04.30.13
W.L. Gore & Associates Inc. could finally be forced to pay a 39-year-old bill. The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to consider an appeal of the company’s $185 million patent loss to C.R. Bard Inc. over vascular graft technology.
The justices left intact a $185 million jury verdict against Gore that with interest, royalties and fees, could top $900 million. The top court did not explain its decision; instead, it included the rejection in a routine list of orders released in January in Washington, D.C.
Gore, however, is not giving up so easily. It continues to seek a new trial (a trial judge in Arizona currently is revisiting part of the jury award—$185 million for acting intentionally and related legal fees) despite an attempt by Bard to force payment on a bill that is nearly four decades overdue.
The two manufacturing giants have been locked in a legal dispute since 1974 over Bard’s vascular stent graft technology that Gore insists a company engineer helped invent. Gore uses the fluoropolymer technology to make both fabrics and surgical devices, though it legally is Bard’s invention, according to the Arizona trial ruling. The stakes are high for both companies, with Gore attempting to solidify its presence in the medical devices industry and Bard aiming to protect its dominance in the valuable fluoropolymer market.
The battle though, is far from over. Gore received some unexpected reinforcements in January from the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO), which granted the firm’s request for a re-examination of Bard’s vascular graft patents. Bard, which ironically revealed the USPTO decision in regulatory filings, does not expect the move to impact the lawsuit.
Headquartered in Newark, Del., Gore is perhaps best known for developing waterproof, breathable fabric known as Gore-Tex. The 55-year-old company also has developed electronic signal transmission equipment as well as fabric laminates, medical implants, and membrane, filtration, sealant and fiber technology for various industries.
Bard develops, manufactures and markets vascular, urological, oncology and surgical specialty technology. The company is located in Murray Hill, N.J.
The justices left intact a $185 million jury verdict against Gore that with interest, royalties and fees, could top $900 million. The top court did not explain its decision; instead, it included the rejection in a routine list of orders released in January in Washington, D.C.
Gore, however, is not giving up so easily. It continues to seek a new trial (a trial judge in Arizona currently is revisiting part of the jury award—$185 million for acting intentionally and related legal fees) despite an attempt by Bard to force payment on a bill that is nearly four decades overdue.
The two manufacturing giants have been locked in a legal dispute since 1974 over Bard’s vascular stent graft technology that Gore insists a company engineer helped invent. Gore uses the fluoropolymer technology to make both fabrics and surgical devices, though it legally is Bard’s invention, according to the Arizona trial ruling. The stakes are high for both companies, with Gore attempting to solidify its presence in the medical devices industry and Bard aiming to protect its dominance in the valuable fluoropolymer market.
The battle though, is far from over. Gore received some unexpected reinforcements in January from the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO), which granted the firm’s request for a re-examination of Bard’s vascular graft patents. Bard, which ironically revealed the USPTO decision in regulatory filings, does not expect the move to impact the lawsuit.
Headquartered in Newark, Del., Gore is perhaps best known for developing waterproof, breathable fabric known as Gore-Tex. The 55-year-old company also has developed electronic signal transmission equipment as well as fabric laminates, medical implants, and membrane, filtration, sealant and fiber technology for various industries.
Bard develops, manufactures and markets vascular, urological, oncology and surgical specialty technology. The company is located in Murray Hill, N.J.