133 F. Supp. 648 | D. Del. | 1955
Plaintiff sues for infringement of patent No. 2,441,091 relating to an improved process for producing provitamin D3
Infringement. The patent deals with a process for the synthesis of 7-dehydro-cholesterol, known as provitamin D3 and convertible to vitamin D3
Defendant’s answers to interrogatories describe the method it uses to convert cholesterol to 7-dehydrocholesterol. The process for manufacturing 7-dehy-drocholesterol was described by defendant:
(a) “The 7-dehydrocholesterol or vitamin D3 is made by mixing the benzoyl ester of cholesterol with Nbromsuecinimide in an organic solvent, the mixture being heated for a sufficient length of time to form 7-bromcholesterol. This product is*650 them separated from the by-products the reaction and then heated to 'form 7-dehydrocholesterol. The latter is then irradiated to give vitamin D.”
(b) “The benzoyl ester of cholesterol is dissolved in an organic solvent; mixed with N-bromsuccinimide and heated to form 7-bromeholes-terol benzoate. It is separated from the by-products and then heated in the presence of calcium hydroxide (containing a small amount of pyridine) to form 7-dehydrocholesterol benzoate; oxygen is excluded during this reaction. The 7-dehydroeholes-terol benzoate is then treated with the sodium ester of methanol by the Meerwein-Ponndorf reaction to form 7-dehydroeholesterol. It is irradiated to give vitamin D3.”
Plaintiffs’ Dr. van der Vliet’s testimony indicates this method includes all the elements of claims 12 and 24.
Defendant’s admitted procedures infringe claims 12 and 24. Each step of the process covered by claims 12 and 24 of the patent in suit is found in defendant’s process as described by defendant itself
Patent Validity. Before trial defendant relied on 24 items of prior art. At trial reliance was narrowed to two publications: a. the Wohl and b. the Ziegler articles.
The prior art:
a. The Wohl article is DX 3. Defendant’s attorney referred to it in his opening statement.
b. The Ziegler article is D_X 5. The Patent Examiner had it during prosecu-. tion of the application on which the patent issued.
“With the utmost ease—in a few minutes—the esters of the cyclic olefin alcohol cholesterol can be brominated with bromsuccinimid. What is involved,' as in all cases heretofore described, is a smooth substitution, since quantitatively succinimid is re-formed. Naturally we have further pursued obvious consequences. On this subject we shall later report in a separate work.” (Emphasis added).
Ziegler says nothing about the type of compound which would be formed by the described bromination reaction;' and no reference is had to dehydrohalogenation treatment such as -is required by the. patent in suit to produce the desired 7-dehydrocholesterol. Ziegler makes no reference either to 7-nalogenocholesterol or 7-dehydrocholesterol.
“Q. To put it in non-scientific language, you say that while Ziegler may have suggested a path in the forest, he never pointed it out, nor did he walk down it? A. That is right, sir.”
Defendant’s witness confirmed this view.
. Conclusions. I do not believe a general synthetic organic chemist with no expertise in the chemistry of sterole,.. given Wohl and Ziegler (nothing else) could produce the substance resulting from the process of the patent by making use of general chemical information. At least no such chemist so testified.
The evidence supports validity of plaintiff’s patent. It is clothed with a presumption of validity, especially where it was granted only after the best prior art was cited against it and distinguished in the Patent Office. United Mattress Machinery Co., Inc., v. Handy Button Machine Co., 3 Cir., 207 F.2d 1; Artcraft Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc., v. Gotham Silk Hosiery Co., Inc., 3 Cir., 72 F.2d 47, certiorari denied 293 U.S. 595, 55 S.Ct. 109, 79 L.Ed. 688; Container Company v. Carpenter Container Corp., 3 Cir., 194 F.2d 1013, certiorari denied 344 U.S. 826, 73 S.Ct. 26; 97 L.Ed. 643.
- Comment. The ■ state of the art of producing Vitamin D3 before the appearance of van der Vliet and Stevens shows the substance had been produced commercially by either the “mussel” or the “Windaus” process. The first required considerable quantities of mussels; these were taken from the ocean floor, cooked, the shells removed, the cooked meat extracted with organic solvents ; ■ after this process a small amount of vitamin D3 was recovered. The Windaus process involved six chemical steps for conversion of cholesterol into pro-vitamin D3; the yield was low.
No satisfactory replacement for the mussel or Windaus methods was found until van der Vliet and Stevens offered the invention found in the present suit.
True, the inventors here were not the first to produce 7-dehydrocholes-terol. But, they were first to invent a process (described in the patent) which permitted provitamin D3 to be produced on a commercial basis in an efficient, cheaper and less complicated manner. Their task and project did, in view of the art, call for “the exercise of inventive genius.”
Results. Claims 12 and 24 of patent No. 2,441,091 are valid and infringed by defendant. Plaintiffs are entitled to their injunction against further infringement. Plaintiffs are also entitled to an award of damages for defendant’s infringement.
As this opinion contains the required findings and conclusions, an order may now be submitted by plaintiffs after notice.
. The processed substance may be converted to vitamin D3. The patent in suit is not concerned with such conversion.
. Vitamin D3 is an antirachitic vitamin present in cod liver oil and thought to be essential for the formation of healthy bones and teeth in humans and animals.
. Plaintiff Hartford National Bank and Trust Company holds title to the patent as Trustee for N. V. Philips’ Gloeilampenfabrieken, et al., under deed of August 25, 1939. Plaintiff Philips Laboratories, Inc., is exclusive licensee of Hartford with right to sue infringers.
. Of the family of chemical elements: chlorine, bromine, fluorine, and iodine.
. PX 4, 5, 6; PX 5 par. 4(a); PX 6; T. 42-43.
. T. 47-50 and 50-53.
. Dr. Ritter qualified as a “general synthetic organic chemist” but disclaimed experience in the chemistry of sterols or in the treatment of cholesterol or analogous products prior to engagement to testify in this litigation. T. 91, 93.
. T. 107-109.
. T. 50.
. T. 139-140.
. T. 47-50, 50-53.
. DX 3 and 5.
Defendant’s witness conceded none of the other prior art patents and publications (DX A to H) referred to either production of 7-halogenocholesterol compound or its dehydrohalogenation (T. 137-138). Since these two critical steps are present in the patent in suit, the prior art was entitled to little weight.
. A pleaded “misuse” defense was abandoned at trial (T. 145). In any event, “misuse” goes to enforceability not validity. See Metals Disintegrating Co. v. Reynolds Metals Co., D.C.Del., 107 F.Supp. 105.
. T. 14-15.
. T. 125.
. T. 15,
. T. 14-15.
. PX. 1, col. 1, line 43, col. 2, line 8.
. T. 138.
. PX 1, col. 2, lines 4-8, and col. 8, lines 27-29 and 41.
. DX 6.
. Conceded by defendant’s expert: T. 124-125.
. T. 41.
. T. 138.
. The problem given to Dr. Ritter (defendant’s expert) was to convert cholesterol benzoate into 7-dehydrocholesterol-benzoate (T. 122). . No reference is found in either Wohl or Ziegler to these-two products (T. 124). Dr. Ritter in his experiment was supposed to follow the quoted paragraph of Ziegler, supra, which deals with treatment of cholesterol (T. 126). He admitted he did not follow that paragraph of Ziegler “to closely” in the “essential” dehydrobromination step, i. e., dehydrohalogenation where the halogen is bromine.
. T. 141, 144.
. DX 7.
. T. 128, 142.
. T. 130.
. T. 130.
. This Court (per Nields, J.), in Radio Corporation of America v. Collins Radio Co., D.C.Del., 13 F.Supp. 976, 979, held:
“It is a well-established rule that, where a reference has been cited by the Patent Office during the prosecution of an application for a patent, the court will not invalidate the patent on the basis of that reference unless clearly convinced that the Patent Office acted incorrectly in withdrawing the reference and permitting the patent to issue.”
. T. 33-35.
. T. 36.
. T. 36.
. T. 36-37.
. Much expensive equipment used in the two former processes had to be written off and abandoned as the patent process required a small amount of equipment occupying a lesser space than formerly required by each of the former processes (T. 39-40).
. From this Court, Guaranty Trust Co. of New York v. Union Solvents Corporation, D.C.Del., 54 F.2d 400, affirmed 3 Cir., 61 F.2d 1041, certiorari denied 288 U.S. 614, 53 S.Ct. 405, 77 L.Ed. 987, is apt. Examining the circumstances surrounding a patent, such as in suit, Judge Nields, 54 F.2d at page 403 wrote:
“Weizmann (the patentee) was not the first to produce acetone and butyl alcohol by a fermentation process. He made no such claim. Mere production of limited quantities of acetone and butyl alcohol by a fermentation process was not the problem with which Dr. Weizmann was dealing. The problem with which he was dealing and successfully solved was that of isolating a particular bacteria or a culture containing some particular bacteria that would produce butyl alcohol and acetone in commercial quantities better than any other known*653 bacteria, Weizmann discovered a particular species of bacteria new to bacteriologists and invented the process of successfuly employing them. This task called for the exercise of inventive genius. He obtained bis patent, not for the bacteria per se, but for a process which consists in the employment of certain bacteria to produce large yields of acetone and butyl alcohol under aerobic or anaerobic conditions.” (Emphasis by Court).
. Metals Disintegrating Company v. Reynolds Metals Company, D.C.Del., 180 F.Supp. 227.
. T. 36-37.
. T. 38.
. T. 37-38.
. That extensive search was in the field (circa) in the Ziegler-Wohl period is suggested by the large number of prior art references originally put by defendant. “And it has been held that the excessive number of such references is in itself persuasive of the futility of prior attempts to solve the problem”. Ric-Wil Co. v. E. B. Kaiser Co., 7 Cir., 179 F.2d 401, 404, certiorari denied 339 U.S. 958, 70 S.Ct. 981, 94 L.Ed. 1369.