239 F.2d 792 | 3rd Cir. | 1957
The plaintiff, Plax Corporation, instituted suit alleging infringement by the defendant, Precision Extruders, Inc., of Ferngren United States Patent No. 2,-128, 239 (’239) and Femgren United States Patent No. 2,230,188 (’188). Subsequent to the filing of the complaint Precision was dissolved and its successor, the other defendant, Lamex Chemical Corporation, was made a defendant. -At pre-trial it was stipulated that the litigation would be limited to the adjudication of tho validity and infringement of •claims 8, 21 and 26 of ’239, and of claim 16 of T88. The claims in issue, all process claims, are set out in the footnote.
Precision filed a counterclaim for a declaratory judgment of invalidity and non-infringement of the claims in issue. The court below found the claims valid
The processes employed by Plax and the defendants involve the production of hollow articles from organic plastic materials. These processes have had extensive use in the production of bottles from the organic plastic known as polyethylene. This substance has the unique characteristic of flexibility which permits the production of the popular “squeeze bottle.” To avoid confusion in the treatment of this complex subject matter, we will deal with the issues presented in substantially the same order as did the court below.
• The Ferngren ’239 patent
In support of their position that the ’239 patent is invalid Precision and Lam-ex make a number of arguments which can be disposed of briefly. The defendants endeavored to show by an open-court demonstration that Ferngren’s ’239 process was inoperative. But the court below correctly found this demonstration inconclusive. Employing the defendants' machine, the defendants’ own expert witness, Temple, testified that he did not consider the '239 process inoperative. The issue was whether the end of a tube produced at the end of an extruder nozzle could be closed and then be blown into a mold. The witness said that it could and there is no reason to doubt the accuracy of his statement.
Precision and Lamex also asserted that the screw extruder process was old and that prior art processes relating to celluloid and glass were substantially identical to the patented process. The fact is, however, as the court below found, that the working of celluloid and glass is sufficiently different from the Fern-gren process as to render that art irrelevant.
As to an asserted lack of commercial use there was ample evidence from which the court below could find that Plax successfully used the process disclosed by the patent for commercial ends.
On examination of the entire record we conclude as did the court below, that the Ferngren '239 process satisfies the standard of invention required by Section 103 of the Patent Act of 1952, 35 U.S.C.A. § 103. We enunciated our interpretation of Section 103 in R. M. Palmer Co. v. Luden, Inc., 3 Cir., 1956, 236 F.2d 496, and of recent date in New-burgh Moire Co., Inc., v. Superior Moire Co., Inc., 3 Cir., 1956, 237 F.2d 283. We need not repeat in detail here what was said there. It is not necessary that an invention result from a “flash of genius”. We think that Ferngren’s work involved “more ingenuity * * * than the work of a mechanic skilled in the art”, Cuno Engineering Corp. v. Automatic Devices Corp., 1941, 314 U.S. 84, 90, 62 S.Ct. 37,
Infringement of ’239 Patent
The court below held that the test of infringement of a process patent is “whether defendant’s machine employs every essential of the patented method.” This is a valid refinement of the test this court prescribed in Moore Filter Co. v. Tonopah-Belmont Development Co., 3 Cir., 1912, 201 F. 532, 541-542. In the defendants’ process, the end of the extruded plastic tube, emanating from the stationary nozzle, is closed by bringing together the halves of a split mold, thereby pinching and sealing the end of the tube.
But even if we were to cast aside the salutary rule of construction applied by the District Court and accept Plax’s contention that in applying it the court made an unwarranted interpretation of the patent, Plax’ case would not be advanced substantially. Plax contends that ’239 discloses methods whereby the end of the extruded tube may be closed other than by extruding the end of the tube against the bottom of the closed mold in the way shown in Fig. 3. Plax cites three parts of the specification as showing these other means.
The words of Plax’ expert witness and the language of the specification cited indicate, end-against-mold closing aside, various means and points of possible closure. But assuming that all of the cited means of closure are operable, the fact remains that none of them was employed by the defendants who closed their extruded plastic tubes by pinching them between the ends of a split mold. They therefore did not infringe the ’239 process.
The issue of infringement here, at least, is primarily one of law for the record enables us to examine the precise nature of both the ’239 process and that employed by the defendants. See United States v. Esnault-Pelterie, 1938, 303
Validity of ’188 Patent and the Issue of Double Patenting
The Férngren ’188 patent
Plax’ reply brief
What is the difference here which constitutes invention ? The court below stated that the ’188 patent “differs from the ’239 patent in that Claim 16 discloses a repetitive process and the extrusion of a full charge of plastic before blowing.” 137 F.Supp. at page 501. The statement is a correct reading of claim 16.
The law permits an inventor to have a monopoly on his invention for the number of years fixed by the statutes. The monopoly is so limited in the public-interest. That interest may not be jeopardized by the double patenting of a single inventive process.
That part of the judgment of the court below holding the claims in issue of Patent ’239 valid and not infringed will1 be affirmed. That part of the judgment, holding the claim in issue of Patent ’188. valid will be reversed.
. As follows:
Patent ’239: “8. The process of making blown hollow articles from organic plastic materials which are expansible by blowing and thereafter capable of being rigidified, which comprises moving -the plastic material while in a plastic state in tubular form into a mold of the shape of the finished article, bringing the •end of the tube of plastic material into -contact with the bottom of the mold to close the end of the tube, and applying fluid under pressure to the interior of the -closed tube to distend the walls thereof and bring them against the walls of the mold.”
“21. The process of making hollow articles from organic plastic materials which are expansible by fluid pressure and thereafter capable of being rigidified, which comprises providing a mass of such plastic material in a state of workable plasticity, performing a portion of said mass while still in a state of workable plasticity into a closed-ended hollow body, expanding said preformed material in a mold by fluid pressure before ■the material thereof has been converted to a state of rigidity, rigidifying the expanded material in position in the mold, -and separating the hollow article thus formed from the remainder of said mass.”
“26. The process of forming hollow •articles from organic plastic material which is expansible by blowing and thereafter capable of being rigidified, which -comprises forming an expansible plastic Hank from an integral with an unformed •parent body of such material, expanding the blank by blowing in a mold prior to the rigidification of the material, and severing the article thus formed from the parent body of said material, the blown article thus formed being initially rig'dified in situ in the mold.”
Patent T88: “16. The process of forming a blown hollow article from organic thermoplastic material which is expansible by blowing and thereafter capable - of being rigidified, which comprises heating such an organic thermoplastic material to bring it to a moldable state of plasticity, passing said plastic material into an elongate annular chamber under superatmospherie pressure, extruding a predetermined quantity of the plastic material in hollow form from said annular chamber, applying gaseous pressure within said extruded plastic material while it is still in a moldable state of plasticity and thereby expanding said plastic material into conformity with the confines of the cavity of a mold, thereby forming a blown hollow article, and introducing additional boated plastic material into said chamber for subsequent extrusion.”
. It is interesting to note that claims 8, 21, and 26 of the ’239 patent were found valid in Plax Corp. v. Elmer E. Mills Corp., D.C.N.D.Ill.952, 100 F.Supp. 399, modified in part 7 Cir., 1953, 204 F.2d 302. There was no holding that claim 16 of the T88 patent was valid but the court did find that it was not infringed. See the opinion of the court below, 137 F.Supp. at page 496, and 204 F.2d 302, 311.
. The ’239 patent was granted on August 30, 1938 on ,.an application filed February 25, 1933, and has now expired. The al-leged infringement, however, antedates the expiration date as appears.
. The nature of the defendants’ process was stipulated.
. The portions of the specification referred to are found at: p. 1, col. 1, lines 20-27; and p. 4, col. 1, lines 21 and 35.
. Transcript of Record, pp. 75-77.
. This patent was granted January 28, 1941 on an application filed March ,29, 1938. It was co-pending in' the .Patent office with the ’239 patent.
. The issue of double patenting was argued orally before this court, and supplemental briefs on the issue were filed by the parties.
. Thei-mosetting materials are organic plastic materials which rigidify on the application of heat. Thermoplastic materials are organic plastic materials which rigidify on cooling, and become plastic on the1'application of heat.
. Plax’á expert noted two differences only ‘ between tbe ’239 and the ’188 patents. Transcript of record pp. 161-167. Plain- • tiff’s counsel on appeal added only the-generic-specific difference. Transcript pp. 60-64.
. The court in Plax Corp. v. Elmer E. Mills Corp., D.C.N.D.Ill.1952, 106 E.Supp. 399, 416 found no double patenting as to the ’188 patent because .claim , 16 contained “elements additional’’ to-those of claim 19 of the ’239 patent. The-'188 patent issues were not appealed. With all due deference to the court in-that case, we must conclude that the additional elements did not amount to inventive difference.