc. v. Boston Scientific Corporation

333 F.3d 737, 2003 WL 21404036
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 2003
Docket02-3740
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 333 F.3d 737 (Cook Inc. v. Boston Scientific Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook Inc. v. Boston Scientific Corporation, 333 F.3d 737, 2003 WL 21404036 (7th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff brought suit seeking a declaration that it had not violated a contract to which it and the defendant, along with a third firm, are parties. Jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship, and the governing substantive law is that of the state of Washington, though no peculiarities of Washington law have been drawn to our attention. The defendant counterclaimed, charging that the plaintiff had indeed broken the contract. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court ruled for the defendant and entered a permanent injunction against the plaintiff, precipitating this appeal.

The contract involves a medical device known as a stent. The narrowing of an artery, as by atherosclerosis, is called “stenosis” and one way of treating it is by balloon angioplasty, a procedure in which a small balloon is inserted into the affected artery to press against the artery wall restoring it to its normal dimensions. The stent is a metal tube that encloses the balloon and remains in the artery after the procedure. Yet sometimes despite the stent the stenosis reappears — this is called “restenosis” — and there is medical opinion *739 that the likelihood of this happening can be reduced by coating the stent with a suitable drug. One candidate to be such a drug is paclitaxel, which gained fame as an anticancer drug under the trade name Taxol. The patent rights for use of paclitaxel on stents are held by a Canadian company called Angiotech Pharmaceuticals. Angiotech does not manufacture either stents or drugs, and so it decided to license the use of paclitaxel for coating stents. It granted “coexclusive” licenses to Cook Incorporated and Boston Scientific Corporation (BSC), firms involved in the development of drug-coated stents for preventing restenosis. Each license grants the licensee “worldwide right[s] and license to use, manufacture, have manufactured, distribute and sell, and to grant sublicenses to its Affiliates to use, manufacture, have manufactured, distribute and sell [paclitaxel] ... solely for use in [stents].” The licenses are exclusive in the sense that Angiotech promises not to license the use of paclitaxel for coating stents to any other firm, but coexclusive in the sense that each licensee has the same rights. Critically, the licenses forbid the licensee to assign his license, or to grant a sublicense to anyone except an affiliate, unless all parties to the two licenses, which is to say Angiotech, BSC, and Cook, agree. We’ll call this provision the “anti-assignment” clause, although it covers sublicens-es as well. Why the distinction between assignment to an affiliate, which is forbidden, and sublicensing an affiliate, which is permitted, is unclear, since, while an assignment and a sublicense are not identical, a sublicense can be drafted in such a way as to have the same effect. Finance Investment Co. v. Geberit AG, 165 F.3d 526, 531-32 (7th Cir.1998); Black Clawson Co. v. Kroenert Corp., 245 F.3d 759, 765 (8th Cir.2001); Prima Tek II, L.L.C. v. A-Roo Co., 222 F.3d 1372, 1377 (Fed.Cir.2000).

The two licenses were granted in a single contract, so that both the licensees and Angiotech are contractually bound to one another. The contract provides for the arbitration of disputes arising under it, but the parties have waived that provision. Angiotech is not a party to this suit; it may be indifferent to the outcome or reluctant to take sides in a dispute between its most important partners in. the development of restenosis-resisting stents.

Why coexclusive licenses? No evidence has been presented or arguments made concerning the reason for the coexclusive feature. The lawyers either have not bothered to inquire or have not bothered to inform us or the district judge concerning the commercial setting of such a contract. They seem insensitive to the importance to the sound interpretation of contracts of understanding the business purpose served by a contract’s provisions, and to the limitations of generalist judges’ knowledge of the customs and practices of specific industries. We are left to speculate, having found no secondary literature on coexclusive licenses either.

A patentee’s choice between granting exclusive and nonexclusive licenses is similar to a seller’s choice between granting exclusive and nonexclusive rights to his dealers. The dealer who is granted an exclusive right will have an enhanced incentive to devote his sales efforts to the seller’s product. Dealers who do not receive exclusive rights will have enhanced incentives to minimize their margins by competing among themselves, thus maximizing the price that the seller can charge. Consumers’ demand is a function of the dealer’s as well as- the original seller’s profit margin. For both margins are components of the retad price, and so the lower the dealer’s margin is, the lower that price will be, the more therefore will be *740 sold, and so the greater will be the original seller’s total profits.

Thus a patentee can ordinarily be expected either to grant nonexclusive licenses in order to exploit the effect of competition in minimizing the licensees’ margins or to grant an exclusive license in order to encourage the licensee to invest in the further development of the licensed process or product by protecting the licensee from the competition of other licensees, which might prevent the licensee from recouping his investment. John W. Schlieher, Licensing Intellectual Property: Legal, Business, and Market Dynamics 69-71 (1996). There are other considerations bearing on the choice between exclusive and nonexclusive licensing as well, see, e.g., Michael L. Katz & Carl Shapiro, “How to License Intangible Property,” 101 Q.J. Econ. 567 (1986); Carl Shapiro, “Patent Licensing and R&D Rivalry,”. Am. Econ. Rev. Papers & Proceedings, May 1985, pp. 25, 27, but we needn’t get into them.

The second goal that we have mentioned, that of encouraging investment by the licensee, is the relevant one in this case. Angiotech does not manufacture or coat stents itself. It depends on its licensees to develop the product (that is, the coated stents) and obtain the Food and Drug Administration’s approval so that the product can be marketed. If, therefore, Cook or BSC were essentially interchangeable, or one were clearly a superior developer to the other, we would expect Angio-tech to grant an exclusive license to one of them. Probably the reason it did not is that the two firms use different coating methods, requiring each to obtain separate approval from the FDA before being permitted to market a drug-coated stent in the United States. When the contract was made, and indeed to this day, neither Cook nor BSC had yet obtained FDA approval. Their products are still being tested for safety and efficacy. Angiotech would not have wanted to risk betting on the wrong horse — granting BSC an exclusive license, for example, when Cook’s stent might turn out to be the only drug-coated stent that the FDA would approve, or might be approved earlier than BSC’s product, or might prove to be the superior product.

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

Related

Hill v. Village of Howard
E.D. Wisconsin, 2024
Sleik v. Village of Howard
E.D. Wisconsin, 2024
United States v. Philip Morris USA
District of Columbia, 2019
Williams v. Stacy
E.D. Wisconsin, 2019
Rego v. Liberty Mut. Managed Care, LLC
367 F. Supp. 3d 849 (E.D. Wisconsin, 2019)
Baxter v. Sun Life Assurance Co.
833 F. Supp. 2d 833 (N.D. Illinois, 2011)
Michael McKim v. New Market Technologies, Inc.
370 F. App'x 600 (Sixth Circuit, 2010)
United States v. Philip Morris USA Inc.
566 F.3d 1095 (D.C. Circuit, 2009)
American Needle Inc. v. National Football League
538 F.3d 736 (Seventh Circuit, 2008)
American Needle, Inc. v. New Orleans Louisiana Saints
496 F. Supp. 2d 941 (N.D. Illinois, 2007)
Medinol Ltd. v. Boston Scientific Corp.
346 F. Supp. 2d 575 (S.D. New York, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
333 F.3d 737, 2003 WL 21404036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-inc-v-boston-scientific-corporation-ca7-2003.