Rick C. Sasso, M.D., and SEE LLC v. Warsaw Orthopedic, Inc., Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., and Medtronic, Inc.

45 N.E.3d 835, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 702, 2015 WL 6777120
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 2015
Docket43A04-1504-PL-175
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 45 N.E.3d 835 (Rick C. Sasso, M.D., and SEE LLC v. Warsaw Orthopedic, Inc., Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., and Medtronic, Inc.) 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
Rick C. Sasso, M.D., and SEE LLC v. Warsaw Orthopedic, Inc., Medtronic Sofamor Danek, Inc., and Medtronic, Inc., 45 N.E.3d 835, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 702, 2015 WL 6777120 (Ind. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

BAKER, Judge.

[1] SEE LLC appeals the trial court’s order denying its motion for summary judgment and granting the defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. It argues that it is entitled to unpaid royalties stemming from a 1998 contract. Finding this contract unenforceable as a matter of law, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Facts 1

• [2] Dr. Rick Sasso is a spinal surgeon and inventor. The president of Indiana *837 Spine Group in Carmel, Indiana, he is the named inventor on several United States patents related to rehabilitation of the spine.

[3] In 1994, Sasso filed his first patent application, with co-inventor Dan Justin, for a spine implant device. Justin later assigned his entire interest to Sasso, making Sasso the sole owner. This’ device involves screws and rods that provide stability in the upper neck area. Sasso formed a company, SEE LLC (SEE), with his brother and father-in-law to manage his intellectual property. In July 1997, Patent 5,643,259 (“the Patent”) issued.

Background to This Suit

[4] In 1998, Sasso began negotiating a potential business venture .with Sofamor Danek Group (SDG), the predecessor to the defendants, 2 in which he would transfer the Patent and provide expertise in exchange for monetary compensation. SDG’s first draft of a contract was written as an agreement between SDG and Sasso, but Sasso edited the contract to replace his name with SEE’s. Appellants’ App. 569-79. The parties signed this 1998 contract (“the Agreement”) after these edits had been made. Id. at 251-58.

[5] After the edits, one of the representations reads, “See further warrants and represents that it owns solely, as evidenced by a copy of an assignment attached hereto in Schedule A, all right, title, and interest in the Patent and the Intellectual Property. Rights.,Id. .at 571. There is no such document attached to the contract. 3 Indeed, there is no formal assignment document establishing SEE’s rights to the Patent anywhere in the record. The right to the -Patent was the heart of the deal, as SEE purported in the Agreement to “irrevocably transfer[ ], assign[ ], and eonvey[ ] to SDG all its entire right, title, and interest in and to” the Patent. Id. at 254.

[6] SDG agreed to pay three types of consideration in exchange for the rights to the Patent. First, it agreed to pay, and did in fact pay, $100,000 to SEE. Second, it agreed to grant, and. did in fact grant, 1,500 shares of SDG stock to SEE.

[7] . The .third ..form .of . payment (“4(B)(iii) payment”) constitutes the subject of this lawsuit:

A contingency payment in the amount of five percent (5%) of the worldwide Net Sales of the Medical Device, if covered by the Intellectual Property Rights, and two and one-half .percent (2½%) if the Medical Device is not covered by the Intellectual Property Rights.

Id. at 254. “Medical Deviee” is defined as “any device, article, system, apparatus or product including the Invention.” Id. at 252. “The Invention” is defined as “any product, method or system relating to spinal or cranial surgery....” Id. “Intellectual Property Rights” is defined as the Patent and associated know-how. Id.

■ [8] Also in the definition of “Medical Device,” however, is the following statement: “Such Medical Devices shall be listed in accordance with SDG catalog numbers and descriptions in an addendum to be attached to this Agreement as agreed upon in writing between the parties.”. Id, Just as there was no “Schedule A” at *838 tached to the contract to show assignment of the Patent, no such addendum listing the products covered by the agreement was ever negotiated, agreed upon, written down, or attached to the Agreement. The defendants have never made a single 4(B)(iii) payment. Until the commencement of this lawsuit, SEE never made a demand for 4(B)(iii) payments, nor did it communicate to the defendants that it thought it was owed 4(B)(iii) payments.

Sasso’s Ventures With Medtronic

[9] The controversy between SEE and the defendaiits is complicated by the extensive business relationship that Sassó, as an individual, has carried on with' the defendants. In January 1999, SD6 merged with Medtronic.- Since that time, Sasso, the individual, has entered into several agreements with the defendants, all for different medical devices related to spinal stabilization. • Appellant’s App. at 312-13. 4

[10] Sasso and Medtronic have entered into agreements for the’following products in which he transferred his intellectual property in exchange for royalties and, occasionally, up-front cash: a “Posterior Rod System,” id.' at 74; a “facet screw instrumentation and headless facet screw fixation system,” id. at. 108; a “Vantage Plate Device,” id. at 867; an “Atlantis Venture” product, id. at 119-33; a “posterior side-loading spinal rod system,” id. at 342; a “cervical intervertebral disc prosthesis,” id. at 362; and an “image guided remote referencing pin used in- surgical procedures,” id. at 409. Altogether, Med-tronic has paid Sasso at least $23 million on these deals as of December 22, 2014. Id. at 313.

[11] ’Consolidating the definitions in the Agreement, SEE claims it is entitled to at least 2.5% of'the sales of “any device, article, system, apparatus or product that includes any product, method or system relating to spinal or cranial surgery.” Id. at 252. SEE explains, “The broad definitions agreed to by the parties make practically all products Dr. Sasso helped with subject to payment of royalties, including specifically the Vertex posterior cervical screw/rod implant system_” Appellants’ Br. 16. In other words, the LLC.of which Sasso is, one of three members claims a right to be compensated for most, if not all, of the products for which Sasso, the individual, has already been compensated.

[12] The defendants say that they negotiated all of these contracts under the presumption that they would not have to pay double compensation to Sasso and to his company. The defendants maintain that if SEE is correct about its claim, SEE would be entitled to at least $750 million in unpaid royalties. Appellees’ Br. II. 5

Other Dealings Between "Sasso and Medtronic

[13] In 2005, Medtronic and Sasso attempted to negotiate a “global agreement” that would consolidate all of Sasso’s consulting contracts into a single agreement. The parties did not reach such an agreement, but both sides make much ado about representations made during the negotiation. In its original proposal, Medtronic acknowledged that the Agreement was still valid and ongoing. Appellants’ App. 606. However, Exhibit D of the draft global agreement listed no products being covered by the 1998 Agreement as of April 1, 2005.

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45 N.E.3d 835, 2015 Ind. App. LEXIS 702, 2015 WL 6777120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rick-c-sasso-md-and-see-llc-v-warsaw-orthopedic-inc-medtronic-indctapp-2015.