Zila , Inc. v. Tinnell

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 5, 2007
Docket05-15031
StatusPublished

This text of Zila , Inc. v. Tinnell (Zila , Inc. v. Tinnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zila , Inc. v. Tinnell, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

ZILA, INC., a Delaware  Corporation, Plaintiff-counter-defendant- No. 05-15031 Appellee, v.  D.C. No. CV-00-01345-KJD JAMES E. TINNELL, Defendant-counter-claimant- Appellant. 

ZILA, INC., a Delaware  Corporation, Plaintiff-counter-defendant- No. 05-15087 Appellant, v.  D.C. No. CV-00-01345-KJD JAMES E. TINNELL, OPINION Defendant-counter-claimant- Appellee.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Nevada Kent J. Dawson, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted December 8, 2006—San Francisco, California Filed September 5, 2007 Before: Dorothy W. Nelson, Robert E. Cowen,* and Marsha S. Berzon, Circuit Judges. *The Honorable Robert E. Cowen, Senior United States Circuit Judge for the Third Circuit, sitting by designation.

11687 11688 ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL Opinion by Judge Berzon 11690 ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL

COUNSEL

Larry C. Johns and John H. Pilkington, Las Vegas, Nevada, for the appellant. ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL 11691 William H. Drummond, Newport Beach, California, for the appellee.

OPINION

BERZON, Circuit Judge:

Appellant James Tinnell developed a liquid solution to treat lesions caused by the herpes virus. He applied for a patent on the treatment and acquired a defunct corporation, now named Zila, as a vehicle for marketing and selling the product, now called Zilactin. Tinnell subsequently entered an agreement with Zila that assigned all rights in his invention to the com- pany in return for royalty payments and company stock. The royalty payments provided for in this contract are the subject of the present dispute.

The contract at issue is unambiguous as to the duration of the royalties, and the parties agree on their intent at the time it was formed. All the evidence is thus in accord with a single interpretation — that Tinnell would relinquish all rights to Zilactin, patent or otherwise, and, in return, receive in perpe- tuity a five percent royalty on Zila’s sales of the invention. The difficulty in this case arises because Zila asserts, and the district court agreed, that the doctrine announced in Brulotte v. Thys, 379 U.S. 29 (1964), displaces, because of federal patent policy, the parties’ intent and renders the royalty obli- gation unenforceable, either entirely or upon the expiration of the first patent that issued on Tinnell’s invention. We con- front, consequently, not simple questions of contract law but rather issues concerning the impact and bounds of Brulotte, in the context of an otherwise unremarkable case.

I.

Tinnell first developed his liquid solution to treat lesions 11692 ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL caused by oral and genital herpes in 1976. He applied for a patent on the treatment the following year and soon thereafter acquired a defunct California corporation, which he renamed Zila, Inc.,1 as a vehicle for marketing and selling the product. The product has been improved since it was developed in 1976 and is now sold under the brand name Zilactin.

On September 5, 1980, Tinnell and Zila entered into an agreement (“1980 Agreement”) that began by noting that “Tinnell has invented a treatment composition for herpes virus infection, which is the subject of a patent application,” and “Tinnell is desirous of assigning all of his right, title and interest in the application and invention, improvements thereon and Letters Patent thereon” for consideration includ- ing royalties and stock. The 1980 Agreement

assign[ed] all of [Tinnell’s] right, title and interest in the [patent] application and invention, improvements thereon and Letters Patent thereon, when granted in the United States or foreign countries, to [Zila], including any present or future improvement whether the same being made by Tinnell or [Zila], and whether presently existing or made in the future, and as may be granted in the United States or any foreign country or otherwise, including each patent granted on any application which is a division, sub- stitution or continuation of any of the applications specifically identified herein, and each reissue or extension of any of the same.

In return, and without any temporal or other limitation, the contract provided Tinnell with “a five percent (5%) royalty on gross sales of [Zila] of the invention,” as well as company stock. Tinnell obligated himself to “cooperate with [Zila] to 1 We refer to the corporation throughout this opinion as Zila, its current name. ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL 11693 the extent that [Zila] may enjoy to the fullest extent the rights conveyed hereunder . . . .”

The officers who signed on behalf of Zila testified that when they executed the 1980 Agreement, it was not known whether any patents would issue on Tinnell’s invention. According to their uncontested statements, the duration of Zila’s obligation to pay Tinnell royalties was not related in any way to the patents that might or might not be obtained by the company as a result of his previously-filed patent applica- tion. Instead, the signatories understood the 1980 Agreement to provide Tinnell with a 5% royalty on gross sales of Zilactin for as long as the company sold his product.

Zila subsequently secured patents in the United States and Canada.2 The first of these patents, U.S. Patent ‘934, was issued in August 1981. Zila also secured a continuation patent, ‘236, for the 1981 patent and, in December 1985, Canadian Patent ‘494. The primary improvement that trans- formed Tinnell’s original solution into the present-day Zilac- tin was the addition of a thickener that made the product into a gel. The patent for the addition of this thickener was approved as U.S. Patent ‘158 in January 1992.

There is a dispute as to who invented the 1992 patent. In 1987, Zila filed a patent application which described an improvement to the original chemical compound and named Tinnell as the inventor. Because Zila’s patent counsel erred in the technical description of the chemical compounds involved, however, the company withdrew the application. When the company resubmitted the application, it inexplica- bly named Edwin Pomerantz, Zila’s regulatory specialist, as the inventor. The patent office subsequently issued the patent 2 The record does not establish whether a patent was obtained in any other country. 11694 ZILA, INC. v. TINNELL in 1992 to Zila, crediting Pomerantz rather than Tinnell with the invention.3

Zila’s royalties to Tinnell grew exponentially from 1987 to 2000. In 1987, gross sales of Zilactin amounted to only $321,000, which pegged royalties at $6,426. By 2000, how- ever, Zilactin had gross sales of over $8 million, and Zila owed Tinnell half a million dollars in royalties annually.

In July 2000, Zila’s patent counsel advised the company to terminate Tinnell’s royalties, on the grounds that, under Bru- lotte, Tinnell’s right to royalties expired on August 1998, when the 1981 patent expired. Two months later, Zila stopped making royalty payments on all sales of Zilactin. Although the Canadian patent did not expire until December 2002, Zila justified its withholding of the Canadian royalties on the ground that it had overpaid Tinnell nearly a million dollars in American royalties over the previous two years.

Shortly after it stopped paying royalties, Zila filed a two- count complaint in federal court requesting a declaratory judgment that Tinnell’s right to royalties under the 1980 Agreement ceased after August 25, 1998. The suit also sought reimbursement for the royalties paid to Tinnell for the two years after the 1981 patent expired. Tinnell filed a counter- claim for declaratory relief, contending that his entitlement to royalties under the Agreement did not terminate with the expiration of the 1981 patent but, instead, continued in perpe- tuity.

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