Brigham Young University et al v. Pfizer et al
Filing
915
MEMORANDUM DECISION and ORDER granting in part and denying in part 753 BYU's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Re Mitigation of Damages and Failure to Patent as Described in Special Defenses Numbered 24 and 25 in the Amended Answer. Signed by Judge Ted Stewart on 03/26/2012. (tls)
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
CENTRAL DIVISION
BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY, and
DR. DANIEL L. SIMMONS,
Plaintiffs,
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND
ORDER ON BYU’S MOTION FOR
PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT
RE MITIGATION OF DAMAGES
AND FAILURE TO PATENT AS
DESCRIBED IN SPECIAL
DEFENSES NUMBERED 24 AND 25
IN THE AMENDED ANSWER
vs.
PFIZER, INC., et al.,
Case No. 2:06-CV-890 TS
Defendants.
This matter is before the Court on BYU’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Re
Mitigation of Damages and Failure to Patent as Described in Special Defenses Numbered 24 and
25 in the Amended Answer.1
1
Docket No. 753.
1
I. BACKGROUND
The facts of this case are fully set out in the Court’s Order dated March 13, 2012,2 and
need not be recited here.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is proper if the moving party can demonstrate that there is no genuine
issue of material fact and it is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.3 The party seeking
summary judgment bears the initial burden of demonstrating an absence of a genuine issue of
material fact.4 “Once the moving party has properly supported its motion for summary judgment,
the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to go beyond the pleadings and set forth specific facts
showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.”5 “An issue is genuine ‘if the evidence is such that
a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.’”6
III. DISCUSSION
BYU moves the Court to find that two of Pfizer’s defenses are invalid as a matter of law
as applied to certain of BYU’s contract claims. Pfizer has alleged that (1) BYU should have
mitigated any damages stemming from Pfizer’s alleged breach of paragraphs 3.3 and 4.1 and (2)
BYU should have patented Project output. Each defense will be dealt with in turn.
2
Docket No. 896.
3
See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a).
4
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986).
5
Sally Beauty Co., Inc. v. Beautyco, Inc., 304 F.3d 964, 971 (10th Cir. 2002).
6
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986).
2
A.
MITIGATION
Under Missouri law, “one damaged by breach of contract must make reasonable efforts to
minimize his damages. The duty to mitigate damages, however, does not arise until the promisee
learns that the contract has been breached.”7 BYU contends that it had no duty to mitigate
damages at the time alleged by Pfizer because it did not then know that Pfizer had breached
either 3.3 or 4.1. Pfizer contends that BYU knew about the basis for both of its breach claims at
the relevant time.
1. BREACH OF 3.3
BYU claims it could not mitigate damages accruing under paragraph 3.3 at the time
Pfizer identifies because it was not aware that Pfizer had breached. To be aware of a breach of
3.3, BYU must have known (1) that Pfizer had determined certain Project output was patentable
without telling BYU and/or (2) that BYU was not reviewing Project output. Pfizer argues that
BYU was aware of a breach, and submits the following facts as support:
35. Lynn Astle, director of BYU’s Technology Transfer Office from January 1,
1990 to April 1, 2006, testified in his deposition that BYU knew in or before 1991
that Simmons’ alleged discovery was patentable but that BYU elected not to
patent it.
36. Dr. Simmons had advised BYU’s Technology Transfer Office of his
discovery and sought the assistance of that office to seek patent protection for the
discovery.
37. Prior to April 1991, Dr. Simmons had several discussions with Lynn Astle
about patentability. A decision was made by BYU that the “timing wasn’t yet
right.”
38. It was the duty of BYU’s Technology Transfer Office to protect BYU’s
interests in intellectual property.
7
A.G. Edwards & Sons, Inc. v. Drew, 978 S.W.2d 386, 391 (Mo. Ct. App. 1998) (citations
omitted).
3
39. The BYU Technology Transfer Office had, prior to 1991, engaged outside
patent firms to file patents on behalf of BYU.8
The Court notes that these facts establish that BYU, at some point, might have thought
that some parts of Simmons’s inventions were patentable. However, this does not equate to
BYU knowing that Pfizer had (1) come to a conclusion something was patentable and then (2)
failed to inform BYU about its determination. Nor does it demonstrate that BYU would know,
by virtue of thinking it had patentable discoveries, that Pfizer was breaching its alleged duty to
review BYU’s materials. BYU has consistently claimed to have been unsophisticated in patent
matters and that its reason for entering into the Research Agreement was to secure Pfizer’s
assistance in making exactly these kinds of determinations. Thus, BYU may well have suspected
the COX-2 discoveries were potentially patentable, and then construed Pfizer’s silence on the
topic to mean they were not. In any event, BYU was entitled to rely on Pfizer’s silence. It
follows that, even construing all facts in a light most favorable to Pfizer, Pfizer has not shown a
dispute of fact as to whether BYU was aware that Pfizer had breached 3.3. Accordingly, the
Court will reject Pfizer’s failure to mitigate claim with respect to 3.3.
2.
BREACH OF 4.1
In order to show that BYU was aware of the breach of paragraph 4.1, Pfizer cites to
evidence that (1) Dr. Simmons gave what he considered to be confidential information to Pfizer;
(2) that he expected Pfizer to use it; (3) that he was aware of statements made by Pfizer
employees indicating the information was being used; and (4) that Pfizer employees later
8
Docket No. 815, at xxiii.
4
published articles, some of which Simmons himself went on to cite, that clearly incorporated the
confidential information Simmons had provided.9
As to Simmons’s provision of materials to Pfizer and his knowledge that Pfizer was using
them, the Court has previously stated that although it
agrees that BYU knew that Pfizer was using the information in pursuit of COX-2
progress, this does not end the inquiry. There has been no proof that BYU
thought Pfizer was, at that time, using the confidential information to develop its
own NSAID without sharing the results with BYU, which is the vital question. In
fact, BYU has offered testimony from Dr. Simmons showing the exact
opposite—that Simmons had no idea that Pfizer was using the information for any
other purpose than to further the parties’ cooperative effort.10
Thus, the only alleged fact that could support a claim that BYU was aware that Pfizer was
in breach of 4.1—i.e. using confidential information for its own COX-2 drug program—is the
existence of articles written by Pfizer personnel on COX-2 science that supposedly incorporate
Simmons’s confidential information.
In an Order dated February 23, 2011,11 (the “February Order”) the Court considered
whether these articles put Dr. Simmons on notice that Pfizer was using his confidential
information for its own purposes. The argument was then raised by Pfizer as support for its
9
Id. at xxv (incorporating by reference Docket No. 816, at lxxviii-lxxxiii, and Docket No.
485, at xix-xxvi).
10
Docket No. 899, 10-11. The Court would note that this statement was made in response
to Pfizer’s argument that the course of performance between the parties during the Research
Agreement period demonstrated that the parties intended the Research Agreement to allow Pfizer
to use confidential information for its own purposes. The language is thus necessarily restricted
to the Research Agreement time period and does not foreclose the possibility that BYU became
aware of Pfizer’s misuse after that time.
11
Docket No. 552.
5
claim that the statute of limitations had run on various of BYU’s claims. BYU argued that none
of the articles actually revealed that Pfizer was using Simmons’s work, and offered other
evidence to establish a dispute of fact as to whether BYU had notice. The Court saw the articles
as Pfizer’s “strongest argument” that BYU’s claims were time barred,12 but nevertheless
concluded that BYU had offered sufficient evidence to demonstrate a dispute as to whether
Simmons knew of the breach and therefore denied summary judgment to Pfizer.
On this Motion, the roles are reversed—BYU now seeks to demonstrate that the articles
do not create a dispute of fact as to whether Simmons knew that Pfizer was misusing confidential
information. However, if the articles were a strong argument for granting summary judgment on
BYU’s awareness of a breach in the February Order, they are a strong argument for denying it
here. The Court therefore finds that the articles create a dispute of material fact as to whether
BYU was aware of Pfizer’s use of confidential information and will deny BYU’s motion on this
point.13
BYU seeks to avoid this result by arguing that, even if the articles put BYU on notice,
Pfizer had not shown any evidence that a reasonable course of mitigation was open to BYU. The
12
Id. at 20.
13
The Court notes that Pfizer has implied, to some degree, that BYU could have drafted
the Agreement differently to require Pfizer to return confidential materials at the conclusion of
the parties’ research relationship. Pfizer argues that because BYU did not do so, it would have
been prudent for BYU to request that Pfizer return all confidential materials. The Court will here
note that an argument that a contract should have been written differently is not a mitigation
argument. Mitigation requires reasonable steps from an injured party after a breach becomes
apparent. BYU certainly could not have rewritten the contract once it learned of Pfizer’s alleged
breach. Accordingly, the course Pfizer suggests is not one that has any bearing on the issue of
mitigation.
6
Court is not persuaded that this is the case. Pfizer has suggested that BYU should have informed
Pfizer that 4.1 was being breached, and in that way damages would have been mitigated. BYU
responds that it had no obligation to do so. The Court agrees that BYU was not required to
ensure that Pfizer complied with the Research Agreement. But the Court cannot find that BYU
was permitted to knowingly allow the misuse of confidential information to continue for several
years without trying to stop it merely because, as BYU now asserts, there is no evidence that
Pfizer would have stopped. The Court will not engage here in a hypothetical contemplation of
what, based on assumptions about both parties’ characteristics, either party might have done in
order to determine whether BYU had any reasonable mitigation opportunities. Rather, the Court
simply notes that there is a dispute of fact as to (1) whether BYU was aware of the breach and (2)
if applicable, whether BYU had any reasonable options for mitigation at the time it became
aware.
BYU has also argued that the doctrine of mitigation applies only to special, and not
general, damages. BYU relies on John Call Engineering, Inc. v. Manti City Corp.14 in support of
this proposition. John Call held that
“[i]n the context of general damages for breach of contract, which damages
ordinarily will be the amount plaintiff would have received had the contract been
completed less the expenses plaintiff saved by not having to perform, the
mitigation doctrine rarely applies. In limited circumstances, however, general
damages may be reduced by the amount of gains received by performing another
contract which could not have been entered into but for defendant’s breach of the
14
795 P.2d 678 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).
7
prior contract and plaintiff’s being thereby left free to perform the second
contract.”15
In response, Pfizer notes that John Call is a Utah case, that the case recognizes some exceptions
to the rule that mitigation does not apply to general damages,16 and that its is not clear which of
BYU’s damages are general and which are special. In its reply, BYU does not respond to any of
Pfizer’s contentions.
The Court first notes that Missouri law applies to the interpretation of the Research
Agreement,17 and the Court has discovered no such categorical rule in Missouri.18 However,
even if it were the case that mitigation does not apply to general damages, the Court finds there is
significant uncertainty over what portion of BYU’s damages should be classified as either special
or general. “General damages are those which the law would impute as the natural, necessary
and logical consequences of defendant’s wrongful act. Special damages are the natural but not
necessary result of the wrongful act.”19 Some of BYU’s damage claim relies on hypothetical
patents BYU may have obtained if 4.1 had not been breached. BYU’s loss of those patents may
15
Id. at 681.
16
The Court notes, however, that it is indisputable that the limited exception envisioned
by John Call in which mitigation might apply to general damages does not apply to the instant
case.
17
Docket No. 704, at 9.
18
BYU cites to J.H. Barnett v. Elwood Grain Co., a Missouri case, for the same
proposition. 153 S.W. 856 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911). The Court finds that this case announces no
such general rule. Furthermore, the case involves facts entirely distinct from the instant case and
the Court will not stretch them to make the case applicable. Furthermore, as discussed above,
even if Missouri did follow such a rule, that would not end the inquiry.
19
Parsons Const. Co. v. Mo. Pub. Serv. Co., 425 S.W.2d 166, 173 (Mo. 1968).
8
be a natural result of the breach of 4.1, but it does not appear that such damage would be a
necessary result. At any rate, it is BYU’s burden to establish that no dispute of fact exists on
mitigation, and a prerequisite to such a demonstration—under a no-general-damages theory of
mitigation—would be a showing that all the damages associated with breach of 4.1 are properly
described as “general.” Because BYU has not engaged in a classification of its damages, the
Court will not find that mitigation is barred based on this argument.
In light of the foregoing, the Court will therefore deny summary judgment on the 4.1
mitigation claim.20
B.
FAILURE TO PATENT
Pfizer’s twenty-fifth defense is that BYU failed to patent its materials. In what context
and to what effect Pfizer intends to argue this defense is unclear. To the extent Pfizer is alleging
that BYU should have patented its materials as a defense to BYU’s breach of 3.3 claim, the Court
finds that this is simply a failure to mitigate argument couched in other terms. The Court will
reject the argument to the extent Pfizer intends to rely on it to reduce BYU’s calculation of
damages stemming from Pfizer’s alleged breach of 3.3 because, as noted above, BYU was
20
The Court notes that BYU has cited to Alexander v. Brown for the proposition that
“[w]here the party having the primary duty for performance has the same opportunity to perform
and the same knowledge of the consequences of nonperformance as the party to whom the duty is
owed, he cannot complain about the failure of the latter to perform this duty for him.” 646 P.2d
692, 695 (Utah 1982). First, the Court notes that this is a Utah case. As has been firmly
established in previous Orders, Missouri law applies to the interpretation of this contract.
Second, even if Alexander was controlling authority, the Court finds its facts so divergent from
the instant case that its reasoning would not apply here.
9
entitled to rely on Pfizer’s silence and assume that Simmons’s discoveries were not patentable.
The Court will therefore grant BYU’s motion with respect to this issue.
However, where relevant, Pfizer may still offer statements from Dr. Astle or others
regarding BYU’s position on the patentability of Dr. Simmons’s materials. As BYU notes,
granting summary judgment on the failure to patent defense does not equate to a motion in limine
preventing all future evidence on what BYU knew or did know about the patentability, as long as
such evidence is relevant to other claims besides the failure to mitigate damages.
IV. CONCLUSION
In light of the foregoing, it is therefore
ORDERED that BYU’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment Re Mitigation of
Damages and Failure to Patent as Described in Special Defenses Numbered 24 and 25 in the
Amended Answer (Docket No. 753) is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART.
DATED March 26, 2012
BY THE COURT:
_____________________________________
TED STEWART
United States District Judge
10
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