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Some Post-Expiration Patent Royalty Payments May Be OK

The US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit reversed a district court’s finding that a contract impermissibly allowed for patent royalties after the patent expired because the post-termination royalty payments were allocated to non-US patents. C.R. Bard, Inc. v. Atrium Med. Corp., Case No. 23-16020 (9th Cir. Aug. 23, 2024) (Friedland, Mendoza, Desai, JJ.) (per curiam).

C.R. Bard held one US and one Canadian patent covering a type of vascular graft. In 2011, Bard and Atrium entered a licensing agreement to settle a patent dispute. Under the terms of the agreement, Atrium agreed to pay Bard a 15% royalty on covered US sales until 2019 (when the US patent expired) and a 15% royalty on covered Canadian sales until 2024 (when the Canadian patent expired). The contract also included a quarterly royalty minimum. Through 2019, as the contract contemplated, Atrium paid royalties on its US and Canadian sales. Because of a US Food and Drug Administration delay, Atrium had lower than expected sales and never exceeded the quarterly minimum royalty.

Atrium eventually refused to continue making royalty payments, which after 2019 covered only Canadian sales (likewise never exceeding the quarterly minimum). Bard sued for breach of contract in 2021. Atrium argued that the royalty provision was unenforceable under Brulotte v. Thys, a 1964 US Supreme Court decision holding that collecting royalties for patent use after a patent’s expiration constitutes patent misuse. The district court determined that the “clear and primary purpose” of the parties’ contractual minimum royalty was to compensate Bard for US sales of the patented product. The district court therefore agreed with Atrium. Bard appealed.

The Ninth Circuit undertook to determine whether the terms of the parties’ contract constituted patent misuse under Brulotte. The Ninth Circuit first explained that in Brulotte, the Supreme Court considered a contract between the owner of multiple patents related to picking hops and farmers who made seasonal license payments to use machines incorporating those patents. The Supreme Court found patent misuse because the license amount did not decrease as patents incorporated into the machines expired, which indicated that the farmers were paying to use expired patents.

Despite pushback, the Supreme Court refused to overturn Brulotte in 2015 when it decided Kimble v. Marvel. That case involved a patent holder’s license allowing Marvel to incorporate patented web-shooting technology into a Spiderman toy. In Kimble, the Ninth Circuit had ruled that the license agreement was invalid under Brulotte because it required Marvel to continue to pay a royalty fee after the patent expired. The Ninth Circuit noted, however, that an ongoing license after the expiration of a patent may be permissible if the license contemplates both patented and non-patented features, as long as the terms of the royalty adjust when the patent expires. For instance, a license covering both a patented invention and a trade secret may continue past the life of the patent, as long as the royalty rate diminishes after the patent expires. This reflects that the royalty is [...]

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Taking the High Road: Ambiguity Regarding “Versions” of Beer Precludes Summary Judgment

The US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed a district court’s summary judgment denial and determination that the definition of “beer” (which encompassed “other versions and combinations” of beer and malt beverages) in a trademark licensing agreement was ambiguous. Cerveceria Modelo de Mexico, S. de R.L. de C.V. v. CB Brand Strategies, LLC, Case No. 23-810 (2d Cir. Mar. 25, 2024) (Cabranes, Wesley, Lohier, JJ.) (nonprecedential).

In 2013, Modelo granted Constellation Brands a perpetual sublicense to use Modelo’s trademarks for Corona and Modelo to sell “beer” in the United States. The sublicense defined “beer” as “beer, ale, porter, stout, malt beverages, and any other versions or combinations of the foregoing, including non-alcoholic versions of any of the foregoing.” Several years later, Constellation launched Corona Hard Seltzer and Modelo Ranch Water, both of which are flavored alcoholic seltzers derived from fermented sugar.

Modelo sued Constellation in 2021, alleging that Constellation’s sales of the “Corona” or “Modelo” branded hard seltzers violated the sublicensing agreement because the license for use of the marks on “beer” did not encompass sugar-based hard seltzers. Modelo moved for summary judgment, which the district court denied after determining that the agreement’s definition of “beer” was ambiguous. At trial, the jury found that Modelo had failed to show that the seltzers were not “beer” under the sublicense definition. Modelo appealed.

Modelo asserted that the district court erred in denying summary judgment, arguing that the agreement’s definition of “beer” was unambiguous and challenged the district court’s jury instructions and exclusion of certain evidence at trial.

The Second Circuit agreed that the term “beer” as used in the agreement was ambiguous. The Court noted that a motion for summary judgment in a contract dispute generally may only be granted when the relevant language has a definite meaning and is unambiguous. Modelo argued that the sublicense plainly excluded the hard seltzers because they were not “beer,” “malt beverages,” or versions or combinations of either. Modelo contended that the term “versions” was limited to beverages with characteristics in common with “beer” and “malt beverages” and would not include “malt-free,” “hops-flavorless” hard seltzers.

The Second Circuit assumed for purposes of the opinion that the plain and ordinary meaning of “beer” and “malt beverages” excluded seltzers but reasoned that Corona Hard Seltzer and Modelo Ranch Water could plausibly be understood as a “version” of either. The Court found Modelo’s limited view of the term “versions” unpersuasive, given that the sublicense allowed for “nonalcoholic versions” of beer and malt beverages, even though dictionary definitions uniformly define “beer” as containing alcohol. Because each party’s reading of “versions” was at least plausible, the Court concluded that the relevant contract language was ambiguous and affirmed the district court’s summary judgment denial.

Modelo also argued that the district court failed to instruct the jury that undefined words should be given their plain and ordinary meaning and improperly instructed the jury to ignore dictionary definitions. The Second Circuit rejected this argument, noting that the instructions properly informed the jury [...]

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