PLANT PATENTS ARE SURPRISINGLY SIMILAR TO COPYRIGHTS

You’re a plant breeder.  You have a great cultivar that you want to propagate and sell.  You would really like to put it out there so that all your hard work could pay off and so that everyone could enjoy how great your cultivar is.  Of course, you don’t want to sell one plant and then have the buyer of that one plant become your competition by using it to make and sell numerous clones.  You want to be the only one who can sell clones, or you want people who sell clones to have to do so with a license and pay you royalties.  Seems fair, right?

Copyright owners do something similar all the time — authors and artists create things like books and movies and songs.  Then, if people use what the authors and artists created by making copies of their books or playing their songs, (1) they can only do so with permission, and (2) they must pay a fee for doing so.  Copyrights protect against unauthorized copying of an original work and assure that the originator of the work can derive some benefit from his or her creation.

Something that most people (even most patent attorneys) do not know is that plant patents are very much like copyrights for plant cultivars.  Plant patents only cover exact genetic copies (asexual clones) of the patented cultivar.  They do not protect sexual progeny (plants grown from seeds) or plants that are merely similar to the patented cultivar.  So, in that way, a plant patent is essentially a copyright on a plant cultivar.

When people think of a patent,

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.

As a plant breeder, you know that not every cultivar you select will have equal commercial potential.  And yet it would be nice to have a plan for appropriate intellectual-property protection of all, or at least most, of your cultivars with any commercially potential.  So let’s start by classifying the cultivars you may develop into three general groups.

  1. Perhaps a certain selection will be just successful and special enough to be cloned, further propagated, named and “become” a cultivar, so to speak.  You may sell some clones for a season or two, but that cultivar may never be quite great enough for anyone to really bother to try to steal from you, illicitly propagate, and turn into their own business that is based on some form of (at least) unethical misappropriation of your work.  However, it just might get some traction in the market — you can’t be sure; it could have some potential. (Maybe your cultivars are always better and more successful than this, but I’m creating this as one end of the theoretical spectrum, just for purposes of completeness.)
  2. In the middle of the spectrum is a cultivar that you know is pretty special. You think it’s quite possible that it would have demand for several years, at least, and that some nurseries would want to propagate and sell it.  They might even like it enough to sell it at a premium price.
  3. At the high end of the spectrum is a truly great cultivar that you believe will stay in demand for a long time — maybe for decades. People would go to some lengths, if they could, to get their hands on it, propagate it, even “reverse counterfeit” it by mislabeling it as something else.  If possible, they might try to make their own business out of it, illegally transport it to other markets, maybe use it to breed other cultivars.  This is what anyone would recognize as truly valuable genetics.

There are certainly plant cultivars on the

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By Dale Hunt – The opinions expressed here are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of his professional colleagues or his clients.  Nothing in this post should be construed as legal advice.  Meaningful legal advice can only be provided by taking into consideration specific facts in view of the relevant law.