ARTHUR J. SCHWAB, District Judge.
The parties have been aware that the present trial is focused on the "narrow issue of willfulness" and that the parties would not be able to "backdoor other issues into the trial" since December 21, 2011.
As such, in the Preliminary Jury Instructions, the Court instructed the jury that, "[t]he only issue you are to decide, is whether Varian's infringement of the patent was willful." Doc. No. 482, 2. Further, the jury was instructed that, "[i]t is [the Court's] job to decide whether or not to award increased damages to Pitt." Doc. No. 482, 3. As set forth in the Court's Pre-trial Orders and Preliminary Jury Instructions, any evidence regarding damages/valuation is improper in this trial. Doc. Nos. 426, 452, 481.
During opening arguments, defense counsel referred to the pre-litigation negotiations between Pitt and Varian regarding potentially licensing the `554 Patent to Varian. Defense counsel stated that the negotiations broke down when Varian was prepared to offer $250,000.00 and Pitt would not agree to license the patent for less than $350,000.00. Instead of stopping at that point, defense counsel then stated that Pitt now seeks damages of $63 million which if tripled would total $200 million.
While the fact that the parties engaged in prior negotiations concerning a potential license may be relevant to the issue of willfulness, the remuneration Pitt was willing to accept and Varian was willing to give for a license is not relevant (under Fed. R. Evid. 402) to the issue of willfulness, because it has no tendency to prove or disprove the numerous factors previously set forth to the jury to determine willful infringement.
Because of Pitt's conformity with the terms of the Pretrial Order concerning the scope of this trial, Pitt properly did not offer any evidence of past discussions regarding the value of the product at issue or the measure of damages/valuation concerning a license or other measure of damages. Indeed, in conformance with the Pretrial Order of this Court, Pitt has not set forth any evidence whatsoever with respect to the issue of damages/valuation in any respect.
Varian's attempt to insert the issue of damages, through comparison, into this trial, which is precisely the kind of "backdoor issue," to which Court was referring in its prior Pretrial Order (doc. no. 426), is improper, and Varian's reference to these issues of damages in its opening statement was certainly prejudicial. In addition to striking the statements of Varian and reading a curative instruction, the Court admonishes Varian again that it shall not introduce any evidence regarding the issue of damages/valuation in this trial. To repeat, the Court finds that any evidence related thereto shall be excluded under Fed. R. Evid. 403, because its prejudicial effect substantially outweighs its probative value.
Simply put, this is not a damages/valuation trial, and it is improper, highly prejudicial, confusing and misleading to the jury for either party to attempt (improperly) to make it one.
Accordingly,
The parties shall file a Joint Proposed Corrective Instruction on or before January 25, 2012, at 7:00 a.m., or separate proposed instructions if necessary.