The High Court Report
Hikma Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. v. Amarin Pharma, Inc. | Case No. 24-889 | Docket Link: Here [https://www.supremecourt.gov/docket/docketfiles/html/public/24-889.html] | Argued: 04/29/2026 | Decided: 06/04/2026 Overview: Amarin's cardiovascular drug patent faced challenge when generic maker Hikma launched a skinny-label version and marketed it through statements Amarin claimed encouraged doctors to prescribe the generic for the still-patented heart indication. Question Presented: Whether a generic drug maker's marketing statements plausibly constitute "active steps" inducing patent infringement under 35 U.S.C. §271(b). Posture: District Court dismissed; Federal Circuit reversed; Supreme Court reversed and remanded. Main Arguments: Petitioner (Hikma): * (1) Statements fully consistent with lawful skinny-label marketing cannot constitute active inducement under §271(b); * (2) Federal law mandated the label's contents, making legal compliance an obvious alternative explanation that forecloses liability; * (3) The Federal Circuit's physician-reading standard would destroy the Hatch-Waxman section viii pathway and expose generics to devastating litigation risk. Respondent (Amarin): * (1) Hikma's totality of statements — repeatedly invoking "generic Vascepa," using an overbroad therapeutic category, and touting Vascepa's billion-dollar sales — plausibly encouraged infringing use; * (2) Amarin spent $300 million discovering the cardiovascular indication and patent law must protect that investment from free-riders; * (3) Seven other generic manufacturers avoided liability by accurately describing only their narrow approved uses, demonstrating Hikma's conduct fell outside normal practice. Holding: Amarin failed to state a claim for active inducement in violation of §271(b); none of Hikma's alleged statements — individually or in totality — plausibly constituted active steps encouraging infringement of Amarin's cardiovascular-use patents. Voting Breakdown: 9-0. Justice Jackson delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court. No Justice filed a separate opinion. Federal Circuit reversed and remanded. Opinion: Here [https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/25pdf/24-889_5i36.pdf] Majority Reasoning: * (1) Active inducement requires affirmative steps to encourage infringement — not merely statements physicians could read as instructions to infringe; * (2) Hikma's label reflected legal compliance under the duty of sameness, its "generic Vascepa" description reflected standard industry practice, and omissions alone cannot support active inducement; * (3) Website category descriptions, patient leaflet warnings, and investor press release sales figures lacked the clear, affirmative message inducement demands. Separate Opinions: None. The decision was unanimous. Implications: * (1) Generic manufacturers may use the Hatch-Waxman skinny-label pathway without automatic inducement liability for routine commercial communications; * (2) Brand manufacturers must plead specific affirmative acts of encouragement — not inferences drawn from vague statements or omissions; * (3) The active inducement framework now applies with fresh clarity across all patent-holding industries. The Fine Print: * 35 U.S.C. §271(b): "Whoever actively induces infringement of a patent shall be liable as an infringer." * 21 U.S.C. §355(j)(2)(A)(v): Requires a generic drug application to contain "information to show that the labeling proposed for the new drug is the same as the labeling approved for the [reference] listed drug . . . except for changes required because of differences approved under [applicable regulations]." Primary Cases: * Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. v. Grokster, Ltd. (2005): Active inducement requires purposeful, culpable expression and conduct designed to stimulate infringement; distributing a product capable of both infringing and non-infringing uses does not, alone, impose liability. * Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly (2007): A complaint must plead facts supporting a plausible claim for relief; allegations carrying obvious alternative lawful explanations fail to clear the plausibility bar. Oral Advocates: * Petitioners (Hikma): Charles B. Klein of Winston & Strawn LLP * Amicus Curiae (United States): Malcolm L. Stewart of the Department of Justice * Respondents (Amarin Pharma): Michael R. Huston of Perkins Coie LLP
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