WSJournal. The Future of Patent Law Rests in a Far
Post# of 63696
WSJournal. The Future of Patent Law Rests in a Farmer's Hands
Dispute Pits Farmer vs. Monsanto in Case That May Affect Industries From Software
SANDBORN, Ind.—A dispute between an Indiana farmer and Monsanto Co. MON -0.79% over soybean seeds has sprouted into a U.S. Supreme Court case that could have broad implications for industries from software to nanotechnology.
Monsanto sued Vernon Bowman, shown above at home. The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Tuesday.
At issue is how long Monsanto can claim patent protection for its genetically engineered seeds. The crop-biotechnology company is squaring off against 75-year-old Vernon "Hugh" Bowman, whom it sued in 2007 after he planted soybeans that came from crops grown by other farmers using Monsanto seeds.
Monsanto contends its patent protection extends beyond its first-generation seeds, while Mr. Bowman argues the company's patent rights were exhausted by the time he bought later-generation seeds from a local grain elevator. The Supreme Court is scheduled to hear arguments from each side Tuesday.
How the high court rules could influence patent rights for other companies developing technologies that either replicate themselves or can be copied by their users. Various trade groups have filed briefs supporting Monsanto, including organizations representing software firms such as Microsoft Corp. MSFT +0.04% and Apple Inc. AAPL -0.09% The groups say a ruling against the seed maker would "eviscerate" tech companies' patent protection.
Monsanto says that if the Supreme Court sides with Mr. Bowman, farmers would essentially become its competition, able to produce the same seeds it has spent hundreds of millions of dollars to develop. The company says that would make bringing new biotech soybean seeds to market "nigh impossible" for Monsanto.
Lower federal courts have ruled in the company's favor. The Supreme Court said in October that it would hear the case over the objections of the Obama administration, which had urged the justices to leave the lower-court rulings in place.
While Monsanto's genetically modified soybeans—introduced in the 1990s—are among the earliest examples of self-replicating products, there are numerous others in the field of molecular biology. They include new cell lines, manufactured DNA and nanotechnologies that are expected to become more prevalent with time, says Hans Sauer, an attorney for the Washington, D.C.-based Biotechnology Industry Organization, which has 1,100 members, including Monsanto.
Software companies, meanwhile, fear a negative ruling could open the door for people who download their products to capture a temporary copy of the software and then sell copies of that.
Large research universities whose faculty members often develop patented technologies have filed briefs in support of St. Louis-based Monsanto as well.
Critics of Monsanto, including environmental groups and organic-farming advocates, have rallied around Mr. Bowman, arguing that his case is part of a long-standing history of bullying by Monsanto. The company has investigated the planting activities of many farmers over the years, and it has filed 144 lawsuits alleging patent infringement, according to the Center for Food Safety, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.
At the center of the controversy is Mr. Bowman, who farms roughly 300 acres in Sandborn, a tiny southern Indiana community where he has cultivated a reputation as a contrarian.
Many U.S. farmers use Monsanto's biotech seeds, including its Roundup Ready soybeans, which are resistant to the weedkiller glyphosate. When farmers buy seed from Monsanto, they are required to sign licensing agreements that prohibit them from planting second-generation seeds harvested from first-generation crops.
Mr. Bowman had for years bought and planted Monsanto's seeds for his main soybean crop each spring. But like other farmers, he often plants a second soybean crop later in the spring, after completing his wheat harvest. For that crop, which tends to have a higher risk of failure, he decided to seek a cheaper supply of seed.
In 1999, he went to a local grain elevator, where farmers sell their crops, and bought some unlabeled soybeans grown by other farmers. Such soybeans are typically purchased for use as livestock feed, and Monsanto doesn't usually monitor such sales. Mr. Bowman planted the seeds, he says, suspecting they would be herbicide-resistant and later saved soybeans from the harvest for future plantings.
Mr. Bowman argues that once such seeds were sold to the grain elevator, Monsanto's patent protection was exhausted.
Lawyers for Monsanto argue his actions amounted to an illegal end run around its licensing agreements. "We certainly don't have a business model built around bringing lawsuits against customers, but we want to keep the playing field level," says David Snively, Monsanto's general counsel.
Mr. Bowman came to the legal fight with slim resources. He says he filed for bankruptcy protection in the 1980s and has few assets.
A lifelong bachelor, Mr. Bowman says he felt he had nothing to lose by taking on Monsanto. "I decided to take my meager resources and fight Monsanto to the bitter end," he says.
As the dispute escalated in the 2000s, Mr. Bowman, who studied agronomy at Purdue University in the 1950s, visited the one-story library in Sandborn, a town of about 500. There, he learned to use a computer and spent hours researching patent issues.
In 2007, when Monsanto sued him for patent infringement, he hired an Indiana lawyer to represent him. But he eventually ran out of money and decided to argue the case himself in a federal-district court in Terre Haute, Ind. The court ruled for Monsanto in 2009 and ordered Mr. Bowman to pay $84,000 in damages.
After that defeat, Mr. Bowman's case was foundering. But the Federal Circuit Bar Association, a national group based in Washington, heard about his plight in 2010 and persuaded Frommer Lawrence & Haug LLP to represent the farmer pro bono.
Mark P. Walters, a partner in the firm's Seattle office, will be arguing his first Supreme Court case. Monsanto is represented by Seth Waxman, a Washington lawyer and former U.S. Solicitor General who has argued more than 60 cases before the high court.
Many of Mr. Bowman's fellow residents say they are rooting for him and believe he did nothing wrong.
Larry Hancock, a 62-year-old farmer, calls Mr. Bowman "the town philosopher" and says he tends to pick an opposing view to start a debate.
"He just thinks different than most people," Mr. Hancock says.