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District Court Excludes Opinion Of Damage Expert On Licenses That Were Not Economically Comparable

The plaintiff, Bayer, moved to exclude the opinion of the defendant’s damage expert, Dr. Rausser, for failing to show that the licenses that he used for his reasonable royalty analysis were technologically or economically comparable to the license resulting from the hypothetical negotiation.  The district court agreed with Bayer on the economically comparable point and granted the motion to exclude on that basis.

As explained by the district court, Bayer asserted that the license resulting from the hypothetical negotiation would be a non-exclusive, running royalty license between competitors, and of Dr. Rausser’s four selected licenses, only one was a non-exclusive license, two were between competitors, and none of them used a running royalty.

The district court stated that the strongest argument by Bayer “relates to Dr. Rausser’s use of lump-sum licenses to support a running royalty hypothetical license. ‘Significant differences exist between a running royalty license and a lump-sum license.’ Lucent, 590 F.3d at 1326. A lump-sum license can still be relevant to running royalty damages, but “some basis for comparison” must exist. See id. at 1330. Defendants argue that Lucent is inapposite because here, unlike in Lucent, the parties agree that damages should be in the form of a running royalty. Defendants further argue that, “while it may be difficult to determine a lump sum from a running royalty,” as shown in Lucent, “the opposite is not true.”

The district court then concluded that “Defendants provide no support for their proposition that a lump-sum license may easily support a running royalty license, but not vice versa. The court in Lucent made clear that lump-sum and running royalty licenses rely on ‘different considerations’ and have ‘fundamental differences.’ 590 F.3d at 1326, 1330.  It follows that those differences would be relevant to any comparison between lump-sum and running royalty licenses, regardless of which type of license results from the hypothetical negotiation.”

In addressing the four selected licenses the district court explained that Dr. Rausser describes them as having (1) “an upfront payment of $4 million, a regulatory milestone payment of $2 million, and no running royalty” (the Bolder Biotechnology-Bayer license), (2) “an upfront lump sum of $50,000, patent cost reimbursement of $18,789.20, regulatory milestone payments totaling up to $3.4 million, a sales milestone payment of $5 million if sales of licensed products exceeded $100 million, and a running royalty of 1% of net sales” (the University of Rochester-Bayer license), (3) “an annual maintenance fee of $50,000 and a running royalty rate of 0.5%” (the Grifols Biologicals-Baxter license), and (4) “an upfront signing fee of $85,000, an annual maintenance fee of $45,000 . . . , and an annual royalty of $85,000 . . . [, where the] annual royalty was to be increased by 25% every two years” (the University of Connecticut-Baxter license).

The district court then commented that “[t]hree of the four licenses include a lump-sum (upfront) payment. The first license has no running royalty, and the remaining three combine a running royalty with lump-sum, milestone, and/or annual payments. Dr. Rausser makes no effort to reconcile these features with the hypothetical license.  Therefore, I find Dr. Rausser has failed to show “some basis for comparison” to rely on the selected licenses to support his running royalty opinion. See Lucent, 590 F.3d at 1330.”

The district court also concluded that “Dr. Rausser’s opinions cannot be saved by the fact that his estimated damages are comparable to, or even ‘far less’ than, the values in the selected agreements.  Comparability is a preliminary issue. An expert cannot retroactively justify the use of certain agreements by asserting that his ultimate damages value is similar to the values in those agreements.”

Bayer Healthcare LLC v. Baxalta Inc., Case No. 16-cv-1122-RGA (D. Del. Jan. 2019)

 

The authors of www.PatentLawyerBlog.com are patent trial lawyers at Jeffer Mangels Butler & Mitchell LLP.  For more information about this case, contact Stan Gibson at 310.201.3548 or SGibson@jmbm.com.

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