Justices rule 9-0 that Indiana farmer can't rely on a "blame-the-bean defense."
Read the whole story
Read the whole story
I haven't seen anybody cite anything concrete on this. I see various anti-GMO sites mentioning hundreds of lawsuits but none that have gone to trial except for people like Bowman here who were clearly intending to violate patents.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480849#p24480849:1da04fpr said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":1da04fpr][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480737#p24480737:1da04fpr said:Chimel31[/url]":1da04fpr]
That's exactly how Monsanto sued some organic farmers and even one seed producer who had to destroy his collection of seeds painfully selected manually over many years.
What case was this? Can you provide a link about this?
The contract applies to the seeds he bought from Monsanto, not to any other seeds. But the contract does not really matter, you are breaking the law if you are stealing IP, whether you signed a contract or not, or even whether you are aware your stuff contains patented IP or not.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480069#p24480069:1d9fdb2y said:terryy[/url]":1d9fdb2y]I am kind of mixed on this ruling. From the description of things, this farmer did sign an agreement with Monsanto on the seeds but he just chose not to buy all his seeds from Monsanto so I can see where Monsanto would have a case there.
But how about a different situation. How about a farmer who has never signed an agreement with Monsanto, goes out does the same thing as this guy? He's never signed an agreement and unless there's some sort of prohibition against planting seeds you buy from some grain silo. Would this farmer be infringing as well?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480831#p24480831:2u5i1j9s said:masterbinky[/url]":2u5i1j9s][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480645#p24480645:2u5i1j9s said:Sobels[/url]":2u5i1j9s][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480593#p24480593:2u5i1j9s said:masterbinky[/url]":2u5i1j9s]Letting nature do it's grow/reproduce thing isn't the same as copying. I don't go to the story to buy a copy of a banana.
The farmer did not just let nature do its own thing. He bought the seeds, planted them and sprayed herbicide to select for the herbicide-resistant plants that he knew existed in the population of seeds he bought. That's hardly the same as unknowingly having cross-pollination copy the gene for you.
And they don't buy seeds for plants that don't handle the climate in the area either. He also watered it on a regular basis that he knew would help it grow. So what? This is a living organism that is patented? At what point is a plant not patented anymore? When it becomes a different species? Society is gaining no benefit from overprotecting monsato this like, and it is more likely to cause more harm than good from the legal abuse monsato is known for.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481067#p24481067:c7jul0is said:JEDIDIAH[/url]":c7jul0is][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480821#p24480821:c7jul0is said:g0m3r619[/url]":c7jul0is][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480797#p24480797:c7jul0is said:TechGeek[/url]":c7jul0is][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480249#p24480249:c7jul0is said:BkMak[/url]":c7jul0is][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479921#p24479921:c7jul0is said:TechGeek[/url]":c7jul0is]So now what happens when we genetically modify a human? Does that now make that human a slave for life? How about his children and his children's children? Patents on living things is a very evil concept.
In what universe does a patent on Soybeans = Patents on Human people?
The patent is on a genetic manipulation to the soybean. What happens when we have a genetic manipulation to a human being, say making them resistant to cancer? Does the patent owner now gain complete control over that human being?
Not quite the same thing. Plants are not sentient beings with rights. You do get this right? The plants we are talking about are food. You would have done better by comparing them to genetically modified livestock or pets.
That's not a distinction that's being made in the law.
Also, companies are already trying to patent human genes.
You are conveniently ignoring all of the worst case scenarios. Even without the patent quagmire, this entire situation is a case of engaging in experiments in your production system when you don't have a backup or disaster recovery plan of any kind.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481243#p24481243:3lf5l3um said:AnonymousRich[/url]":3lf5l3um][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480625#p24480625:3lf5l3um said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":3lf5l3um]
There is a difference between intentional and unintentional infringement.
That's not the way I understand it. This is not my original source, but it will do for now.
This is from Canada BTW, but I do recall a similar case in the US.
GMO Monsanto Schmeiser's Story
-- Monsanto "did everything to try to discredit me, which is a typical way of corporations
-- when you fight them in court. In the two years of pretrial, they stated that there was
-- absolutely no record I had ever bought their seed, but they said it didn’t matter how it got
-- there, I infringed on their patent." The Court, after 2 1/2 weeks of trial, ruled that it does
-- not matter how Monsanto’s GMOs get into a farmer’s field--through cross pollination,
-- direct seed movement by wind, by birds, by farmers hauling grains, by floods or storms:
-- "If it happens to get into your crop, your seeds and plants; you no longer own your seeds
-- and plants," said Schmeiser. "It all becomes Monsanto’s property, whether 1% or 50%
-- contaminated. That was a startling, startling decision... it basically takes farmers’ rights away."
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481275#p24481275:25agws2a said:Chimel31[/url]":25agws2a]The contract applies to the seeds he bought from Monsanto, not to any other seeds. But the contract does not really matter, you are breaking the law if you are stealing IP, whether you signed a contract or not, or even whether you are aware your stuff contains patented IP or not.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480069#p24480069:25agws2a said:terryy[/url]":25agws2a]I am kind of mixed on this ruling. From the description of things, this farmer did sign an agreement with Monsanto on the seeds but he just chose not to buy all his seeds from Monsanto so I can see where Monsanto would have a case there.
But how about a different situation. How about a farmer who has never signed an agreement with Monsanto, goes out does the same thing as this guy? He's never signed an agreement and unless there's some sort of prohibition against planting seeds you buy from some grain silo. Would this farmer be infringing as well?
In this case, the farmer even knew his soybean had the Monsanto genes. He might have had a case if he was buying grain from the elevator every year, but he bought it only once and then grew it year after year, reusing the seeds with the Monsanto gene so he could apply Roundup. So he was in effect reproducing the IP patented in the seeds, and using them for the purpose they were patented for, resisting to Roundup.
Exactly, the Newtown school killer bought guns and bullets and fired them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behavior to be illegal.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480829#p24480829:3mei90wv said:Feanaaro[/url]":3mei90wv]
Exactly, he bought beans and planted them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behaviour to be illegal.
I submit that my original post is vindicated
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481291#p24481291:2n5erf7h said:Sobels[/url]":2n5erf7h]The main issue that I take with Monsanto is when they sue people who have not willingly infringed on a patent, but who are forced to by laws of nature.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479725#p24479725:fcs24n9w said:Dputiger[/url]":fcs24n9w]The problem with a decision in his favor is that it would gut the business model for any company, not just Monsanto. He's right that life is self-replicating (a condition not foreseen in patent law), but cutting things off at the first generation would be ruinous to any company in the future.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481479#p24481479:2p8utzmg said:Chimel31[/url]":2p8utzmg]Exactly, the Newtown school killer bought guns and bullets and fired them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behavior to be illegal.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480829#p24480829:2p8utzmg said:Feanaaro[/url]":2p8utzmg]
Exactly, he bought beans and planted them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behaviour to be illegal.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480329#p24480329:2lfqwo22 said:armendiel[/url]":2lfqwo22][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480291#p24480291:2lfqwo22 said:rmongiovi[/url]":2lfqwo22][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480245#p24480245:2lfqwo22 said:aiken_d[/url]":2lfqwo22]
No. The odds of your naturally selected seeds expressing the exact patented gene are low.
Patents cover a particular implementation, not an idea. So I can patent a *method* for producing Roundup-resistant crops, but not the *idea* of having Roundup-resistant crops.
Bowman didn't buy his seeds from Monsanto. Did they check the DNA of all his plants to make sure they were actually contamination with the Monsanto modification and not naturally evolved resistance? Or did they just assume "Roundup didn't kill them, they must be Monsanto."
Read up on the effects of glyphosphate. The probability of a naturally evolved resistance is VERY low. As in, so low that it is almost infinitely unlikely.
I don't bookmark these, but I think this was in Canada and they settled privately as I remember, several years ago.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480849#p24480849:3bz3gfht said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":3bz3gfht][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480737#p24480737:3bz3gfht said:Chimel31[/url]":3bz3gfht]
That's exactly how Monsanto sued some organic farmers and even one seed producer who had to destroy his collection of seeds painfully selected manually over many years.
What case was this? Can you provide a link about this?
Monsanto didn't invent resistance, they just figured a way to insert it.Fortunately, patents cannot be applied to naturally-occurring genes. So we're safe.
RR2 is better still and won't be off patent soon. And then there will be dicamba resistant starting. And then presumably that will eventually be off patent too. So yes, the system is just fine. Pay up for new tech or else keep using the 'old' for free.Not only that, but next year the patent will expire and farmers will come out even more ahead, because they can keep using the invention and stop paying the license. Forever.
Well I know you're exaggerating or painting with too wide a brush, because as already pointed out in this thread, the grain elevator would be on trial if that were true. Grain elevators sell the patented item every day. They just don't sell it for the use of the patented use. The same way Bowman would have been ok if he hadn't used the patented product for the patented use.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481483#p24481483:8236oswa said:mebeSajid[/url]":8236oswa]I submit that my original post is vindicated
No it's not. Patent infringement is a strict liability offense, at least in the United States. As long as you make, use, offer to sell, or sell a patented item, you've committed direct patent infringement. Intent doesn't play into it.
I was just remarking on the stupidity of that comment, not making a valid comparison, but it is illegal to duplicate patented IP without a license, the contract that you sign when you purchase the seeds is what protects you from patent infringement.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481507#p24481507:3sr3ralp said:mebeSajid[/url]":3sr3ralp][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481479#p24481479:3sr3ralp said:Chimel31[/url]":3sr3ralp]Exactly, the Newtown school killer bought guns and bullets and fired them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behavior to be illegal.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480829#p24480829:3sr3ralp said:Feanaaro[/url]":3sr3ralp]
Exactly, he bought beans and planted them. I gather that this is illegal. I question the sanity of the system that allows such a behaviour to be illegal.
There is a key difference. The Newtown school killer's actions were illegal because he fired the bullets at people. There are plenty of legal ways to buy and shoot guns. There isn't a way to buy Roundup Ready soybeans from a party other than Monsanto (or its affiliates) and plant them without being liable for patent infringement.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481533#p24481533:qk1tcla5 said:Chimel31[/url]":qk1tcla5]I don't bookmark these, but I think this was in Canada and they settled privately as I remember, several years ago.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480849#p24480849:qk1tcla5 said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":qk1tcla5][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24480737#p24480737:qk1tcla5 said:Chimel31[/url]":qk1tcla5]
That's exactly how Monsanto sued some organic farmers and even one seed producer who had to destroy his collection of seeds painfully selected manually over many years.
What case was this? Can you provide a link about this?
It is one example frequently mentioned in the anti-GMO literature, like the books Seeds of Deception/Seeds of Destruction/The World According to Monsanto and others. Only one farmer sued that I remember was organic, and one (maybe that Canadian guy?) did this stuff knowingly according to Monsanto, a bit like what happened just now with The Supremes, who should stick to singing, really...
I have the books, if you want to borrow them, no links for the content of the books.![]()

[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481557#p24481557:2rtycg31 said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":2rtycg31]Well I know you're exaggerating or painting with too wide a brush, because as already pointed out in this thread, the grain elevator would be on trial if that were true. Grain elevators sell the patented item every day. They just don't sell it for the use of the patented use. The same way Bowman would have been ok if he hadn't used the patented product for the patented use.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481483#p24481483:2rtycg31 said:mebeSajid[/url]":2rtycg31]I submit that my original post is vindicated
No it's not. Patent infringement is a strict liability offense, at least in the United States. As long as you make, use, offer to sell, or sell a patented item, you've committed direct patent infringement. Intent doesn't play into it.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481291#p24481291:1lao0995 said:Sobels[/url]":1lao0995]
The main issue that I take with Monsanto is when they sue people who have not willingly infringed on a patent, but who are forced to by laws of nature.
I don't even know if we can talk about RR1 or RR2 Roundup-Ready generations anymore, Monsanto seems to be developing different multi-stacked (several genes combined together, like one for Roundup tolerance, one Bt gene for root worms, one for leaf worms) cultivars every year.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481539#p24481539:17xsgwj3 said:Miles[/url]":17xsgwj3]RR2 is better still and won't be off patent soon. And then there will be dicamba resistant starting. And then presumably that will eventually be off patent too. So yes, the system is just fine. Pay up for new tech or else keep using the 'old' for free.Not only that, but next year the patent will expire and farmers will come out even more ahead, because they can keep using the invention and stop paying the license. Forever.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481485#p24481485:24uwe73c said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":24uwe73c][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481291#p24481291:24uwe73c said:Sobels[/url]":24uwe73c]The main issue that I take with Monsanto is when they sue people who have not willingly infringed on a patent, but who are forced to by laws of nature.
Do you have a link that says that they have ever done that?
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481653#p24481653:3uucwnv0 said:Chimel31[/url]":3uucwnv0]
And I don't see the new 2015 dicamba and 2-4-D resistant GM plants as a progress. Sure, they will break the cycle of current weed tolerance to glyphosate, but these herbicides were the main reason we switched to the less toxic glyphosate.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479855#p24479855:22mbhy2e said:herozero[/url]":22mbhy2e][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479723#p24479723:22mbhy2e said:Dilbert[/url]":22mbhy2e]This.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479703#p24479703:22mbhy2e said:PapagenoF[/url]":22mbhy2e]I'm extremely leery of anything that lets "IP" into food production.
Speak with your wallet. Don't buy such foods.
I'd love to except that Proposition was defeated here in CA, because apparently it's too liberal and stupid to know what's in your food. That and all the money big agribusiness spent on defeating it. Our democracy at work. </rant>
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479695#p24479695:1kp3msp3 said:Feanaaro[/url]":1kp3msp3]One can slice the patent argument however one wants, but the fact remains that a person buys beans, plant them, and can be condemned for that.
I don't feel I have a "bias" on Monsanto or GMOs in general, and you shouldn't trust any source that you haven't verified. That's what the footnotes and references are for. The trials have been covered by many newspapers and are probably publicly available, even if the private settlements (when any) are not.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481613#p24481613:rivjdc5w said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":rivjdc5w]
Well I'm not going to entirely write off your vague recollections just because you're not unbiased on the subject and your sources for the information share the same bias you do. But I have to say I'm not going to lend it much weight![]()
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481691#p24481691:2jimwhuc said:Sobels[/url]":2jimwhuc]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsanto_C ... _Schmeiser
Schmeiser noticed that some of his crop had become Roundup-resistant and selected for these crops. Monsanto sued him for claims regarding both the crop in which Schmeiser had originally noticed the RR plants, and the subsequent year after they had been selected for. Later, they dropped claims regarding the earlier year. However, it would have been (in my opinion) an undue burden on Schmeiser to destroy his crop because it had been contaminated by RR plants, so even drawing claims for the latter year was morally dubious to me.
In that case Schmeiser intentional grew the crop after he found out he had it. He even eliminated acres worth of regular crop by over spraying with Roundup and seeing what survived. He did this in 1997. In 1998 Monsanto approached him asking him to sign a contract. Intent played a big factor in that ruling.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481691#p24481691:1d2rfe0p said:Sobels[/url]":1d2rfe0p][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481485#p24481485:1d2rfe0p said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":1d2rfe0p][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481291#p24481291:1d2rfe0p said:Sobels[/url]":1d2rfe0p]The main issue that I take with Monsanto is when they sue people who have not willingly infringed on a patent, but who are forced to by laws of nature.
Do you have a link that says that they have ever done that?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsanto_C ... _Schmeiser
Schmeiser noticed that some of his crop had become Roundup-resistant and selected for these crops. Monsanto sued him for claims regarding both the crop in which Schmeiser had originally noticed the RR plants, and the subsequent year after they had been selected for. Later, they dropped claims regarding the earlier year. However, it would have been (in my opinion) an undue burden on Schmeiser to destroy his crop because it had been contaminated by RR plants, so even drawing claims for the latter year was morally dubious to me.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481621#p24481621:31x6e2cj said:mebeSajid[/url]":31x6e2cj][url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481557#p24481557:31x6e2cj said:⎋⎋⎋[/url]":31x6e2cj]Well I know you're exaggerating or painting with too wide a brush, because as already pointed out in this thread, the grain elevator would be on trial if that were true. Grain elevators sell the patented item every day. They just don't sell it for the use of the patented use. The same way Bowman would have been ok if he hadn't used the patented product for the patented use.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481483#p24481483:31x6e2cj said:mebeSajid[/url]":31x6e2cj]I submit that my original post is vindicated
No it's not. Patent infringement is a strict liability offense, at least in the United States. As long as you make, use, offer to sell, or sell a patented item, you've committed direct patent infringement. Intent doesn't play into it.
Not at all. The seeds are patented, period. The reason the grain elevators can't be held liable is because Monsanto sells the seeds pursuant to a license, and that license includes the right to plant seeds once, and then use the resulting crop, which are seeds, for anything but replanting. Monsanto has no patent rights as to the seeds once the grain elevator has them so long as the grain elevator doesn't plant the seeds itself. Even if the grain elevator did plant the seeds, the grain elevator could only be sued for "making" new seeds, not for planting the old ones, because Monsanto's patent rights as to the seeds that were sold to the grain elevator were exhausted by the first sale doctrine as long as the seeds were grown under a license agreement. Also, there's dicta in the opinion suggesting that the seeds were sold with an implied license to grow them once, were there no license agreement.
Bowman was found liable because he planted the seeds - Monsanto couldn't sue him if he, for example, cooked the seeds, because it sold it's seeds with a license to create one generation of new seeds and that license covered the new products sold (though this case was decided under a theory of patent infringement and not under breach of contract, and Bowman couldn't have been sued for breach because he wasn't a party to that contract anyhow).
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481797#p24481797:2s7nnsut said:taswyn[/url]":2s7nnsut]
If Monsanto wanted to be able to charge for each generation, they should have engineered a seed that was unable to reproduce in the wild, or at least unable to reproduce without some specialized protein or similar being used to allow their reproductive process at one point or another.
[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479723#p24479723:4g43n8zb said:Dilbert[/url]":4g43n8zb]This.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24479703#p24479703:4g43n8zb said:PapagenoF[/url]":4g43n8zb]I'm extremely leery of anything that lets "IP" into food production.
Speak with your wallet. Don't buy such foods.
This seems more like business versus business and the guy was actively trying to steal. He will be free to do what he pleases in less than 2 years.[url=http://meincmagazine.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=24481867#p24481867:3i414ygv said:tului[/url]":3i414ygv]In other news, people have no rights. Businesses have whatever rights they can buy. Someone massacre congress and these judges and let's get some non-crooks in power.