Appellant Harold S. Hemstreet (Hem-street) appeals the order of the District Court for the Northern District of Illinois entering summary judgment in favor of defendant Computer Entry Systems Corp. (CES).
Hemstreet v. Computer Entry Systems Corp.,
BACKGROUND
In 1953, Hemstreet filed a patent application relating to the field of Optical Character Readers (OCRs). After some twenty years of effort at the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO), followed by a suit in state court to recover ownership of the patents from his employer’s successor, Hemstreet in 1976 emerged the owner of two issued patents — the 3,713,099 patent (’099) and the 3,713,100 patent (’100).
Hemstreet — an individual inventor — then set out to enforce his patent rights. He first sought to license IBM, and reached agreement with the company on August 22, 1978. Concurrently, he initiated litigation against Spiegel Corporation and Recognition Equipment, Inc. (REI) in September *1292 1977. That case settled during trial, on July 13, 1981. On November 17, 1981, Hemstreet filed suit against Burroughs Corporation. Burroughs later instigated a reexamination proceeding at the PTO on July 3, 1986. On January 30, 1987, the Burroughs trial court granted Burroughs’ motion for summary judgment; this was reversed by the Federal Circuit on September 9,1988. On August 1,1989, the Examiner issued an Office Action confirming patentability of over 30 claims of the ’100 patent. Hemstreet promptly filed suit against CES on August 3, 1989, shortly before the Burroughs litigation was settled. 1
While Hemstreet was pursuing his enforcement strategy as described, he had also sent a warning letter to other members of the OCR industry. Amer-O-Matic, a subsidiary which CES had acquired in September 1982, received such a letter on July 1, 1983. The text of that letter is set out in the District Court opinion.
Hem-street v. Computer Entry Systems Corp.,
CES’ October 4, 1983 response to the July 1 letter to Amer-O-Matic indicated that it would examine the Hemstreet patents, and promised to inform Hemstreet of its findings. CES also requested and was provided with further information about licensing, including confidential copies of the IBM and REI licenses. Although CES promised a prompt response to Hemstreet, it did not provide one.
Hemstreet and CES did not communicate again until Hemstreet in 1989 contacted CES with a proposed tolling agreement. CES maintained its silence. As noted, litigation was not long in following. On June 22, 1990, the trial court granted CES’ motion for summary judgment on the laches and estoppel issues, thus holding that Hem-street was completely barred from any recovery for CES’ alleged infringement. Hemstreet appeals.
DISCUSSION
Laches and estoppel are equitable defenses, committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.
A. C. Aukerman Co. v. R.L. Chaides Construction Co.,
*1293 I
The trial court did not have the benefit of our recent clarification of the law of laches in
A.C. Aukerman Co. v. R.L. Chaides Construction Co.,
The trial court’s analysis is inconsistent with the approach to laches set forth in Aukerman, and illustrates graphically why fairness requires that the principles laid out in Aukerman be followed. The trial court acted in accordance with its understanding of our prior precedents. In light of the more than six year delay, the court placed the burden of proof on the patent-holder to show the delay to be excusable and to affirmatively prove the lack of prejudice to the defendant.
Aukerman
specifically rejects this approach.
With the presumption burst,
Auker-man
requires that a defendant who invokes laches as a defense must affirmatively prove (1) unreasonable and inexcusable delay and (2) prejudice resulting from that delay.
Here, we note that during the 1976-1989 period Hemstreet was busy enforcing his patent rights elsewhere, and indeed for a period of the delay had no valid patent rights to enforce, as the Burroughs trial court had erroneously held the patent unenforceable. On the facts of record before us, the delay involved here could not be considered unreasonable and inexcusable. However, the defendant during the proceedings below was not required to introduce evidence to support a finding of unreasonable and inexcusable delay-it was afforded the benefit of the pre-Aukerman presumption which shifted the burden of proof to Hemstreet. To the extent that CES rested on this presumption and did not introduce all the evidence available to prove its case, a remand is necessary to provide it with an opportunity to further develop the record.
Although the trial court recognized that prejudice resulting from the patentee’s delay was also a necessary part of the laches defense, its opinion does not address that factor.
3
However, we note that the
*1294
record reflects that CES had expenditures of over $23 million on research and development, $6.5 million on direct marketing costs, and $20 million to expand or consolidate manufacturing facilities.
At the time of this case, the OCR industry was a specialized and largely self-contained industry. Hemstreet in his 1983 letter to CES gave specific warning of the litigation plaintiff was then pursuing against other alleged infringers. CES apparently made a deliberate business decision to ignore that warning, and to proceed as if nothing had occurred. If so, such a decision has to be at CES’ risk, not Hem-street’s. Hemstreet’s subsequent continued pursuit of his rights, in public forums both of his choosing and of the choosing of various of his opponents, left the attentive observer with little doubt of his intentions. Indeed, if silence is the nub of defendant’s claim that there was not only inexcusable delay but that the long silence before filing suit resulted in harm to defendant, on the facts of this record it hardly seems that there was silence.
II
The trial court granted summary judgment in defendant’s favor on estoppel, citing the four-part test set forth in
James-bury Corp. Inc. v. Litton Industrial Products,
As the summary of the facts of record recited above suggests, there was no action by plaintiff that would lead a reasonable competitor to assume that continued infringement by defendant was condoned or approved by plaintiff. 5 And there is a total absence in the record of any showing by CES that its activities were in reliance upon supposed actions of Hemstreet, rath *1295 er than a business judgment of its own-a judgment which subsequent events may well prove to have been faulty. 6
Although defendant correctly notes that equitable estoppel may in some instances be based upon a misleading silence, mere silence must be accompanied by some
other
factor which indicates that the silence was sufficiently misleading as to amount to bad faith.
Hottel,
Our jurisprudence on the subject of es-toppel is set forth in Aukerman. The trial court at the time this case was decided did not have the benefit of that review of the law, and its judgment based on earlier erroneous views cannot now stand.
CONCLUSION
The order granting summary judgment is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is vacated. On the facts of record in this case, it is difficult to imagine that, under the standards set out in Aukerman, the defense of laches can succeed. It is even less likely that the elements of estop-pel exist. Nevertheless, out of an abundance of caution since all the facts may not be known, we remand the matter to the trial court for such further proceedings on these issues as may be appropriate.
Each party to bear its own costs.
ORDER REVERSED, JUDGMENT VACATED, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The trial court stated that the Burroughs litigation finally concluded on September 9, 1988, the day the Federal Circuit reversed the lower court's summary judgment in Burroughs’ favor. However, the litigation did not actually terminate until the two parties settled, September 20, 1989.
.
Jamesbury Corp. v. Litton Industrial Products,
. This absence of discussion may be due to the trial court's belief that the presumption of lach-es shifted the burden of persuasion regarding both delay and prejudice to the patentee. Un *1294 der the trial court’s approach, Hemstreet’s failure to prove that the delay was neither unreasonable nor inexcusable ended the laches inquiry. As noted, this approach is incorrect under Aukerman.
. This inference is further strengthened by Hemstreet's established sequential license-or-litigate pattern.
Compare Jamesbury Corp. v. Litton Industrial Products, Inc.,
.
Compare Meyers v. Brooks Shoe, Inc.,
.
See Meyers,
