Medical Sterilization, Inc. (MSI) and Robert S. Luniewski (Luniewski) appeal from a summary judgment of the United States District Court (Mishler, J.) for the Eastern District of New York, No. CV 88-1681. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Luniewski was employed by Shamrock Technologies, Inc. (Shamrock) between May 1980 and July 1983. As a condition of employment, he agreed to assign his work-related inventions to Shamrock. Luniewski and William Neuberg jointly invented an apparatus and method for processing poly-tetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) with radiation. On March 26, 1982, Luniewski assigned his rights in the inventions to Shamrock. Patent applications were filed on May 3, 1982 and July 22, 1983. Having signed declarations to be filed with the patent applications, Luniewski left Shamrock in July 1983 and joined MSI as Vice President in charge of Operations. Thereafter, MSI began radiation processing of PTFE; first by an “original process”, and, after this suit was commenced, by a “current process”. 1
On May 31, 1988 and October 11, 1988, respectively, the applications issued as United States Patent Nos. 4,748,005 (’005) (apparatus) and 4,777,192 (’192) (method). On May 31, 1988 Shamrock sued MSI and Luniewski for infringement of its ’005 patent. MSI and Luniewski counterclaimed for a declaration of invalidity. In an October 13,1988 “Memorandum of Decision and Order”, the district court applied the doctrine of assignor estoppel and granted Shamrock's partial summary judgment motion to strike affirmative defenses and to dismiss the counterclaim. The district court rejected the arguments that the assignment was fraudulently obtained and that privity was lacking between Luniewski and MSI. 2
On November 18, 1988, Shamrock amended its complaint, asserting infringement of the ’192 patent.
In an August 8, 1989 “Memorandum of Decision and Order”, the district court rejected a request to withdraw the October 13, 1988 order and entered summary judgment that: (1) the affirmative defenses and counterclaim relating to invalidity of the ’192 patent were barred by assignor estoppel; (2) the defense of unenforceability of both patents was barred by assignor estoppel; and (3) the accused original and current processes infringed the patents. On August 24, 1989, the district court entered a “Final Partial Judgment” pursuant to Rule 54(b), Fed.R.Civ.P., 3 holding the patents not invalid, enforceable, and in *791 fringed and enjoining MSI and Luniewski from further infringement.
ISSUES
1. Whether the district court erred in granting summary judgment of infringement.
2. Whether the district court erred in holding that assignor estoppel precluded the invalidity and unenforceability defenses.
OPINION
Summary judgment is appropriate where “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact” and “the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
A. Infringement
1. The Claimed Inventions
The ’005 patent is directed to an apparatus for processing high molecular weight, flowable solid polytetrafluoroethylene. Claim 1 is representative: 4
Apparatus for batch radiation processing of a high molecular weight, flowable solid polytetrafluoroethylene material to degrade said material to lower its molecular weight and render it grindable into a powder, comprising a processing vessel for holding a batch of said material during processing, a source of particle radiation for supplying radiation to a selected region of said processing vessel, mechanical stirring means for agitating said material in said processing vessel during said processing thereby to repeatedly move said material into and out of said selected region whereby said material is uniformly irradiated, and water cooling means for maintaining said vessel and said material below a selected temperature during said processing.
The ’192 patent resulted from a continuation-in-part of the application that resulted in the ’005 patent and is directed to a method for processing PTFE. Claim 1 is representative:
A method for processing flowable solid polytetrafluoroethylene material by radiation, to degrade said material to lower its molecular weight and render it grind-able into a powder, comprising
(a) supplying said material to a processing vessel,
(b) supplying radiation to a selected region of said processing vessel,
(c) agitating said material in said processing vessel during said processing thereby to repeatedly move said material into and out of said selected region whereby said material is uniformly irradiated, and,
(d) cooling said material to maintain a temperature below 500° F. during said processing.
2. The Accused Processes
Appellants admitted that their original process involved a processing vessel for holding PTFE during processing, a source of particle radiation for supplying radiation to a portion of said vessel, mechanical stirring means for agitating the PTFE in the vessel during processing in such manner that the PTFE repeatedly moves into and out of the region being irradiated, and injection of water into the PTFE to cool it during processing.
The current process differs from the original in that agitation is achieved with air pressure and paddles, air cooling has replaced water cooling, and an air classifier extracts particles of PTFE from the vessel.
3.The Disputed Claim Limitations
Appellants focus on four claim limitations and their use of a prior art step, but fail to establish the presence of genuine issues of material fact. Though the district court said both patents are infringed
*792
by both processes, it is sufficient to note the correctness of its judgment based on infringement of the ’005 patent by the original process and infringement of the ’192 patent by the current process.
See Fromson v. Advance Offset Plate, Inc.,
(a)“Uniformly irradiated”
The district court correctly looked to the specifications and prosecution histories of the patents to illuminate the meaning of “uniformly irradiated”.
Loctite Corp. v. Ultraseal Ltd.,
(b)“Into and out of”
Appellants’ argument that because the current process uses paddles and air pressure to agitate PTFE it does not meet this limitation was correctly rejected by district court as “meritless”.
(c)“Water cooling means for maintaining said vessel and [the PTFE] below a selected temperature during processing”
Appellants say their spraying of water directly on the PTFE in the original process avoids this limitation because the ’005
specification
discloses a water jacket precluding contact between the water and the PTFE. The record, however, supplies no basis for reading the
claim
as limited to a water jacket or as precluding direct spraying of the PTFE.
See E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
(d)“PTFE temperature below 500° F.”
Appellants say there is no evidence that their current process meets this limitation. We fully agree with the district court’s analysis:
[appellants] do not assert that their processes involve temperatures above 500° F., but merely that the temperature is below 620°. Although [appellants] are correct in asserting that on a motion for summary judgment all inferences must be drawn in favor of the nonmovant, it has been held that:
the nonmovant must do more than merely present some evidence on an issue it asserts is disputed. Sufficient evidence for a jury to return a verdict in favor of the nonmovant must be forthcoming.
A.B. Chance Co. v. RTE Co. [Corp.],
(e) Prior art step
The district court correctly noted that appellants’ use of the prior art step of grinding was incidental and insignificant. The argument that infringement is avoided by adding a prior art step is fallacious. No claim limitation precludes use of simultaneous grinding and irradiation, and no basis appears in the record for reading such a limitation into the claims.
See E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
B. Assignor Estoppel
In
Diamond Scientific Co. v. Ambico, Inc.,
Appellants argue that applying assignor estoppel was error because: (1) MSI is not in privity with Luniewski, (2) Luniewski was misled and under duress when he signed the declarations, and (3) the inequitable conduct defense is not subject to assignor estoppel.
1. Privity
Assignor estoppel is an equitable doctrine, id. at 1224, 6 USPQ2d at 2030, “that is mainly concerned with the balance of the equities between the parties.” Id. at 1225, 6 USPQ2d at 2031. Those in privity with the assignor partake of that balance; hence, extension of the estoppel to those in privity is justified. See id. at 1224, 6 USPQ2d at 2030.
What constitutes “privity” varies, depending on the purpose for which privity is asserted.
See American Mach. Co. v. Everedy Mach. Co.,
Privity, like the doctrine of assignor estoppel itself, is determined upon a balance of the equities. If an inventor assigns his invention to his employer company A and leaves to join company B, whether company B is in privity and thus bound by the doctrine will depend on the equities dictated by the relationship between the inventor and company B in light of the act of infringement. The closer that relationship, the more the equities will favor applying the doctrine to company B.
See, e.g., Douglass v. United States Appliance Corp.,
The district court correctly determined that, considering the balance of equities and the relationship of Luniewski and MSI, no genuine issue of material fact exists regarding privity in this case. The undisputed facts are: (1) in July 1983 Luniewski left Shamrock to join MSI as Vice-President in charge of Operations; (2) Luniewski owns 50,000 shares of MSI stock; (3) MSI was formed in 1982 to sterilize surgical instruments and manufacture other medical goods; yet as soon as Luniewski was hired in 1983, MSI built facilities for processing PTFE with radiation; (4) Luniewski oversaw the design and construction of those facilities; (5) Luniewski was hired in part to start up MSI’s infringing operations; (6) the decision to begin processing PTFE with radiation was made jointly by Luniewski and the president of MSI; (7) MSI began manufacturing PTFE with radiation in 1985; and (8) Luniewski was in charge of MSI’s PTFE operation.
MSI attempts to distinguish
Diamond Scientific,
citing
National Cash Register Co. v. Remington Arms Co.,
2. Alleged Misrepresentations and Duress
Appellants say there were questions of fact on whether Luniewski was misled on inventorship and patentability and signed the declaration under intimidation and duress.
See Diamond Scientific,
It suffices to say here that we agree with the district court’s determination that no genuine issue of material fact as to misrepresentation or duress exists. Whether Luniewski was misled on inven-torship and patentability is a question relating to the viability of the patent application, not to the validity of the assignment agreement. Hence it is not among the “usual defenses to the contract of assignment”. As discussed more fully below, the inequitable conduct defense is unfounded on its face. Employment, salary and bonuses are valid consideration for the assignment, see id. at 1225, 6 USPQ2d at 2031, and to hold that fear of their loss constitutes duress or intimidation would undermine every assignment by an employee-inventor.
3. Inequitable Conduct
Appellants argue that Diamond Scientific dealt with a challenge to patent validity but is silent on the equitable defense of inequitable conduct. We reject the contention that mere classification of a defense as equitable bars consideration of assignor es-toppel.
It is at best incongruous to suppose that the equitable doctrine of assignor estoppel can never be applied to an equitable defense. The premise of the doctrine, prevention of unfairness and injustice, is not removed upon the mere denomination of a defense as “equitable”.
Diamond Scientific,
Appellants say the spectre of inequitable conduct is raised by its allegations that Neuberg was misnamed as joint inventor, and that Luniewski was misled about the prior work at High Voltage Engineering and the patentability of the inventions. Appellants rely on conjecture. Moreover, the district court correctly determined that those allegations directly contradict statements made by Luniewski in his declarations,
see, e.g., Diamond Scientific,
Appellants also point to a statement in Shamrock’s board of patent appeals brief for the ’192 patent that “radiation penetrates for some distance into the mass of particles” when in fact “shallow depth of penetration is established by Figure 6 of the patents-in-suit.” Appellants fail, however, to explain how the statement and the showing in Figure 6 could be shown to amount to withholding or concealment of material information with intent to deceive.
See Kingsdown Medical Consultants Ltd. v. Hollister, Inc.,
Appellants say that events relating to invalidity ordinarily occur before the inventor signs the declaration when he is in position to know and control them, whereas acts constituting inequitable conduct ordinarily occur after the inventor signs the declaration. That the basis for a defense arises after the inventor has signed a declaration, however, is ordinarily irrelevant, the inventor having assigned the rights to
his invention,
not alone to a patent application. As we said in
Diamond Scientific,
It is also irrelevant that, at the time of the assignment, [the inventor’s] patent applications were still pending and the Patent Office had not yet granted the patent. What [the inventor] assigned were the rights to his inventions. That Diamond may have later amended the claims in the application process (a very common occurrence in patent prosecutions), with or without [the inventor’s] assistance, does not give appellants’ argument against estoppel any greater force. Our concern must be the balance of the equities.
It is true that in a proper case general principles of equity may preclude use of assignor estoppel to bar a viable equitable defense arising from post-assignment events.
See Buckingham Prods.,
CONCLUSION
The district court’s grant of summary judgment holding the ’005 and ’192 patents not invalid, enforceable, and infringed, and enjoining appellants from further infringement, is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In the briefs, the parties use "modified" to refer to what the district court termed the "current" process. We conform our language to that of the district court.
. MSI and Luniewski appealed from the October 13 order. That appeal was dismissed because the order was not final.
Shamrock Technologies, Inc. v. Medical Sterilization, Inc.,
.Apparently, the district court labeled its judgment “partial” because the damages issue remained for resolution. Reservation of damages does not, however, render a judgment of the present type unappealable. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(c)(2).
. The '005 and '192 patents have 17 and 19 claims, respectively. The parties have not identified the asserted claims. Because independent claim 1 in each patent is infringed, we need not discuss the other claims.
. Appellants say air cooling in their current process avoids the limitation in claim 6 of the '192 patent to "supplying water” for cooling. The argument is meaningless, because air cooling clearly falls within the literal scope of claim 1 of the '192 patent.
