All of us get mad in
some dispute and say, “we’ll fight this all the way to the Supreme Court”. We don’t.
But Hugh Bowman does. Mr.
Bowman is an Indiana soybean farmer who went to the grain elevator and
bought soybeans which he planted.
Monsanto says he committed a huge wrong against them and won an $850,000
judgment. Mr. Bowman has taken his case
to the Supreme Court, and incredibly, the Supreme Court will hear his case.
Mr. Bowman - He's Going to |
Of course things are slightly
more complicated than the above summary.
Monsanto has developed soybean seed that can survive treatment with
Roundup © which is the major weed control chemical sprayed on fields. Farmers who buy the special seed can use it
only once, they cannot save the progeny of the first crop to plant as a second
crop. Mr. Bowman had a way around that
restriction.
What Bowman did was to take commodity grain from the local
elevator, which is usually used for feed, and plant it. But that grain was
mostly progeny of Monsanto’s Roundup Ready beans because that’s what most Indiana soybean farmers
grow. Those soybeans are genetically modified to survive the weedkiller
Roundup, and Monsanto claims that Bowman’s planting violated the company’s
restrictions.
Monsanto says this is a violation of its rights, and
so far has won in lower courts. It’s
logic is this.
An
adverse ruling, Monsanto warned the court
in its brief, “would devastate innovation in biotechnology,” which
involves “notoriously high research and development costs.”
“Inventors are unlikely to make such investments if they cannot prevent
purchasers of living organisms containing their invention from using them to
produce unlimited copies,” Monsanto states.
And it has created a new term,
The
farmer was in effect “soybean laundering,” according to some of the companies
supporting Monsanto at
the Supreme Court — selling Roundup Ready progeny beans to the grain elevator
and hoping other farmers were too, then buying them back and planting them.
Mr. Bowman had been fighting the battle alone, but
now has help in his upcoming Supreme Court hearing.
Bowman
originally represented himself, with the help of a local attorney, in the legal
proceedings. But now Seattle
lawyer Mark P. Walters and his intellectual property law firm are working
pro bono on Bowman’s behalf.
In a rare admission, this Forum admits it has no idea
of who is right and who is wrong here.
There is no question that planting the seed and harvesting new seeds is “copying”
similar to reproducing copyrighted material without authorization from the
copyright holder. But it is also clear
that once a farmer has purchased soybeans from a grain elevator he or she
should maybe have the right to do with them as he or she pleases, including planting
them.
So we will wait to see who wins this case, hoping
that Mr. Bowman does just to get a win for the little guy, but expecting
Monsanto to win because, well because the Supreme Court in its current makeup
doesn’t really support the little guy does it.
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