Appellees, Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. and Glaxo Group
Ltd., British drug companies engaged in the manufacture and sale of
the fungicide griseofulvin, pooled their bulk- and dosage-form
patents and sublicensed certain firms in the United States to
practice the patents. The pooling agreement contained a covenant to
restrict bulk sales and resales, and sublicensing agreements
prohibited bulk resales to third parties without the licensors'
prior consent. The United States filed a civil antitrust suit
against appellees to restrain alleged violations of § 1 of the
Sherman Act, and the Government also attacked the validity of the
dosage-form patents, and sought the relief of mandatory,
nondiscriminatory bulk-form sales and reasonable-royalty licensing
of the patents. The District Court held that bulk-sales
restrictions were
per se violations of § 1, and enjoined
their future use, but refused the Government's request to order
mandatory, nondiscriminatory sales of the bulk form of the drug and
reasonable-royalty licensing of appellees' patents as part of the
relief. The court also refused to entertain the Government's claim
of patent invalidity, since appellees did not rely on their patents
in defense of the antitrust claims.
Held:
1. Where patents are directly involved in antitrust violations
and the Government presents a substantial case for relief in the
form of restrictions on the patents, the Government may challenge
the validity of the patents regardless of whether the owner relies
on the patents in defending the antitrust action. Pp.
410 U. S.
57-60.
2. In order to "pry open to competition" the market closed by
the antitrust violations, an order for mandatory, nondiscriminatory
sales to all
bona fide applicants is appropriate relief,
and where, as in this case, the manufacturer may choose not to make
bulk-form sales, and the licensees are not bound by the court's
order for mandatory sales, further relief in the form of
reasonable-royalty licensing of the patents is also proper. Pp.
410 U. S.
60-64.
328 F.
Supp. 709, reversed;
see also 302 F. Supp.
1.
Page 410 U. S. 53
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and DOUGLAS, BRENNAN, MARSHALL, and POWELL, JJ., joined.
REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which STEWART and
BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
410 U. S.
64.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States appeals pursuant to § 2 of the Expediting Act,
as amended, 62 Stat. 989, 15 U.S.C. § 29, from portions of a
decision by the United States District Court for the District of
Columbia in a civil antitrust suit. We are asked to decide whether
the Government may challenge the validity of patents involved in
illegal restraints of trade, when the defendants do not rely upon
the patents in defense of their conduct, and whether the District
Court erred in refusing certain relief requested by the
Government.
I
Appellees, Imperial Chemical Industries Ltd. (ICI) and Glaxo
Group Ltd. (Glaxo), are British drug companies engaged in the
manufacture and sale of griseofulvin. Griseofulvin is an antibiotic
compound that may be cut with inert ingredients and
administered
Page 410 U. S. 54
orally in the form of capsules or tablets to humans or animals
for the treatment of external fungus infections. There is no
substitute for dosage-form griseofulvin in combating certain
infections. Griseofulvin itself is unpatented and unpatentable. ICI
owns various patents on the dosage form of the drug. [
Footnote 1] Glaxo owns various patents on a
method for manufacturing the drug in bulk form, as well as a patent
on the finely ground, "microsize" dosage form of the drug.
[
Footnote 2]
On April 26, 1960, ICI and Glaxo entered into a formal agreement
pooling their griseofulvin patents. At the time of the execution of
the agreement, ICI held patents on the dosage form of the drug, and
Glaxo held bulk-form manufacturing patents. Pursuant to the
agreement, ICI acquired the right to manufacture bulk-form
griseofulvin under Glaxo's patents, to sell bulk-form griseofulvin,
and to sublicense under Glaxo's patents. Glaxo was authorized to
manufacture dosage-form griseofulvin and to sublicense under ICI's
patents. As part of the agreement, ICI undertook
"not to sell and to use its best endeavors to prevent its
subsidiaries and associates from selling any griseofulvin in bulk
to any independent third party without Glaxo's express consent in
writing."
Subsequent to the pooling of the griseofulvin patents, ICI
granted a sublicense to American Home Products
Page 410 U. S. 55
Corp. (AMHO), ICI's exclusive distributor in the United States.
ICI agreed to sell bulk-form griseofulvin to AMHO. AMHO was
authorized to process the bulk form into dosage form and to sell
the drug in that form. With respect to bulk sales, the agreement
stated: "You [AMHO] will not, without first obtaining our [ICI's]
consent, resell, or redeliver in bulk supplies of griseofulvin."
Glaxo had previously entered into similar sublicensing agreements
with two United States companies -- Schering Corp. (Schering) and
Johnson & Johnson (J & J). The agreements contained a
covenant on the part of the licensees "not to sell or to permit its
Affiliates to sell any griseofulvin in bulk to any independent
third party without Glaxo's express consent in writing." [
Footnote 3]
On March 4, 1968, the United States filed a civil antitrust suit
against ICI and Glaxo, pursuant to § 4 of the Sherman Act, 15
U.S.C. § 4, to restrain alleged violations of § 1 of the Act, 26
Stat. 209, as amended, 15 U.S.C. § 1. The Government charged that
the restrictions on the sale and resale of bulk-form griseofulvin,
contained in the 1960 ICI-Glaxo agreement and the various
sublicensing agreements, were unreasonable restraints of trade. The
Government also challenged the validity of ICI's dosage-form
patent. [
Footnote 4]
Page 410 U. S. 56
The District Court, citing this Court's decision in
United
States v. Arnold, Schwinn Co., 388 U.
S. 365 (1967), held that the bulk-sales restrictions
contained in the ICI-AMHO agreement were
per se violations
of § 1 of the Sherman Act. [
Footnote 5]
302 F. Supp.
1 (DC 1969). Because ICI had filed an affidavit disclaiming any
desire to rely on its patent in defense of the antitrust claims,
the District Court struck the claims of patent invalidity from the
Government's complaint, ruling that the Government could not
challenge ICI's patent when it was not relied upon as a defense to
the antitrust claims. The District Court also denied the
Government's motion to amend its complaint to allege the invalidity
of Glaxo's patent on "microsize" griseofulvin. [
Footnote 6]
Subsequently, in separate, unreported orders, the bulk sales
restrictions in the Glaxo-J & J, the Glaxo-Schering, and the
Glaxo-ICI agreements were found to be
per se violations of
§ 1. The court enjoined future use of the bulk-sales restrictions,
but refused the Government's request to order mandatory,
nondiscriminatory sales of the bulk form of the drug and
reasonable-royalty licensing of the ICI and Glaxo patents as part
of the relief.
328 F.
Supp. 709 (DC 1971). The United States took a direct appeal
under the Expediting Act and we noted probable jurisdiction. 405
U.S. 914.
Page 410 U. S. 57
II
The major issue before us is whether the District Court erred in
ruling that the United States could challenge the validity of a
patent in the course of prosecuting. an antitrust action only when
the patent is relied on as a defense, which was not the case here.
We agree with the United States that this was an unduly narrow view
of the controlling cases.
United States v. Bell Telephone Co., 167 U.
S. 224 (1897), acknowledged prior decisions permitting
the United States to sue to set aside a patent for fraud or deceit
associated with its issuance, but held that the federal courts
should not entertain suits by the Government "to set aside a patent
for an invention on the mere ground of error of judgment on the
part of the patent officials," at least where the United States
"has no proprietary or pecuniary [interest] in the setting aside of
the patent [and] is not seeking to discharge its obligations to the
public. . . ." 167 U.S. at
167 U. S. 269,
167 U. S. 265.
Subsequently,
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
333 U. S. 364
(1948), referred to
Bell Telephone as holding that the
United States was "without standing to bring a suit in equity to
cancel a patent on the ground of invalidity,"
id. at
333 U. S. 387,
but went on to declare that, to vindicate the public interest in
enjoining violations of the Sherman Act, the United States is
entitled to attack the validity of patents relied upon to justify
anticompetitive conduct otherwise violative of the law. The Court
noted that, because of the public interest in free competition, it
had repeatedly held that the private licensee-plaintiff in an
antitrust suit may attack the validity of the patent under which he
is licensed even though he has agreed lot to do so in his license.
The authorities for this proposition were
Sola
Electric Co. v. Jefferson Electric
Page 410 U. S. 58
Co., 317 U. S. 173
(1942);
Edward Katzinger Co. v. Chicago Metallic Mfg. Co.,
329 U. S. 394
(1947); and
MacGregor v. Westinghouse Electric Mfg. Co.,
329 U. S. 402
(1947). The essence of those cases is best revealed in
Katzinger, where the Court held that, although a patent
licensee (under the then controlling law) was normally foreclosed
from questioning the validity of a patent he is privileged to use,
the bar is removed when he alleges conduct by the patentee that
would be illegal under the antitrust laws, absent the patent. The
licensee was free to challenge the patent in these circumstances
because the "federal courts must, in the public interest, keep the
way open for the challenge of patents which are utilized for
price-fixing. . . ."
Id. at
329 U. S. 399.
Katzinger and
Gypsum were much in the tradition
of
Pope Mfg. Co. v. Gormully, 144 U.
S. 224,
144 U. S. 234
(1892):
"It is as important to the public that competition should not be
repressed by worthless patents, as that the patentee of a really
valuable invention should be protected in his monopoly . . . ,"
a view most recently echoed in
Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
395 U. S. 653,
395 U. S. 670
(1969).
We think that the principle of these cases is sufficient
authority for permitting the Government to raise and litigate the
validity of the ICI-Glaxo patents in this antitrust case. According
to the record, appellees had issued licenses under their patents
that unreasonably restrained trade by prohibiting the licensees
from selling or reselling bulk-form griseofulvin and had included
in the pooling agreement a covenant to impose such restrictions on
licensees. These charges were sustained, the court concluding that
the covenant and the patent license provisions were
per se
restraints of trade in the griseofulvin product market.
The District Court was then faced with the Government's attack
on the pertinent patents as well as its
Page 410 U. S. 59
demand for mandatory sales and reasonable-royalty licensing, the
latter being well established forms of relief when necessary to an
effective remedy, particularly where patents have provided the
leverage for or have contributed to the antitrust violation
adjudicated.
See, for example, Besser Mfg. Co. v. United
States, 343 U. S. 444
(1952);
United States v. United States Gypsum Co.,
340 U. S. 76
(1950);
International Salt Co. v. United States,
332 U. S. 392
(1947);
Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U.
S. 386 (1945). Appellees opposed mandatory sales and
compulsory licensing, asserting that the Government would "deny
defendants an essential ingredient of their rights under the patent
system," and that there was no warrant for "such a drastic
forfeiture of their rights." In this context, where the court would
necessarily be dealing with the future enforceability of the
patents, we think it would have been appropriate, if it appeared
that the Government's claims for further relief were substantial,
for the court to have also entertained the Government's challenge
to the validity of those patents.
In arriving at this conclusion, we do not recognize unlimited
authority in the Government to attack a patent by basing an
antitrust claim on the simple assertion that the patent is invalid.
Cf. Walker Process Equipment v. Food Machinery & Chemical
Corp., 382 U. S. 172
(1965). Nor do we invest the Attorney General with a roving
commission to question the validity of any patent lurking in the
background of an antitrust case. But the district courts have
jurisdiction to entertain and decide antitrust suits brought by the
Government and, where a violation is found, to fashion effective
relief. This often involves a substantial question as to whether it
is necessary to limit the rights normally vested in the owners of
patents, which, in itself, can be a complex
Page 410 U. S. 60
and difficult issue. The litigation would usually proceed on the
assumption that valid patents are involved, but if this basic
assumption is itself challenged, we perceive no good reason, either
in terms of the patent system or of judicial administration, for
refusing to hear and decide it.
The District Court, therefore, erred in striking the allegations
of the Government's complaint dealing with the patent validity
issue and in refusing to permit the Government to amend its
complaint with respect to this issue. On remand, the District Court
should consider the validity of the ICI dosage-form patent and the
Glaxo microsize patent.
III
The question remains whether the Government's case for
additional relief was sufficient to provide the appropriate
predicate for a consideration of its challenge to the validity of
these patents. For this purpose, as we have said, its case need not
be conclusive, but only substantial enough to warrant the court's
undertaking what could be a large inquiry, one which could easily
obviate other questions of remedy if the patent is found invalid
and which, if the patent is not invalidated, would lend substance
to a defendant's claim that a valid patent should not be limited,
absent the necessity to provide effective relief for an antitrust
violation to which the patent has contributed. Here, we think not
only that the United States presented a substantial case for
additional relief, but that it was sufficiently convincing that the
District Court, wholly aside from the question of patent validity,
should have ruled favorably on the demand for mandatory sales and
compulsory licensing.
In the first place, it is clear from the evidence that the ICI
dosage-form patent, along with other ICI and Glaxo patents, gave
the appellees the economic leverage with which to insist upon and
enforce the bulk-sales
Page 410 U. S. 61
restrictions imposed on the licensees. [
Footnote 7] Glaxo apparently considered the bulk-sales
restriction to be a prerequisite to the granting of a sublicense,
for it rejected a draft of the ICI-AMHO agreement because, among
other things, it would have permitted AMHO to sell griseofulvin in
bulk form. There are indications, also, that Glaxo refused a
sublicense to others than Schering and J & J because of fears
that the companies would sell in bulk form or pressure Glaxo to
allow such sales. The
Page 410 U. S. 62
source of the patent-pooling agreement pursuant to which such
licenses were permitted and which contained the bulk-sales
restriction was simple: Glaxo needed the ICI dosage-form patent to
assure its licensees the right to use the patent and sell in dosage
form. Pooling permitted ICI to engage in bulk manufacture, and, in
exchange, ICI imposed the bulk-sales restrictions upon its
licensees. There can be little question that the patents involved
here were intimately associated with and contributed to
effectuating the conduct that the District Court held to be a
per se restraint of trade in griseofulvin.
Secondly, we think that ICI and Glaxo should have been required
to sell bulk-form griseofulvin on reasonable and nondiscriminatory
terms and to grant patent licenses at reasonable-royalty rates to
all
bona fide applicants in order to "pry open to
competition" the griseofulvin market that "has been closed by
defendants' illegal restraints."
International Salt Co.,
332 U.S. at
332 U. S.
401.
The United States griseofulvin market consists of three
wholesalers, all licensees of appellees, that account for nearly
100% of United States sales totaling approximately eight million
dollars. Glaxo and ICI have never sold in bulk to others than the
licensees, and have prohibited bulk sales and resales by the
licensees. In practice, the licensees have not manufactured
griseofulvin under the bulk-form patents, preferring instead to
purchase in bulk form from ICI and Glaxo. The licensees sell the
drug in dosage and microsize form to retail outlets at virtually
identical prices. The effect of appellees' refusal to sell in bulk
and prohibition of such sales by the licensees has been that bulk
griseofulvin has not been available to any but appellees' three
licensees, and that these three are the only sources of dosage-form
griseofulvin in the United States.
There is little reason to think that the appellees or their
licensees, now that the bulk-sales restrictions have been declared
illegal, will begin selling in bulk. It is in
Page 410 U. S. 63
their economic self-interest to maintain control of the bulk
form of the drug in order to keep the dosage-form wholesale market
competition-free. Bulk sales would create new competition among
wholesalers, by enabling other companies to convert the bulk drug
into dosage and microsize forms and sell to retail outlets, and
would presumably lead to price reductions as the result of normal
competitive forces. There is, in fact, substantial evidence in the
record to the effect that other drug companies would not only have
entered the market, had they been able to make bulk purchases, but
also would have charged substantially lower wholesale prices for
the dosage and microsize forms of the drug. Only by requiring the
appellees to sell bulk-form griseofulvin on nondiscriminatory terms
to all
bona fide applicants will the dosage-form wholesale
market become competitive.
Relief in the form of compulsory sales may not, however, alone
insure a competitive market. Glaxo and ICI could choose to
discontinue bulk-form manufacturing or the sale of griseofulvin in
bulk form. The patent licensees might then begin to practice the
bulk-form manufacturing patents pursuant to the patent licenses to
fill their needs for the bulk drug. The licensees, of course, are
not parties to this action, and a mandatory sales order would not
affect them. They would not be required to make the economically
less advantageous bulk sales. The bulk form of the drug would be
controlled by the licensees, and the appellees, because they would
be required under the Government's proposed relief to sell to all
applicants only so long as they sell to any United States
purchasers, could easily avoid the mandatory sales requirement.
Unless other American firms are licensed to manufacture
griseofulvin, competition in the United States market will depend
entirely upon appellees' willingness to continue to supply their
present licensees with the bulk form of the drug.
Page 410 U. S. 64
This Court has repeatedly recognized that "[t]he framing of
decrees should take place in the District, rather than in
Appellate, Courts," and has generally followed the principle that
district courts "are invested with large discretion to model their
judgments to fit the exigencies of the particular case."
International Salt Co., supra, at
332 U. S.
400-401;
accord, Ford Motor Co. v. United
States, 405 U. S. 562,
405 U. S. 573
(1972). The Court has not, however, treated that power as one of
discretion, subject only to reversal for gross abuse, but has
recognized "an obligation to intervene in this most significant
phase of the case" when necessary to assure that the relief will be
effective.
United States v. United States Gypsum Co., 340
U.S. at
340 U. S. 89.
Accordingly, we have ordered the affirmative relief that the
District Court refused to implement.
See, e.g., United States
v. United States Gypsum Co. The purpose of relief in an
antitrust case is "so far as practicable, [to] cure the ill effects
of the illegal conduct, and assure the public freedom from its
continuance."
Id. at
340 U. S. 88.
Mandatory selling on specified terms and compulsory patent
licensing at reasonable charges are recognized antitrust remedies.
See, e.g., Besser Mfg. Co. v. United States, 343 U.
S. 444 (1952);
International Salt Co. v. United
States, 332 U. S. 392
(1947);
Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U.
S. 386 (1945). The District Court should have ordered
those remedies in this case.
To the extent indicated in this opinion, the judgment of the
District Court is reversed.
So ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Specifically at issue in the present litigation is U.S. Patent
No. 2,900,304, issued August 18, 1959. The patent embodies two
types of claims -- (1) a method of curing humans or animals of
external fungus diseases by administering "an effective amount of
griseofulvin" to them internally and (2) a capsule, tablet, or pill
containing an effective amount of griseofulvin.
[
Footnote 2]
Specifically at issue in the present litigation is U.S. Patent
No. 3,330,727, issued July 11, 1967. This patent covers the
improved (finely ground or "microsize") dosage form of
griseofulvin. This form has proved more effective and more
marketable than other dosage forms of the drug.
[
Footnote 3]
Although AMHO, Schering, and J & J could have manufactured
bulk-form griseofulvin under Glaxo's patents, in practice, they
purchased the bulk form of the drug from ICI and Glaxo and
themselves performed the processes to convert the drug to dosage
form.
[
Footnote 4]
See supra, n 1. The
Government contended that the "method" portion of the patent did
not disclose how to practice the invention in that it failed to
specify what is an "effective amount" of the drug.
See 35
U.S.C. § 112. The Government also argued that ICI's product claims
were invalid because the dosage form that they covered did not
specify an "effective amount" of the drug, did not specify the
diseases that could be cured, and claimed a patent monopoly over a
substance long in the public domain.
See 35 U.S.C. §§ 100
and 101.
[
Footnote 5]
The case was decided on the basis of various motions concerning
the merits and the relief. Testimony was not received; the facts
were developed in affidavits, exhibits, and interrogatories
accompanying the motions.
[
Footnote 6]
See n 2. The
Government had sought to challenge the patent on the basis that the
patent purported to monopolize a product long in the public domain,
on the basis of prior disclosure, and on the basis of prior public
use.
See 35 U.S.C. §§ 100, 101, 102(a), 102(b).
[
Footnote 7]
The Government argued in the District Court:
"We submit that
[ 333 U. S. ] Gypsum
[
333 U.S.
364 (1948)] should be understood more broadly to support
challenge to any patent used by antitrust defendants in furtherance
of their illegal program. The importance of the Imperial patent to
the defendants' scheme to violate the antitrust laws is plain. It
was, according to ICI's contentions, the reason for the patent pool
agreement in the first place; Glaxo's grant of rights to ICI was
paid for with the Imperial patent. Without the Imperial patent the
defendants could not maintain their monopoly in the United States
over the drug, for then anyone who could secure bulk form
griseofulvin could make it up into pills and sell them without a
patent to stop him; bulk form griseofulvin is, as ICI points out,
unpatented. The Imperial patent thus bolsters the effectiveness of
the illegal restraint on alienation ICI imposes on the resale of
bulk form griseofulvin: if a small drug company somehow manages to
get the unpatented bulk form drug despite ICI's restraint on
alienation designed to prevent it or anyone else from doing so, the
defendants may still suppress the manufacture of the drug by threat
of patent infringement suit. In this context, vindication of the
public interest in competition in unpatentable goods is doubly
important -- for there is a double impediment to commerce -- the
patent and the conspiracy."
The Government, throughout its brief in this Court, emphasizes
the importance of the patents to the antitrust violation.
"In cases like this, the patents involved generally are of major
importance in furthering the allegedly unlawful patent licensing
practices; they give the defendants the power which enables them to
impose the restraints of trade. That is the situation here. The
patents were essential to the appellees' scheme to violate the
antitrust laws."
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART and MR.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN concur, dissenting.
The Court has undertaken to substitute its judgment for that of
Congress in the initiation of novel procedures for the
determination of patent validity, and in so doing,
Page 410 U. S. 65
has blandly disregarded the procedural history of this case.
I
There is neither statutory nor case authority for the existence
of a general right of either private individuals or the Government
to collaterally challenge the validity of issued patents. In the
Patent Act of 1790, Congress provided that private citizens could,
upon motion alleging fraudulent procurement, prompt a district
court to issue to a patentee an order to show cause why his letters
patent should not be repealed. [
Footnote 2/1] A substantially identical provision was
carried over in the Patent Act of 1793. [
Footnote 2/2] But the Patent Act of 1836 contained no
provision for such individual actions, although it increased the
number of statutory defenses in infringement actions. [
Footnote 2/3] The effect of this omission
was determined by
Mowry v.
Whitney, 14 Wall. 434 (1872), to be the preclusion
of private actions to cancel patents, even when fraudulently
procured.
As part of the rationale in
Mowry, the Court reasoned
that the equitable suit for cancellation of a patent because it was
fraudulently procured was a substitute for the writ of
scire
facias, and, accordingly, it should have the same limitations.
In dictum, the Court stated:
"The fraud, if one exists, has been practiced on the government,
and, as the party injured, it is the appropriate party to assert
the remedy or seek relief."
Id. at
81 U. S. 441.
When the United States later sued to set aside two patents issued
to Alexander Graham Bell subsequent to several purported
Page 410 U. S. 66
acts of fraud by him on the Patent Office, this Court relied
heavily on the dictum in
Mowry, supra, in recognizing the
right of the Federal Government to sue for the cancellation of
letters patent obtained by fraud:
"That the government, authorized both by the Constitution and
the statutes to bring suits at law and in equity, should find it to
be its duty to correct this evil, to recall these patents, to get a
remedy for this fraud is so clear that it needs no argument. . .
."
United States v. Bell Telephone Co., 128 U.
S. 315,
128 U. S. 370
(1888) (
Bell I).
The Government asserts that the breadth of this holding was
established in the dictum in
United States v. Bell Telephone
Co., 159 U. S. 548
(1895) (
Bell II), wherein the Court upheld its appellate
jurisdiction in such patent cancellation cases. There, it was
stated:
"In
United States v. Telephone
Company, [
128 U.S.
315], it was decided that, where a patent for a grant of any
kind issued by the United States has been obtained by fraud, by
mistake or by accident, a suit by the United States against the
patentee is the proper remedy for relief, and that, in this
country, where there is no kingly prerogative but where patents for
land and inventions are issued by the authority of the government,
and by officers appointed for that purpose who may have been
imposed upon by fraud or deceit, or may have erred as to their
power, or made mistakes in the instrument itself, the appropriate
remedy is by proceedings by the United States against the
patentee."
Id. at
159 U. S. 555. But
in
United States v. Bell Telephone Co., 167 U.
S. 224 (1897) (
Bell III), the Court
characterized the above-quoted language as a "general statement" of
the power
Page 410 U. S. 67
of the Government to maintain a suit and, again in dictum,
limited its effect, saying:
"But while there was thus rightfully affirmed the power of the
Government to proceed by suit in equity against one who had
wrongfully obtained a patent for land or for an invention, there
was no attempt to define the character of the fraud, or deceit or
mistake, or the extent of the error as to power which must be
established before a decree could be entered cancelling the patent.
It was not affirmed that proof of any fraud, or deceit, or the
existence of any error on the part of the officers as to the extent
of their power, or that any mistake in the instrument was
sufficient to justify a decree of cancellation. Least of all was it
intended to be affirmed that the courts of the United States,
sitting as courts of equity, could entertain jurisdiction of a suit
by the United States to set aside a patent for an invention on the
mere ground of error of judgment on the part of the patent
officials. That would be an attempt on the part of the courts in
collateral attack to exercise an appellate jurisdiction over the
decisions of the Patent Office, although no appellate jurisdiction
has been by the statutes conferred. . . ."
Id. at
167 U. S. 269.
The plain import of the
Bell cases is that the authority
of the Government to bring an independent action to cancel a patent
is confined to the traditional equitable grounds of fraud, mistake,
and deceit. The Government makes two arguments to support its
position that it should not be as limited here. It contends that,
since this is an antitrust action, its right to attack the validity
of the patent is established by the rationale of
United States
v. United States Gypsum Co., 333 U. S. 364
(1948), and is therefore not subject to the limitations of
Bell
III. Alternatively, it argues that
Bell III has been
so undercut
Page 410 U. S. 68
by subsequent decisions, including
Gypsum, that it
should no longer be followed.
In
Gypsum Co., supra, the Court stated in "deliberate
dicta" that the Government may challenge the validity of a patent
which has been asserted by an antitrust defendant to be a defense
to the Government's claim of antitrust violations. It reasoned
that, in a suit to vindicate the public interest by enjoining
violations of the Sherman Act, the United States should have the
opportunity, similar to that afforded licensees in an action for
royalties, to show that an asserted shield of patentability does
not exist.
Id. at
333 U. S. 386-388.
The
Bell cases enunciate the range of the Government's
authority, quite independent of any other litigation it may have
with a patentee, to attack a governmental grant from the Patent
Office obtained by the sort of fraud or mistake there described.
The
Gypsum doctrine, on the other hand, sprang from the
right of the Government as a civil plaintiff under the antitrust
laws to assert the invalidity of a patent grant set up as a defense
to its civil complaint. Since a private licensee may attack the
validity of a patent that is made the basis of an action against
him for royalties, the Government should, equally, have the right
to attack a patent that is set up as a defense by the patentee in
the Government's action.
The Government's claim here essentially falls between these two
limited grants of authority. A claim of lack of patentability,
without more, is not within the Government's authority
qua
government to set aside a patent for fraud or mistake. And since
the decision of the merits of the Government's claim of antitrust
violation against these appellees in no way required the court to
determine the validity of their patents, the reasoning of
Gypsum is not applicable. The Government may, therefore,
prevail only if we are to blur the distinction between
Page 410 U. S. 69
these separate grants of authority, and extend such authority to
circumstances that are within the rationale of neither.
Certainly, it is true, as the Court states, that there is a
public interest favoring the judicial testing of patent validity
and the invalidation of specious patents.
See, e.g.,
Blonder-Tongue v. University Foundation, 402 U.
S. 313,
402 U. S.
343-344 (1971);
Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
395 U. S. 653,
395 U. S. 657,
395 U. S. 664
(1969). For when a patent is invalid, "the public parts with the
monopoly grant for no return, the public has been imposed upon and
the patent clause subverted."
United States v. Singer Mfg.
Co., 374 U. S. 174,
374 U. S. 197,
374 U. S.
199-200 (1963) (WHITE, J., concurring).
Significant recognition is given to this interest by both the
Bell and
Gypsum doctrines. Additional authority
resides in the Government to obtain judicially decreed restrictions
on patent monopoly in appropriate cases where the defendant's
antitrust violations have consisted, at least in part, of patent
misuse.
International Salt Co. v. United States,
332 U. S. 392
(1947);
Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U.
S. 386 (1945);
Morton Salt Co. v. G. S. Suppiger
Co., 314 U. S. 488
(1942). But the sort of roving commission that the majority now
authorizes whereby the Government may request a court to invalidate
any patent owned by an antitrust defendant that in any way related
to the factual background of the claimed antitrust violation cannot
be regarded as a reasonably necessary extension of any of these
principles. It is, therefore, more properly the creature of statute
than of judicial innovation.
II
Although the Court purports to limit its holding to avoid giving
the Government such a roving commission, the range of the new
authority is pointed up by the facts in this case.
Page 410 U. S. 70
The Government submitted its case to the District Court in three
motions for partial summary judgment on the very narrow issue that
the vertical restrictions on the resale of bulk-form griseofulvin
constituted
per se violations of the antitrust laws under
the
Schwinn doctrine. [
Footnote 2/4]
United States v. Arnold, Schwinn &
Co., 388 U. S. 365
(1967). Although common bulk-form griseofulvin is the subject of a
British manufacturing patent owned by Glaxo, it is neither patented
nor patentable in the United States.
The two patents that this Court is now authorizing the
Government to challenge bear no relationship whatsoever to the
illegal restraint found. The ICI patent relates only to the dosage
form of the drug. The majority states that
"it is clear from the evidence that the ICI dosage-form patent .
. . gave the appellees the economic leverage with which to insist
upon and enforce the bulk-sales restrictions imposed on the
licensees."
Ante at
410 U. S. 60-61.
But no such evidence was submitted in the Government's statement of
undisputed facts that accompanied its motions for partial summary
judgment on the "restraint of alienation issue." And no such fact
was included in the District Court's findings of undisputed or
ultimate facts. The District Court found precisely the
opposite:
"Plaintiff has not shown on this record that defendants' current
licensing practices are related to the adjudged antitrust
violation, nor are they methods to circumvent the prohibition of
restraints on resale. . . ."
328 F.
Supp. 709, 713.
Page 410 U. S. 71
Since the Court's factual assumption as to economic leverage is
completely contrary to the finding of the District Court,
presumably the Court without saying so is holding that finding to
be clearly erroneous. Yet the only support for such a holding, to
which the Court refers, is an unverified statement contained in the
Government's argument to the District Court on this issue. While
the Government has an impressive batting average in this Court as
an antitrust litigant, it has not heretofore had the benefit of
having unverified assertions of its counsel treated as being of
sufficient evidentiary weight to upset a considered factual finding
of the District Court in which that argument was made. Nothing in
the antitrust laws or in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
exempts the Government from having to make its case in the trial
court in the same manner as any other litigant. The Court's
conclusion that there
"can be little question that the patents involved here were
intimately associated with and contributed to effectuating the
conduct that the District Court held to be a
per se
restraint of trade in griseofulvin,"
ante at
410 U. S. 62, is
thus reached only by a substantial departure from the settled
usages of appellate review.
Similarly, the other patent which the Government may now have
declared invalid was not even granted until 1967, and it, too,
relates to the dosage form of the drug. Since the restraints on
alienation were imposed in the early 1960's, there cannot be a
plausible contention that it in any way provided "economic
leverage" for the antitrust violations. And there was no other
proof of its relationship to the bulk-form market and the antitrust
violations. [
Footnote 2/5] Thus,
the scope of the new authority extends
Page 410 U. S. 72
to any patent that happens to be present in a patent licensing
agreement that contains a restraint on alienation in a different
market, regardless of its relationship to such restraint.
Since there is no congressional authorization for the challenge
by the Government to the validity
vel non of patents
without regard to the relationship to antitrust violations, and
since there was no proved relationship between these violations and
the patents in question, I would affirm the judgment and orders of
the District Court. I therefore dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
1 Stat. 109. For an excellent review of the history briefly
summarized here,
see Cullen & Vickers, Fraud in the
Procurement of a Patent, 29 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 110 (1960).
[
Footnote 2/2]
1 Stat. 318.
[
Footnote 2/3]
5 Stat. 117.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The majority inaccurately states that the lower court sustained
the allegations in the complaint that appellees had unreasonably
restrained trade by prohibiting the licensee from selling or
reselling bulk-form griseofulvin. In fact, the District Court only
found that the restraint on reselling bulk-form griseofulvin
constituted the
per se antitrust violations found.
[
Footnote 2/5]
This total lack of proof of any relationship also defeats for me
the granting of compulsory licensing of the United States patents.
Compulsory licensing is a recognized remedy in patent misuse cases,
see, e.g., International Salt Co. v. United States,
332 U. S. 392
(1947),
Hartford-Empire Co. v. United States, 323 U.
S. 386 (1945), but here the District Court specifically
found there was no patent misuse or other abuse of patent
rights.