Huvepharma EOOD et al v. Associated British Foods, plc et al
Filing
104
MEMORANDUM ORDER: The request to stay litigation pending resolution of the IPRs (D.I. 96 ) is GRANTED. The parties shall submit a status report no later than August 3, 2020. The stay shall remain in effect until lifted by Court Order. The parties shall promptly advise the Court if and when the stay should be lifted. Signed by Judge Richard G. Andrews on 8/12/2019. (nms)
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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE
HUVEPHARMA EOOD and
HUVEPHARMA, INC.,
Plaintiffs,
V.
ASSOCIATED BRITISH FOODS, PLC, AB
VISTA, INC., POP INTERNATIONAL
CORPORATION, ABITEC CORPORATION,
AB ENZYMES, INC., and AB ENZYMES
GMBH,
Defendants,
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Civil Action No. 18-129-RGA
MEMORANDUM ORDER
Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit near the beginning of 2018 . Plaintiffs allege infringement of
six now-expired patents. Trial is set for June 1, 2020. The PTAB instituted IPRs on the 44
asserted claims (and some unasserted ones) on July 25, 2019. Decisions are likely on or about
July 23 , 2020. I gather document discovery is substantially complete and that fact depositions
will be starting imminently. I had a Markman hearing and issued a Markman ruling.
Defendants requested to stay the suit pending the IPRs, and the parties have been heard on the
issue. (O.I. 96, 97, 99, 100).
Plaintiffs and Defendants are competitors, but, as the patents are expired, the only
advantage Plaintiffs can gain from litigation is damages.
The standard for granting a stay involves consideration of three factors:
(1) whether granting the stay will simplify the issues for trial ;
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(2) whether discovery is complete and a trial date is set; and
(3) whether granting a stay would cause the non-moving party to suffer undue prejudice
from any delay, or a clear tactical disadvantage.
The pending IPRs will simplify the issues by, at a mi11imum, removing some or all
anticipation and obviousness issues from trial due to the estoppel provisions relating to an IPR.
Of course, at the maximum, all asserted claims will be found invalid, and the case will be over.
More likely, some claims will be invalidated, and others will not. In any event, the only question
is not whether the IPR results will simplify the trial, but what the extent of simplification will be.
The first factor thus strongly supports granting the stay.
Discovery is in progress, and there is a trial date. Given the amount of discovery that
remains, including all expert discovery, the second factor does not strongly favor either side.
Although the parties are competitors, Plaintiffs seek only monetary damages. It does not
appear that Plaintiffs will suffer any undue prejudice if the motion is granted, as pre-judgment
interest generally appears to compensate for any delay in obtaining damages. Both sides will
benefit to the extent the IPRs simplify the case (and therefore lower their litigation costs), and, of
course, should the IPRs resolve the case, the benefit will be significant. Plaintiffs contemplate
having anticipation and obviousness tried twice, whereas a stay will mean that those issues will
only be tried once. Plaintiffs do not argue in their submissions that there are sources for an
anticipation or obviousness argument that would avoid the estoppel effect of the IPRs on any
claims that survive. Plaintiffs primary argument is that Defendants waited too long to file the
IPRs. I agree that Plaintiffs could have filed sooner, but I do not think that any unnecessary
delay (which may be somewhat related to the unsuccessful attempt at early mediation) suggests
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an attempt to gain a "tactical advantage." Thus, I do not see the third factor as weighing in favor
of denying the stay.
Considering all the circumstances, this case seems to be an easy case for granting a stay
pending IPR.
Thus, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED this ~
y of August 2019 that:
1. The request to stay litigation pending resolution of the IPRs (D.I. 96) is GRANTED;
2. The parties shall submit a status report no later than August 3, 2020; and
3. The stay shall remain in effect until lifted by Court Order. The parties should
promptly advise the Court if and when the stay should be lifted.
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