Berry Sterling Corporation (Berry) appeals the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia granting Pescor Plastics, Inc.’s (Pescor) motion for summary judgment and invalidating U.S. Patent Des. No. 362,368 (the ’368 patent) for functionality. We vacate and remand.
BACKGROUND
The patented container design was apparently developed in response to an industry-wide solicitation by the Coca Cola Company requesting the development оf a car cup for its “Coke to Go” program. In order to receive consideration, the cups had to meet the following criteria: (1) they had to have a 32 ounce capacity; (2) they had to have a spill-proof lid; (3) they had to fit in a majority of car cup holders; (4) they had to be short enough to fit under the valve of a soda dispenser; and (5) they had to have a low production cost.
Over the course of several months, Berry submitted three designs to Coca Cola Company executives. The first was a bi-level cup design which was apparently originally conceived by George Willbrandt (Willbrandt) in 1988. Although Coca Cola’s representаtive found that it met the above-mentioned criteria for consideration and liked the concept of the bi-level design, he was not satisfied with its appearance. It was “too short, too squat, and too kind of squаre looking.” Other Coca Cola executives also were dissatisfied with the cup’s appearance, remarking that this model did not have enough “sex appeal” and was too “angular and square.”
In response to this criticism, Berry submitted a second design, a cup with a narrower base, a rounder shoulder, and an increased overall height. Coca Cola Company executives provided additional criticism and, as a result, a third model was prepared, further rounding the shoulder transition. The progeny of this third model were the car cups produced for the “Coke to Go” program and are of the type used for promotionаl purposes by a multitude of fast food or “quick service” restaurants, convenience stores, sports arenas, and theme parks.
The application for the ’368 patent was filed to protect the design оf containers including this cup. It is a design for a contain *1454 er which will fit in a vehicle cup receptacle. The patent illustrates a bi-level container, the tapered and fluted lower portion, toppеd by a smooth and tapered upper portion more than two and one half times taller than the lower portion. A clearly defined “shoulder” transitions the lower portion to the upper portion. (See illustration infra.) A second illustrated embodiment includes the same bi-level container accompanied by a domed lid.
The ’368 patent issued on September 19, 1995. Two days later, Berry sought to enforce the patent against Pescor and several other defendants, some of whom were also involved in designing cups suitable for the “Coke to Go” program. On the close of discovery and the eve of trial, Pescor moved for summary judgmеnt on its defense of patent invalidity, based on obviousness and functionality. Berry cross-moved for summary judgment to dismiss the defense. The parties also filed other motions on validity and infringement issues. The district court granted Pescоr’s summary judgment motion for invalidity on grounds of functionality. The court considered, but did not decide, the other pending motions. Thus, the sole issue before us is whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment on the record invalidating the ’368 pаtent because the overall design, as shown in the patent drawings, was dictated by the function of the article, and, if so, how.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, we are not bound to give deference to the district court’s grant of summary judgmеnt, but must make an independent determination that the standards for summary judgment have been met.
Vas-Cath, Inc. v. Mahurkar,
To create a genuine issue of fact, the nonmovant must do more than present some evidence on an issue it asserts is disputed. “[Tjhere is no issue for trial unless there is sufficient evidence favoring the nonmoving party for a jury to return a verdict for that party. If the evidence [of the nonmovant] is merely colorable, or is not significantly probative, summаry judgment may be granted.”
Id.
at 249-50,
In this case we are unable tо make a determination as to whether the standards for summary judgment have been met, because the parties and the court have not elicited the appropriate factual underpinnings for a determinаtion of invalidity of a design patent due to functionality. The parties and the court have treated the manufacturing specification for the “Coke to Go” program cup as providing limitations for the ’368 patеnt. In reviewing the “undisputed facts” set forth in Pescor’s brief, we note that paragraphs 1-7 are irrelevant to invalidity due to functionality because they promulgate limitations based on the specification of the “Coke to Go” program cup rather than the patented design. Paragraphs 8, 12, 13, and 15, are irrelevant because they relate to prior art considerations and obviousness, which are not at issue in this appеal.
A properly conducted patent analysis, be it for infringement or validity, necessarily requires construing the patent, and more specifically, the claim.
See Best Lock Corp. v.
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Ilco Unican Corp.,
The ’368 patent claim is in the form required by rule: “The ornamental design for a container to fit a vehicle cup receрtacle, as shown and described.” See 37 C.F.R. § 1.153 (1996). The patent includes nine figures depicting two separate embodiments of the container. As can be seen from the exemplary Figure 3 of the patent, the patented dеsign includes the following four discernible, possibly ornamental, features: (1) a rolled lip; (2) tapered upper portion; (3) a fluted lower portion; and (4) a rounded shoulder transition.
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The district court imposed the limitations of the manufacturing specifications for the “Coke to Go” program cup on the underlying article of manufacture thereby unduly limiting the scope of the claimed design. After reciting the claim, the court stated
It is clеar, however, that the design was dictated not only by the function of fitting the majority of car cup holders, but was also designed so that the cup was able to fit underneath the valve of a soda fountain and so that it cоuld hold 32 ounces while retaining stability to minimize the danger of spilling.
There are, inter alia, no height or volume limitations, no requirements that the container fit in the majority of car cup holders, and no stability limitations imposed by thе claim. The features forming the basis for the functionality analysis promulgated by the court are found in the commercial embodiment of the underlying article of manufacture. It should áddress the article in the claimed design, which means, realistically, the article and its configuration as shown in the drawings. Thus, we vacate and remand because the court cannot use the limitations of the commercial embodiment of the underlying article оf manufacture to impose limitations on the scope of the design patent.
In the interest of judicial economy, we address two points raised by the parties with regard to the substance of the court’s functionality analysis. First, the court erred in its analysis by failing to return to the overall appearance after purportedly analyzing each of the elements of the design. While analyzing elements of the design may be appropriate in some circumstances, the determination of whether the patented design is dictated by the function of the article of manufacture must ultimately rest on an analysis of its overall appearance.
See L.A. Gear, Inc. v. Thom McAn Shoe Co.,
Second, the district court acknowledged that there may well be alternative existing designs of cups similar to those claimed in the ’368 patent, but apparently did not consider the alternative designs important to deciding whether the ’368 patent is invalid for functionality. We have held
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that “[w]hen there are severаl ways to achieve the function of an article of manufacture, the design of the article is more likely to serve a primarily ornamental purpose.”
Id.
Berry argues that this language from
L.A. Gear,
and similar language from
Avia Group Int’l, Inc. v. L.A. Gear California, Inc.,
We have considered the parties’ other arguments and conclude that they are either unpersuasive or unnecessary for resolution of this appeal. We vacate and remand for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
