ISIS Report 06/04/09 
Who Owns Life, Not Monsanto? 
_http://www.i-sis.org.uk/whoOwnsLifeNotMonsanto.php_ 
(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/whoOwnsLifeNotMonsanto.php)  
 

Percy Schmeiser is a real life hero who played David to  Monsanto’s 
Goliath, and like David, he won. 
Sam Burcher 
 
Percy and Louise Schmeiser in London 
 
 
Governments approve Monsanto’s GM crops 
 
Percy Schmeiser and his wife Louise are third generation  farmers from the 
prairies of Western Canada in the province of Saskatchewan near  the city of 
Saskatoon.  They feel really blessed not only that his  grandparents moved 
there, but by the fact that in Central Saskatchewan so many  types of grain 
crops can be grown; pulses, oil seeds, in what the locals call  God’s 
Country. 

The Schmeisers, like hundreds of thousands of farmers all  over the world, 
were using their canola (oilseed rape) seed from year to year  and 
developing new varieties suitable for climatic soil conditions on the  
prairies.  
Percy had also been the Mayor of his town for over thirty years,  a member of 
the provincial Parliament and an active member of agricultural  committees 
representing his province on new agricultural policy, law and  regulations for 
the benefit of farmers. 

In 1996, the Canadian Federal Government and the US  Government gave 
regulatory approval to four genetically modified (GM) crops:  soya, corn or 
maize, 
cotton and canola. At the time not all GM crops in Canada  were herbicide 
tolerant except for Monsanto’s Roundup Ready canola and soya,  both resistant 
to the company’s herbicide Roundup. The US Government had also  approved Bt 
cotton and Bt corn that has the added GM toxin from Bacillus  thuringenisis 
(Bt). The Canadian government were fully complicit in allowing  Monsanto to 
develop GM crops on Government test plots and research stations in  return 
for a royalty on every bushel of GM crops sold. 
 
 
Monsanto versus farmer 
 
 
In 1998, two years after the introduction of genetically  modified 
organisms (GMOs) in Canada, the Schmeisers received a lawsuit notice  from 
Monsanto 
which said that they were growing Roundup Ready canola without a  licence 
from Monsanto and that this was a patent infringement. Monsanto had a  patent 
on a gene to make GM canola resistant to the glyphosate herbicide in its  
formulation Roundup. This came as a complete surprise to the Schmeisers who  
immediately realised that all their research and development on canola over 
the  past fifty years had been contaminated by Monsanto’s GMOs.  They felt 
that  they had a case against Monsanto for liability and the damages possibly 
caused  to them, and that was the beginning of [1] Schmeiser's Battle for 
the Seed (SiS  19). And 10 years on, the Schmeisers have been invited to 
London to tell their  full story [2]. 

The Schmeisers stood up to Monsanto’s claims of patent  infringement in the 
Federal Court with just one judge and no jury. The pre-trial  took two 
years to go to court in which Monsanto claimed that despite having no  
knowledge 
of Percy Schmeiser ever having obtained any GM seed,  he must  have used 
their seed on his 1 030 acres of land because ninety-eight percent of  the 
land was GM contaminated. And, because the Schmeisers had contaminated their  
own seed supply with Monsanto seed, ownership of the Schmeisers seed supply  
reverted to Monsanto under patent law. 
 
 
Monsanto owns all crops or seeds  contaminated, the court ruled 
 
 
The Court ruled after a two-and-half-week trial that it was  the first 
patent infringement case on a higher life form in the world.  The  Judge’s 
ruling and Percy Schmeiser’s name became famous overnight: 
 
- It does not matter how a farmer, a forester, or a gardener’s  seed or 
plants become contaminated with GMOs; whether through cross pollination,  
pollen blowing in the wind, by bees, direct seed movement or seed  
transportation, the growers no longer own their seeds or plants under patent  
law, they 
becomes Monsanto’s property. 
 
- The rate of GM contamination does not matter; whether it’s 1  percent, 2 
percent, 10 percent, or more, the seeds and plants still belong to  
Monsanto. 
 
- It’s immaterial how the GM contamination occurs, or where it  comes from. 

The Schmeisers tracked down the source of the  contamination. It was their 
neighbour who had planted GM crops in 1996 with no  fence or buffer between 
them. Nevertheless, the Schmeisers’ seeds and plants  reverted to Monsanto, 
and they were not allowed to use their own seeds and  plants again, nor keep 
any profit from their canola crop in 1998. 

The Schmeisers appealed against the ruling, and after  another two years, 
it was upheld by the Federal Court of Appeal judges even  though they did not 
agree with all the trial judge’s statements. The Schmeisers  believe that 
the case should have been thrown out of Court and not upheld.   After having 
lost the two trials costing them $300 000 of their own money, Percy  took 
the case to the Supreme Court of Canada.  He was warned that there was  only a 
very small chance that the case would be heard; but was granted a second  
leave of Appeal by the Supreme Court of Canada. 
 
 
Schmeiser raised important questions  during the Supreme Court Appeal 
 
 
The Appeal was good news for the Schmeisers, but in the  meantime Monsanto 
had brought another lawsuit against them for $1million in  legal costs, 
fines and punitive damages.  Monsanto said that the Schmeisers  were 
recalcitrant and that they wanted a million dollars from them. For good  
measure, 
Monsanto brought a third lawsuit against the Schmeisers to seize their  
farmland, 
farm equipment and house, in an effort to stop them mortgaging their  
assets to pay their legal bill. 

Percy Schmeiser effectively raised several important  questions at the 
Supreme Court Appeal: 
 
1. Can living organisms, seeds, plants, genes, and human  organs be owned 
and protected by corporate patents on intellectual property? 
2. Can genetically modified traits invade and become noxious  weeds that 
then become resistant to weed killers and become superweeds? (The  answer was 
obviously yes, as these are now all over Western Canada and almost  the rest 
of Canada, see below.) 
3. Can the farmers’ rights to grow conventional or organic  crops be 
protected, especially organic crops? 
4. Can farmers keep their ancient right to save their own  seeds and 
develop them further if they so desire? 
5. Who owns life?  Has anyone, either an individual or a  corporation, the 
right to put a patent on a higher life form? 

On the important issue of “Who owns life?” the Supreme  Court ruled in 
2004 that “Monsanto’s patent on a gene is valid and wherever that  gene 
arrives in any higher life form they own or control that higher life  form.”  
That 
was considered to be a major victory for Monsanto at the time,  but is a 
decision that has come home to roost in the form of corporate liability  for 
GMOs. Percy explained that if a corporation own and control a higher life  
form and they put it into the environment where everyone knows it cannot be  
controlled or contained and co-existence is impossible then the corporation  
should be liable for the damages done to an organic farmer or a conventional 
 farmer, as well as for the negative impacts on biodiversity. 

Despite strong recommendations by the Supreme Court for  the Parliament of 
Canada to bring in new laws and regulations on patents on life  and the 
rights of farmers to use their seed from year to year these issues have  yet to 
be addressed to date. In the US, Monsanto has filed lawsuits against at  
least ninety farmers (see [3] Monsanto versus Farmers, SiS 26). 
_http://www.i-sis.org.uk/MonsantovsFarmers.php_ 
(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/MonsantovsFarmers.php) 
 
 
Monsanto’s contamination no benefit to  farmers, the Supreme Court ruled 
 
 
In 2004, the Supreme Court ruled that in the case of patent  infringement 
the Schmeisers owed no money to Monsanto because they did not  benefit by 
being contaminated by the GM genes.  Furthermore, they had not  used Monsanto’s 
patent because they had not sprayed the Roundup herbicide on  their canola 
crops. However, both parties had to pay their own legal bills. The  
Schmeisers legal bill was over $400 000 and Monsanto’s was over $2 million. 

In essence, Monsanto had used Percy Schmeiser as a test  case to see how 
far they could exercise intellectual property rights (IPR) over  farmers’ 
rights. “At one point, Monsanto had nineteen lawyers in court, I had  one. Talk 
about intimidation,” Percy said. 

No longer able to grow canola in their fields for fear of  infringing 
Monsanto’s patent, The Schmeisers began research into yellow mustard  and 
started 
cultivating 50 acres of land in preparation for planting. In the  autumn of 
2005, they noticed canola plants growing despite not having been  seeded in 
those fields for many years. They brought in witnesses and tested the  
plants by spraying Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide on the plants. Monsanto claim  
that any green plant that is sprayed with Roundup that does not die must 
contain  their patented gene. When the Schmeisers plants did not die they 
realised that  Monsanto’s canola was in their fields again. 

The Schmeisers contacted Monsanto and asked them to remove  the canola 
plants from their property. Monsanto took samples of the plants that  confirmed 
they were their patented variety and two days later Louise Schmeiser  
received a fax from Monsanto containing a signed release statement which was  
blackened out in parts.  Louise refused to sign it and insisted that  Monsanto 
send her the unexpurgated document.  Monsanto sent what was  essentially a 
gagging order on the Schmeisers from ever telling anyone,  neighbours, and the 
press about the terms of settlement, or ever taking Monsanto  to court 
again for the rest of their lives no matter how much Monsanto  contaminated 
their fifty acre parcel of land with GM canola. 
 
 
Victory for Schmeisers and farmers at  last 
 
 
There was no way that the Schmeisers were ever going to sign a  statement 
like that and give up their freedom to a corporation. Monsanto said  that if 
they refused to sign then they would not remove the plants. The argument  
raged backed and forth; the Schmeisers said they will remove the plants  
themselves and Monsanto wrote back saying we wish to remind you that the plants 
 
that are on your field are our property and you are not allowed to do with 
those  plants what you want. The Schmeisers said get your property off our 
property,  you’re trespassing!  Monsanto said only if you sign the release 
form. 

The Schmeisers wanted the plants off their land before the  pods ripened 
and the seeds were dispersed into the field.  They hired the  neighbours to 
help remove the plants and notified Monsanto about what had been  done and M
onsanto sent another fax saying that you can’t do what you want with  those 
plants. A bill was eventually sent to Monsanto by the Schmeisers for $640  to 
pay for the neighbours help to clear the field. Monsanto refused to pay the  
bill unless Percy signed the release statement.  This went on for about a  
year so the Schmeisers made a decision to go back to Court amid media 
reports  about the new dispute.     The judge in the small claims  Court agreed 
with the Schmeisers and sent Monsanto a summons. Percy said, “We  then had a 
billion dollar Corporation in Court on a $640 bill and you can  imagine the 
publicity that got in Canada.” 

In March 2008, the case went to trial and when the judge  came into the 
Court room Monsanto got up with a cheque in hand to pay the $640  plus $20 
costs. “I’ll never forget that $20 costs!” Percy laughed.  “It was  a great 
victory, not only for ourselves, but for farmers all over the world  because 
it has set a precedent where a corporation has accepted liability for  
contamination and clean up costs”, he said. Percy Schmeiser had become the 
first  
farmer in history to successfully counter-sue Monsanto for liability over  
damages done to his seeds and crops by Monsanto’s GM crops 
 
 
GM in Canada - lessons  learnt 
 
 
Thirteen years ago when GM soya and rapeseed was introduced in  Canada (and 
in the US) the Corporations and Government told farmers that GM  would 
increase yields, be more nutritious, use less chemicals, and feed a hungry  
world. Now we will always have a sustainable agriculture, they claimed.   The 
Canadian Department of Agriculture figures states canola yields have  
decreased at least ten percent and soya at least fifteen percent [4], but worst 
 of 
all, farmers are using three to five times more chemicals because of the GM  
superweeds that have developed.  The reality is that the nutritional  
content of all crops are down fifty percent of what they were before GMOs were  
introduced and now we have less yields and more chemicals used, exactly the  
opposite of what Monsanto promised. 

Percy Schmeiser said, “Once you introduce GMOs, believe me  the days of 
organic farmers are over, the days of the conventional farmer are  over, it all 
becomes GMOs in a matter of a few years.”  In addition, he  said, there is 
no such thing as containment, you cannot contain pollen  flow.   It doesn’t 
matter if contamination is by seeds blowing in the  wind, or by bees, or by 
farmers transporting their seeds to market, or so on.  Ultimately, farmers, 
growers and consumers will no longer have a choice because  despite Monsanto’
s promise that farmers will have choice, they won’t because  it’s 
absolutely impossible for organic and conventional farming to co-exist with  GM 
crops. 
 
 
Mountains of contaminated produce that  cannot be exported 
 

Canadian organic farmers can no longer grow canola and  soya crops 
organically. The seed stocks of those two crops are now totally  contaminated 
by 
GMOs, which cross- pollinate into other market garden crops from  the brassica 
family. Percy describes the devastating effect GMOs have had on  Canada’s 
markets, as a nation reliant on exporting eighty percent of what it  produces. 
 The markets for rapeseed have shrunk to primarily exporting to  Mexico, 
the US and Japan, Canada is now sitting on a mountain of canola, not one  
bushel can be exported to the EU.  Furthermore, Canada’s honey markets  
throughout the world have been lost because of GM contamination. 

Schmeiser is also concerned about a new wave of GM crops  in Canada called “
pharma-plants”. There are six major types of drugs now being  produced by 
GM plants, including  prescription vaccines, industrial  enzymes, blood 
thinners, blood clotting proteins, growth hormones and  contraceptives, all 
known 
to be much more dangerous than conventional drugs (see  [5] Biologicals’, 
Wonder Drugs with Problems 
_http://www.i-sis.org.uk/biologicalsWonderDrugsWithProblems.php_ 
(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/biologicalsWonderDrugsWithProblems.php)   , SiS 42)  
What if 
somebody has had major surgery and then eats food  contaminated with genes 
from a plant manufactured to be a blood thinner?   Or what about a pregnant 
woman who eats food contaminated by genes from a plant  that is manufactured 
as a contraceptive?  These are just some of the  worrying implications of 
pharma-plants, along with containment and co-existence. 
 
 
Superweeds now ubiquitous in Canada,  requiring supertoxic herbicides 
 
 
Superweeds have evolved from conventional canola plants that  have taken on 
the genes from three or four companies selling GM canola that has  
cross-pollinated and ended up in one plant. It had become established in Canada 
 by 
1996 (so quickly that horizontal gene transfer was suspected as having been  
involved, see [6] What Lurks Behind Triple Herbicide-Tolerant Oilseed  
Rape? _http://www.i-sis.org.uk/whatlurk.php_ 
(http://www.i-sis.org.uk/whatlurk.php)   , ISIS Report).  Percy warns that 
superweeds are  ubiquitous 
throughout Canada in wheat fields, barley fields, cemeteries,  university 
grounds, 
towns, and golf courses.  He said that all these people  that never even grew 
GM canola have this new expense of trying to control it,  and this is 
responsible for the massive increase in the use of chemicals to  control the 
superweeds. 

One third of Canada’s insecticides, herbicides and  pesticides are used in 
Saskatchewan, which has the highest rate of breast cancer  and prostate 
cancer in Canada.  “We’re killing ourselves with the chemicals  we are using 
and the chemicals are more powerful and more toxic than ever  before,” Percy 
says.  He warns that Roundup herbicide is now four times  stronger than it 
was in 1996. Roundup is bad enough as new research reveals (see  [7] Death by 
Multiple Poisoning, Glyphosate and  Roundup 
_http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DMPGR.php_ (http://www.i-sis.org.uk/DMPGR.php)  ,  
SiS 42); the new type “24D”, contains 70 percent Agent Orange, and is 
being used  on the prairies to combat superweeds.  The adverse health effect of 
Agent  Orange in Vietnam is common knowledge and could explain the major 
health  problems, environment damage and loss of biodiversity in Canada. 
 
 
Monsanto’s culture of  fear 
 
 
Monsanto is perpetrating a culture of fear and intimidation in  Canada in 
an effort to gain control of the seed supply, and ultimately the food  
supply. It was not easy to stand up to Monsanto. Percy said, “They tried  
everything to break us down mentally and financially.” His main fear was the  
harm 
that they would do to his wife and family.  Monsanto employees would  sit in 
the road in their vehicles watching us all day long when we were working  in 
our field, he said. They would sit in the driveway for hours at a time  
watching Louise Schmeiser when she was working in the garden and then phone her 
 and say “You better watch it; we’re going to get you.” Monsanto would 
then phone  their neighbours and say if you support Percy and Louise Schmeiser 
we’re going  to come after you and do the same to you as we’re doing to 
them. Monsanto  offered $20 000 worth of chemicals to the Schmeisers’ 
neighbours if they would  say something negative about them in Court. 

Percy warns farmers about Monsanto’s “Inform on your  neighbour” policy 
for a free gift such as a leather jacket or chemicals. He said  when the “gene 
police” arrive on contaminated farm land threatening the farmer  and his 
wife with a court case, what do you think goes through a farmers’ mind?  You 
have a suspicion about your neighbours; it breaks down the social fabric of  
rural society, farmers’ relationships, farmers not trusting one another, 
farmers  scared to talk to each other about what they are seeding.  We don’t 
know  how many thousands of farmers they have done that to.  But by 2004 at 
least  30,000 farmers were paying royalties to Monsanto in Canada [8]. As a 
former  politician, Percy thinks this is the worst thing that has happened 
with the  introduction of GM crops, a whole new culture of fear that Monsanto 
has been  able to establish on the prairies of North America and Canada. 

If Monsanto can’t find the farmer at home they go to the  municipality 
office and get the farmers address and extortion letters  follow.  Percy has 
collected a lot of letters that farmers have given to  him that say:  “We have 
reason to believe that you might be growing  Monsanto’s GM rapeseed without 
a licence. We estimate that you have so many  acres.  In lieu of us not 
sending you to court send us $100 000 dollars or  $200 000 dollars in two weeks 
time and we may or may not send you to  court.”  Can you imagine the fear of 
a farm family when they receive this  letter from a billion dollar 
Corporation?  The letter ends, “You’re not  allowed to show this letter to 
anyone 
or we will fine you.” One farmer’s wife  sent Percy a letter from Monsanto 
because she was at her wits end.  Her  husband had four heart attacks and she 
pleaded with them to put her in  jail.  Monsanto replied, “We don’t want 
to put you in jail lady, sell your  farm and we’ll let you go for half the 
money.” This behaviour is ruthless and if  Monsanto can victimise farmers in 
First World countries such as Canada and  America, it is a given that they 
will do this in many countries all over the  world. 
 
 
No new GM crops for  Canada 
 
 
But the Schmeisers’ struggles have brought a ray of hope. 

In Canada food is not labelled, and campaigners have  protested to find out 
what’s in their food by demanding labelling.  The  National Farmers Union 
has warned farmers not to buy Monsanto’s GM seeds because  of their 
aggressive attitude.  The Government has been unsuccessful in  introducing any 
new GM 
crops such as wheat, rice, flax, and alfalfa because  there was such an 
uproar by the people who have seen the damage and don’t want  any more GM 
crops.  Schmeiser said, “If we’re trying to stop them in the US  and especially 
Canada, why would you want to introduce them in the UK and  Europe?” He 
believes that now the Corporations have lost the ability to  introduce any more 
GMOs in Canada they have turned their attention to other  countries in the 
world.  He compared this dominant strategy with the sale  of agricultural 
pesticides and chemicals that have been exported wholesale to  Africa and Asia 
once the North American markets were saturated. 

Percy said we do not know if you can ever recall out of  the environment a 
life form that you put into it.  And in relation to GMOs,  what are we 
leaving for the future?  We are at a fork in the road. If you  go the GM way, 
this is what will happen; if you go down the other fork, you will  maintain 
good food, safe food, and your environment.  “I don’t think any of  us want to 
leave to the future generations our environment, our soil, our water,  our 
food, and our air full of poisons, none of us want to leave that,” he  
concluded.  Percy has five children, fifteen grandchildren and two great  
grandchildren and that is why the Schmeisers have taken such a strong stand  
because they want to leave a legacy of safe food, water, air and soil. 

He leaves us with a final question: “What will happen if  you introduce GM 
crops in the UK?”   We still have the chance to make  the right decision.
 
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