Sаndvik Aktiebolag (Sandvik) appeals the order of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, No. 3-94-1076, granting summary judgment of noninfringement in favor of defendant E.J. Company (E.J.). The district court held that United States Patent No. 4,222,690 (the ’690 patent) and United States Patent No. 4,381,-162 (the ’162 patent) were not infringed because defendant’s replacement of the carbide tip of the drill constituted a permissible repair. We reverse.
BACKGROUND
The facts in this case are not in dispute. The patents in suit are directed to a drill with a shank portion and a unique carbide tip geometry that has specially configured cutting edges resulting in а drill suitable for high-feed machining with improved cutting ability especially at its center portion. 1 The drill tip is not separately patented.
As illustrated in the above drawings from the ’690 patent, the drill has a tip (1), shank portion (2), twisted grooves (3), projections (4) (these projections bend and break the chips to render them smoothly removable) and a cоnical end having a center point (11) at the apex of the cone and a pair of cutting edges (10). The drill shank (2) is made of medium carbon steel. The drill tip (1) is made of a more durable carbide and is brazed to the steel shank (2). Brazing is like soldering but with a much higher melting point. It requires a temperature of 1300 degrеes Fahrenheit to join the carbide tip to the steel shank.
Sandvik manufactures a commercial embodiment of the patented drill. Although made of durable carbide, over time and use, the drill tip dulls and may require resharpening. Resharpening, also known as regrinding, involves putting a new edge on the drill tip. Normаlly, the drill can cut through about one thousand inches of material before needing resharpening, depending, of course, upon the hardness of the material being cut. Sandvik expects the drill tip to be resharpened and, in fact, issues guidelines explaining how to resharpen the tip so as to maintain the specially configured cutting edges. Sandvik does not contend that resharpening constitutes infringement.
E.J. offers a drill repair service which includes resharpening and retipping Sandvik drills. E.J. retips, at the request of its customers, when the tip cannot be sharpened because it chips, cracks or simрly wears down after being resharpened several times. According to E.J’s vice-president, Mr. Robert Hayes, some of E.J.’s customers elect not to have the drill retipped when it cannot be resharpened any longer. E.J. returns the drill to the customer or disposes of it at the customer’s request. The pаrties agree that when the tip is damaged (i.e. chipped, cracked or sufficiently worn down so that it cannot be resharpened), the drill has reached the end of its useful life unless it is retipped.
E.J.’s retipping process includes removing the worn or damaged tip by heating the tip to 1300 degrees Fahrenhеit using an acetylene torch. E.J. then brazes in a rectangular piece of new carbide onto the drill shank. After the piece of carbide has cooled, E.J.
Sandvik claims that E.J.’s retipping service constitutes an infringing reconstruction of its patented drills. Sandvik does not manufacture or sell replacement drill tips. It contends that it never intended for the drills to be retipped. E.J. contends that its retipping service is a lawful repair of the patented drills.
On December 7, 1994, Sandvik filed a patent infringemеnt suit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee claiming that E.J.’s retipping service was an impermissible reconstruction of the patented drill and that E.J.’s actions, therefore, constituted an infringement of the ’690 and T62 patents. On summary judgment, the district court held that E.J.’s retipping was a permissible repair, not a reconstruction of the drills.
DISCUSSION
I.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo, Conroy v. Reebok Int'l Ltd.,
II.
Direct infringement includes the making of a patented article without authority. 35 U.S.C. § 271(a) (1994). Sandvik contends that E.J. is reconstructing its patented drill and therefore infringing its ’690 and ’162 patents under § 271(a). However, when Sandvik sold its patеnted drills to its customers, it granted them an implied license to use the drill for its useful life,
see Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
The Supreme Court has taken an expansive view of what constitutes a permissible repair. In
Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co.,
The Court also rejected the “heart of the invention test.”
See id.
at 344-45, 81 S.Ct. at
In
Am I,
the Supreme Court further explained the tеst for what constitutes a reconstruction: “The decisions of this Court require the conclusion that reconstruction of a patented entity, comprised of unpatented elements, is limited to such a true reconstruction of the entity as to ‘in fact make a new article,’ after the entity, viewed as a whole, has become spent.”
There are a number of factors to consider in determining whether a defendant has made a new article, after the device has become spent, including the nature of the actions by the defendant, the nature of the device and how it is designed (namely, whether one of the components of the patented combination has a shorter useful life than the whole), whether a market has developed to manufacture or service the part at issue and objective evidence of the intent of the patentee. Under the totality of the circumstanсes, we hold in this case that E.J.’s actions are a reconstruction.
By E.J.’s own admission, the drill is “spent” when the tip can no longer be resharpened unless it is retipped. In fact, the record reveals that E.J.’s customers may elect not to retip and inform E.J. to discard the drill instead.
Moreover, the nature of thе work done by E.J. shows that retipping is more like reconstruction than repair. E.J. does not just attach a new part for a worn part, but rather must go .though several steps to replace, configure and integrate the tip onto the shank. It has to break the worn or damaged tip from the shank by heating it to 1300 degrees Fahrenheit. It brazes to the shank a new rectangular block of carbide and grinds and machines it to the proper diameter and creates the point. Thereafter, the tip is honed and sharpened, grinding the rake surfaces and the center of the point and honing the edges. These actions are effectively a re-creation of the patented invention after it is spent.
This is not a case where it is clear that the patented device has a useful life much longer than that of certain parts which wear out quickly. For example, in
Wilson v. Simpson,
The proof in the case, is, that one of [the patentee’s] machines, properly made, will last in use for sevеral years, but that its cutting-knives will wear out and must be replaced at least every sixty or ninety days.
[If such a] part of the combination is meant to be only temporary in the use of the whole, and to be frequently replaced, because it will not last as long as the other parts of the combination, its inventоr cannot complain.
The drill tip in this case is not a part like the detachable knives in the Wilson that have to be replaced periodically over the useful life of the planing machine. The drill tip was not manufactured to be a replaceable part, although it cоuld be resharpened a number of times to extend its life. It was not intended or expected to have a life of temporary duration in comparison to the drill shank. And finally, the tip was not attached to the shank in a manner to be easily detachable.
In
Aro I,
the Supreme Court also noted that “the consequent demand for replacement fabrics has given rise to a substantial industry.” Evidence of development in the industry could also be a factor tending to prove that there is a reasonable expectation that the part of the patented combination wears out quickly and requires frеquent replacement.
See also Kendall Co. v. Progressive Medical Tech., Inc.,
Finally, there was no intent evidenced by the patentee that would support E.J.’s argument that replacement of the tips is a repair.
See Kendall Co.,
Although there is no bright-line test for determining whether reconstruction or repair has occurred, we conclude based on all of the facts in this case that E.J. is reconstructing an otherwise spent device when it retips Sandvik’s drills. Accordingly, wе hold that E.J.’s drill tip replacements infringe the ’690 and ’162 patents. Because there are no disputed issues of fact, we reverse the district court grant of summary judgment.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Claim 1 of the '690 patent provides:
A drill comprising a pair of cutting edges each starting at the center of rotation of the drill and extending symmetrically with respect to said center and curved outwardly away from the direction of rotation of the drill with a greater curvature in the radial inner portion than in the outer peripheral portion of the drill when viewed from the bottom of the drill, each of the cutting edges being formed with a rake face starting at said center of rotation and having a rake angle approximately equal to zero at the radial inner portion of said rake face, said drill having twisted grooves, and means defining a cavity formed in said twisted grooves close to said starting end of each of the cutting edges to provide an increase in rаke face at the inner radial portion of the cutting edge in the vicinity of said starting end of said cutting edge.
The T62 patent, a division of the ’690 patent, describes and claims similar subject matter. For example, claim 1 of the T62 patent claims a method of drilling a bore using a drill having "helical grooves and a pair of cutting edges having a rake face.”
