Fieldturf, Inc. and Fieldturf International, Inc. (“Fieldturf’), the purported exclusive licensees of U.S. Patent No. 4,337,283 (“'283 patent”), appeal the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky dismissing with prejudice claims alleging violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act, the Lanham Act, the Kentucky Consumer Protection Act, the common law of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and, most relevant here, the Patent Act.
Fieldturf, Inc. v. Southwest Recreational Indus.,
Background
Fieldturf and Southwest Recreational Industries, Inc. (“Southwest”) are competitors in the artificial turf market, a market primarily geared toward providing an alternative to natural grass for playing surfaces for athletic games. Southwest manufactures and markets at least two types of artificial turf systems: AstroTurf®, a carpet-like turf system, and AstroPlay®, a filled-turf system that more closely resembles the appearance of natural grass. Fi-eldturf manufactures and markets its own filled-turf system, FieldTurf®, which is the commercial embodiment of the '283 patent.
Fieldturf claims to possess the right to manufacture and market the embodiment of the '283 patent by virtue of a series of transactions. On December 29, 1980, approximately a year and a half before the '283 patent issued, Frederick T. Haas, Jr., the inventor of record, assigned all rights to the pending patent to a Louisiana partnership, Mod-Sod Sports Surfaces (“MSSS”), owned by Haas and his three children. On March 1, 1994, Mod-Sod Sports Surfaces, Inc. (“MSSSI”), the purported successor in form to MSSS, and Haas entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with SynTenniCo, Inc. (“STC”) and Jean Prevost. This gave STC and Prevost the exclusive right to manufacture and market commercial embodiments of the '283 patent, save a limited right retained by MSSSI and Haas to “develop[ ], display[ ], commercialize[ ], and market[ ]” to potential customers. In that same document, MSSSI and Haas also retained the right of first refusal to enforce the '283 patent against infringers, enabling STC and Prevost to bring suit only after MSSSI and Haas had declined to do so. On June 19, 1998, Prevost, on behalf of STC, and *1268 Haas, on behalf of MSSSI, entered into another exclusive licensing agreement that was deemed to “cancel[] and replace[]” the 1994 agreement. On August 17, 1999, STC assigned its rights in the licensing agreement to Fieldturf Holdings, Inc., which in turn assigned its rights to Field-turf, Inc. on September 14, 1999.
For years Fieldturf and its predecessors in interest consistently have maintained that AstroPlay®, when installed with infill comprising both sand and rubber, infringes the '283 patent. For example, STC filed suit against Southwest in 1998, in part to prohibit Southwest from manufacturing and marketing AstroPlay® with rubber and sand infill for the duration of the '283 patent. As part of a settlement stemming from that litigation, Southwest agreed to market AstroPlay® with an infill consisting entirely of resilient particles and no sand. In this case, Fieldturf alleges that Southwest resumed infringement of the '283 patent immediately following the execution of the settlement agreement “by manufacturing its AstroPlay® grasslike carpets in the United States and then shipping that material overseas, with the understanding that the infringing sand-and-rubber infill would be added abroad.” On summary judgment, the district court ruled against Fieldturf on all counts, and Fieldturf appeals. Southwest asserts that Fieldturf lacks standing to enforce the '283 patent, and the patent claim should be dismissed for that reason.
Discussion
Before we can address the merits, we must decide whether Fieldturf has standing to sue on the patent.
See Myers Investigative & Sec. Servs. v. United States,
To bring an action for patent infringement, a party must be either the patentee, a successor in title to the patentee, or an exclusive licensee of the patent at issue.
Mentor H/S, Inc. v. Med. Device Alliance, Inc.,
Fieldturf asserts that it has standing to enforce the '283 patent against third parties not because it is the patentee or a successor in title to the patentee, but rather because it is an exclusive licensee. Consequently, it has the burden to provide evidence endowing it with all substantial rights in the patent.
See id.
(citing
Speedplay, Inc. v. Bebop, Inc.,
To determine whether an agreement conveys all substantial rights in the patent, “we must ascertain the intention of the parties and examine the substance of what was granted by the agreement.”
Id.
(citing V
aupel Textilmaschinen KG v. Meccanica Euro Italia
S.P.A.,
First, without granting STC the right to enforce the patent, either explicitly or impliedly, the document conveys no more than a bare license.
See State Contracting & Eng’g Corp. v. Condotte Am., Inc.,
The next question is whether the appropriate course of action is to remand for dismissal with or without prejudice. Ordinarily, dismissal for lack of standing is without prejudice.
H.R. Tech., Inc. v.
As
technologies, Inc.,
The main problem for Fieldturf is that it has not identified the successor in title of the '283 patent, if indeed there is one. Haas assigned his interests in the patent to MSSS, a Louisiana partnership. Absent from the record, however, is any document conveying interests in the patent from MSSS, the partnership, to any other party-particularly MSSSI, the Louisiana corporation. Without such documentation, it is questionable whether MSSSI conveyed any rights to STC, Fieldturfs predecessor in interest.
See Prima Tek II,
Even if this threshold issue is resolved in Fieldturfs favor, and MSSSI is conclusively proven to be MSSS’s successor in title, Fieldturf still must establish that MSSSI can be feasibly joined before it can maintain the present suit for infringement. Jean Prevost, as a co-licensee with STC to both agreements, may also need to be joined to complete Fieldturfs standing. Fieldturf simply cannot maintain a suit for infringement unless all such concerns about the completeness of its standing are resolved in its favor. We cannot ascertain from this incomplete record whether join-der of these parties would be necessary or possible. Thus, it is for the district court to complete these inquiries, and then determine, in its discretion, whether to dismiss the case with or without prejudice.
Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment is vaeated-in-part, and the case is remanded-in-part, to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky with instructions to dismiss, and transferred-in-part to the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.
VACATED IN PART, REMANDED IN PART, AND TRANSFERRED IN PART.
