Washington University v. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foun

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 2020
Docket18-3795
StatusUnpublished

This text of Washington University v. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foun (Washington University v. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washington University v. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foun, (3d Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ________________

Nos. 18-3795 and 18-3827 ________________

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, Appellant in No. 18-3827

v.

WISCONSIN ALUMNI RESEARCH FOUNDATION, Appellant in No. 18-3795

________________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (D.C. Civil No. 1-13-cv-02091) District Judge: Honorable Joseph F. Bataillon ________________

Submitted Pursuant to Third Circuit L.A.R. 34.1 on April 15, 2020

Before: CHAGARES, SCIRICA, and ROTH, Circuit Judges

(Filed: October 28, 2020) ________________

OPINION * ________________

* This disposition is not an opinion of the full Court and pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7 does not constitute binding precedent. SCIRICA, Circuit Judge

Defendant Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (“WARF”) asks this Court to

overturn the trial court’s finding that it could not assert the statute of limitations as a

defense in a breach-of-contract dispute with Plaintiff Washington University. The trial

court determined that the statute-of-limitations defense was unavailable to WARF

because it had concealed its practice of diluting royalty payments for a patent that it

jointly owned with Washington University, withholding millions of dollars. In a bench

trial, the trial court found WARF breached the contract and awarded damages to

Washington University. But it concluded that the amount was not sufficiently certain to

justify an award of prejudgment interest. In a cross-appeal, the University asks for

prejudgment interest on the damages it received.

We will affirm in part and reverse in part. We hold that the trial court correctly

determined that WARF could not raise the statute of limitations as a defense, but hold

that the University is entitled to prejudgment interest and will reverse and remand for

further proceedings on that issue.

I.

In 1995, WARF and Washington University entered into the Inter-Institutional

Agreement for Prevention of Hyperphosphatemia in Kidney Disorder Patients (the

“IIA”). Among other things, the IIA, which is governed by Wisconsin law, sets the terms

for how WARF and the University would share royalties for a jointly owned and invented

2 method of treatment for chronic kidney disease. This method of treatment would

eventually receive patent protection as U.S. Patent No. 5,597,815 (“the ’815 patent”).

Under the IIA, WARF assumed the role of the “senior party” in matters

concerning the ’815 patent, while the University was the “junior party.” As the senior

party, WARF was granted by the University the “exclusive right” to (1) “prepare, file,

prosecute, and maintain” the rights arising from the ’815 patent; (2) “negotiate, execute,

administer, and enforce” any license agreements to the ’815 patent; and (3) “determine

whether or not [WARF or the University] shall engage in and prosecute any legal

actions” involving the ’815 patent. In this role, WARF assumed the duty to keep the

junior party informed of key events and decisions relating to the parties’ jointly owned

intellectual property.

As the junior party, Washington University retained its ownership interest in the

’815 patent but gave up its rights to commercialize, license, or enforce the patent. In

exchange for “securing and administering” any license agreements relating to the parties’

joint invention, WARF received an administration fee equaling 15% of royalties on the

’815 patent. Once these administrative fees and certain patent prosecution fees were

deducted from total revenues, WARF agreed to pay the University one-third of the

revenues from licensing the ’815 patent, with WARF keeping the remaining two-thirds.

The IIA also set the terms for the treatment of royalties when a patent is included

in a portfolio of other patents. In the event the ’815 patent was licensed as part of a

portfolio, the parties agreed that “WARF shall have the authority to assign relative

3 values” to the ’815 patent. “Relative value” was not defined by the IIA, but the trial court

found, and neither party contests on appeal, that when the ’815 patent is included in a

portfolio of other patents, this clause requires WARF to assign to the ’815 patent “the

monetary or material worth, in light of all circumstances relevant to such license,

considered in relation to the value of the other patents licensed in the portfolio.” This is a

“patent-specific relative value.” Under the construction given to the IIA by the trial court,

“WARF cannot assign a random value to the ’815 patent,” and if some patents in a

portfolio contribute “no value to the license,” then those patents would be “assigned a

low (or zero) ‘relative value’ accordingly.”

In 1998, WARF entered into a license agreement with Abbott Laboratories that

added the ’815 patent to a licensed portfolio of patents and patent applications. This

portfolio protected a drug, paricalcitol, that was approved by the Food and Drug

Administration to be sold commercially by Abbott under the brand name Zemplar.

Significantly, WARF recognized that the ’815 patent “directly support[ed]” Zemplar.

Zemplar would go on to be wildly successful, generating approximately $6.1 billion in

total sales revenues for Abbott. WARF would ultimately receive approximately $426.5

million in royalties from Zemplar.

For purposes of royalty payments under the IIA, WARF assigned relative values

to the patents in the 1998 License portfolio. In its initial allocation, WARF divided 70%

of the overall value of the portfolio between two “Licensed Patents.” The remaining 30%

was divided among thirty-one “Ancillary Patents,” each of which was given an equal

4 relative value of 0.968%. The ’815 patent was included in the group of Ancillary Patents,

and WARF accordingly gave it a relative value of 0.968% of the total portfolio, the same

as the thirty other patents in the group. With the exception of the ’815 patent, all of these

patents were owned solely by WARF.

WARF made its first distribution of Zemplar royalties to Washington University

later in 1998. Although WARF would receive approximately $426.5 million in royalties

in the coming years, it would only remit a little over $1 million to Washington

University, the co-owner of the ’815 patent. This was later found by the trial court to be

inadequate. In the trial court’s estimation, “there was no economic justification for

WARF to have assigned such a low relative value to the ’815 patent.” “Nor was there any

economic justification for WARF to have assigned the exact same relative value to each

of the other so-called ‘Ancillary Patents.’” As was eventually revealed, most of the other

Ancillary Patents had “little to no relationship to Zemplar,” with the result that WARF’s

placement of the ’815 patent in the group of Ancillary Patents was “arbitrary and self-

dealing” and served primarily to dilute the value of the ’815 patent, to the detriment of

Washington University. This remained the case even after WARF re-allocated relative

values in 1999, when WARF reduced the number of Ancillary Patents to thirty from

thirty-one and gave each patent a relative valuation of 1% of the total portfolio—all

except the ’815 patent, which continued to receive a valuation of 0.968% for the next

sixteen years.

5 WARF’s appeal primarily revolves around the question of when Washington

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