Searle Analytic Inc. v. Ohio-Nuclear, Inc.

398 F. Supp. 229, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 360, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11599
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 2, 1975
Docket74 C 1167
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 398 F. Supp. 229 (Searle Analytic Inc. v. Ohio-Nuclear, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Searle Analytic Inc. v. Ohio-Nuclear, Inc., 398 F. Supp. 229, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 360, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11599 (N.D. Ill. 1975).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KIRKLAND, District Judge.

This cause comes before the court on plaintiff's motion for summary judgment. The action is brought by Searle Analytic Inc. (“Searle”) against Ohio-Nuclear, Inc. (“Ohio”) to recover royalties allegedly due Searle pursuant to a patent licensing contract. Ohio defends on grounds that two contractual provisions of the licensing agreement relieved it from any obligation to pay during the period royalties were withheld. Other defenses earlier asserted by Ohio have been rendered moot, hence the court does not deal with them here.

Defendant first relies upon Article 5 of the licensing agreement. Article 5 provides that Ohio shall have the right to abate royalty payments, upon notice to Searle of a substantial infringement of the licensed patent, if Searle has not within six months after said notice:

(.1) Initiated a legal action for infringement of the '057 Patent against the said alleged Substantial Infringer which remains pending, and is being actively prosecuted. . . . (emphasis added)

There is no dispute that Searle’s infringement suit against Nuclear Data, Inc. was filed and pending on an active calendar during the period in issue here; instead the controversy is.whether Searle was “actively” prosecuting that infringement action during its pen-dency.

Determining whether a pending case is being “actively prosecuted” necessarily involves inquiry into the court’s conduct of its own calendar, inasmuch as the court’s function includes supervising and expediting litigation before it. It would necessarily include also examination and evaluation of the court’s activity regarding that specific case. In this Court’s opinion, the parties may not make that a part of their contract.

This is not to say that court rulings or other evidence indicating failure to prosecute an action may not be made the basis of challenge under the contract provisions in question; but the challenging party bears a heavy burden, of establishing that failure, which has not been met here.

Deliberate delay is alleged, inter alia, on the basis that the court informally stayed litigation against the alleged infringer pending outcome of a suit litigating Searle’s right to the patent in the first instance. It is Ohio’s position that Searle should have simultaneously prosecuted the infringement action even though an adverse decision in the other action would moot the infringement suit. Contract provisions may not take precedence over common sense utilization of judicial resources. Consequently, decisions by the courts in furtherance of judicial economy may not be transformed into the basis for a charge of deliberate delay. This Court holds that Searle actively prosecuted the infringement action within the meaning of Article 5 of the licensing contract.

Defendant next urges that the “Most Favored Nations” clause of Arti *231 cle 6 of the licensing contract acts to relieve Ohio from the obligation to pay royalties during the period in which an alleged substantial infringement (Nuclear Data, Inc.) was being prosecuted after Ohio’s settlement. Ohio’s reasoning is that the infringer was forgiven all infringements for that period as part of the later settlement agreement.

The pertinent part of the “Most Favored Nations” clause states:

. [if] another sublicensee under the ’057 patent has the benefit of a lower effective royalty than the royalty which is set forth in Paragraph 3.1 of this agreement and/or the benefit of other provisions which are more favorable to such sublicensees than are accorded to Ohio under this Agreement; then, and in any such case, Searle shall immediately give written notice thereof to Ohio, and the lower effective royalty and/or the benefits under the significantly more favorable provisions shall be deemed to be effective as to Ohio as of the date when the other subli-censee first had the benefit thereof.

It is Ohio’s position that settlement of another infringement action at a later time, with a provision forgiving prior infringements to the approximate date of settlement, constitutes more favorable treatment under the above clause. Searle, on the other hand, argues that a settlement forgiving past infringements does not constitute a “provision” under the “Most Favored Nations” clause, merely because the litigation was settled subsequent to Ohio’s.

Searle licensed Ohio on July 1, 1973 after settlement of an infringement action wherein Ohio was forgiven past infringements in return for its agreement to pay royalties on future use of the patented item. Searle licensed Nuclear Data, Inc. (“Nuclear Data”), on November 1, 1974 in a settlement forgiving past infringements in return for an agreement to pay royalties on future use of the patented item. The issue is whether Ohio can, under the “Most Favored Nations” clause, abate royalties for the sixteen month period between settlements on grounds that the later settlement date with Nuclear Data constitutes a more favorable provision.

This Court finds that the “Most Favored Nations” clause is unambiguous and that there is controlling precedent on this issue.

The court in Universal Oil Products Co. v. Vickers Petroleum Co., 41 Del. 238, 19 A.2d 727 (1941), focused on the purpose of a “favored nations” clause:

Specifically it provides that, if Universal shall enter into any license agreement, or shall modify any existing license agreement providing for a lower or more advantageous royalty rate, then and thereafter the licensee shall have the same benefit.

In response to defendant’s argument that forgiveness of past infringement constituted a “retroactive implied license”, the court said:

A license in its very nature is prospective in operation. . . . Acceptance of [the “retroactive implied license”] argument would mean that the plaintiff, if it should proceed to offer -protection to the defendant against competition from infringers by licensing them on equal terms with the defendant, would be compelled to exact payment for the infringer’s past operations at the same royalty rate, or else forfeit its right to collect from the defendant the royalties accrued during the period of infringement.

While it is true that in the Vickers case plaintiff was under no contractual duty to prosecute infringers, the logic of that case equally applies where plaintiff is under a duty to stop infringement. The duty to stop infringement by others does not imply, under the “Most Favored Nations” clause litigated here, a duty to recover a sum certain for past infringements by Nuclear Data in order not to *232 forfeit the right to royalty payments from Ohio during the period in question.

Ohio was sued for infringement and settled the case by agreeing to pay future royalties if past infringements were forgiven. At the same time Nuclear Data was also being sued for infringement, although that case was not settled until almost a year and a half later. Each case was settled on the same terms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 F. Supp. 229, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 360, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/searle-analytic-inc-v-ohio-nuclear-inc-ilnd-1975.