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The Supreme Court Sets Limits on the Bayh-Dole Act

The Supreme Court Sets Limits on the Bayh-Dole Act. Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University v. Roche Molecular Systems, Inc . Kevin E. Noonan, Ph.D. Outline of the Talk. Introduction: the case Agreements with Stanford and Cetus District court decision

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The Supreme Court Sets Limits on the Bayh-Dole Act

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  1. The Supreme Court Sets Limitson the Bayh-Dole Act Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University v. Roche Molecular Systems, Inc. Kevin E. Noonan, Ph.D.

  2. Outline of the Talk • Introduction: the case • Agreements with Stanford and Cetus • District court decision • Federal Circuit panel decision • The Supreme Court • Majority opinion • Dissent (Justices Breyer and Ginsberg) • Concurrence (Justice Sotomayor) • Significance • Unanswered questions

  3. Outline of the Talk • Consequences and Recommendations • For universities • For researchers • For licensees and potential licensees • Policy concerns • Questions

  4. Background • Technology: PCR detection of HIV infection • Stanford holds patents assigned by inventors • Roche sells diagnostic test relating to invention • Ownership issue • Inventor signed agreement with Stanford that he “will assign” inventions to the university • Some work performed at Cetus where inventor signed agreement that he “hereby assigns” • Roche asserted ownership interest in patent infringement lawsuit by Stanford

  5. Background • Proceedings below • District court trial on the merits, denied Roche’s ownership claim • Federal Circuit vacated and remanded with instructions to dismiss, finding significant difference in language between two agreements

  6. Background • Proceedings below • “Agreement to assign” is merely a promise to assign in the future while “do hereby assign” is a present assignment of a future invention • Relied on FilmTec v. Allied Signal, held that inventor had already assigned his rights to Cetus/Roche and thus had nothing to assign to Stanford

  7. Supreme Court • What was the question presented? Depends on who presented it • University: • Whether a federal contractor university’s statutory right under the Bayh-Dole Act… in inventions arising from federally funded research can be terminated unilaterally by an inventor through a separate agreement purporting to assign the inventor’s rights to a third party.

  8. Supreme Court • What was the question presented? Depends on who presented it • Roche: • Whether the Bayh-Dole Act’s provision allowing a federal contractor to “elect to retain title” to an “invention of the contractor” allows the contractor retroactively to take intellectual property rights that have been validly assigned to a third party that neither accepted nor benefitted from federal funds.

  9. Supreme Court Opinion • Majority opinion (written by Chief Justice Roberts) affirmed Federal Circuit opinion • But majority did not address Federal Circuit’s contract/assignment grounds • Majority decision based on primacy of inventor in owning the rights to her invention • Held that Bayh-Dole did not change that

  10. Supreme Court • What did the Court think was the question? • The question here is whether the University and Small Business Patent Procedures Act of 1980—commonly referred to as the Bayh-Dole Act—displaces that norm [that rights in an invention belong to the inventor] and automatically vests title to federally funded inventions in federal contractors. We hold that it does not. • Greatly influenced by the Solicitor Generals’ views

  11. Supreme Court opinion • Primacy of inventor’s ownership of patent rights: • "[s]ince 1790, the patent law has operated on the premise that rights in an invention belong to the inventor."  • Provisions of Patent Act and precedent consistent with this primacy • Stanford (and U.S. amicus) contended the Bayh-Dole Act vested ownership in university

  12. Supreme Court opinion • The majority disagreed: • Nowhere in the Act is title expressly vested in contractors or anyone else; nowhere in the Act are inventors expressly deprived of their interest in federally funded inventions.  Instead, the Act provides that contractors may "elect to retain title to any subject invention."  • Majority notes that when Congress intends to make such a fundamental change, it does so expressly, citing other statutes

  13. Supreme Court Opinion • Employment is not enough, by itself, to automatically vest title in the university • Citing express language of the statute regarding “retaining” rights: • "[t]he Bayh-Dole Act does not confer title to federally funded inventions on contractors or authorize contractors to unilaterally take title to those inventions; it simply assures contractors that they may keep title to whatever it is they already have."

  14. Supreme Court opinion • The Bayh-Dole Act is limited: • "order of priority rights between the Federal Government and a federal contractor in a federally funded invention that already belongs to the contractor.  Nothing more."  • This interpretation is supported by the absence of provisions regarding third parties: • "that have neither sought nor received federal funds" where the absence of such remedies "would be deeply troubling . . . [i]n a world in which there are frequent collaboration between private entities, inventors and federal contractors." 

  15. Dissenting opinion • Justices Breyer and Ginsberg dissented on the FilmTec v. Allied Signal precedent • Believe the majority decision contrary to purpose of the Bayh-Dole Act • Permitting an inventor to independently license to a third party “tak[es] that invention out from under the Bayh-Dole Act's restrictions, conditions, and allocation rules." 

  16. Dissenting opinion • As a consequence, public might have to “pay twice” for federally funded research • Also believes the Federal Circuit’s contract interpretation “makes too much of too little” and produces a “technical trap for the unwary” • Also believes that Federal Circuit precedent is flawed on the underlying contract issues as they related to inventor assignments • But concede that the issue not properly briefed and thus not ripe for review

  17. Concurring opinion • Justice Sotomayor concurred but agreed with dissent that this precedent flawed • Expresses hope that issue will properly come before the Court in another case

  18. Consequences • Perhaps minimal, provided universities properly draft assignment provisions • Increases burdens on technology transfer offices to ensure compliance with Bayh-Dole requirements regarding assignments • Increases potential for inventors to limit effectiveness of Bayh-Dole Act through independent activities • May decrease likelihood of commercialization due uncertainty regarding scope of rights

  19. Consequences • May correct “excesses” third parties allege have arisen under Bayh-Dole • Tendency to assert Bayh-Dole “rights” to anything done with any Federal grant monies (voiced by majority opinion) • Overreaching or attempt to comply? • Decision reduces motivation (insofar as compliance-driven • For this reason, may increase likelihood of university/industry collaborations

  20. Consequences • Will not address other third party concerns (regarding ownership) • Also does not address the issue raised by the Federal Circuit regarding present assignment of future inventions • Universities could follow Justices Breyer and Ginsberg in crafting contract and assignment language, but not the law • Requires increased efforts by Technology Transfer Offices to “educate” (control?) faculty

  21. Consequences • What should universities do? • Educate/outreach to department heads and PIs regarding Bayh-Dole requirements • Make explicit invention disclosure and reporting requirements • Amend/change employment and appointment agreements to make duties under Bayh-Dole explicit • Condition funding on compliance (NIH role)

  22. Consequences • What does the opinion say about “first inventor to file”? • Short answer: nothing • A philosophical question • Not always the actual first inventor under current law • Policy reasons • 102(g): “who has not abandoned, suppressed of concealed” • Dangerous to read the tea leaves

  23. Thank you! Kevin E. Noonan, Ph.D. noonan@mbhb.com www.patentdocs.org MBHB 300 South Wacker Drive Chicago, Illinois 60606-6709 312 913 0001 phone 312 913 0002 fax www.mbhb.com

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