- What agreements are needed to exchange research materials between universities/companies?
- What agreements are needed to work with a company or university?
- Who has the authority to sign agreements on behalf of the University?
All research related agreements, license agreements, MTAs, NDAs, as well as option, teaming, STTR and other related intellectual property agreements must have the signature of
the Associate Provost and Vice President for Research. Only
this signature can legally bind the University to the aforementioned agreements.
- What are the University intellectual property policies?
- Auburn University Patent Policy (PDF)
- Auburn University Copyright Policy (PDF)
- Release of invention rights (PDF)
- What is the University's position regarding:
Binding arbitration
Auburn University cannot commit to binding arbitration, however the
University can agree to non-binding mediation. As an instrumentality of
the State of Alabama, Auburn University falls under the purview of the
Alabama State Constitution which states in Article I, Section 14 “That
the State of Alabama shall never be made a defendant in any court of law
or equity.”
Consulting
Faculty and other employees desiring to perform consulting work for
outside organizations are required to obtain the prior concurrence in
accordance with current University policy.
Inventions and discoveries made or developed solely in the course of consulting work
performed with prior concurrence in accordance with current University
policy shall not be considered as having been made or developed in the
course of University employment unless otherwise provided in the
concurrence or unless a significant use of University facilities is
involved, in which case the University will determine the University’s
involvement by the following:
In order to provide incentive and encouragement to faculty members, other
employees and students of the University in pursuing their personal
research interests outside the scope of their official duties and
responsibilities and not programmed or substantially supported by the
University although slight use may be made of University facilities, any
resulting invention or development which may be patentable may be
submitted to the University for acceptance or rejection, or may be
disposed of and handled by the inventors as they desire. However, all
personal discoveries or inventions will be reported to the University,
regardless of submission for acceptance or rejection by the University for
a determination in accordance with this section. Generally, projects
conducted by students and faculty or employees as a part of formal
instruction or thesis projects are considered personal research and
outside the scope of official duties and responsibilities and programming
unless such thesis projects are conducted as a part of a contractual
research effort or substantially supported by the University.
Inventions arising from consulting engagements by faculty and other employees not
having prior concurrence or approval by the appropriate Vice President and
involving substantial use of University facilities will be governed as
follows, notwithstanding any agreement between the consultant and his
client:
The patent rights to inventions and developments resulting from research or
other activities conducted by faculty, other employees or students within
the field of their official duties and responsibilities or programmed or
substantially supported by the University are retained by the University.
Disposition of patent rights is handled by the University. However, the
faculty members, other employees and/or students, who are the inventors of
record may participate in the income from discoveries and inventions on
which patents are obtained.
Students working with faculty on consulting projects are governed by this same policy.
Due Diligence
Auburn is committed to a policy that ideas or creative works produced at
Auburn should be used for the greatest possible public benefit, and
accordingly believes that every reasonable incentive should be provided
for the prompt introduction of such ideas into public use, all in a manner
consistent with the public interest. In addition, a large percentage of
Auburn's research funding is derived from the Federal government, which
under the requirements of Bayh-Dole maintains that federally funded
inventions be commercialized for public benefit.
Due diligence milestones are mandatory in all of our license agreements, but
may be modified on a case by case basis. Due diligence is a safeguard
which prevents a licensee from shelving an invention only to keep it away
from use by its competitors.
Equitable relief
The University cannot submit to any type of equitable or injunctive
relief. As an instrumentality of the State of Alabama, Auburn University
falls under the purview of our State Constitution which states in Article
I, Section 14 “That the State of Alabama shall never be made a defendant
in any court of law or equity.”
Governing law
As an instrumentality of the State of Alabama, Auburn University cannot
enter into agreements that are governed by the laws of another state or
country. Our options are to change the non-Alabama law to Alabama state
law, or to delete the section in its entirety and remain silent on the
issue of governing law. For all license agreements, the governing
law must be that of the State of Alabama.
Indemnification
As an instrumentality of the State of Alabama, Auburn University cannot
indemnify other parties. To indemnify another party allows for the
possibility of entering into a court of law or equity which is prohibited
by our State Constitution which states in Article I, Section 14 “That
the State of Alabama shall never be made a defendant in any court of law
or equity.” Additionally, the University requires that outside
parties indemnify the university in license agreements and some research
agreements. This is required in order to protect the university and
its public services as a whole, the importance of which far outweighs our
technology development and commercialization efforts.
Patent Ownership
The University’s standard position is that it does not relinquish
ownership of or assign away its rights to its intellectual property and
inventions (IP), rather that it licenses the right to commercialize such
IP.
Publication
Auburn University cannot give up the right of our faculty to publish. Our
standard position is as follows: Auburn’s Investigators shall have the
right to publish or otherwise publicly disclose information gained in the
course of the research provided that copies of all materials to be
published will be submitted to Sponsor for review sixty (60) days prior to
being submitted to publication. Fair consideration shall be given to
Sponsor’s comments; however, Auburn shall have the right to the final
decision. Any and all proprietary information of Sponsor will be excluded
from publication. In order to permit Sponsor an opportunity to determine
if a patentable invention is disclosed, the Principal Investigator will
provide Sponsor with drafts of intended articles, whenever possible as
soon as they reach a stage suitable for distribution. Sponsor shall
inform Auburn and the author(s) within thirty (30) days so as not to delay
publication whether in its judgment the material contains information on
which patent applications may or should be filed. If Sponsor wishes to
file a patent application, Sponsor may request that publication be delayed
for an additional thirty (30) days.
Warranty/Guarantee
It is the University’s policy not to warrant or guarantee anything;
however the University can "represent". The terms “warrant”
and “guarantee” are weighted such that by agreeing to them allows for
the possibility of entering into a court of law or equity which is
prohibited by our State Constitution which states in Article I, Section 14
“That the State of Alabama shall never be made a defendant in any court
of law or equity.”