Monsanto wins seed patent battle in US Supreme Court

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Indiana grain farmer Vernon Hugh Bowman

WASHINGTON: The US Supreme Court ruled in favor of Monsanto over an Indiana farmer accused of having pirated the genetically-modified crops developed by the agribusiness giant.

The high court was unanimous in its decision, ruling that laws limiting patents do “not permit a farmer to reproduce patented seeds through planting and harvesting without the patent holder’s permission.”

The crux of the argument was over “patent exhaustion” which states that, after a patented item has been sold, the purchaser has “a right to use or resell that article,” Justice Elena Kagan explained in the court’s 10-page decision.

“Such a sale, however, does not allow the purchaser to make new copies of the patented invention,” she added.
The ruling gave Monsanto shares a bounce after falling more than one percent in opening trade.

In a lawsuit filed in 2007, Monsanto had accused Vernon Hugh Bowman, a farmer, of infringing on its intellectual property rights by replanting, cultivating and selling herbicide-resistant soybean seeds it spent more than a decade developing.
The patented seed, which allows farmers to aerially spray Monsanto-made Roundup herbicide over their entire fields, was invented in 1996 and is now grown by more than 90 percent of the 275,000 US soybean farmers.

The farmer, 75, said he had respected his contract with Monsanto and purchased new Roundup Ready seeds each year for his first planting.
But he said hard times forced him to purchase a cheaper mixture of seeds from a grain elevator starting in 1999, which he used for his second planting. The mixture included Roundup Ready soybeans, which Bowman was able to isolate and replant from 2000 to 2007.-AFP

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