3m Innovative Properties Company and Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company v. Avery Dennison Corporation

350 F.3d 1365, 2003 WL 22844387
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJanuary 20, 2004
Docket03-1203
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 350 F.3d 1365 (3m Innovative Properties Company and Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company v. Avery Dennison Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
3m Innovative Properties Company and Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company v. Avery Dennison Corporation, 350 F.3d 1365, 2003 WL 22844387 (Fed. Cir. 2004).

Opinions

Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge CLEVENGER. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge MICHEL.

CLEVENGER, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs-Appellants 3M Innovative Properties Company and Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Company (collectively “3M”) sued Defendant-Appellee Avery Dennison (“Avery”) for infringement of claim 1 of U.S. Patent No. 5,897,-930 (“the '930 patent”) in the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. After construing disputed claim terms, the district court entered summary judgment in favor of Avery, concluding that Avery did not infringe, as a matter of law, the '930 patent either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents. We reverse the district court’s claim construction, vacate its summary judgment and remand for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

I

3M and Avery compete in the market for adhesive-based products for the commercial graphics industry. In our increasingly image-suffused world, this industry seems to have targeted all available surfaces in public places, including the exteri- or of busses, trucks and other vehicles, as appropriate locations for advertising images. So that these advertisements may be efficiently and pervasively placed on such diverse surfaces, images are pre-printed onto sheets of adhesive-backed film. These films, like bumper stickers, have release liners that can be stripped off to reveal a pressure sensitive adhesive just prior to affixation of the image.

Even one of skill in the art of sticking films on surfaces can experience difficulties. Correct positioning of a large image may require repeated adjustments, and if the film is not initially placed in precisely the desired position, removing the film and repositioning it is likely to damage the film and mar the sought-after image. Additionally, pockets of air, in the form of [1316]*1316bubbles or blisters, may become entrapped between the film and the surface if the two are not mated perfectly.

The '930 patent describes a release liner that, according to 3M, avoids these positioning and air-entrapment difficulties. Also according to 3M, Avery’s EZ Film liner infringes the claims of the '930 patent in the features it uses to provide these benefits.

II

As implicated in the current litigation, the '930 patent “relates to embossed webs useful as liners for pressure sensitive adhesives.” '930 patent, col. 1, 11. 5-7. When used as a “release liner,” the “embossed web” is the adhesive-protective layer that is removed from the back of the film to expose the adhesive. More specifically, the '930 patent addresses embossed webs that are manufactured with a particular type of three-dimensional configuration or “topography” that are useful insofar as they fashion an obverse topography in the exposed adhesive.

Only independent product claim 1 of the '930 patent is at issue in this appeal, and it reads as follows:

1. A carrier web, comprising: at least one surface that has a multiple embossed pattern having a first embossed pattern and a second embossed pattern, wherein the first embossed pattern forms an array of depressions, wherein the depressions of the first embossed pattern are in the second embossed pattern, wherein the second embossed pattern comprises lands and ridges between the lands, and wherein the height of the ridges over the lands ranges from about 3 to about 45 m.

(emphasis added).

In the preferred embodiment, the first and second embossed patterns each serves a different function. The “depressions” of the first embossed pattern in the web enhance the film’s positionability. They result in protruding bumps in the exposed adhesive, minimizing the surface area of the initial points of contact between the adhesive and the substrate and increasing the ease with which the image-imprinted film can be positioned after initial contact but before complete adhesion. Additionally, if nonadhesive granules, such as glass beads, are placed in the depressions prior to the web being coated with adhesive, the granules stick to the adhesive when the liner is removed, creating nonadhesive bumps and further increasing positionability. In contrast, the “ridges” in between the “lands” of the second embossed pattern in the web result in a network of valleys in the exposed adhesive. Because these valleys create channels through which air can flow even after the film has adhered to the substrate, air that would otherwise become trapped as air bubbles due to imperfect application of the film can escape.

Independent method claim 6 is also relevant to this appeal, although 3M does not allege that Avery has infringed it. Claim 6 provides:

A method of embossing, comprising the steps of:
(a) embossing a carrier web having at least one surface with a first pattern, to create a first pattern of depressions;
(b) embossing the surface with a second pattern, to create a second pattern of depressions comprising lands and ridges;
wherein the depressions created from the first embossing step are substantially preserved during the second embossing step even though the second embossing step superimposes the second pattern on the depressions created by the first embossing step, and wherein [1317]*1317the height of the ridges over the land ranges from about 3 to about 45 m.

The specification provides several definitions for terms used in claim 1, two of which are relevant here:

“Embossed” means a topography on a web or on tooling having an effective three-dimensional pattern that generates a difference in surface planar dimension in the liner or the tooling.
“Multiple embossed” means two or more embossing patterns are superimposed on the web to create a complex pattern of differing depths of embossing.

’930 patent, col. 1, ll. 61-64, col. 2, ll.1-3.

Ill

Avery’s accused product is its EZ Film, an adhesive-backed graphics film with both positionability and air-egress features. The EZ Film liner is created by first depositing or printing polyurethane “ink” dots (the “PU dots”) on top of the liner’s outer polyethylene layer (the “PE layer”) and then embossing a pattern of hexagonal ridges and lands in the liner when the PU/PE combination passes over an embossing roll. This hexagonal pattern in the liner creates air-egress-enabling channels in the adhesive layer when the liner is removed. At some point (or points) in the manufacturing process, the PU dots are pressed into the PE layer of the liner.1 When the liner is removed from the adhesive layer, the PU dots remain affixed to the adhesive, creating less-adhesive, posi-tionability-enhancing bumps.

rv

3M alleges that the Avery EZ Film liner infringes the '930 patent because the dents in the PE layer of the liner (created when the PU dots are embedded) constitute a “first embossed pattern,” the hexagonal pattern constitutes a “second embossed pattern,” and because all remaining claim limitations are satisfied.

In its first order, the district court construed claim 1 of the '930 patent and denied 3M’s plea for a preliminary injunction on the ground, among other things, that 3M had not demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of its infringement claim. See 3M Innovative Props. Co. v.

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350 F.3d 1365, 2003 WL 22844387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/3m-innovative-properties-company-and-minnesota-mining-and-manufacturing-cafc-2004.