Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc. et al v. Fresenius Kabi USA, LLC
Filing
319
ORDER granting in part and denying in part 218 Ex Parte MOTION for Sanctions by Fresenius Kabi USA, LLC. As provided herein, Plaintiff Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc., must reimburse Defendant Fresenius Kabi USA, LLC, for reasonable costs and fees incurred in investigating and bringing before the Court the breach of the Protective Order. The Court declines to impose a further sanction at this time. Signed by Magistrate Judge Mitchell D. Dembin on 7/8/14. (Dembin, Mitchell)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
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SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
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CADENCE
PHARMACEUTICALS, INC.
and SCR PHARMATOP,
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v.
CASE NO. 13-cv-00139 DMS (MDD)
Plaintiffs,
FRESENIUS KABI USA, LLC,
ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND
DENYING IN PART
DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR
SANCTIONS
[ECF NO. 218]
Defendant.
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Background
Before the Court is Defendant’s Motion for Sanctions filed on May
19 20, 2014. (ECF No. 218). Defendant seeks relief based upon Plaintiff
20 Cadence Pharmaceuticals, Inc.’s (“Cadence”) violation of the Protective
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21 Order entered by this Court on June 10, 2013. (ECF No. 61). Cadence
22 responded in opposition on June 3, 2014. (ECF No. 247). A public,
23 redacted version of the opposition was filed on June 13, 2014. (ECF No.
24 263). Defendant replied on June 10, 2014. (ECF No. 259). A hearing
25 was held on June 20, 2014. (ECF Nos. 281, 297).
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The Protective Order has
27 parties as reflected in the Amended been amended, by agreement of the
Protective Order signed by this Court
on June 23, 2014. (ECF No. 282). The amendment has no bearing on the
28 instant dispute.
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1
Facts
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A. Relevant Provisions of the Protective Order
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The Protective Order was negotiated between the parties and
4 submitted to the Court as a Joint Motion. The Court endorsed the
5 proffered Protective Order without modification. (ECF Nos. 48, 61).
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As agreed by the parties, only “counsel of record,” as defined in the
7 Protective Order, were authorized to see information designated as
8 “attorneys’ eyes only.” (ECF No. 61 ¶ 8). “Counsel of record” was
9 defined to include litigation counsel and necessary staff in this case and
10 “two designated in-house legal counsel for each Party of Record who have
11 responsibility for maintaining, defending or evaluating this litigation but
12 who do not have involvement in initiating or prosecuting patent
13 applications or reexamination proceedings relating to injectable
14 formulations of acetaminophen . . . .” (Id. ¶ 3). Lists of approved
15 personnel were required to be exchanged along with appropriate
16 certifications. (Id.). Each party was required to take reasonable
17 precautions to prevent unauthorized or inadvertent disclosure. (Id. ¶
18 15). The Order also included a “prosecution bar” preventing any
19 individual receiving access to “confidential” or “attorneys’ eyes only”
20 information from participating or having any involvement in patent
21 office proceedings relating to injectable formulations of acetaminophen
22 for two years after termination of this lawsuit. (Id. ¶ 19).
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A party objecting to a confidential designation was required to
24 notify opposing counsel in writing and, absent resolution, bring the
25 matter before the Court within seven days. (Id. ¶ 14). The parties also
26 agreed that the restrictions and obligations of the Protective Order
27 would not apply to any confidential information that is public knowledge
28 or has become public knowledge other than as a result of disclosure by
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1 the receiving party. (Id. ¶ 29).
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B. Cadence’s Breach of the Protective Order
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The relevant facts of Cadence’s breach of the Protective Order
4 largely are undisputed. The only real dispute, in that regard, is whether
5 an amendment filed to one of Cadence’s patents-in-suit during
6 reexamination before the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) was
7 influenced by information learned as a result of the breach.
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The facts are as follows:
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1.
On January 10, 2014, Defendant served upon Plaintiffs the
10 Responsive Expert Report of Dr. Yaman and designated the entire report
11 “attorneys’ eyes only.” (ECF No. 218-1 at 92). Dr. Yaman’s responsive
12 expert report opined that Defendant’s product and manufacturing
13 process do not infringe Plaintiff’s patent designated as ‘218. (Id.)
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2.
On February 6, 2014, litigation attorney Darryl Steensma
15 and paralegal Kristen Fechner of the law firm Latham & Watkins,
16 counsel of record for Plaintiff Cadence, electronically provided the
17 restricted Yaman report to Hazel Aker, the general counsel of Cadence.
18 (ECF No. 218-3, Exh. I). The report was included, along with non19 confidential information, to Ms. Aker as part of a periodic update from
20 litigation counsel. (Id.) Ms. Aker was not authorized, pursuant to the
21 Protective Order, to receive information designated attorneys’ eyes only.
22 (Id.)
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3. That same day, Ms. Aker electronically provided the materials
24 that she had received, including the restricted Yaman report, to two law
25 firms representing Cadence before the PTO - Wilson Sonsini Goodrich
26 and Rosati (“Wilson”) and Hunton & Williams LLP (“Hunton”). The
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The Court will use the
28 than the original pagination. page numbering as filed in CM/ECF rather
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1 provided documents were downloaded by three attorneys at the Wilson
2 firm, Jeff Vockrodt, Matt Grumbling and Jeff Guise. (Id.) Due to a
3 technical problem, Ms. Aker made the documents electronically available
4 again to Mr. Vockrodt on February 12, 2014. Only Messrs. Vockrodt and
5 Grumbling reviewed the Yaman report. (Id.)
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4.
On February 25, 2014, the Yaman report was filed in the
7 docket regarding the re-examination of the ‘222 patent at the PTO. (Id.
8 Exh. C).
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5.
On February 25, 2014, Mr. Vockrodt filed the Declaration of
10 Dr. William Craig with the PTO regarding the ‘222 patent. (Id. Exh. D).
11 On February 28, 2014, Plaintiff Pharmatop, through Mr. Vockrodt,
12 submitted an amendment to the ‘222 patent. (Id. Exh. E).
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6.
Counsel for Defendant noticed that the restricted Yaman
14 report was filed in the PTO docket during a routine docket review in late
15 March 2014. Counsel for Cadence was notified on April 1, 2014. (ECF
16 No. 218-1 at 9).
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7.
Counsel for Cadence promptly investigated the matter and
18 reported the results to Defendant. (ECF No. 218-3, Exh. I). The Yaman
19 report was expunged from the PTO docket on May 5, 2014, and was
20 never disclosed publicly. (ECF No. 263 at 11). Ms. Aker no longer is
21 employed by Cadence and the Wilson and Hunton law firms have been
22 replaced by the firm Mayer Brown. No one from Mayer Brown has been
23 exposed to the Yaman Report. (ECF No. 218-3, Exh. H).
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8.
Counsel for Cadence offered to make the involved individuals
25 available for interview or deposition by Defendant. Defendant declined
26 the invitation.
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Discussion
The parties agree that the Protective Order was violated and that
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1 the offensive conduct was unintentional. The parties diverge regarding
2 the impact of the breach and the need for and nature of any remedial
3 sanction.
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Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2) authorizes the Court to impose sanctions for
5 failing to obey discovery orders, including orders issued under Rule 26(f).
6 Rule 26(f) authorizes the Court to issue protective orders under Rule
7 26(c). The Protective Order in this case was issued under the auspices of
8 Rule 26(c). Accordingly, the Court may impose sanctions, including
9 those provided under Rule 37(b)(2)(A) as a consequence of the breach of
10 the Protective Order.
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Defendant disclaims any desire for monetary sanctions, other than
12 costs and fees incurred in connection with its investigation of the breach
13 and bringing the matter before the Court. As stated by Defendant:
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No monetary award can compensate [Defendant] Fresenius
for the risk that Plaintiffs have used, or may use, Fresenius’s
own confidential material to decide how to best draft or
amend the claims of the patents-in-suit to ensure that the
claims come as close as possible to reading on Fresenius’s
confidential product and manufacturing process.
(ECF No. 218-1 at 5). Rather, Defendant requests the Court to order
that Plaintiffs may not assert against Defendant any new or amended
claim resulting from the re-examination of the patents-in-suit which
were brought after the date of the breach. (Id.). Defendant has not
requested enforcement of the Prosecution Bar against any of the
individuals involved in the breach.
At the hearing on this matter, the Court advised Defendant that
there is no evidence that the Declaration of Dr. Craig, filed by Mr.
Vockrodt after the breach, was influenced by information obtained from
the Yaman Report. Defendant did not press that issue and instead
focused on the amendment to the ‘222 patent. The amendment was filed
by Mr. Vockdrodt and narrowed one of the claims of the ‘222 patent.
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1 Defendant asserts that the manner in which Mr. Vockrodt decided to
2 frame the narrowed claim may have been influenced by his review of the
3 Yaman Report. Defendant asserts that it is precisely because it is
4 unknown whether and to what extent Mr. Vockrodt may have been
5 influenced, even subconsciously, by his review of the Yaman Report, that
6 the relief sought is warranted. The “Vockrodt Amendment” has been
7 superseded by later amendments but Defendant asserts that the later
8 amendments may have been influenced by the possibly tainted language
9 of the Vockrodt Amendment.
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Cadence asserts that there is nothing in the Vockrodt Amendment
11 that suggests that it was influenced by the Yaman Report. And, without
12 bad faith or intentional misconduct, the relief sought by Defendant is far
13 too punitive. Cadence also challenges the confidentiality of certain
14 information in the Yaman Report. The time to raise that challenge,
15 however, was prior to disclosure and is not appropriate as a defense to
16 disclosure.
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Defendant’s arguments are appealing and the remedy sought is
18 clear and enforceable. There was not simply a single inadvertent breach.
19 The initial breach, the inadvertent disclosure by Latham & Watkins to
20 Ms. Akers, was compounded by Ms. Aker’s inadvertent disclosure to
21 outside counsel. The Wilson attorneys took the matter a step further by
22 actually viewing the document, labeled “attorneys’ eyes only,” and then
23 filing it with the PTO. The Court finds that the compounding of the
24 original inadvertent disclosure rises beyond mere inadvertence and into
25 the realm of negligence. That the breach was discovered by Defendant,
26 and not by Cadence, also suggests negligence.
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The Court grants Defendant’s motion to the extent that Cadence
28 will be required to reimburse Defendant for costs and reasonable
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1 attorneys’ fees in investigating the breach and presenting this motion to
2 the Court. If the parties cannot agree regarding the costs and fees,
3 Defendant may make appropriate application to the Court.
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The Court will not enjoin Cadence from enforcing new claims or
5 amendments to claims of the ‘218 and ‘222 patents against Defendant
6 which were filed post-breach at this time. Defendant asserts that any
7 pre-breach claims that remain valid following PTO review are
8 enforceable against it and all valid claims are enforceable against other
9 alleged infringers. Consequently, Defendant asserts that the relief
10 neither is overbroad nor unnecessarily punitive. Cadence states that
11 without bad faith or without evidence that the amendments somehow
12 drew on the restricted knowledge provided by the Yaman Report, the
13 litigation advantage accorded to Defendant is unwarranted. Cadence,
14 however, proposes no alternative.
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The only potential “taint” left in the case is from the Vockrodt
16 Amendment. Having reviewed the amendment, the Court cannot say
17 that it was influenced by the Yaman Report. The Court has some
18 familiarity with the patents-in-suit and it appears that the amendment
19 is the natural consequence of the re-examination and nothing about it
20 suggests corruption. Inasmuch as Defendant decided not to interview or
21 depose Mr. Vockrodt, a determination of credibility is out of the question.
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It also is interesting that Defendant chose not to seek an order
23 enforcing the prosecution bar of the Protective Order against attorneys
24 Vockrodt and Grumbling, the only non-authorized persons known to
25 have reviewed the confidential Yaman report. Even though their firm is
26 no longer representing Cadence before the PTO, the Prosecution Bar
27 would prohibit them from any involvement in patent office proceedings
28 relating to injectable formulations of acetaminophen for two years after
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1 termination of this lawsuit. One would think that if Defendant was so
2 concerned regarding misuse of their confidential information, that they
3 would want an order prohibiting these attorneys from representing
4 anyone in patent proceedings regarding injectable acetaminophen. Such
5 an order, however, would not give Defendant any potential advantage in
6 the instant litigation.
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At this point, the extent to which the patents-in-suit or any post-
8 breach new or amended claim of either patent will survive re9 examination is not known. Consequently, the request for injunctive
10 relief is premature. Accordingly, the Court denies that aspect of
11 Defendant’s motion without prejudice. Defendant may seek an order
12 prohibiting Cadence from asserting any surviving ‘218 or ‘222 patent
13 claim filed or amended following the date of the breach before trial in
14 this case. Such a renewed motion must be based on something more
15 than speculation.
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Conclusion
The Protective Order has been breached by Cadence and the
18 circumstances are sufficient to justify the imposition of sanctions.
19 Defendant’s Motion for Sanctions is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED
20 IN PART. Defendant’s motion is GRANTED to the extent that Cadence
21 shall reimburse Defendant for costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees in
22 investigating the circumstances of the breach and bringing the matter
23 before the Court. To the extent that the parties have a dispute
24 regarding the appropriate reimbursement, that matter can be brought
25 before the Court in a joint motion.
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Defendant’s request for an order prohibiting Cadence from
27 enforcing any new claim or amendment to the patents-in-suit filed with
28 the PTO post-breach against Defendant is DENIED WITHOUT
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1 PREJUDICE. Defendant may choose to re-file depending upon the
2 outcome of the re-examination of the patents-in-suit.
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IT IS SO ORDERED.
5 DATED: July 8, 2014
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Hon. Mitchell D. Dembin
U.S. Magistrate Judge
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