Prominent Allies File Amici Briefs on Behalf of OSGATA
WASHINGTON, D.C. – July 17, 2012 – Eleven prominent law professors and fourteen renowned organic, Biodynamic®, food safety and consumer non-profit organizations have filed separate briefs with the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit arguing farmers have the right to protect themselves from being accused of patent infringement by agricultural giant Monsanto. The brief by the law professors and the brief by the non-profit organizations were filed in support of the seventy-five family farmers, seed businesses, and agricultural organizations representing over 300,000 individuals and 4,500 farms that last year brought a protective legal action seeking a ruling that Monsanto could never sue them for patent infringement if they became contaminated by Monsanto’s genetically modified seed. The case was dismissed by the district court in February and that dismissal is now pending review by the Court of Appeals. The plaintiffs recently filed their opening appeal brief with the appeals court.
“Monsanto continues to claim that
Plaintiffs’ concerns about being accused of patent infringement after
being contaminated by Monsanto’s transgenic seed are unsubstantiated and
unjustified,” said attorney Dan Ravicher of the not-for-profit legal
services organization Public Patent Foundation (PUBPAT), which
represents the plaintiffs in the suit against Monsanto known as Organic
Seed Growers and Trade Association et al. v Monsanto. “But now two
impeccable groups have joined with plaintiffs in explaining to the Court
of Appeals how real and legitimate their concerns really are,
especially since Monsanto continues to refuse to simply promise never to
sue contaminated farmers for patent infringement.”
The first
group filing a brief in support of the OSGATA plaintiffs includes eleven
prominent law professors from throughout the United States, including
Professor Margo Bagley of the University of Virginia School of Law, Professor Michael Burstein of the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Professor Rochelle C. Dreyfuss of the New York University School of Law, Professor Brett Frischmann of the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Professor Erika George of University of Utah S.J. Quinney College of Law, Professor Shubha Ghosh of the University of Wisconsin Law School, Professor Megan M. La Belle of the Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law, Professor Kali Murray of Marquette University Law School, Professor Ted Sichelman of the University of San Diego School of Law, Katherine J. Strandburg of the New York University School of Law, and Melissa Wasserman of the University of Illinois College of Law.
In their amicus brief,
the law professors point out that, “broad standing to challenge the
validity of patents ensures that the courts can effectively play their
critical role in screening out invalid patents.” They add, “In actions
challenging the validity of a patent, the alleged injury is not only the
risk of an infringement suit, but a present restraint on economic
activity due to the presence of a potentially invalid exclusive right.”
The law professors went on to note, “But the validity of issued patents
is uncertain until they are tested in court. This uncertainty creates
real and present risks for persons wishing to engage in economic
activity that might be the subject of an issued patent….When a person is
deterred from undertaking valuable activity by the risk that the
activity may encroach on another’s exclusive rights, that person has
incurred an actual, concrete and particularized injury.”
“We
are grateful for the brilliant and powerful amici briefs submitted to
the appeals court by these two stellar groups, supporting our family
farmers’ quest for justice,” said Maine organic seed farmer Jim
Gerritsen, President of lead Plaintiff, Organic Seed Growers and Trade
Association. “An erroneous interpretation of law by a single judge is
not going to cause our farmers to abandon our rights to farm the way we
choose, to grow good food and good seed for our families and for our
customers, free from Monsanto’s trespass and contamination. Denial of
the property rights of American farmers is an attack on the property
rights of every American. We will fight until family farmers receive
justice.”
The
second group filing a brief in support of the OSGATA plaintiffs, made
up of fourteen non-profit agricultural and consumer organizations,
includes the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance, Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Association, Carolina Farm Stewardship Association, Food and Water Watch, International Organic Inspectors Association, Maine Alternative Agriculture Association, Michigan Land Trustees, Natural Environmental Ecological Management, Nebraska Sustainable Agriculture Society, Organic Consumers Association, Slow Food USA, Virginia Association for Biological Farming, Virginia Independent Consumers and Farmers Association, and Wisconsin Natural Food Associates.
In their amicus brief,
the non-profit agricultural and consumer organizations point out, “The
Plaintiff and Amici organizations, farmers, and seed businesses have
suffered significant harm due to the threat of patent infringement suits
by Monsanto.” They also noted, “Defendants have chosen to patent
products that, by their very nature, will inevitably end up on the
private property of people who have no desire to use them. Plaintiffs’
uncontroverted allegations show that, for the first time in history,
they can be sued for something as natural as pollen drift, while
simultaneously being forced to take expensive and burdensome steps in
order to continue their normal businesses. The quandary of this type of
liability is precisely the sort of situation that the Declaratory
Judgment Act was intended to address.” The amicus brief further
explained, “The Supreme court has stated that the plaintiff “need not
‘bet the farm’” yet in this case, that is precisely what the district
court effectively required Plaintiffs to do in order to get their day in
court – continue farming the disputed crops until they are
unquestionably liable to Defendants for potentially crippling levels of
damage before being able to seek a declaratory judgment as to their
rights…The district court noted that ‘unlicensed – and unintented – use
of transgenic seeds is inevitable…’ but then failed to address the fact
that such unlicensed use is actionable and places Plaintiffs at risk of
enforcement actions by Defendants.”
“It’s time
to end Monsanto’s scorched-earth campaign of frivolous lawsuits against
America’s family farmers,” said Dave Murphy, founder and executive
director of Food Democracy Now!, a grassroots community of more than
300,000 farmers and citizens dedicated to reforming food and
agriculture. “Monsanto’s claims against farmers for patent infringement
are exceedingly weak, violating Americans’ most basic sense of fairness
and decency. Our Founding Fathers would be outraged”, stated Murphy.
- Read OSGATA’s Press Releases regarding the lawsuit.
- Read the full appeal brief.
- Read the Law Professors’ Amici Brief & the Non-Profit Organization’s Amici Brief.
Who are we?
As a diverse membership organization, OSGATA is uniquely positioned
to address serious threats facing organic seed. We are working to
protect, promote, and develop the organic seed trade and it’s
growers and assure that the organic community has access to excellent
quality organic seed, free of contaminants and adapted to the diverse
needs of organic agriculture.
We envision a thriving organic seed industry with regionally-adapted,
diverse organic seed that can support naturally integrated, local and
organic farms. These seeds are robust, require low chemical inputs and
are nutritionally superior. As the trade association representing the
organic seed community, we have established that GMO contamination of
organic seed constitutes irreparable harm to the organic seed industry
and undermines the integrity of organic seed. Any detectable level is
unacceptable.
SOURCE: http://www.osgata.org/
SOURCE: http://www.osgata.org/
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