Abbvie Inc. v. Medimmune Limited , 881 F.3d 1334 ( 2018 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    ABBVIE INC., ABBVIE BIOTECHNOLOGY, LTD.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants
    v.
    MEDIMMUNE LIMITED,
    Defendant-Appellee
    ______________________
    2017-1689
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Eastern District of Virginia in No. 2:16-cv-00322-AWA-
    DEM, Judge Arenda L. Wright Allen.
    ______________________
    Decided: February 5, 2018
    ______________________
    JEFFREY I. WEINBERGER, Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP,
    Los Angeles, CA, argued for plaintiffs-appellants. Also
    represented by HEATHER E. TAKAHASHI; GINGER ANDERS,
    Washington, DC; DAVID PENN FRAZIER, MICHAEL A.
    MORIN, Latham & Watkins LLP, Washington, DC.
    DAVID I. BERL, Williams & Connolly LLP, Washing-
    ton, DC, argued for defendant-appellee. Also represented
    by THOMAS S. FLETCHER, SHAUN PATRICK MAHAFFY.
    ______________________
    2                          ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, DYK, and CHEN, Circuit
    Judges.
    DYK, Circuit Judge.
    AbbVie, Inc., and AbbVie Biotechnology Ltd.
    (“AbbVie”) filed suit in the Eastern District of Virginia
    against MedImmune Limited (“MedImmune”), seeking a
    declaratory judgment that U.S. Patent No. 6,248,516 (“the
    ’516 patent”) is invalid. The district court determined
    that it lacked jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judg-
    ment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201–02, and alternatively that it
    would not exercise jurisdiction if it existed, and it granted
    MedImmune’s motion to dismiss. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    This declaratory-judgment action concerns a devel-
    opment and licensing agreement entered into by prede-
    cessors to AbbVie and MedImmune in 1995.                 The
    agreement stemmed from a research collaboration be-
    tween those predecessors that resulted in the antibody
    adalimumab, the active ingredient in the well-known
    pharmaceutical drug Humira. The contract is governed
    by British law. 1 The 1995 agreement licensed AbbVie to
    practice the ’516 patent among others, although the
    parties agree that AbbVie does not presently practice it.
    The agreement also required AbbVie to pay royalties on
    the sales of certain antibodies “until the last to expire of
    [certain] Patents or the expiry of fifteen years from the
    date of First Commercial Sale of a Product by [AbbVie’s
    predecessor] . . . (whichever is later).” J.A. 62. The last of
    those patents to expire is the ’516 patent, with an expira-
    tion date of June 19, 2018. The first commercial sale
    occurred in January 2003. Accordingly, AbbVie’s obliga-
    1  The 1995 agreement itself is not in the record, but
    the parties agree––as did the district court––that British
    law governs.
    ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED                       3
    tion to pay royalties to MedImmune either ceased in
    January 2018 (if the period is measured from the first
    commercial sale) or will cease in June 2018 (if measured
    from the expiration date of the ’516 patent).
    Seeking to hasten the end of its royalty obligations,
    AbbVie brought this declaratory-judgment action in June
    2016 seeking a declaration that the ’516 patent is invalid.
    AbbVie argued that a declaration of the ’516 patent’s
    invalidity would constitute its expiration for purposes of
    the 1995 agreement (making the royalty obligations
    expire in January 2018). However, AbbVie did not seek a
    declaration as to the contract’s interpretation.
    MedImmune argued that the district court lacked de-
    claratory-judgment jurisdiction or, if it had jurisdiction,
    should decline to exercise it. On the merits, MedImmune
    rejected AbbVie’s interpretation of the contract, contend-
    ing that the royalty obligations are pegged to the patent’s
    expiration date without regard to the patent’s validity. 2
    The district court dismissed the complaint on two al-
    ternate grounds. First, the court observed that AbbVie
    does not practice the ’516 patent and therefore is not at
    risk of an infringement suit. The district court held that
    2   MedImmune also argued that three other enti-
    ties––namely, a research arm of the British government,
    an American research institute, and an American corpo-
    ration––own interests in the ’516 patent and are neces-
    sary and indispensable parties to this action under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 19. AbbVie contends that
    it properly sued only MedImmune, which AbbVie argues
    “possesses all substantial rights in the ’516 patent rele-
    vant to this case.” Appellant Br. 44. The district court
    found this issue moot given its dismissal of the complaint
    on other grounds. In light of our disposition of this case,
    we also need not decide the issue.
    4                         ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED
    AbbVie “could not be subject to a patent [infringement]
    action, and therefore lack[s] standing to bring this action.”
    J.A. 6.
    Second, assuming AbbVie had standing, the district
    court noted that the interpretation of the 1995 agreement
    was governed by British contract law and would implicate
    the rights of the British government, which jointly owns
    the patent through one of its research councils. Deciding
    the invalidity question, the district court observed, would
    not resolve the parties’ ultimate dispute and would raise
    these additional concerns about foreign law and sovereign
    immunity. The district court concluded, therefore, that it
    would not exercise its declaratory-judgment jurisdiction
    as a matter of discretion. The district court dismissed the
    case.
    AbbVie timely appealed, and we have jurisdiction un-
    der 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    The district court erred in holding that it lacked de-
    claratory-judgment jurisdiction on the basis that there is
    no controversy as to infringement of the ’516 patent. As a
    general principle, “federal courts, when determining
    declaratory judgment jurisdiction, often look to the ‘char-
    acter of the threatened action’” that the declaratory-
    judgment defendant “might have brought.” Medtronic,
    Inc. v. Mirowski Family Ventures, LLC, 
    134 S. Ct. 843
    ,
    848 (2014) (quoting Pub. Serv. Comm’n v. Wycoff Co., 
    344 U.S. 237
    , 248 (1952)). In other words, courts examine
    declaratory actions, at least in part, by looking to the
    “mirror image” suit the declaratory defendant might bring
    if and when it seeks coercive relief.
    In conducting this analysis, the district court charac-
    terized AbbVie’s declaratory claim as the mirror image of
    an infringement suit. It then applied our cases from the
    infringement context, concluding that AbbVie had failed
    ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED                       5
    to present an actual case or controversy sufficient to
    trigger Article III jurisdiction in light of “the lack of
    evidence of infringement, the lack of evidence of any
    intent to infringe the patent, and the absence of any
    threat to sue [AbbVie] for infringement.” J.A. 5. It con-
    cluded that AbbVie “could not be subject to a patent
    action, and therefore lack[s] standing to bring this [de-
    claratory] action.” J.A. 6.
    This was a mischaracterization of AbbVie’s claim,
    which has never rested on the possibility of infringement
    but rather concerns the parties’ contractual obligations
    under the 1995 agreement. Those contractual obligations
    turn on the expiration and, perhaps, the validity of the
    ’516 patent, but there is no contention that they turn on
    whether AbbVie engaged in infringement.
    If properly presented, such a contractual dispute
    could confer declaratory-judgment jurisdiction.         The
    Supreme Court has held repeatedly that contractual
    disputes can be the subject of a declaratory action. E.g.,
    MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc., 
    549 U.S. 118
    , 125
    (2007) (“All we need determine is whether petitioner has
    alleged a contractual dispute.”); Freeport-McMoRan, Inc.
    v. K N Energy, Inc., 
    498 U.S. 426
    , 426–29 (1991) (per
    curiam) (finding federal diversity jurisdiction in declara-
    tory action concerning breach of contract); Skelly Oil Co.
    v. Phillips Petroleum Co., 
    339 U.S. 667
    , 674 (1950) (same);
    Aetna Life Ins. of Hartford, Conn. v. Haworth, 
    300 U.S. 227
    , 242 (1937) (“The dispute relates to legal rights and
    obligations arising from the contracts of insurance.”). And
    it has held that declaratory-judgment jurisdiction extends
    to contractual disputes that turn on issues of patent
    infringement and invalidity. 
    MedImmune, 549 U.S. at 123
    –26.
    So too has this court. In Powertech Technology Inc. v.
    Tessera, Inc., the parties disputed whether royalty obliga-
    tions under a contract were contingent on the validity and
    6                        ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED
    infringement of a patent. 
    660 F.3d 1301
    , 1308–10 (Fed.
    Cir. 2011). We held that the parties’ dispute “as to
    whether the license agreement require[d] royalty pay-
    ments to be tied to valid patent coverage [was] sufficient
    to support declaratory judgment jurisdiction.” 
    Id. at 1310
    (citing 
    MedImmune, 549 U.S. at 135
    –36); see also Kimble
    v. Marvel Enters. Inc., 
    727 F.3d 856
    , 859–60, 864, 867 (9th
    Cir. 2013) (affirming declaratory judgment that royalty
    obligations ceased upon patent expiration even though
    the parties agreed there was no infringement), aff’d sub
    nom. Kimble v. Marvel Entm’t, LLC, 
    135 S. Ct. 2401
    (2015); ABB Inc. v. Cooper Indus., LLC, 
    635 F.3d 1345
    ,
    1349 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (finding declaratory-judgment
    jurisdiction on the ground, among others, that an indem-
    nitor has an interest in determining its potential contrac-
    tual liability, where liability turned not on its own
    infringement but on the indemnitee’s).
    AbbVie’s problem is that it did not seek a declaration
    of its contractual obligations. Rather, AbbVie’s complaint
    only sought a declaration of invalidity with respect to the
    ’516 patent. And as MedImmune argues and the district
    court held, such a declaration would not actually resolve
    the parties’ contractual dispute.
    The Supreme Court has long held that in general “a
    litigant may not use a declaratory-judgment action to
    obtain piecemeal adjudication of defenses that would not
    finally and conclusively resolve the underlying controver-
    sy.” 
    MedImmune, 549 U.S. at 127
    n.7 (citing Calderon v.
    Ashmus, 
    523 U.S. 740
    , 749 (1998)). This principle is an
    application of Article III’s case-or-controversy require-
    ment in the declaratory-judgment context. See 
    Calderon, 523 U.S. at 745
    –47. In Calderon, for example, the incar-
    cerated plaintiffs sought a declaration that they would be
    entitled to certain procedural benefits conferred by stat-
    ute should they bring a habeas action. 
    Id. at 742.
    Rather
    than resolve the matter in the normal course of their
    habeas proceedings, the plaintiffs “s[ought] to have that
    ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED                         7
    question determined in anticipation of seeking habeas so
    that [they] w[ould] be better able to know, for example,
    the time limits that govern the habeas action.” 
    Id. at 746.
    The Supreme Court found this use of the Declaratory
    Judgment Act impermissible under Article III because it
    “would not resolve the entire case or controversy . . . but
    would merely determine a collateral legal issue governing
    certain aspects of their pending or future suits.” 
    Id. at 747
    (citing Coffman v. Breeze Corps., 
    323 U.S. 316
    , 322–
    24 (1945)). In other words, in general, parties may not
    “seek[] by declaratory judgment to litigate a single issue
    in a dispute that must await another lawsuit for complete
    resolution.” 
    Id. at 748;
    see also McLeod v. Gen. Mills, Inc.,
    
    856 F.3d 1160
    , 1166–67 (8th Cir. 2017) (finding no juris-
    diction over declaratory claim concerning waiver of em-
    ployees’ age-discrimination rights where relief could not
    resolve the actual controversy––the underlying discrimi-
    nation claims); Williams v. BASF Catalysts LLC, 
    765 F.3d 306
    , 327–28 (3d Cir. 2014) (finding no jurisdiction to
    “determin[e] rights and defenses available . . . in future
    proceedings,” such as preclusion issues that might arise in
    later personal-injury suits).
    This case suffers from the same defect. The 1995
    agreement, which is governed by British law, pegs the end
    of AbbVie’s payments to the expiration of the ’516 patent.
    It is an open question whether British courts would
    consider the invalidation of a patent to be tantamount to
    its expiration for purposes of this agreement. Without a
    resolution to this question, the parties’ contractual dis-
    pute would persist. Contrary to AbbVie’s argument, the
    Supreme Court in MedImmune did not hold that a patent-
    invalidity question could be brought as an action separat-
    ed from the underlying dispute as to contract interpreta-
    tion. 
    See 549 U.S. at 123
    –25, 127 n.7 (explaining that the
    plaintiff there sought a conclusive declaration as to its
    contractual obligations, rather than piecemeal adjudica-
    tion of the subsidiary patent issues).
    8                        ABBVIE INC.   v. MEDIMMUNE LIMITED
    We have occasionally permitted an exception to the
    rule against piecemeal adjudication in circumstances
    where litigation is also pending that would resolve the
    remaining questions. For example, in Dey Pharma, LP v.
    Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Inc., we approved of declarato-
    ry-judgment jurisdiction in a Hatch-Waxman Act suit that
    would not entirely resolve the parties’ dispute. 
    677 F.3d 1158
    , 1163–64 (Fed. Cir. 2012). The patentee in Dey had
    brought an infringement action against a generic drug
    manufacturer on two of three patents related to the
    pharmaceutical drug at issue. 
    Id. at 1161.
    The generic
    company then filed a separate declaratory-judgment
    action asserting the invalidity and noninfringement of the
    third patent. 
    Id. The patentee
    asserted the rule against
    piecemeal adjudication, but we observed that “the only
    reason there are two cases here is that [the patentee]
    declined to sue [the generic company] on all the [three]
    patents.” 
    Id. at 1164.
    We concluded that “simply elimi-
    nating one barrier [to resolving the dispute] is sufficient
    for declaratory jurisdiction, so long as litigation is also
    pending that could eliminate the other barriers.” Id.;
    accord Caraco Pharm. Labs., Ltd. v. Forest Labs., Inc.,
    
    527 F.3d 1278
    , 1288, 1293 (Fed. Cir. 2008).
    Here, AbbVie has no other pending litigation that
    would conclusively resolve its contractual dispute with
    MedImmune. Without taking at least that step, in either
    the American or British courts, it cannot establish declar-
    atory-judgment jurisdiction over the question of invalidi-
    ty.   Accordingly, the judgment of the district court
    dismissing the action without prejudice is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED