MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
On thе 20th day of August 1998, the above-styled matter came before the Court for consideration of the defendant’s motion to disqualify plaintiffs counsel (Document # 27): The parties appeared by their counsel of record and presented oral arguments in supрort of their respective memoranda of law. After considering the above, the Court is of the opinion that the defendant’s motion to disqualify plaintiffs counsel should be DENIED.
II. FACTS
The law firm of Eckert Seamans Cherin ,& Mellott, L.L.C. (“Eckert Seamans”) has represented West Virginia University (“WVU”) with regard to intellectual рroperty matters for at least fifteen years. This has included the prosecution of numerous United States patent applications for WVU in the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”).
Dr. Kurt L. VanVoorhies (“Dr.VanVoo-rhies”) and Dr. James E. Smith (“Dr.Smith”) signed an Assignment dated February 5, 1993 (“Assignment”) which, by its terms, assigns to WVU,
inter alia,
“the entire right, title and interest in and to said invention or inventions” as described in U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 07/992,970 (“Application ’970”), as well as any continuation-in-part or foreign applications which may be filed upon said invention or inventions. The invention or inventions embodied in Application ’970 were certain improvements to a toroidal antenna. These improvements are described in the Disclosure of Invention signed and submitted to WVU by Dr. Van-
The Assignment states that Dr. VanVoo-rhies and Dr. Smith will
communicate to said assignee [WVU], its reprеsentatives or agents or its successors and assigns, any facts relating to said invention or inventions including evidence for interference purposes or for other legal proceedings whenever requested [and will] generally do everything possible to aid said assignee, its successors or assigns and nominees to obtain and enforce proper patent protection for said invention or inventions in this or any foreign country.
WVU retained Eckert Seamans to prepare and prosecute Apрlication ’970 and U.S. Patent Application Serial No. 08/486,340 (“Application ’340”) on its behalf as the owner of the invention or inventions disclosed and claimed therein. Eckert Seamans invoiced WVU for legal services rendered in connection with the preparation and prosecution of Application ’970 and Application ’340. WVU paid Eckert Seamans for its legal services. Ec-kert Seamans acted at the direction of WVU in performing legal services related to the preparation and prоsecution of Applications ’970 and ’340.
No retention agreement ever existed between Dr. VanVoorhies and Eckert Seamans. Eckert Seamans never invoiced Dr. VanVoo-rhies for legal services. Dr. VanVoorhies did not pay Eckert Seamans for аny legal services. As well, Eckert Seamans denied that it ever represented Dr. VanVoorhies. The usual indicia of an attorney-client relationship, such as contracts or memoranda of representation, are not present in this case.
Dr. VanVoorhies claims that he was represented by Eckert Seamans during the time period of “on or about May 4, 1992 through February 15, 1995.” He concedes that Ec-kert Seamans represented WVU during this time period, but further alleges that the law firm represented Dr. Smith. There is no clаim by Dr. VanVoorhies that Eckert Sea-mans represented him after February 15, 1995. At no time between January 30, 1995 and May 13, 1998, when he filed the instant motion, did Dr. VanVoorhies ever raise a concern that Eckert Seamans had represented him and might therefore be in a position of conflict of interest.
Dr. VanVoorhies retained Lyman Lyon, Esquire, a patent lawyer, in March 1995. Mr. Lyon likewise did not assert that Eckert Seamans was in any way precluded from representing WVU in its ongoing dispute with Dr. VanVoorhies about his obligation to assign Applicаtion ’340. Rather than asserting that Eckert Seamans had represented Dr. VanVoorhies, Mr. Lyon charged the firm with “ill founded posturing, demands and threats” and treated the firm as an adversary to Dr. VanVoorhies.
Dr. VanVoorhies acknowledged in a February 23, 1995 letter to Eckert Sеamans that the firm did not represent him, or Dr. Smith. His words at that time were: “I realize that I am not your client, and that it is not your duty to look out for my rights ... In fact, Dr. Smith is also not your client, and I am certainly not challenging WVU’s rights to the invention.” (Plaintiffs Exhibit 13.) Dr. Van-Voorhies communicated with Eckert Seа-mans with regard to Application ’970 as required by the Assignment. During the course of his communications with Eckert Seamans, Dr. VanVoorhies became licensed before the PTO as a Patent Agent in October 1994. Therefore, he has much more knowledge of patent law than the average person. Further, Dr. VanVoorhies has not established the communication of any confidential information to Eckert Seamans. It appears that any information provided to Eckert Sea-mans was given pursuant to Dr. VanVoo-rhies’ contractual obligation as required by the Assignment.
III. DISCUSSION OF LAW
The party seeking disqualification of opposing counsel carries a heavy burden. Disqualification is “a drastic measure which courts should hesitate to impose except when absolutely necessary.”
DCA Food Ind., Inc. v. Tasty Foods, Inc.,
“The relationship between inventor and his assignee’s patent counsel who is appointed to prosecute the patent application must be considered in conjunction with the patent laws governing the acquisition and assignment of rights to inventions.”
Sun Studs, Inc. v. Applied Theory Assoc., Inc.,
37 C.F.R. § 1.41(a) requires that “[a] patent must be applied for in the name of the actual invеntor or inventors.” 35 U.S.C. § 111 also states that an “[application for patent shall be made, or authorized to be made, by the inventor, except as otherwise provided in this title, in writing to the Commissioner.” “Even where the invention has been assigned to the company, the inventor must still be the applicant.”
Sun Studs,
“The choice of attorneys, like the filing, is a decision by the assignee, not the inventor.”
Sun Studs,
Dr. VanVoorhies contends that the identification of Eckert Seamans attorneys аs “Attorney for Applicants” on filings with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is evidence that the law firm represented him, since he was one of the “Applicants” on Application ’970. Such a designation has little significance in this context. The usual procedure is described in the
Sun Studs
opinion. “The PTO corresponds with the persons named in the original power of attorney even after an assignment is recorded unless the assignee otherwise requests. Thus, it is routine for an inventor to execute an application aрpointing the attorneys who prepared the application at the direction of the party to whom the application must be assigned and on whose behalf it will be prosecuted.”
Sun Studs,
Dr. VanVoorhies contends that Eckert Seamans is in a conflict of interest, аs a substantial relationship allegedly exists between its current representation of WVU and its alleged prior representation of Dr. Van-Voorhies. Before even undertaking the “substantial relationship” test, it is necessary to determine whether or not a рrior attorney-client relationship ever existed between Eckert Seamans and Dr. VanVoorhies.
Telectronics Proprietary, Ltd. v. Medtronic, Inc.,
Dr. VanVoorhies cites a number of eases which purportedly require the disqualification of plaintiffs counsel. These cases are inapposite for several reasons. The ■ eases primarily relied upon by Dr. VanVoorhies in his principal brief all arose under circumstances very different from this one, as none of them address the role of patent counsel in the patent applicatiоn process.
1
Dr. VanVoo-
Dr. VanVoorhies submitted a number of exhibits to the Court, some of which were redacted or incomplete, and argued that these exhibits demonstrated that Dr. Van-Voorhies communicаted confidential information to Eckert Seamans beyond the technical information which is normally passed from an employee-inventor to his employer-assign-ee’s patent counsel. Dr. VanVoorhies further asserted that his exhibits established that Eckеrt Seamans rendered legal advice to him, basing this assertion upon the issuance of an opinion letter by Eckert Seamans with regard to the inventorship of Application ’970. Careful review of the exhibits proffered by Dr. VanVoorhies leads the Court to the сonclusion that the communications between Dr. VanVoorhies and Eckert Seamans were nothing more than the normal communication of technical information to an assignee’s attorney primarily to enable the attorney to prepare and prosecute a patent application. The Court further concludes that Dr. VanVoorhies was obligated to undertake such communications by the terms of the Assignment that he signed.
IV. CONCLUSIONS
. Dr. VanVoorhies has not shown that Ec-kert Seamans represented him аt any time. None of the usual indicia of an attorney-client relationship are present in this case. Moreover, Dr. VanVoorhies has not provided evidence that his communication of information to Eckert Seamans was anything more than the normal technical information from an employee-inventor to counsel for his employer-assignee, for the purpose of preparing and prosecuting a patent application. In addition to the above factors, the Court may cоnsider the equities weighing for and against disqualification. In
Sun Studs,
the court held that the equities weighed against disqualification, in part due to the firm’s representation of Sun Studs for 14 years.
Sun Studs,
ORDERS
1. That the defendant’s motion to disquаlify plaintiffs counsel (Document # 27) be DENIED.
Notes
.
Coles v. Arizona Charlie’s,
