Lead Opinion
This appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa granting plaintiff's motion to strike three affirmative defenses is before us by permission, to decide whether the doctrine of assignor estoppel prevents this assignor-inventor and his company, who are sued for infringement, from challenging the validity of the patents previously assigned by him to the assignee. We affirm.
Appellee Diamond Scientific Co. (Diamond) employed Dr. Clarence Welter from 1959 until 1974. During that time, Dr. Welter invented a vaccine against gastroenteritis in swine, and filed a patent application for “Transmissible Gastroenteritis Vaccines and Methods of Producing the Same.” While making this patent application, Dr. Welter assigned all of the rights in the patents to Diamond Laboratories, Inc. (the predecessor of Diamond). Eventually, Diamond’s predecessor was awarded the following patents from this application: No. 3,479,430; No. 3,585,108; and No. 3,704,203.
In 1974 Dr. Welter left Diamond, where he had become a vice-president, and formed his own company, appellant Ambico, Inc. (Ambico). Ambico began manufacturing and selling a gastroenteritis vaccine for swine. Diamond began this patent infringement suit against Ambico-and Dr. Welter, claiming infringement of the three patents that Dr. Welter had assigned to Diamond. The defendants’ answer raised, among other defenses, three grounds for patent invalidity: 35 U.S.C. § 112 (inadequate disclosure); 35 U.S.C. § 102 (lack of novelty); and 35 U.S.C. § 103 (obviousness). Diamond’s motion to strike these three defenses asserted the doctrine of assignor estoppel. The district court granted Diamond’s motion,
The central issue to be decided is whether in this case the assignor-inventor of the patents (or a company in privity with him) can defend the infringement suit brought by the assignee by challenging the validity of the patents previously assigned, or whether the equitable doctrine of assignor estoppel prevents the assignor from claiming that the patents are invalid.
I.
This is the first opportunity presented to this court to examine the doctrine of assignor estoppel. Although the Supreme Court has examined this doctrine or a related doctrine — licensee estoppel — several times this century, its opinions have hardly been definite or definitive.
Beginning with Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co. v. Formica Insulation Co.,
In Scott Paper Co. v. Marcalus Mfg. Co.,
Scott Paper is the most recent word from the Supreme Court on assignor estop-pel. However, in Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
Lear resolved the issue of licensee estop-pel by writing its obituary; but for courts wrestling with assignor estoppel it was less clear whether Lear had also sounded the death knell for that doctrine. Certainly, there was nothing in its holding that eliminated the doctrine. Beyond the questioning dicta in Lear, the Court has left assignment estoppel untouched for the past nineteen years.
II.
The federal court cases, decided either shortly before Lear or since then, that discuss the doctrine of assignor estoppel reveal some uncertainty about the continued vitality of the doctrine. At least two courts have acknowledged the doctrine, although rejecting on the facts its application to the cases before them. Nationwide Chemical Corp. v. Wright,
III.
In examining Lear, one important distinction between assignors and licensees becomes apparent — a distinction that cautions against the automatic application to assignment cases of the rationale underlying Lear and licensees. The public policy favoring allowing a licensee to contest the validity of the patent is not present in the assignment situation. Unlike the licensee, who, without Lear might be forced to continue to pay for a potentially invalid patent, the assignor who would challenge the patent has already been fully paid for the patent rights.
Assignor estoppel is an equitable doctrine that prevents one who has assigned the rights to a patent (or patent application) from later contending that what was assigned is a nullity. The estoppel also operates to bar other parties in privity with the assignor, such as a corporation founded by the assignor. See, e.g., Stubnitz-Greene Spring Corp. v. Fort Pitt Bedding Co.,
The four most frequently mentioned justifications for applying assignor estoppel are the following: “(1) to prevent unfairness and injustice; (2) to prevent one [from] benefiting from his own wrong; (3) by analogy to estoppel by deed in real estate; and (4) by analogy to a landlord-tenant relationship.” Cooper, Estoppel to Challenge Patent Validity: The Case of Private Good Faith vs. Public Policy, 18 Case W.Res. 1122 (1967). Although each rationale may have some utility depending on the facts presented by the particular case, our concern here is primarily with the first one.
Courts that have expressed the estoppel doctrine in terms of unfairness and injustice have reasoned that an assignor should not be permitted to sell something and later to assert that what was sold is worthless, all to the detriment of the assignee. Justice Frankfurter’s dissent in Scott Paper explained that the doctrine was rooted in the notion of fair dealing. “The principle of fair dealing as between assignor and assignee of a patent whereby the assignor will not be allowed to say that what he has sold as a patent was not a patent has been part of the fabric of our law throughout the life of this nation.” Scott Paper v. Marcalus Mfg. Co.,
IV.
Our holding is that this is a case in which public policy calls for the application
Appellants argue that assignor estoppel is necessarily a variation of estoppel by conduct and should be governed by the traditional elements of equitable estoppel.
We note first that Dr. Welter assigned the rights to his inventions to Diamond in exchange for valuable consideration (one dollar plus other unspecified consideration —presumably his salary over many years and other employment benefits). Dr. Welter also executed an inventor’s oath, which stated his belief, inter alia, that he was the first and sole inventor, that the invention was never known or used before his invention and that it was not previously patented or described in any publication in any country. Furthermore, Dr. Welter apparently participated actively in the patent application process, including drafting the initial version of the claims and consulting on their revision.
Appellants would now defend against accusations of infringement by trying to show that the three patents in issue are invalid because the inventions either were inadequately disclosed by the specifications, lacked novelty, or would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill at the time the inventions were made. If appellants are permitted to raise these defenses and are successful in their proof, Dr. Welter will have profited both by his initial assignment of the patent applications and by his later attack on the value of the very subjects of his earlier assignment. In comparison, Diamond will have given value for the rights to Dr. Welter’s inventions only to have him later deprive Diamond of the worth of those assigned rights.
We agree with the district court that the equities weigh heavily in favor of Diamond. Although the doctrine of assign- or estoppel may no longer be a broad eq
It is also irrelevant that, at the time of the assignment, Dr. Welter’s patent applications were still pending and the Patent Office had not yet granted the patents. What Dr. Welter assigned were the rights to his inventions. That Diamond may have later amended the claims in the application process (a very common occurrence in patent prosecutions), with or without Dr. Welter’s assistance, does not give appellants’ arguments against estoppel any greater force. Our concern must be the balance of the equities. The fact is that Dr. Welter assigned the rights to his invention, irrespective of the particular language in the claims describing the inventions when the patents were ultimately granted. Appellants should not be allowed now to destroy those rights by derogating the patents’ validity. Cf. AMP, Inc.,
Nevertheless, Westinghouse does allow for an accommodation in such circumstances. To the extent that Diamond may have broadened the claims in the patent applications (after the assignments) beyond what could be validly claimed in light of the prior art, Westinghouse may allow appellants to introduce evidence of prior art to narrow the scope of the claims of the patents, which may bring their accused devices outside the scope of the claims of the patents in suit. Id. at 350,
V.
Appellants also contend that the district court improperly relied on material outside the pleadings in granting Diamond’s motion to strike. Although nothing in the language of Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(f) explicitly prohibits a court from examining materials beyond the pleadings, some courts have noted that the general rule is otherwise. See, e.g., OKC Corp. v. Williams,
In granting the motion to strike, the district court mentioned the assignment, the inventor’s oath, and Dr. Welter’s participation in the patent application process as factors weighing in favor of estoppel.
CONCLUSION
Because we agree that the public policy behind the doctrine of assignor estoppel prevents these appellants from challenging the validity of the patents in issue, the district court’s decision granting Diamond’s motion to strike appellants’ second, third and sixth affirmative defenses is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
. This being an issue directly related to the patent law, we need not follow the law of the Eighth Circuit in which the current case arose.
. Brand Plastics Co. v. Dow Chemical Co.,
(1) Ignorance of the party claiming estoppel of the matter asserted; (2) silence concerning matter where there is a duty to speak amounting to misrepresentation or concealment of a material fact; (3) action by the party relying on the misrepresentation or concealment; and (4) damages resulting if the estoppel is denied.
(quoting Nelson v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Corp.,76 F.2d 17 , 21 (8th Cir.1935)).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I agree with the court’s decision that the equities in this case favor imposing estop-pel on the assignor, and with the court’s recognition that elements analogous to es-toppel by deed may also be considered. However, I believe that the relationship between assignee and assignor is preferably treated under the laws of contract and transfers of property,
Assignor-assignee cases are typified by the facts at bar: the validity of the patent is attacked by the inventor/assignor who, having received the bargained-for consideration for the assignment, now seeks to impeach the invention (by challenging the validity of the patent) in order to use the subject matter for his own gain. Our decision today does indeed help to clarify the issues, but I write separately to state my belief that it is time to reaffirm the principle of assignor estoppel; that is, to reinstate assignor estoppel as the general rule rather than the exception. Such rule would place on the assignor/challenger the burden of proving that an apparently valid deed of assignment should not be enforced in accordance with the applicable laws of contracts and property transfers, rather than placing on the assignee the burden of proving that equity is on its side. See the discussion, in the majority opinion, of Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co. v. Formica Insulation Co.,
The situation of the appellant Dr. Welter typifies modern industrial research environments, where inventor/assignors are supported by the assignee in salary, laboratory, staff, and equipment. Equally typical is the circumstance that subsequent investment by the assignee, in the development and commercialization of the invention, can dwarf the cost of making the invention itself. Much attention has been given to encouraging investment in research and commercialization of new products, and in providing incentives to offset the risk inherent in such activity. See, e.g., Report of the Advisory Committee on Industrial Innovation, U.S. Department of Commerce (1979). Giving realistic weight to our national interest in strengthening incentives for innovation, I believe that both public policy and experience weigh on the side of reaffirming the contractual integrity of patent assignments.
Students of the public policy invoked by the Supreme Court when it eliminated licensee estoppel in Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
The Court in Lear apparently believed that “full and free competition” ensues when a patent is eliminated from the rolls. The experience of the marketplace is otherwise. The usual incentive to the patent licensee in taking the license is, and always has been, the opportunity for profit. If the destruction of a licensed patent would not enhance profits but instead facilitate the entry of competitors, this would surely be weighed by a licensee before embarking on a Lear-authorized challenge to the licensed patent. See Dreyfuss at 698-700 (discussing the value of lead time to a licensee). It is common experience — and common sense — that challenges to patent validity by either licensees or assignors, albeit serving the private interest of the challenger, carry scant public benefit. The nobler expectations of Lear have few testimonials.
The past rejection of assignor estoppel appears to be based on respect for Lear and a reluctance to depart from the basic policy as to licensee estoppel expressed therein. Yet, as the majority observed, the policy considerations are not identical. In my view they are sufficiently different that rehabilitation of the doctrine of assignor estoppel is merited. Placing legal emphasis on the property and transfer aspects of patent assignments does not exclude equitable considerations, and the usual defenses to the contract of assignment, e.g. fraud or failure of consideration, may always be raised by an assignor. However, I know of no other property right that is treated by law as exempt from the normal precepts of commercial bargain and sale. We should repair this gap between outmoded theory and market reality.
Patent rights are indeed vested with strong elements of public interest, but this does not exclude giving due weight to all the interests involved. Thus although I join the court’s judgment, I would decline to give sustenance to a theory of public policy that both weakens the rule of law and disserves the national interest.
. See 35 U.S.C. 261: Subject to the provisions of this title, a patent shall have the attributes of personal property.
