In Re Kemeta, LLC

470 B.R. 304, 2012 WL 1570627, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1957
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware
DecidedMay 4, 2012
Docket19-10529
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 470 B.R. 304 (In Re Kemeta, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Kemeta, LLC, 470 B.R. 304, 2012 WL 1570627, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1957 (Del. 2012).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

CHRISTOPHER SONTCHI, Bankruptcy Judge.

INTRODUCTION

1. The Court conducted an evidentiary hearing on March 26-27, 2012 2 on Invoy Technologies, LLC’s Motion to Compel Trustee’s Compliance with Section 365(n) of the Bankruptcy Code (Docket 27, hereinafter the “Motion to Compel” or the “Motion”). In that Motion, Invoy Technologies, LLC (“Invoy”) seeks an order compelling the Chapter 7 Trustee (“Trustee”) to comply with the rights to which Invoy claims entitlement under 11 U.S.C. § 365(n) (“Section 365(n)”) by virtue of its Confidential Exclusive License Agreement dated April 7, 2009 (the “License Agreement” or the “Agreement”) with debtor Remeta, LLC (“Remeta”).

2. The Trustee and Caliber Partners Fund K, LP (“Caliber”), the Kemeta’s secured lender, have challenged Invoy’s entitlement to rights under Section 365(n) based primarily on the contention that the License Agreement was not executory on the Petition Date as the Debtor was in pre-petition breach of the Agreement. 3

STATEMENT OF FACTS

A. THE LICENSE AGREEMENT

3.The License Agreement (Ex. I-001) 4 pertains to certain medical diagnostic technology for measuring chemical species or analytes in breath. In it, Remeta (the licensor) granted to Invoy (the licensee) exclusive rights in Remeta’s intellectual property, including patents, trade secrets and the like, within a “Licensed Field of Use,” while retaining a field of use for itself. More specifically, Section 2.1, of the License Agreement, which is the main granting provision, provides as follows:

2.1 License Grant. Subject to the terms, conditions, and limitations set forth in this Agreement, Remeta hereby grants and agrees to grant in the future to Invoy and its Affiliates, and Invoy hereby accepts, a royalty-bearing, exclusive right, license, and privilege under the Licensed Intellectual Property in the Licensed Field of Use throughout the Licensed Territory to make, to have made, to sell, to distribute, to market, to advertise, to offer to sell, distribute or sublicense, to import, to export, to practice, to engage in and/or to use any product, service, apparatus, system, device, component, article of manufacture, *308 composition of matter, method, process, invention and/or any other thing or activity covered by the Licensed Intellectual Property throughout the Licensed Territory for the life of the Licensed Intellectual Property, (emphasis added.)

The “Licensed Intellectual Property” is defined in Section 1.11 as, “collectively, the Licensed Patents, Licensed Technology, and Licensed Processes.”

4. The term “Licensed Patents” is defined in Section 1.3.

5. “Licensed Technology” is defined in Section 1.4 as:

1.4 Licensed Technology. The term “Licensed Technology” shall mean, collectively, all Kemeta technical and design information and know-how relating to detection, measurement and monitoring of breath components (including enabling technologies), including: (a) any unpatented proprietary information which Kemeta has or develops which performs or enables the design, manufacture, sale, installation, or operation of Licensed Products and the inventions described in any of the Licensed Patents, such as trade secrets, know-how, drawings, plans, designs, and specifications relating to the apparatuses and the inventions disclosed in any of the Licensed Patents; (b) any engineering and technical data, knowledge, experience, and proprietary or other information now possessed or hereafter developed by Kemeta that performs or enables the design, manufacture, sale, installation, or operation of the Licensed Products and the inventions described in the Licensed Patents; and (c) the inventions of the Licensed Patents, (emphasis added.)

6. The term “Licensed Processes” is defined in Section 1.5:

Section 1.5. Licensed Processes. The term “Licensed Processes” shall mean any process covered by any unexpired claim of one or more of the Licensed Patents or pending claims of any patent application which is a Licensed Patent, or arising from Licensed Technology. Licensed Processes also includes the provision of any service using a Licensed Product.

7. The “Licensed Technology” and “Licensed Processes” are also referred to herein as the “Kemeta Technology” or “Kemeta’s Technology.”

8. The exclusive license granted to In-voy under Section 2.1 is in the “Licensed Field of Use.” This term is somewhat confusingly defined by Section 1.8 by what it is not: “any and all fields of use other than the Kemeta Field of Use.” (emphasis added.) Thus, Kemeta retained certain rights for itself, and granted Invoy exclusive rights in everything else. The term “Kemeta Field of Use” is expressly defined in the Agreement by Section 1.7. In it Kemeta retains rights in six market areas (subsections (a)-(f)), to commercialize products and processes for “the detection and analysis of human breath acetone and no other breath analyte.” (emphasis added.) Subsections (a)-(c) are further limited to various aspects of fat metabolism and diabetes mellitus, and subsections (d)-(f) are further limited to veterinary markets. Importantly, however, the field of use in each of the six market areas is expressly limited to “breath acetone and no other breath analyte.” This acetone-only limitation is expressly reiterated in major grant provision Sec. 2.1, which states that:

Nothing herein shall preclude, and it is expressly understood by the Parties that Invoy has the right to any type of device that measures and/or analyzes acetone, provided that it measures and/or analyzes one or more analytes *309 in addition to acetone, (emphasis added.)

9.In exchange for the license grant and other consideration, Invoy agreed to pay certain license fees, in addition to a running royalty. The fee provision is at License Agreement Section 3.1, which reads:

3.1 License Fee. Once Kemeta has provided the Dow Consents according to the terms and conditions of Section 2.6 and 2.7 and signed documents needed by Invoy per Section 2.4, including a recordable notice of exclusive rights (collectively, “Conditions for Payment”), Invoy agrees to pay and shall pay to Kemeta a license fee in the amount of two hundred fifty thousand U.S. dollars ($250,000.00): The first payment of twenty thousand U.S. dollars will be made within three (3) days of execution of this Agreement by wire transfer to Kemeta and assuming that Kemeta provides the wire transfer instructions on April 8, 2009 or April 9, 2009;

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
470 B.R. 304, 2012 WL 1570627, 2012 Bankr. LEXIS 1957, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-kemeta-llc-deb-2012.