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Justia Daily Opinion Summaries

US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
July 25, 2020

Table of Contents

Gensetix, Inc. v. Baylor College of Medicine

Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Education Law, Government & Administrative Law, Intellectual Property, Patents

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US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit Opinions

Gensetix, Inc. v. Baylor College of Medicine

Docket: 19-1424

Opinion Date: July 24, 2020

Judge: O'Malley

Areas of Law: Civil Procedure, Constitutional Law, Education Law, Government & Administrative Law, Intellectual Property, Patents

Decker developed the patented inventions while employed at the University of Texas and assigned the patents to UT. Gensetix obtained an exclusive license in the patents. The license agreement provides that, Gensetix must enforce the patents. The parties agreed to cooperate in any infringement suit and that nothing in the agreement would waive UT's sovereign immunity. Gensetix sued Baylor, alleging infringement and requested that UT join as a co-plaintiff. UT declined. Gensetix named UT as an involuntary plaintiff under FRCP 19(a). The district court dismissed, finding that UT is a sovereign state entity, so that the Eleventh Amendment barred joinder of UT, and that the suit could not proceed without UT. The Federal Circuit affirmed in part. UT did not voluntarily invoke federal jurisdiction; the Eleventh Amendment prevents “the indignity of subjecting a State to the coercive process of judicial tribunals” against its will. It is irrelevant that the license agreement requires the initiation of an infringement suit by Gensetix or cooperation by UT. The court erred in dismissing the suit without adequate analysis of Rule 19(b)'s factors: the extent to which a judgment might prejudice the missing required party or the existing parties; the extent to which any prejudice could be lessened; whether a judgment rendered in the required party’s absence would be adequate; and whether the plaintiff would have an adequate remedy if the action were dismissed.

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