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Legal Development Updates
January 22, 2002
The United States Supreme Court, state courts,
and a federal district court recently decided cases of interest
to seed companies. In addition, the North Dakota's Seed Arbitration
Board has issued a proposal to revise the requirements regarding
seed arbitration.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejected arguments by
an agricultural supply business that federal patent law does not
provide for the grant of utility patents for plants and seeds. The
Court upheld the validity of countless seed-related patents in finding
that neither the Plant Variety Protection Act, nor the Plant Patent
Act, precludes the grant of utility patents for plants and seeds.
In this crucial decision, the American Seed Trade Association wrote
an amicus curiae brief in support of the seed industry's position.
In North Dakota, the State Supreme Court rejected
arguments by a seed company that the state's consumer fraud act
only applies to consumer transactions. Specifically, the court found
that the statute applies to the purchase of seeds by farmers for
the cultivation and subsequent sale of the resultant crops.
In a case pending before the Federal Circuit,
petitioners are appealing a federal district court's decision invalidating
patents involving the method and process of identifying, germinating,
and harvesting the sprouts of certain cruciferous seeds at a specific
stage in growth when certain cancer-fighting substances are present
in the food at high levels. Petitioner originally brought suit against
producers of sprouts alleging patent infringement for the growth
and harvesting of certain cruciferous sprouts without a license.
The federal district court held that the patents were invalid by
anticipation because the method of growing, harvesting, and consuming
these sprouts has been well-known for decades.
In Mississippi, a state appellate court upheld
a trial court's finding that seeds sold by the defendant seed company
were infected with a virus and, therefore, sold in breach of the
implied warranty of merchantability because they were not disease-resistant,
and produced low crop yields. The appellate court rejected the defendant's
argument that the trial court abused its discretion in finding the
presence of disease in the seeds without confirmation by laboratory
testing.
In North Dakota, the State's Seed Arbitration
Board has issued a proposal to revise its procedures concerning
seed arbitration. The proposal would eliminate seed arbitration
as a prerequisite to filing a civil action.
Click on links below for summaries of the
cases and proposed rule:
Pioneer Hi-Bred International
v. J.E.M. Ag Supply, Inc.
Jorgenson v. Agway, Inc.
Cruciferous Sprout Patent
Litigation
Jacob Hartz Seed Company,
Inc. v. Simrall and Simrall, a Partnership
North Dakota Seed Arbitration
Board: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking Regarding Seed Arbitration
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