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Legal Development Updates
In Re: Cruciferous Sprout Patent Litigation
The plaintiffs in this case, Johns Hopkins University
and Brassica Protection Products LLC, are holders of three patents
involving the production and consumption of the sprouts of certain
types of cruciferous seeds such as broccoli and cauliflower. Upon
discovering that these sprouts contain high levels of cancer-fighting
substances when harvested and consumed at a specific stage in growth,
the plaintiffs secured three patents involving the method and process
of identifying, germinating, and harvesting the sprouts of certain
cruciferous seeds. In the case at hand, the plaintiffs brought suit
against the defendants in the U.S. District Court for the District
of Maryland, alleging: 1) the defendant broccoli sprout growers
infringed plaintiffs' patents by producing and selling broccoli
sprouts without being licensed by plaintiffs; and 2) the defendant
seed seller contributed to the infringement of the patents by selling
seeds to sprout growers.
The defendants moved for summary judgment that
the patents at issue are invalid because they "merely [describe]
unexpected beneficial results of a known process." The federal district
court granted defendant's motion for summary judgment, noting that
the plaintiffs did not dispute that the prior art reveals that cruciferous
sprouts can be germinated, harvested, and eaten in the sprout stage.
Nor did they claim that their patents involve the alteration or
modification of the natural seeds.
Although it is clear that the plaintiffs discovered
a "new and significant" property of certain types of cruciferous
sprouts, i.e., high levels of cancer-fighting substances, the court
stated that, under the concept of inherency, "[t]he discovery of
a previously unappreciated property of a prior art composition ...
does not render the old composition patentably new to the discoverer."
Concluding that the plaintiffs' patent claims merely "describe the
inherent properties of cruciferous seeds," the district court held
that the plaintiffs' patents were anticipated by the prior art and,
thus, invalid under federal patent law.
This decision is currently on appeal before
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.
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