David (Jang) Beats Goliath and Wins Over $200 Million

A California jury awarded a cardiologist $200 million dollars against Boston Scientific.  The jury heard the patent infringement and licensing lawsuit filed by Dr. David Jang who developed two cardiac stents for Boston Scientific.  The jury found in favor of Dr. Jang and awarded him $200 million dollars in damages.   The jury determined that the medical device company breached its contract with Dr. Jang and infringed two patent claims.

In 2002, Dr. Jang licensed two stent patents to Boston Scientific in exchange for $50 million upfront and an additional $110 million contingent on sales of stents that incorporate his patents.  In 2005, Dr. Jang sued Boston Scientific for breaching the license agreement and claimed that Boston Scientific failed to make payments required by the terms of the agreement. Dr. Jang alleged the company owed him just under $100 million for using his patented products, and with interest at about 12 percent a year, would bring that amount to more than $200 million.

What’s the take away here?  First, a patent is only as good as your ability to enforce it.  Here, the good doctor was able to stand his ground against a large opponent and prevail.  Second, your ability to prevail in an infringement action may take longer than you would ever want.  But patience may be a virtue in patent infringement actions, especially if the facts favor your cause.

Protecting your innovative developments is critical to any organization.  Having the right person to help you through that process is important.  The Law Office of Kathleen Lynch PLLC is designed to help businesses such as yours keep ahead of the game.   The first telephone consultation is free.  Email us at klynch@kliplaw.com.

 

Spider Man's Web Shooter Untangled From Royalty Obligation

Recently, the U.S. Supreme Court confirmed a lower court ruling for Marvel Entertainment relating to a patent royalty dispute for a Spider-Man toy.  The majority, written by Justice Kagen, found that Marvel did not have to pay the agreed to royalties to the inventor of a web-shooting toy after the patent term expired. “Patents endow their holders with certain superpowers,” Kagan wrote, “but only for a limited time.”

The decision is a loss for the Spider-Man toy inventor Stephen Kimble.  Mr. Kimble obtained the patent in 1990 for a toy that shoots foam string from a gloved hand, imitating the web spun by a spider person.  Kimble sought to market the toy to Marvel’s predecessor, which at the time made its own “Web Blaster” toy without paying Kimble.

In 1997, Kimble sued Marvel and the parties settled for a fixed payment to Kimble, along with a 3 percent royalty on sales of the toy with no cutoff date. Marvel later sought a declaratory judgment that it no longer needed to pay royalties after the end of the patent term in 2010.

What’s the take away here?  If you are entering into a license agreement for intellectual property rights, be sure to fully understand your obligations as well as your rights.  Capitalizing on innovative developments is critical to any organization.  Having the right person to help you make those decisions is important.  The Law Office of Kathleen Lynch PLLC is designed to help businesses such as yours keep ahead of the game.   The first telephone consultation is free.  Email us at klynch@kliplaw.com.