AG Fur Industrielle Elektronik AGIE v. Sodick Co.

748 F. Supp. 1305, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1257, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13661, 1990 WL 157779
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedOctober 5, 1990
Docket87 C 8974
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 748 F. Supp. 1305 (AG Fur Industrielle Elektronik AGIE v. Sodick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
AG Fur Industrielle Elektronik AGIE v. Sodick Co., 748 F. Supp. 1305, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1257, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13661, 1990 WL 157779 (N.D. Ill. 1990).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, District Judge.

Each side in this hard-fought patent suit 1 seeks summary disposition of part of the other side’s prayer for relief. Defendants-Counterplaintiffs Sodick Company, Ltd., Sodick, Inc. and KGK International Corp. (collectively “Sodick”) have moved alternatively (1) for partial summary judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. (“Rule”) 56 upholding Sodick’s Counterclaim Count II or (2) for an order narrowing the issues under Rule 16. Plaintiff-Counterdefendant AG Fur Industrielle Elektronik AGIE (“Agie”) has moved for dismissal of Sodick’s Counterclaim Count I under Rule 12(b)(6). 2 For the reasons stated in this memorandum opinion and order, Sodick’s motion for par *1307 tial summary judgment is granted and Agie’s motion to dismiss is denied. 3

Facts and Procedural History

This case involves patent rights to specific designs of wire electrical discharge machine tools (“wire EDMs”) and even more specifically to computer numerically controlled versions of those machines (“CNC wire EDMs”). As Sodick describes it, a CNC wire EDM works like a sophisticated jigsaw. It performs delicate cutting jobs on metal or other electrically conductive material such as ceramics. Cutting is performed by a wire electrode that passes through the material being cut and is stretched between two guides, one on either side of a workpiece. Unlike a jigsaw, however, cutting is not accomplished by physical contact between the wire and the material being cut, but instead by electroe-rosion: Electrical discharges emitted from the wire electrode pass through a dielectric liquid such as deionized water (the “fluid medium”) and erode the conductive material being cut. As the electric sparks from the wire electrode shave off bits of the material being cut, the flushing fluid removes the cuttings from the cutting area.

Both Agie and Sodick make wire EDM machines. Agie has claimed that Sodick’s designs infringe on an Agie patent, while Sodick has counterclaimed that Agie’s patent was procured by fraud. At issue in the current motions is:

1. whether Sodick’s newest type of wire guide and fluid medium flushing assemblies (the “New Assemblies”) — the structures that determine how the fluid medium is discharged in relation to the wire electrode — infringe one or more of Claims 1, 7, 9, 20 and 22 (the “Five Claims”) of Agie’s earlier-procured United States Patent No. 3,928,163 (the “ ’163 patent”), 4 and
2. whether Sodick’s Count I states a cause of action for antitrust violations.

Only the first of those motions involves a factual inquiry as to which a determination of materiality must be made. 5 Many of the necessary factual findings were dealt with in this Court’s May 5, 1990 order (the “Order”) 6 preliminarily enjoining Agie from further pursuing before the ITC any enforcement proceedings related to Sodick wire EDMs equipped with the New Assemblies, pending this Court’s ruling on Sodick’s motion for partial summary judgment on Count II. Although Sodick later withdrew that motion in its then-pending form, it has since refiled basically the same motion. That current motion seeks a summary declaratory judgment finding that the New Assemblies simply implement prior art (prior to the ’163 patent, that is), so that the Agie patent cannot block the New Assemblies.

*1308 1. Prior Art. On August 15, 1972 Hans Rudolf Lehmann procured Swiss Patent No. 526365 (the “Lehmann patent”) for a wire EDM incorporating the wire guide and flushing fluid assembly shown in Exhibit 1. As that exhibit discloses, and as Order at 2-3 found, the Lehmann patent disclosed the following characteristics:

(a) Flushing liquid is discharged through the outlets of several discrete channels 23 formed in the upper die 12 and several discrete channels 22 formed in the lower die 11. Lehmann states in part that “each die has several channels 22 and 23, respectively, which provide a link between the external face and the internal face of the die.” None of the channels 22 and 23 is coaxial with the axis of the wire electrode 7.
(b) Flushing liquid is discharged from the outlets of channels 22 and 23 at a substantial angle to the axis of the wire electrode 7.
(c) Flushing liquid, as it leaves the outlets of channels 22 and 23, is not discharged parallel to the axis of the wire electrode 7.
(d) Flushing liquid, as it leaves the outlets of channels 22 and 23, is not discharged alongside of the wire electrode.
(e) Flushing liquid, as it leaves the outlets of channels 22 and 23, is not discharged in contact with the wire electrode.

2. Agie’s ’163 Patent. On April 23, 1974 Agie applied for its own patent (issued December 23, 1975 as the ’163 patent) on the wire EDM assembly shown in Exhibit 2. As Exhibit 2 illustrates, that patent differed from the Lehmann patent in that the '163 patent flushing assembly includes a single duct that surrounds the wire electrode coaxially and that discharges flushing fluid in a single stream in contact with, alongside of and parallel to the wire electrode. Claims 1, 7 and 9 7 of the ’163 patent describe Agie’s machine as a wire electroerosion machine tool with a wire guide and fluid delivery means including:

a portion defining an outlet for discharging a fluid medium alongside of said electrode in contact with the outer surface thereof and parallel to the axis thereof towards a working area of said electrode, and a portion providing duct means for leading said fluid medium from a supply conduit to said outlet in such a way as to cause said fluid medium to be discharged through said outlet as aforesaid when supplied from said supply conduit.

Agie did not cite the Lehmann patent as prior art during the course of its original prosecution of the ’163 patent. At the request of one of Agie’s competitors, however, the ’163 patent was reexamined by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“PTO”) as Reexamination Request No. 90/000,629 filed September 17, 1984 (the “Reexamination”), and on November 5, 1985 Reexamination Certificate No. B1 3,928,163 was issued. In the course of the Reexamination Agie added several new claims, including Claims 20 and 22. Each of those claims included a limitation virtually identical to that quoted above from Claim l. 8 As the following discussion reflects, much of Sodick’s legal position rests on what did and what did not take place during the reexamination proceedings.

Part of the reexamination involved comparison of the ’163 patent’s claims to prior art including the Lehmann patent. On February 20, 1985 Agie filed a Statement and Amendment of Patent Owner seeking to distinguish the ’163 patent from Leh-mann and other prior art.

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748 F. Supp. 1305, 18 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1257, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13661, 1990 WL 157779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ag-fur-industrielle-elektronik-agie-v-sodick-co-ilnd-1990.