Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp v. Breckenridge Pharmaceutical

909 F.3d 1355
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedDecember 7, 2018
Docket2017-2173; 2017-2175; 2017-2176; 2017-2178; 2017-2179; 2017-2180; 2017-2182; 2017-2183; 2017-2184
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 909 F.3d 1355 (Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp v. Breckenridge Pharmaceutical) 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
Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corp v. Breckenridge Pharmaceutical, 909 F.3d 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Chen, Circuit Judge.

This case involves the complicated, potential double-patenting situation in which the later-filed of two related patents, which share a common specification and effective filing date, expires before the term of the earlier-filed patent due to an intervening change in law by Congress defining a patent's term. When the patent owner filed for the first patent, the governing law defined the patent term as 17 years from the date the patent issued. When the patent owner filed for its second, related patent, the governing law was amended to define the patent term as expiring 20 years from the patent's earliest effective filing date. Because of the two patents' relatively early effective filing date, the change in patent term law caused the second patent to expire earlier than the first patent. The patent owner here concedes that the claimed inventions in the two related patents are obvious variants of each other. The legal question we confront in this appeal is whether the law of obviousness-type double patenting requires a patent owner to cut down the earlier-filed, but later expiring, patent's statutorily-granted 17-year term so that it expires at the same time as the later-filed, but earlier-expiring patent, whose patent term is governed under an intervening statutory scheme of 20 years from that patent's earliest effective filing date. See 35 U.S.C. § 154 (a)(2) (2012).

Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation and Novartis AG (collectively, Novartis) appeal the district court's decision to invalidate U.S. Patent No. 5,665,772 based on obviousness-type double patenting. The invalidating reference, Novartis's *1358 U.S. Patent No. 6,440,990, was filed after, and issued after, but expired before the '772 patent. Both patents claimed the same priority date. The '990 patent expired before the '772 patent because the '990 patent was filed after the June 8, 1995 effective date of the Uruguay Round Agreements Act of 1994 (URAA), § 532, Pub. L. No. 103-465, 108 Stat. 4809 , 4983, and thus expired on September 23, 2013, 20 years from its earliest effective filing date. The '772 patent, on the other hand, was filed before the effective date of the URAA and-pursuant to the URAA transition statute 35 U.S.C. § 154 (c)(1) -expired 17 years from its issuance, on September 9, 2014. Due to a five-year patent term extension (PTE) Novartis was subsequently granted under 35 U.S.C. § 156 , the '772 patent's term expires on September 9, 2019. And due to the intervening change in law through the implementation of the URAA, the lifespan of the '772 patent encompasses that of the '990 patent (even without considering the § 156 five-year term extension).

Applying our decision in Gilead Sciences, Inc. v. Natco Pharma Ltd. , 753 F.3d 1208 , 1212 (Fed. Cir. 2014), which held that a later-filed but earlier-expiring patent can serve as a double patenting reference for an earlier-filed but later-expiring patent, the district court found the '990 patent to be a proper double patenting reference for the '772 patent. Because the parties stipulated to invalidity if the court concluded that the '990 patent is a double patenting reference to the '772 patent, the district court found claims 1-3, 7, and 10 of the '772 patent invalid. We disagree that the '990 patent is an invalidating reference.

The patents at issue in Gilead were both filed after the effective date of the URAA and claimed different priority dates. 753 F.3d at 1210 . Because Gilead's earlier-filed patent claimed an earlier priority date, despite issuing after the later-filed patent, that earlier-filed patent expired before the later-filed patent. Id. As the district court correctly summarized, we held in Gilead that the expiration date is the benchmark of obviousness-type double patenting. But our opinion was limited to the context of when both patents in question are post -URAA patents. Id . at 1216. Here we have one pre-URAA patent (the '772 patent ) and one post-URAA patent (the '990 patent ), governed by different patent term statutory regimes. Our decision in Gilead thus does not control the present situation. Instead, the correct framework here is to apply the traditional obviousness-type double patenting practices extant in the pre-URAA era to the pre-URAA '772 patent and look to the '772 patent's issuance date as the reference point for obviousness-type double patenting. Under this framework, and because a change in patent term law should not truncate the term statutorily assigned to the pre-URAA '772 patent, we hold that the '990 patent is not a proper double patenting reference for the '772 patent. Accordingly, we reverse.

BACKGROUND

Novartis owns the '772 patent, which claims the compound everolimus, and the '990 patent, which is directed to certain methods of treatment using everolimus and specific pharmaceutical compositions comprising everolimus. Everolimus is the active ingredient in Zortress® and Afinitor®, which can be used to treat certain cancers and prevent rejection in kidney and liver transplantations. Novartis sued Breckenridge Pharmaceutical Inc., Par Pharmaceutical, Inc., and West-ward Pharmaceuticals International Ltd. (collectively, Defendants/Appellees) for infringing claims 1-3, 7, and 10 of the '772 patent after Defendants sought FDA approval to *1359 market generic versions of Zortress® and Afinitor®.

In the district court, Defendants conceded that their proposed products infringe the '772 patent's asserted claims. The parties stipulated that the '772 patent and the '990 patent are assigned to the same entity, and both patents share the same named inventors.

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Bluebook (online)
909 F.3d 1355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novartis-pharmaceuticals-corp-v-breckenridge-pharmaceutical-cafc-2018.