Plaintiff brought this breach of contract action in 1984 when defendant stopped making him royalty payments for sales of his invention. The contract. involved an assignment of rights in a “method and apparatus” invented by the plaintiff. The three patents on plaintiff's invention have since expired. Although the contract required defendant to make royalty payments to plaintiff until the expiration of all patents, defendant refused to pay royalties for sales in the United States after the expiration of the only United States patent.
Both parties brought motions for summary judgment. On July 3, 1985, the district court granted defendant’s motion and denied plaintiff’s motion. Plaintiff then brought this appeal. The sole issue on appeal is whether the district court correctly decided that the royalty provisions of the contract were unenforceable as a matter of federal patent law. We affirm the order of the district court.
The facts in this case are undisputed. The plaintiff, John Meehan, invented a method and apparatus for the packaging and dispensing of anti-icing products, which when added to fuels in internal combustion engines prevent ice formation. In a contract executed January 30, 1964, Meehan conveyed exclusive rights in the invention to Hoffman-Taff Corporation. Hoffman-Taff’s rights and obligations under the *883 agreement were subsequently assumed by defendant PPG Industries.
At the time that the agreement was entered into Meehan had not filed a patent application for the invention. But the contract did require PPG to determine immediately whether the invention was patentable and, if so, to pursue an application for a U.S. patent. Meehan was required to assist in a technical capacity, as well as to furnish the necessary information and complete the necessary documents in the patent application process. The contract also transferred the patent, once it issued, to PPG.
Ultimately patents were granted in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. The three patents expired in the following sequence: British patent, November 11, 1981; U.S. patent, January 4, 1983; Canadian patent, December 19, 1984. Since the U.S. patent expired, PPG has made no royalty payments on sales of plaintiff’s invention in the United States.
Meehan sued PPG for breach of contract in 1984. The contract was interpreted as requiring PPG to continue paying plaintiff royalties on all sales until the last patent expired, or in December of 1984. PPG defended, asserting that any obligation it had to continue paying plaintiff royalties beyond the life of the U.S. patent was unenforceable under federal patent law. The district court agreed with PPG and granted summary judgment in its favor. We affirm.
1. Discussion
Article I § 8 of the Constitution empowers Congress to grant inventors limited monopoly rights in their discoveries. Congress exercised that power by giving inventors the right to exclude others from making, using, or selling the idea for 17 years. 35 U.S.C. § 154. The policy behind this federal patent law is to give a 17-year monopoly to inventors in exchange for release of the invention to the public upon expiration of the patent.
Scott Paper Co. v. Marcalus Mfg. Co.,
Accordingly, in
Brulotte v. Thys Co.,
The Eleventh Circuit’s decision in
Pitney Bowe’s, Inc. v. Mestre,
The Sixth Circuit, relying on
Brulotte
and
Pitney,
took the analysis one step further in
Boggild v. Kenner Products,
Aronson v. Quick Point Pencil Co.,
2. Application of Law to Facts
We agree with the Sixth Circuit’s holding that the Brulotte rule should be extended to agreements entered into in anticipation of applying for patents. The plaintiff raises three arguments against the application of Brulotte: (1) plaintiff sold only trade secret rights, not patent rights; (2) the royalty payments merely constituted installment payments for the full contract price of the trade secret; (3) *885 there was no patent issued at the time the contract was entered into.
Meehan first argues that the contract was for the sale of a trade secret, not the sale of patent rights. The terms and language of the agreement simply do not bear that out. The contract uses the term “invention” when identifying what Meehan is selling; nowhere in the contract is the term “trade secret” mentioned. The term “royalties” is also used when describing the payments Meehan will receive under the contract. Moreover, the contract expressly transfers the right to apply for and obtain a patent in 112. Obviously, much more than mere trade secrets was conveyed under this contract.
Meehan then argues that the right to apply for a patent is not a patent right. Therefore, the argument continues, this contract does not involve a transfer of patent rights and
Brulotte
does not apply. This is but semantics; Meehan transferred the only patent interest he had at the time. What plaintiff fails to recognize is that
Brulotte
is not concerned with restrictions on the sale of patent rights but rather the impact of such arrangements on the policies and purposes of the federal patent laws. Meehan could not have transferred a “patent right” because he did not have one yet. It is the issuance of the patent that triggers
Brulotte’s
application, not the transfer of the rights. See
Boggild,
Meehan next contends that the provision for royalty payments is merely an installment method of paying the full contract price of his trade secret. Several facts refute that explanation. Royalty payments by their nature are variable and depend on the market success of the invention; this belies the notion that some set contract price was agreed to and instead suggests that the payments were for use of the product during the post-expiration period. See
Brulotte,
Finally, Meehan advances the argument that because there was no patent at the time the contract was entered into, Brulotte should not apply. Two circuit court of appeals decisions directly conflict with that position. In neither Pitney nor Bog-gild was a patent issued during the course of contract negotiations. In fact, Boggild explicitly held that the Brulotte rule applied to license provisions developed in anticipation of patent protection. And like Boggild the parties in this case obviously anticipated patent protection for Meehan’s invention.
Even when an inventor has not yet applied for a patent, the right to apply for and obtain those protections is valuable. 1 Such a right places the inventor in a strong bargaining position. It is that abuse of that leverage over which the Supreme Court expressed concern in Brulotte. We agree with the Sixth Circuit that:
the same violations of patent law arising from abuse of the leverage attached to a pending or issued patent can arise from *886 abuse of the leverage afforded by an expressly anticipated application for a patent.
This leverage is apparent from the terms of the agreement. The parties’ anticipation and expectation of an issued patent appear throughout the contract. Paragraph 8a, which requires that PPG promptly file and diligently prosecute a patent application, strongly suggests the parties contemplated an early patent application. Paragraphs 8b and 10 required Meehan to remain technical advisor to and provide information assistance to PPG in making the patent application. And in It 6 PPG agreed to pay royalties for only 10 years if no patent issued but for over 17 years (the life of the patent) if a patent issued. The prominence of these terms reveals that the parties negotiated their agreement in anticipation of a forthcoming patent. The terms themselves demonstrate that Meehan exerted considerable leverage from the anticipation of a future patent. “In our view, the absence of a patent application is, under the circumstances, irrelevant to the analysis under
Brulotte.” Boggild,
The terms of the contract must be examined before deciding whether Meehan abused this leverage from the anticipated patent. As in
Brulotte, Pitney,
and
Bog-gild,
this contract fails to distinguish between pre-expiration and post-expiration royalties. The exclusive rights conferred by the contract do not change in the post-expiration period. Although it is true, as Meehan argues, that parties can contract for trade secret payments to extend beyond the life of a patent, there must be some provision that distinguishes between patent royalties and trade secret royalties.
Brulotte,
Because the terms of the agreement demonstrate that the plaintiff used his right to obtain a patent to project his monopoly power beyond the patent period, the agreement is per se unlawful. Therefore, we affirm the district court’s decision.
Notes
. Under the patent laws normally only the inventor may apply for a patent. See 35 U.S.C. §§ 111, 115, 116, 117. Without an agreement like the present one, the manufacturer would have no right to obtain patent protection.
