Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Research Development Foundation, No. 2:2021cv02241 - Document 152 (D. Nev. 2023)

Court Description: ORDER Denying as moot 41 Motion for Judgment. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that 99 RDF's Motion for summary judgment is DENIED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that 106 Pacira's Motion for summary judgment is GRANTED in part. Signed by Judge Cristina D. Silva on 8/8/2023. (Copies have been distributed pursuant to the NEF - JQC)

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Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. v. Research Development Foundation Doc. 152 1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEVADA 2 3 4 5 Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Plaintiff 6 7 v. 8 Research Development Foundation, 9 Defendant Case No. 2:21-cv-02241-CDS-DJA Order Granting in Part Plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and Denying Defendant’s Motions for Judgment on the Pleadings and for Summary Judgment [ECF Nos. 41, 99, 106] 10 11 Plaintiff Pacira Pharmaceuticals, Inc. sues defendant Research Development Foundation 12 in this declaratory-judgment action arising out of a long-standing assignment agreement 13 between the parties. In 1994, RDF assigned Pacira certain intellectual property, giving Pacira the 14 exclusive right to manufacture and sell products employing that property, in exchange for a 15 royalty on some of Pacira’s gross revenues. The product relevant to this suit is called EXPAREL, 16 an anesthetic that Pacira manufactures using two processes: a 45-liter (45L) process and a 20017 liter (200L) process. The parties later disputed the extent of the 1994 agreement and executed 18 both a 1997 letter agreement and a 2004 amendment to clarify key terms. But none of the three 19 contracts explicitly contemplated EXPAREL. Now, the parties dispute whether Pacira owes 20 royalties to RDF over EXPAREL. 21 Pacira seeks (1) a declaration stating that it no longer owes royalties to RDF for 22 EXPAREL made after December 24, 2021; and (2) a declaration invalidating the agreements as 23 unconscionable because they require royalty payments after RDF’s patents covering EXPAREL 24 have expired. RDF countersues, essentially seeking the inverses of both declarations (that Pacira 25 still owes RDF royalties and that the agreements are enforceable). There is no genuine dispute 26 that the agreements are unenforceable as RDF now seeks to interpret them with respect to Dockets.Justia.com 1 EXPAREL manufactured using the 45L process, so I grant Pacira’s motion for partial summary 2 judgment. But there is a genuine dispute over whether Pacira owes royalties on EXPAREL 3 manufactured using the 200L process, as it is unclear whether the patent that Pacira uses to 4 manufacture 200L EXPAREL is “related to” the patent RDF previously assigned to it. I thus 5 deny RDF’s motion for summary judgment. I also deny as moot RDF’s motion for judgment on 6 the pleadings. The parties are instructed to participate in a mandatory settlement conference 7 before the magistrate judge and, should they fail to settle, they are instructed to file a joint 8 pretrial order no later than 14 days after the settlement conference. 9 I. Background 10 A. RDF & Pacira 11 Pacira, formerly known as DepoTech Corporation and SkyePharma, 1 is a California 12 pharmaceutical company that derives most of its revenue from sales of EXPAREL. Compl., ECF 13 No. 1 at 2; Answer, ECF No. 18 at 13. RDF is a Nevada nonprofit that transfers technology from 14 laboratories to companies by obtaining patents and licensing research discoveries. ECF No. 18 at 15 13. In the 1990s, Pacira began work on manufacturing multivesicular liposomes (MVLs) with 16 various active drug ingredients. ECF No. 1 at 7–8. MVLs consist of a “honeycomb-like 17 arrangement of hundreds of chambers, each encapsulating a drug, with that structure enabling 18 delivery of the drug over a sustained period of time as the chambers break.” ECF No. 99-7 at 19 ¶¶ 29–33. In 1994, Pacira contracted with RDF to obtain certain experimental technology and 20 intellectual property pertaining to MVLs in exchange for conditional royalty payments. Id. at 2. 21 The parties disagreed about the scope of products for which Pacira would owe royalties, so they 22 executed two amendments to the 1994 agreement—one in 1997 and another in 2004. ECF No. 18 23 at 16–17. Now, the parties disagree again about the scope of Pacira’s royalty obligations. 24 25 1 When the parties executed the 1994 agreement and the 1997 letter agreement, Pacira was known as DepoTech. When the parties executed the 2004 amendment, Pacira was known as Skye. I refer only to 26 Pacira—and have altered quotes and external references—throughout this order for ease of understanding. 2 1 B. EXPAREL 2 In 2011, the United States Food and Drug Administration approved Pacira’s new drug 3 application for EXPAREL, a technology using MVLs. Id. at 19–20. Pacira describes EXPAREL as 4 a “first-of-its-kind, single dose local anesthetic administered at the time of surgery to control 5 pain and reduce or eliminate the use of opioids for acute postsurgical pain.” ECF No. 1 at 2. The 6 active ingredient in EXPAREL, bupivacaine, is encapsulated in MVLs, allowing for its gradual 7 release over time as lipid membranes are absorbed, “prolonging the action of bupivacaine.” Id. 8 EXPAREL is manufactured by two processes: a 45L process and a 200L process. ECF No. 122 at 9 16 n.2. 10 Pacira first used the 45L manufacturing process, which relied on RDF’s original patented 11 technology. Id. at 7–8. The United States Patent and Trademark Office issued Patent No. 12 9,585,838 on March 7, 2017, which described this MVL production. ECF No. 18-4 at 2. Both 13 parties agree that the ’838 patent was covered by the agreements and constituted “Original 14 Patented Technology,” for which Pacira owed RDF royalties. ECF No. 1 at 7. Pacira practiced the 15 ’838 patent in producing EXPAREL via the 45L process. Id. at 8. But Pacira now asserts that, 16 beginning in 2013, it began to develop a larger scale process to manufacture EXPAREL that did 17 not rely on technology provided by RDF. Id. at 8. It obtained Patent No. 11,033,495 on June 15, 18 2021, which describes manufacturing of bupivacaine MVLs. ECF No. 18-5 at 2. Pacira obtained a 19 second patent, Patent No. 11,179,336, on November 23, 2021, which also discloses and claims 20 aspects of manufacturing bupivacaine MVLs. ECF No. 18-6 at 2. It claims that it practices the 21 ’495 patent in manufacturing EXPAREL using the larger scale 200L process. ECF No. 1 at 8. 22 Pacira now asserts that the two new patents (the ’495 and the ’336 patents) are not 23 “improvements” as defined by the agreements between itself and RDF and that revenues 24 stemming therefrom are not subject to the royalty provision of those agreements. ECF No. 1 at 8. 25 RDF disagrees, contending that the two patents are “DepoFoam Technology” and thus covered 26 by the 2004 amendment. ECF No. 18 at 20–21, 25. For support, RDF points to the specific claims 3 1 made in the patents, public statements made by Pacira leadership, and press releases describing 2 how EXPAREL utilizes DepoFoam technology. Id. at 22–24. Pacira also claims that any royalty 3 provisions requiring it to pay royalties on EXPAREL manufactured by the 45L process are 4 unenforceable, as the ’838 patent has expired. ECF No. 106. Both parties agree that after the ’838 5 patent expired, no valid patents remained to cover 45L EXPAREL. Hr’g Tr., ECF No. 150 at 7:15– 6 17. While they also agree that the ’495 patent covers 200L EXPAREL, they disagree as to 7 whether Pacira owes royalties for its sale or use of 200L EXPAREL. And those disagreements are 8 rooted in their differing interpretations of the 1994 and 2004 contracts. 9 10 C. The 1994 agreement In 1994, RDF assigned Pacira certain “Assigned Proprietary Property,” which gave Pacira 11 exclusive rights to make, manufacture, and sell products employing that property. 1994 12 Agreement, ECF No. 99-1 at 6. In exchange, Pacira was to pay RDF a royalty on gross revenues— 13 a term that would be changed by the 2004 agreement—but in 1994, it meant to cover charges 14 collected by Pacira from sales, licensing, and production of a product. Id. at 5, 11. A product was 15 defined as a “product or portion of a product that where made, used[,] or sold embodies an 16 invention there claimed, or which is specifically intended to be used to practice a method or 17 process there claimed in an Assigned Patent . . . and which is manufactured and sold by or for” 18 Pacira. Id. at 4–5. “Assigned Patent” was defined to mean the patents included within the 19 proprietary property and any reissue, continuation, or extension of them. Id. at 4. The 20 proprietary property contemplated includes “developments, patent rights, copyrights, as well as 21 all patent applications, techniques, methods, processes, apparatus, products, data, trade secrets, 22 confidential information, improvements thereto, modifications thereof, and Know-How, 23 whether patentable or not, related to the technology described in Exhibit 1[.]” Id. at 3. And 24 Exhibit 1 describes various patented technologies, including “multivesicular liposomes having a 25 biologically active substance encapsulated therein in the presence of a hydrochloride,” 26 “heterovesicular liposomes,” “cyclodextrin liposomes encapsulating pharmacologic compounds 4 1 and methods for their use,” and “uniform spherical multilamellar liposomes of defined and 2 adjustable size distribution[.]” Id. at 30. 3 In sum, the 1994 agreement set the key terms for the arrangement: RDF would license its 4 patented technology to Pacira in exchange for 2.5% of the gross revenues arising from that 5 technology. And the royalties were to be paid “for a period extending from the first commercial 6 revenue actually collected by [Pacira] for the life of the last to expire of the patents or patent 7 applications of the Assigned Proprietary Property.” Id. at 11. The agreement was amended by a 8 letter between the parties in 1997. ECF No. 18-2. It confirmed the treatment of royalties and 9 other consideration that Pacira would pay RDF but is otherwise irrelevant to this dispute. 10 D. The 2004 amendment 11 The 2004 amendment broadened the definition “proprietary property,” extending it to 12 include Pacira’s “multivesicular liposome DepoFoam technology which consists of microscopic, 13 spherical particles composed of multiple non-concentric aqueous chambers encapsulating the 14 biologically active substance therein in the presence or absence of any acid or salt or other 15 compound (the ‘DepoFoam Technology’).” ECF No. 99-2 at 4. It noted that such DepoFoam 16 Technology would include everything defined by Assigned Proprietary Property in the 1994 17 agreement as well as “existing and future patent or proprietary rights of [Pacira] in DepoFoam 18 Technology whether or not covered by or subject to the Assignment Agreement.” Id. The 2004 19 amendment also changed the definition of “gross revenues,” such that it meant “charges actually 20 collected by [Pacira] from sales, rental, lease, licensing, maintenance, or production of a Product 21 or from licensing or the use of Proprietary Property by [Pacira] or a third party[.]” Id. at 3. Pacira 22 and RDF executed this amendment on April 15, 2004. Id. at 10. 23 E. Procedural history 24 The ’838 patent expired on December 24, 2021. ECF No. 106 at 9. Pacira filed suit the day 25 before expiration, anticipating that RDF would sue it for breach of contract if it stopped paying 26 royalties thereafter. ECF No. 1. RDF answered and countersued, and the net result of both 5 1 parties’ claims is that the parties request judicial determination about (1) whether Pacira owes 2 RDF for its manufacture of EXPAREL and (2) whether any terms of the agreements requiring 3 Pacira to pay RDF royalties after the expiration of the ’838 patent are unenforceable. ECF No. 1 4 at 13–14; ECF No. 18 at 26–27. RDF now moves for judgment on the pleadings, as well as 5 summary judgment. ECF Nos. 41, 99. Pacira moves for partial summary judgment with respect 6 to EXPAREL manufactured using the 45L process only. ECF No. 106. 7 II. Legal standard 8 “The purpose of summary judgment is to avoid unnecessary trials when there is no 9 dispute as to the facts before the court.” Nw. Motorcycle Ass’n v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 18 F.3d 1468, 1471 10 (9th Cir. 1994). Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings, the discovery and 11 disclosure materials on file, and any affidavits “show that there is no genuine issue as to any 12 material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Celotex Corp. 13 v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986). An issue is “genuine” if there is a sufficient evidentiary basis on 14 which a reasonable factfinder could find for the nonmoving party, and a dispute is “material” if it 15 could affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law. Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 16 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). Where reasonable minds could differ on the material facts at issue, 17 however, summary judgment is not appropriate. Id. at 250–51. “The amount of evidence 18 necessary to raise a genuine issue of material fact is enough ‘to require a jury or judge to resolve 19 the parties’ differing versions of the truth at trial.’” Aydin Corp. v. Loral Corp., 718 F.2d 897, 902 (9th 20 Cir. 1983) (quoting First Nat’l Bank v. Cities Serv. Co., 391 U.S. 253, 288–89 (1968)). A principal 21 purpose of summary judgment is “to isolate and dispose of factually unsupported claims.” 22 Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323–24. 23 The moving party—the one seeking summary judgment—bears the initial burden of 24 informing the court of the basis for its motion and identifying those portions of the record that 25 demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Id. at 323. Once the moving party 26 satisfies the requirements of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, the burden shifts to the party 6 1 resisting the motion to “set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.” 2 Anderson, 477 U.S. at 256. At the summary-judgment stage, “a court’s function is not to weigh the 3 evidence and determine the truth but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.” 4 Assur. Co. of Am. v. Ironshore Specialty Ins., 2015 WL 4579983, at *3 (D. Nev. July 29, 2015) (citing 5 Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249). In evaluating a summary-judgment motion, a court views all facts and 6 draws all inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Kaiser Cement Corp. v. 7 Fischbach & Moore, Inc., 793 F.2d 1100, 1103 (9th Cir. 1986). 8 III. Discussion 9 RDF moves for summary judgment and judgment on the pleadings under Federal Rule of 10 Civil Procedure 12(c). ECF Nos. 41, 99. Pacira also moves for summary judgment. ECF No. 106. 11 All three motions are fully briefed, but a motion for judgment on the pleadings requires me to 12 assume the truthfulness of the nonmoving party’s allegations and prohibits me from considering 13 the voluminous evidence that the parties have dutifully discovered. Hal Roach Studios, Inc. v. Richard 14 Feiner & Co., 896 F.2d 1542, 1550 (9th Cir. 1989). Because the parties have already completed 15 discovery, I elect to decide the issues in light of the evidence obtained, rather than on the basis of 16 unsupported allegations in the pleadings. See Rios-Campbell v. U.S. Dep’t of Com., 927 F.3d 21, 25 (1st 17 Cir. 2019) (“[T]he parties briefed and argued summary judgment, and judicial efficiency would 18 have been best served by dealing directly with those arguments rather than avoiding them.”). 2 I 19 thus deny as moot the defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings 3 and turn to the 20 motions for summary judgment. 21 22 While Rios-Campbell is not binding on this court, I find its reasoning persuasive and adopt it insofar as it holds that district courts should adjudicate matters on the basis of a fully developed record when the 23 parties have incurred great expense in developing that record, rather than on the pleadings alone. See Jones v. 24 L.A. Central Plaza, LLC, 2023 WL 4754544 (9th Cir. July 26, 2023) (quoting Rios-Campbell, 927 F.3d at 26, for the proposition that a district court should not “travel back in time and train the lens of its inquiry on 25 the bare allegations of the complaint while disregarding the compiled factual record upon which a summary judgment movant has elected to rely”). 2 26 3My disposition of Pacira’s motion for summary judgment necessarily moots RDF’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. 7 1 A. I grant Pacira summary judgment on Count II as to EXPAREL manufactured from the 45L process. 2 Pacira seeks a declaratory judgment stating that any terms of the agreements requiring 3 Pacira to pay royalties on sales of EXPAREL made from the 45L process after December 24, 2021, 4 are unenforceable as a violation of public policy. ECF No. 106 at 21. Because I find that the 5 agreements’ terms are unenforceable to the extent that they require Pacira to pay royalties 6 beyond the expiration dates of the patents covering the 45L process for manufacturing 7 EXPAREL, I grant Pacira’s motion for summary judgment as to Count II of the complaint. 8 Pacira claims that RDF’s request for royalties on EXPAREL manufactured using the 45L 9 process is foreclosed by the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Brulotte v. Thys Co., 379 10 U.S. 29 (1964), in which the Court held that “a patentee’s use of a royalty agreement that 11 projects beyond the expiration date of the patent is unlawful per se.” ECF No. 106 at 19–21 12 (quoting Brulotte, 379 U.S. at 32). It asserts that following the expiration of RDF’s ’838 patent on 13 December 24, 2021, RDF lacked another patent that would entitle it to royalties over EXPAREL 14 manufactured using the 45L process. Id. It argues that the agreements’ terms, as RDF now 15 attempts to construe them, are (1) both substantively and procedurally unconscionable, and (2) 16 violate public policy under Brulotte and its progeny. ECF No. 122 at 33–36. RDF responds that (1) 17 the facts of Brulotte can be distinguished from this case, so reasoning from a separate line of cases 18 beginning with Automatic Radio Co. v. Hazeltine, 339 U.S. 827 (1950) should be applied instead, 19 ECF No. 123 at 22–25; and (2) even applying Brulotte, Pacira paid for the discretion to use RDF’s 20 patents rather than for the use of the patents themselves, ECF No. 99 at 35. For the reasons 21 discussed below, I agree with Pacira. 4 22 4 The parties also both attempt to bolster their positions based on evidence extrinsic to the agreements, 23 such as communications from RDF’s executives or Pacira’s outside counsel, but the 2004 agreement states that the 1994 and 2004 agreements “set out and constitute the entire understanding, warranties[,] 24 and agreement of the parties.” ECF No. 18-3 at ¶ 4.1. I find no ambiguity in either of the agreements and note that “ambiguity does not arise simply because the parties disagree on how to interpret their contract.” Galardi v. Naples Polaris, LLC, 301 P.3d 364, 366 (Nev. 2013). And when the “language of the 26 contract is clear and unambiguous, the contract will be enforced as written.” Am. First Fed. Credit Union v. Soro, 359 P.3d 105, 106 (Nev. 2015). Because the parties agreed to construe their contract in accordance with Nevada law, ECF No. 18-3 at ¶ 4.3, I thus place no weight on what either party believed or 25 8 1 Any terms of the agreements requiring Pacira to pay RDF royalties on sales of EXPAREL 2 manufactured using the 45L process after the expiration of the final RDF-controlled patent are 3 unenforceable as a matter of public policy. “The aim of the patent laws is not only that members 4 of the public shall be free to manufacture the product . . . disclosed by the expired patent, but 5 also that the consuming public at large shall receive the benefits of the unrestricted exploitation, 6 by others, of its disclosures.” Scott Paper Co. v. Marcalus Mfg. Co., 326 U.S. 249, 255 (1945). “Any 7 attempted reservation or continuation in the patentee . . . of the patent monopoly, after the 8 patent expires, whatever the legal device employed, runs counter to the policy and purpose of 9 the patent laws.” Brulotte, 379 U.S. at 31 (quoting Scott Paper Co., 326 U.S. at 256) (emphasis 10 added). And “the core feature of the patent laws on which Brulotte relied remains just the same” 11 now as it did in 1964: “Section 154 now, as then, draws a sharp line cutting off patent rights after 12 a set number of years. And this Court has continued to draw from that legislative choice a broad 13 policy favoring unrestricted use of an invention after its patent’s expiration.” Kimble v. Marvel Ent., 14 LLC, 576 U.S. 446, 459 (2015). Ultimately, after “‘the grant of patent monopoly [is] spent’ . . . an 15 attempt to project it into another term by continuation of the licensing agreement is 16 unenforceable.” Brulotte, 379 U.S. at 34 (quoting Ar-Tik Sys., Inc. v. Dairy Queen, Inc., 302 F.3d 496, 17 510 (3d Cir. 1962)). 18 RDF’s attempts to distinguish this case from Brulotte are unavailing. Even if it is correct 19 that Brulotte involved a marginally different licensing situation, that distinction fails in the face of 20 Kimble. The plethora of cases 5 analyzing the licensing of patents in exchange for indefinite post21 represented in correspondence as the bases for Pacira’s royalty payments. Instead, I define the parties’ 22 obligations solely by reference to the contractual language itself. 23 This reasoning also disposes of RDF’s argument that Pacira, in 2012, identified the ‘648 patent as a basis to extend the lifespan of the royalty provision. ECF No. 99 at 34–35. I decline to adopt a theory of 24 contract interpretation that permits RDF to expand Pacira’s royalty obligations under a 2004 contract 25 based solely on an email from Pacira’s representatives regarding a patent application eight years later. See, e.g., Bradley Corp. v. Lawler Mfg. Co., Inc., 2020 WL 7027875, at *7 (S.D. Ind. Nov. 30, 2020) (finding license agreement that set forth a “single, non-diminishing royalty rate without a clear indication that the 26 royalties [were] not subject to patent leverage” unlawful under Brulotte); Goughnour v. Hayward Baker, Inc., 2018 WL 265588, at *7 (N.D.W. Va. Jan. 2, 2018) (finding an assignment that dealt “with one expired, 5 9 1 expiration royalties show that royalties extending beyond the life of the patents are 2 unconscionable not only for their effects on the parties, but also because of how such payments 3 could affect the “consuming public at large[, who] shall receive the benefits of unrestricted 4 exploitation, by others, of its disclosures.” Scott Paper Co., 326 U.S. at 255. Patent policy “gave rise 5 to the [Brulotte] Court’s conclusion that post-patent royalty contracts are unenforceable[.]” 6 Kimble, 576 U.S. at 463. RDF’s assignment of its intellectual property to Pacira is similar enough 7 in all significant respects to create a potential Brulotte problem insofar as RDF requests royalties 8 on the use of its patents in perpetuity. 9 I emphasize the word “use” because RDF also argues that the royalty payments are tied 10 not just to Pacira’s use of the now-expired patents, but in addition, any revenues it receives 11 derived from the use of unpatented trade secrets or from licensing the intellectual property to 12 third parties. ECF No. 148 at 15. It also argues—seemingly in the alternative—that Pacira 13 acquired the privilege to use any or all of its patents as it so desired and the plain language 14 requiring them to pay for that privilege does not conflict with the aforementioned rules against 15 perpetual royalty payments. ECF No. 123 at 24. Both arguments essentially contend that the 16 agreements create separate “triggers” for Pacira to pay royalties to RDF, including but not 17 limited to, the single “trigger” for Pacira’s use of the assigned patents, which can be 18 distinguished from the conditions dictating the life of the agreements that are phrased in terms 19 of the expiration of the last-to-expire patents. Id. 20 21 utilized patent, and one living, unutilized patent application” and projected royalties beyond date of 22 expired patent unlawful under Brulotte). While RDF argues that Bradley can be distinguished because the 23 24 25 26 Bradley licensing agreement “explicitly identified the royalty-bearing products,” ECF No. 123 at 25 (citing Bradley, 2020 WL 7027875, at *7), its argument is unavailing. The Bradley court’s holding was rooted in its finding that the royalty rate did not diminish post-expiration of the patent in question, not because the royalty-bearing products were mentioned by name in the agreement. And in any case, both parties agree that EXPAREL manufactured by the 45L process was, before the expiration of the ‘838 patent, one of the royalty-bearing products—despite not being mentioned by name in either the 1994 or 2004 agreements. RDF’s attempt to project its patent monopoly past its expiration via royalty rights surely cannot turn on whether the royalty-bearing product was explicitly mentioned in the licensing agreement, and no such proposition is embodied in either Brulotte or the cases interpreting it thereafter. 10 1 To determine whether RDF’s argument has merit, I turn back to the contract language. 2 “Determining the reach of Brulotte’s barrier to the collection of royalties requires [me] to consider 3 the scope of the royalty provision[s] . . . In other words, [I] must ask both what [Pacira] is 4 paying royalties for and under what conditions its obligation to do so is lawful.” Zila, Inc. v. Tinnell, 5 502 F.3d 1014, 1025 (9th Cir. 2007). This analysis “is simplicity itself to apply.” Kimble, 576 U.S. at 6 459. I “need only ask whether [the] agreement provides royalties for post-expiration use of a 7 patent. If not, no problem; if so, no dice.” Id. The agreement itself does not: it states that 8 “[r]oyalty payments . . . shall be paid for a period extending from the first commercial revenue 9 actually collected by [Pacira] for the life of the last to expire of the patents or patent 10 applications of the Assigned Proprietary Property.” ECF No. 18-1 at ¶ 4.3. There is no Brulotte 11 problem on the face of the agreement because it purports to halt royalty payments when the last 12 of the patents described by “Assigned Proprietary Property” expires. And as the parties both 13 agree, the last of those patents was the ’838 patent. 14 The Brulotte issue arises only as RDF seeks to hold Pacira liable for royalty payments 15 extending beyond the life of the ’838 patent. Such liability, to the extent that any of the 16 agreements’ terms permit it, would violate the public policy of preventing patent royalty 17 collection beyond the life of any of the patents assigned in exchange for those royalties. But that 18 is exactly what RDF is attempting to do: it attempts to distinguish which of the payment 19 “triggers” that Pacira is using in an attempt to prolong the royalty stream beyond the expiration 20 date of those expired patents. The argument that each “trigger” is somehow separate from 21 Pacira’s “use” of the expired patents relies on a distinction without a difference. 22 RDF argues that some of the other “triggers” include revenues derived from Pacira’s (or a 23 third party’s) use or licensing of proprietary property. ECF No. 148 at 11. It contends that the use 24 of the now-expired patents would have been one such trigger, while use of other “unpatented 25 trade secrets and processes” would be another. Id. But a closer look at the agreements belies this 26 understanding: it is unclear when Pacira would be paying royalties on its use of the now-expired 11 1 patents as compared to paying royalties on its use of otherwise unpatentable intellectual 2 property, as the payment “triggers” do not require Pacira to affirmatively distinguish which 3 “trigger” under which it pays royalties. RDF’s position, however, would have Pacira pay royalties 4 on the sale or licensing of EXPAREL manufactured using the 45L process indefinitely, insofar as 5 such revenue can be connected to any of the “triggers.” But that brings up why the 1994 6 agreement contemplated that royalty payments would “cease for any patent which has been 7 declared invalid[.]” ECF No. 18-1 at ¶ 4.3. The definitions of assigned proprietary property, 8 proprietary property, and improvements all rely—in part—on the patents. The conditions 9 dictating the lifespan of the royalty payments rely on the patents. And Pacira’s 45L 10 manufacturing of EXPAREL relied, in part, on improvements it made to the ’838 patent. If RDF 11 wanted to tie royalties to something other than Pacira’s use of the patents, it chose strange 12 contract language to realize that choice. And the agreements do not provide for any sort of 13 diminution of royalty payment once the patents expired. Cf. Kimble, 576 U.S. at 454 (explaining 14 that “post-expiration royalties are allowable so long as tied to a non-patent right” and giving an 15 example in which a license involving both a patent and a trade secret can set a royalty at 5% 16 during the patent period, but 4% later). Because the parties took great measures to specify that 17 the expiration of the patents would be the cut-off date for Pacira’s royalty obligations—and did 18 not contract for any sort of reduced obligation in light of Pacira’s potential continued use of 19 RDF’s unpatentable intellectual property—Brulotte forecloses Pacira’s obligation to pay royalties 20 on the 45L manufacturing process of EXPAREL. 21 Finally, I address RDF’s reliance on a proposition in Automatic Radio that a licensee “has 22 nevertheless contracted to pay for the privilege of using existing patents plus any developments 23 resulting from [] continued research.” 339 U.S. at 834. In Brulotte, the Supreme Court explicitly 24 declined to extend Automatic Radio to the context at-issue here. 379 U.S. at 33 (“We decline . . . to 25 extend [Automatic Radio] so as to project the patent monopoly beyond the 17-year period.”). 26 Whether or not Pacira agreed to pay royalties on the use of the patents or on the discretion in 12 1 using the patents, RDF provides no valid law establishing that such an agreement may continue 2 past the expiration date of those patents. The aforementioned cases describe such an idea as 3 anathema to patent policy, while RDF’s attempted “distinction between used and unused 4 patents” seems pale in the face of the Supreme Court’s admonition that “a patentee may not use 5 the power of his patent to levy a charge for making, using, or selling products not within the 6 reach of the monopoly granted” by the patent laws. Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Rsch., Inc., 395 7 U.S. 100, 136–37 (1969). Automatic Radio “is not authority for the proposition that patentees have 8 carte blanche . . . to condition the grant of patent licenses upon the payment of royalties on 9 unpatented articles.” Id. at 137. Because Brulotte controls RDF’s attempt to project Pacira’s royalty 10 obligations beyond the expiration of the patents underlying the 45L manufacturing process of 11 EXPAREL, I grant Pacira summary judgment on Count II of its complaint for declaratory relief 12 and issue its requested declaratory judgment. And because any terms of the agreements that 13 would require Pacira to pay royalties on sales of EXPAREL made from the 45L process after 14 December 24, 2021, are unenforceable as a violation of public policy, I need not further 15 determine whether Pacira owes royalties on EXPAREL made from the 45L process after 16 December 24, 2021. 17 B. I deny RDF’s motion for summary judgment as to EXPAREL manufactured from the 200L process. 6 18 RDF argues that § 1.4 of the 2004 amendment, § 3.8 of the 1994 agreement, and § 1.1 of the 19 2004 amendment are three independent bases that each entitle it to royalties for Pacira’s sale of 20 200L EXPAREL. ECF No. 99. Pacira responds that RDF’s position is absurd, if accepted as true, 21 would extend the lifespan of its royalty obligation indefinitely. ECF No. 122 at 16. It claims that 22 23 RDF moves for summary judgment on both of Pacira’s claims with respect to both production processes of EXPAREL. ECF No. 99 at 36. While my disposition of Pacira’s motion technically forecloses me from 24 granting RDF the exact relief it requests, I find that the interests of judicial economy and efficiency are best served by considering RDF’s motion, rather than having the parties refile substantially the same 25 motions but targeted explicitly to the 200L process. See ECF No. 122 at 16 n.2 (Pacira states that “RDF’s first two arguments only apply to 200L EXPAREL”); ECF No. 150 at 7:9–11 (RDF’s counsel states that 26 “Grounds A and B” of RDF’s motion for summary judgment “refer to the ‘495 patent which . . . only covers the 200L process”). 6 13 1 RDF’s arguments misinterpret or ignore key terms of the contracts, conflict with the parties’ 2 intent, and misapply law. Id. 3 “Contract interpretation is a question of law and, as long as no facts are in dispute, 4 [courts] review[] contract issues” by “looking to the language of the agreement and the 5 surrounding circumstances.” Redrock Valley Ranch, LLC v. Washoe County, 254 P.3d 641, 647–48 6 (Nev. 2011). The goal of interpreting contracts “is to discern the intent of the contracting parties. 7 Traditional rules of contract interpretation are employed to accomplish that result.” Davis v. 8 Beling, 278 P.3d 501, 515 (Nev. 2012) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). I must first 9 determine whether the “language of the contract is clear and unambiguous; if it is, the contract 10 will be enforced as written.” Id. The two contracts at issue “set out and constitute the entire 11 understanding, warranties, and agreement of the parties” and defined terms in the 2004 12 amendment supersede any conflicting terms from the 1994 agreement. ECF No. 18-3 at ¶ 4.1. 13 The 1994 agreement contemplates royalties and states that Pacira “shall pay RDF during 14 the term of this Agreement an earned royalty” of 2.5% on “Gross Revenues.” ECF No. 18-1 at 15 ¶ 4.1. Gross revenues are defined by the 2004 amendment as “charges actually collected by 16 [Pacira] from sales, rental, lease, licensing, maintenance, or production of a Product or from 17 licensing or the use of Proprietary Property by [Pacira] or a third party[.]” ECF No. 18-3 at ¶ 1.1. 18 The 2004 amendment defines proprietary property as Pacira’s MVL “DepoFoam technology,” 19 which includes “the Assigned Proprietary Property or Improvements as defined under the 1994 20 agreement and/or [] existing and future patent or proprietary rights of [Pacira] in DepoFoam 21 Technology whether or not covered by or subject to the Assignment Agreement.” Id. at ¶ 1.4. 22 As Pacira points out, RDF muddles terms between the two agreements without 23 following the clear logical chain of the contracts. Section 4.1 of the 1994 agreement creates the 24 royalty obligation and demands that it stems from gross revenues. Section 1.1 of the 2004 25 amendment defines gross revenues and demands that they stem from either sales of a product or 26 from the licensing or use of proprietary property. RDF’s first two arguments allege that because 14 1 the ’495 patent is assigned proprietary property, EXPAREL is a product whose sales create a 2 royalty obligation. For the reasons I address infra subsections 1 and 2, I find a genuine dispute of 3 material fact as to whether the ’495 patent is indeed assigned proprietary property. 4 RDF’s third argument contends that, even if Pacira does not sell a product that could be 5 subject to the royalty provision, Pacira still uses proprietary property. Section 1.4 of the 2004 6 amendment creates two clear categories of proprietary property: the assigned proprietary 7 property or improvements mentioned in the 1994 agreement, and existing and future patent or 8 proprietary rights of Pacira in DepoFoam Technology. For the reasons I address infra subsection 9 3, I also find RDF’s use theory unpersuasive. 10 11 1. The ’495 patent is not assigned proprietary property under § 1.4 of the 2004 agreement. RDF’s first argument is that the ’495 patent is assigned proprietary property. ECF No. 99 12 at 18, 19 (“RDF’s position is simple . . . [t]he defined term Assigned Proprietary Property includes 13 patents with a priority date after the Effective Date of the 2004 Amendment.”). A quick look at 14 the definition of that term, as provided by the 1994 agreement and not superseded in 2004, 15 belies that understanding. It states that assigned proprietary property “shall mean and include 16 the Proprietary Property, including the Patent Rights, Rights in Patents, and Know-How, all of 17 which are assigned hereunder to” Pacira. ECF No. 18-1 at ¶ 1.4. As the ’495 patent did not exist in 18 1994, it could not have been assigned to Pacira at that time. So § 1.4 of the 1994 agreement 19 cannot be the singular clause recognizing the ’495 patent as assigned proprietary property, and 20 RDF seems to recognize that. 21 It instead argues that the 1994 definition of assigned proprietary property should be 22 constrained by the 2004 definition of proprietary property. See ECF No. 99 at 19 (defining 23 assigned proprietary property by reference to § 1.4 of the 2004 amendment). It contends that a 24 patent qualifies as assigned proprietary property when it conforms to § 1.4, subpart (b) of the 25 2004 amendment. Id. This attempt improperly collapses the two distinct clauses of § 1.4 in the 26 2004 amendment. The phrase “and/or” and specific inventoried categories (“(a)” and “(b)”) in 15 1 § 1.4 of the 2004 amendment work to create two distinguishable categories of proprietary 2 property: (a) the assigned proprietary property from the 1994 agreement, and (b) Pacira’s 3 existing or future IP in DepoFoam Technology. RDF cannot borrow language from that latter 4 category to define the former when neither contract does so. I thus decline to consider the ’495 5 patent assigned proprietary property based on the definition of proprietary property used in the 6 2004 amendment. Whether the ’495 patent qualifies as an “existing and future patent or 7 proprietary right” of Pacira would, at best, support an argument that the patent is proprietary 8 property. But that is materially different from the patent being recognized as assigned 9 proprietary property. 7 So I decline to find that § 1.4 of the 2004 agreement creates a royalty 10 obligation covering Pacira’s sales of 200L EXPAREL. 11 12 13 2. There is a genuine dispute of material fact as to whether the ’495 patent is assigned proprietary property under § 3.8 of the 1994 agreement. RDF argues that in the alternative, § 3.8 of the 1994 agreement creates a second basis to 14 identify the ’495 patent as assigned proprietary property. ECF No. 99 at 24. That section states 15 that if either party “files patent applications or otherwise obtains patent rights . . . which relate 16 to the Assigned Proprietary Property, such patent application [or] patent rights . . . shall be 17 included in the Assigned Proprietary Property, and [Pacira] shall have exclusive worldwide 18 rights thereto[.]” ECF No. 18-1 at § 3.8. RDF fails to establish the absence of a genuine dispute 19 that the ’495 patent relates to the assigned proprietary property, however. 20 It contends that the ’495 patent is related to the same field of technology as the ’572 21 patent and the ’838 patent. ECF No. 99 at 28. Initially, this argument improperly expands § 3.8 22 beyond its literal terms: the contract specifies that the later patent must “relate to the Assigned 23 Proprietary Property,” not that it must relate to the same field of technology as the Assigned 24 Proprietary Property. While it might be true that the patents all relate to the same field of 25 26 7 Whether the ’495 patent is proprietary property does affect RDF’s use theory, but for the reasons I discuss infra subsection 3, I find that theory unavailing. 16 1 technology, such a definition is so expansive as to be meaningless—are they all science 2 technology? chemistry technology? MVLs-encapsulating-biologically-active-substances 3 technology? 4 The ’495 patent is not necessarily related to the ’572 patent. The ’495 patent’s disclosure 5 “relates generally to commercial manufacturing processes for making [MVLs] using 6 independently operating tangential flow filtration systems.” ECF No. 18-5 at 11. Meanwhile, the 7 ’572 patent “relates to the composition of synthetic multivesicular lipid vesicles or liposomes 8 encapsulating biologically active substances and to methods for their manufacture and use.” 9 ECF No. 99-3 at 5. The ’495 patent thus seems to embody concepts relating to commercial 10 manufacturing and tangential flow filtration systems, which are not mentioned in the ’572 11 patent’s brief description (and the ’572 patent in its entirety does not mention “flow” or 12 “filtration”). 13 As Pacira points out, the ’572 patent is directed to MVLs made with hydrochloride, while 14 the ’495 patent is not. ECF No. 122 at 27. And the ’495 patent is directed to large-scale 15 bupivacaine MVL production, while the ’572 patent does not mention bupivacaine or large-scale 16 production. Id. While RDF contends that Pacira’s expert “offers no rebuttal to the basic fact that 17 all three of the ’572, ’838, and ’495 Patents relate to the same field of technology of [MVLs] 18 encapsulating a biologically active substance,” ECF No. 99 at 29 n.17, I again refuse to equate 19 relating to the same field with relating to assigned proprietary property. RDF cannot attempt to 20 broaden the scope of § 3.8’s inquiry by importing phrases (“same field of technology”) that do 21 not exist in the contract language. 22 While RDF attempts to justify its definition of “relate to” by reference to various cases 23 and dictionary definitions, some of its definitions support its position while others undercut it. 24 For example, “connected in some way” is far more inclusive than “belonging to the same group.” 25 Relate, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). As the parties did not choose to define “relate to,” 26 and the degree of relation under any such definition is unclear, summary judgment is not the 17 1 appropriate stage for me to resolve the parties’ differing views about whether the ’495 patent 2 and the ’572 (or ’838) patents are related. The question of relation is a genuinely disputed issue 3 of material fact. And that question is essential to whether the ’495 patent might be considered 4 assigned proprietary property under § 3.8 of the 1994 agreement. 5 3. RDF’s use theory does not create a basis for Pacira’s alleged royalty obligation. 6 RDF’s final theory is that § 1.1 of the 2004 amendment defines gross revenues to include 7 Pacira’s use of proprietary property, so any revenues that Pacira derives from the use of the 8 intellectual property described by proprietary property support an ongoing royalty obligation. 9 ECF No. 99 at 29–31. As the parties observe, this argument pertains to both the 45L and 200L 10 processes of manufacturing EXPAREL. But because I have already decided that any attempt to 11 collect royalties from Pacira’s sale of 45L EXPAREL would be unenforceable, I decide this issue 12 only in relation to 200L EXPAREL. 13 EXPAREL manufactured by the 200L process no doubt uses proprietary property, as the 14 term is defined by the 2004 amendment. RDF contends that Pacira uses non-patent proprietary 15 rights to manufacture EXPAREL and collects charges from that use when it sells EXPAREL. 16 ECF No. 99 at 31. But, as Pacira identifies, its use of the proprietary property does not create 17 gross revenue. ECF No. 122 at 28–29. Instead, it uses the proprietary property to create 18 products, which it then sells to create gross revenue. Pacira concludes that to permit RDF to 19 collect royalties on Pacira’s use of proprietary property would render the clause permitting RDF 20 to collect royalties on Pacira’s sale of products using such property superfluous. Id. To read the 21 contract RDF’s way would create the following construction: “Gross Revenues shall mean 22 charges actually collected by [Pacira] from . . . the use of Proprietary Property by [Pacira].” ECF 23 No. 18-3 at ¶ 1.1 But RDF has not demonstrated that Pacira collects charges from itself for the use 24 of proprietary property. It is unclear to me how Pacira could create revenue simply by using the 25 proprietary property. The causal step of revenue generation comes from Pacira selling a product 26 that is manufactured using the proprietary property. Pacira’s researchers used the proprietary 18 1 property in developing a 200L manufacturing process from EXPAREL. But those scientific 2 discoveries did not generate revenue. Pacira also used the proprietary property when it drafted 3 documents, manuals, and patents describing the technology. But again, that drafting did not 4 generate revenue. It was not until Pacira sold EXPAREL, a step which did not require the use of 5 proprietary property, that Pacira generated revenues from it. 6 Because RDF has not demonstrated that any royalty-creating obligation relies on 7 genuinely undisputed facts, it has not met its burden. I therefore decline to grant summary 8 judgment with respect to 200L EXPAREL and instruct the parties to participate in a mandatory 9 settlement conference before the magistrate judge assigned to this case. Should the case fail to 10 settle, a joint pretrial order will be due 14 days after the settlement conference. 11 IV. Conclusion 12 For these reasons, IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that RDF’s motion for judgment on 13 the pleadings [ECF No. 41] is DENIED as moot. 14 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that RDF’s motion for summary judgment [ECF No. 99] is 15 DENIED. 16 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Pacira’s motion for summary judgment [ECF No. 106] 17 is GRANTED in part. 18 IT IS DECLARED that any terms of the agreements that would require Pacira to pay 19 royalties on sales of EXPAREL made from the 45L process after December 24, 2021, are 20 unenforceable as a violation of public policy. 21 The Clerk of Court is kindly instructed to enter judgment accordingly. 22 DATED: August 8, 2023 23 _________________________________ Cristina D. Silva United States District Judge 24 25 26 19

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