Unsuccessful in their intermediate appeal to the district court, Instituí Pasteur and Pasteur Sanofi Diagnostics [collectively: “Pasteur”] again appeal from the bankruptcy court order which confirmed the chapter 11 reorganization plan (“Plan”) proposed by debtor-in-possession Cambridge Biotech Corporation (“CBC”), the holder of two licenses to utilize Pasteur patents. The Plan provision central to the present dispute calls for the sale of all CBC stock to a subsidiary of bioMerieux Vitek, Inc. (“bioMerieux”), a major competitor of appellant Pasteur. Finding no error, we affirm.
I
BACKGROUND
CBC manufactures and sells retroviral diagnostic tests for detecting the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) associated with AIDS. Its HIV diagnostics division annually generates approximately $14 million in revenues. Instituí Pasteur, a nonprofit French foundation engaged in AIDS-related research and development, owns various patented procedures for diagnosing HIV Virus Type 2 (“HIV2 procedures”). Pasteur Sanofi Diagnostics holds the exclusive right to use and sublicense Instituí Pasteur’s patents.
In October 1989, CBC and Pasteur entered into mutual cross-license agreements, whereby each acquired a nonexclusive perpetual license to use some of the technology patented or licensed by the other. Specifically, CBC acquired the right to incorporate Pasteur’s HIV'2 procedures into any diagnostic kits sold by CBC in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere. 1
Each cross-license broadly prohibits the licensee from assigning or sublicensing to others. See Royalty-Free Cross-License, at § 7.1; Royalty-Bearing Cross-License, at § 8.1 (“[N]o other person shall acquire or have any right under or by virtue of this Agreement.”). Nevertheless, either Pasteur or CBC was authorized to “extend to its Affiliated Companies the benefits of this Agreement so that such party shall remain responsible with regard [to] all [license] obligations.” Id. § 1.4. “Affiliated Company” is defined as “an organization which controls or is controlled by a party or an organization which is under common control with a party.” Id.
CBC filed its chapter 11 petition on July 7, 1994, and thereafter continued to operate its retroviral diagnostic testing business as debtor-in-possession. Its reorganization plan proposed that CBC assume both cross-licenses, see 11 U.S.C. § 365 (executory contracts), 2 continue to operate its retrovi-ral diagnostics division utilizing Pasteur’s patented HIV2 procedures, and sell all CBC stock to a subsidiary of bioMerieux, a giant French biotechnology corporation and Pasteur’s direct competitor in international biotechnology sales. Pasteur previously had licensed bioMerieux to use its HIV2 procedures, but the earlier license related to a single product manufactured by bioM-erieux (i.e., bioMerieux’s VIDAS automated immunoassay test system), and applied only to VIDAS sales in markets other than the United States, Canada, Mexico, Australia, and New Zealand, markets expressly encompassed within the CBC cross-licenses.
Not surprisingly, in due course Pasteur objected to the Plan. Citing Bankruptcy Code § 365(c), 11 U.S.C. § 365(c), it contend *491 ed that the proposed sale of CBC’s stock to bioMerieux amounted to CBC’s assumption of the patent cross-licenses and their defacto “assignment” to a third party in contravention of the presumption of nonassignability ordained by the federal common law of patents, as well as the explicit nonassignability provision contained in the cross-licenses. Isabelle Bressac, Pasteur’s licensing director, attested that Pasteur would not have granted its competitor, bioMerieux, or a subsidiary, a patent license under the terms allowed CBC.
The bankruptcy court authorized CBC to assume the cross-licenses over Pasteur’s objection. It ruled that the proposed sale of CBC stock to bioMerieux did not constitute a defacto “assignment” of the cross-licenses to bioMerieux, but merely an assumption of the cross-licenses by the reorganized debtor under new ownership, and that Bankruptcy Code § 365(c) enabled CBC to assume the cross-licenses as debtor-in-possession because the prepetition licensing relationship between Pasteur and CBC was neither “unique” nor “something in the category of a personal services contract.” In re Cambridge Biotech Corp., No. 94-43054, slip op. at 17-18, 24 (Bankr.D.Mass. Sept. 18, 1996); Tr. 176-77. 3 The district court upheld the bankruptcy court ruling on intermediate appeal.
II
DISCUSSION
A. Appellate Jurisdiction
Citing our decision in
Rochman v. Northeast Utils. Serv. Group (In re Public Serv. Co. of
N.H.),
Contrary to CBC’s suggestion, our
Public Service
decision does not reduce to the simplistic theme that appellate courts invariably are deprived of jurisdiction by the lack (or premature dissolution) of a stay which results in substantial plan consummation prior to final disposition of the appeal. Rather, we rested our decision in
Public Service
primarily on two circumstantial considerations.
See In re Andreuccetti,
First, the equities weighed heavily against the appellants in
Public Service,
who repeatedly and inexplicably failed to avail
*492
themselves of interlocutory appeals from earlier denials of their requests for stay by the courts below. As a consequence of their notable lack of diligence, a full sixteen months had elapsed from the date of confirmation, during which “implementation of the confirmed plan proceeded apace.”
In re Public Serv.,
Second,
Public Service
involved extraordinarily intricate Plan provisions, as well as a multi-billion dollar enterprise, with the result that any attempted Plan dismantling following the substantial and unexeused lapses by appellánts would have produced ‘“a nightmarish situation for the bankruptcy court on remand.’ ”
Id.
at 474 (citation omitted);
see, e.g., Baker & Drake, Inc. v. Public Serv. Comm’n of Nev.,
We need not resolve the jurisdictional challenge urged upon us by CBC, however, since the merits of Pasteur’s contention — that CBC’s assumption of the cross-licenses and its sale of stock to the bioMerieux subsidiary contravene Bankruptcy Code § 365(c) — are readily dispatched.
See Casco N. Bank. N.A. v. DN Assocs. (In re DN Assocs.),
B. The Merits 6
Pasteur argues that the CBC Plan effects a de facto assignment of its two cross-licenses to bioMerieux, contrary to Bankruptcy Code § 365(c)(1) which provides as follows:
The trustee [viz., CBC] 7 may not assume or assign any executory contract ..., whether or not such contract ... prohibits or restricts assignment of rights or delegation of duties, if-
(1)(A) applicable law excuses a party[] other than the debtor[ ] [viz., Pasteur] to such contract ... from accepting performance from or rendering performance to an entity other than the debtor or the debtor in possession, whether or not such contract ... prohibits or restricts assumption or assignment; and (B) such party [viz., Pasteur] does not consent to such assumption or assignment. ...
11 U.S.C. § 365(c)(1).
Pasteur argues that in order to encourage optimum product innovation the federal common law of patents presumes that patent licensees, such as CBC, may not sublicense to third parties absent the patent holder’s consent.
See, e.g., Commissioner v. Sunnen,
These contentions are foreclosed by our decision in
Summit Inv. & Dev. Corp. v. Leroux (In re Leroux),
We rejected the proposed hypothetical test in
Leroux,
holding instead that subsections 365(c) and (e) contemplate a case-by-case inquiry into whether the nondebtor party
{viz.,
Pasteur)
actually
was being “forced to accept performance under its executory contract from someone other than the debtor party with whom it originally contracted.”
Id.
Where the particular transaction envisions that the debtor-in-possession would assume and continue to perform under an exec-utory contract, the bankruptcy court cannot simply presume as a matter of law that the debtor-in-possession is a legal entity
materially
distinct from the prepetition debtor with whom the nondebtor party
(viz.,
Pasteur) contracted.
Id.
at 613-14 (citing H.R.Rep. No. 1195, 96th Cong., 2d Sess. § 27(b) (1980);
NLRB v. Bildisco & Bildisco,
Given the pragmatic “actual performance” test adopted in
Leroux,
the ultimate findings of fact and conclusions of law made by the bankruptcy court
10
below did not constitute error. CBC simply does not occupy the same position as the debtor in
CFLC, Inc.,
Pasteur nonetheless insists that the reorganized CBC is different than the prepetition entity, not due merely to its chapter 11 filing but because it is now owned by a different legal entity than before — namely, bioMer-ieux’s subsidiary qua CBC shareholder. Pasteur’s contention finds no support, however, either in Massachusetts law, see supra note 1, or in the cross-license provisions it negotiated.
Stock sales are not mergers whereby outright title and ownership of the licensee-corporation’s assets (including its patent licenses) pass to the acquiring corporation. Rather, as a corporation, CBC “is a legal entity distinct from its shareholders.”
Seagram Distillers Co. v. Alcoholic Beverages Control Comm’n,
Furthermore, Pasteur’s position finds, no support in the negotiated terms of its cross-licenses. As the patent holder — and given CBC’s corporate form and the governing Massachusetts law,
supra
— Pasteur was free to negotiate restrictions on CBC’s continuing rights under the cross-licenses based on changes in its stock ownership or corporate control.
See id.
at 1095 (parties may override law of merger by negotiating express patent license provision);
see also Seagram,
Other cross-license provisions directly undercut Pasteur’s interpretation as well.
See Willitts v. Roman Catholic Archbishop of Boston,
HI
CONCLUSION
As CBC remains in all material respects the legal entity with which Pasteur freely contracted, Pasteur has not made the required individualized showing that it is or will be deprived of “the full benefit of [its] bargain,”
Leroux,
So ordered.
Notes
. These cross-licenses expressly provide that Massachusetts law governs their interpretation. See Royalty-Free Cross-License, at § 9; Royalty-Bearing Cross-License, at § 10.
. The parties agree that the cross-licenses are "executory contracts," since substantial performance remains due by both parties.
See Summit Inv. & Dev. Corp. v. Leroux (In re
Leroux),
. The bankruptcy court further found that the Plan had been proposed in good faith, see 11 U.S.C. § 1129(a)(3), and that the stock sale to bioMerieux had been negotiated in good faith and at arm’s length. In re Cambridge Biotech Corp., No. 94-43054, slip op. at 7, 12.
. A series of stays had prevented CBC from consummating the Plan by August 2, 1996, as scheduled, and a final consummation date was set for October 31, 1996. In early October, CBC asked this court to vacate the pending stay, claiming that further delay threatened irreparable injury. It represented that almost half its employees had quit during the preceding year, jittery clients had begun to cancel contracts, and that its revenues had declined by 10%.
.The equitable and pragmatic tests employed in
Public Service
are symbiotic.
See In re UNR Indus.,
. We review the district court's conclusions of law
de novo
and the bankruptcy court's findings of fact for clear error only.
See Petit v. Fessenden,
. As debtor-in-possession, CBC has substantially the same rights and powers as a chapter 11 trustee, including the power to assume executory contracts under Bankruptcy Code § 365. See 11 U.S.C. § .1107.
.
See Williams v. Ashland Eng’g Co.,
. Bankruptcy Code § 365(e)(2)(A) provides that a statutoiy or contractual termination provision, which is contingent upon the filing of a bankruptcy petition, may be enforceable in bankruptcy if the "applicable law excuses a party, other than the debtor, to such contract or lease from accepting performance from or rendering performance to the trustee or to an assignee of such contract or lease, whether or not such contract or lease prohibits or restricts assignment of rights or delegation of duties; and (ii) such party does not consent to such assumption or assign-ment_” 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(2)(A) (emphasis added).
.We are not persuaded by Pasteur’s contention that the failure to cite Leroux in the confirmation order indicates that the bankruptcy court failed to follow it. Pasteur itself cited Leroux at the July 1996 confirmation hearing, and the bankruptcy court's ultimate findings faithfully track its model.
. Notwithstanding Pasteur's reliance on the important policy goals animating the federal common law of patents, the product-innovation theme promoted under patent law may well be accommodated by allowing patent holders to control sublicensing through negotiated contract restrictions.
. Lastly, Pasteur misplaces reliance upon
In re Alltech Plastics, Inc.,
