Golden Valley, Minnesota
May 4, 2005
Syngenta Seeds has been awarded a $135,000 judgment against
Delta Cotton Co-Operative, Inc, of Marmaduke, Ark., for the
illegal sale of Syngenta’s proprietary NK® Brand COKER®wheat
seed. In its lawsuit, Syngenta claimed infringement of its
property rights under the Plant Variety Protection Act (PVPA),
which states that protected seed may not be sold, offered for
sale, resold or used to produce seed without permission of the
developer. Syngenta also claimed infringement of its property
rights under the Lanham Act, a federal act that protects the
trademark rights of any goods or services. The jury awarded
Syngenta $67,500 under the PVPA and an additional $67,500 for
the Lanham Act claims.
“Those infringing on Syngenta’s
rights under these acts are harming both the company and those
who fully respect PVP legislation,” said Phil Farmer, Senior
Business Manager for Syngenta Seeds. “Our certified seed grower
customers, many of whom are farmers themselves, deserve
protection from these illegal acts.”
This judgment confirms the PVPA
protection for seeds sold or offered for sale in any condition
whereby they may grow if planted. Specifically, the jury found
that it is illegal to sell Syngenta’s federally-protected
varieties, however marked, such as with “feed wheat,” “variety
not stated” and “mixed wheat.” The jury found Delta Cotton
liable for the unauthorized sale or offer for sale of
approximately 2,600 units of NK Brand COKER wheat seed and
awarded damages in excess of $50 for each 50-pound unit involved
in the lawsuit.
This suit is one of 10 that
Syngenta has filed since 2002 in Texas, Missouri, Mississippi
and Arkansas to prevent further illegal sales of proprietary
wheat seed. Seven of those cases were settled out of court in
Syngenta’s favor, and two cases have been tried successfully to
a jury. One remains set for trial in fall 2005. Additionally,
the company’s recently acquired Agri-Pro Wheat settled three
similar suits filed in Oklahoma and Texas. All 13 lawsuits, as
filed across the mid-South region, allege infringement of
Syngenta Seeds’ intellectual property rights under the PVPA and
the unauthorized use of Syngenta’s and AgriPro’s
federally-protected trademarks.
Other PVPA-protected Syngenta
wheat seed varieties include COKER 9474, COKER 9803, COKER 9184,
COKER 9152, COKER 9295, COKER 9312, COKER 9375, and COKER 9436;
and AGRIPRO’s Beretta, Savage, Natchez, Shelby, Crawford, Mason,
Longhorn, Coronodo, Mallard and Patton, Dumas, Thunderbolt,
Coronado, Ogallala, Longhorn, Cutter, Jagalene, TAM-111, Mason,
and Natchez.
Syngenta is a world-leading
agribusiness committed to sustainable agriculture through
innovative research and technology. The company is a leader in
crop protection, and ranks third in the high-value commercial
seeds market. Sales in 2004 were approximately $7.3 billion.
Syngenta employs some 19,000 people in over 90 countries.
Syngenta is listed on the Swiss stock exchange (SYNN) and in New
York (SYT). |