Ag Pro, Inc. v. Bernard A. Sakraida

474 F.2d 167, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 11840
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 1973
Docket72-1108
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 474 F.2d 167 (Ag Pro, Inc. v. Bernard A. Sakraida) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ag Pro, Inc. v. Bernard A. Sakraida, 474 F.2d 167, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 11840 (5th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge:

Ag Pro, Inc., plaintiff-appellant (hereafter plaintiff), sued Sakraida, defendant-appellee (hereafter defendant), for infringement of the D. J. Gribble, et al. (hereafter Gribble/Bennett) Patent 3,-223,070, titled “Dairy Establishment.” On the first hearing the district court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment. This Court reversed and remanded for a trial on the merits. Ag Pro v. Sakraida, 5 Cir., 1971, 437 F.2d 99.

On remand the trial was commenced and completed on the same day. The district court received suggested findings of fact and conclusions of law from both sides, adopted those of the defendant, and adjudged

“* * * that said Patent No. 3,223,070 held by Plaintiff does not constitute invention, is not patentable, and is not a valid patent, it being a combination patent, all of the elements of which are old in the dairy business, long prior to 1963, and the combination of time as described in the said patent being neither new nor meeting the test of non-obviousness, Defendant is entitled to judgment.”

(App. 175.)

Having held the patent invalid, the district court did not determine the issue of infringement. We reverse and remand.

The patent is limited to the construction and arrangement of the floor areas of the barn and the means for storing a volume of water on or immediately above the floor so that, when the water is suddenly released, it will clean all of the barn floor areas without the use of hand labor. According to the letters patent, all barn floor areas can be thoroughly cleaned in a very few minutes, where previously it took hours of labor and use of larger quantities of water to achieve an inferior result. The patent contains three claims, but only Claims 1 *169 and 3 1 are here involved. (App. 18.) In simplified form, those two claims call for a dairy barn having the following elements :

1) A paved, sloped barn floor with downhill drains;
2) individual cow stalls elevated above floor level but designed to facilitate accumulation of cow excrement on the dairy floor;
3) paved feeding and milking areas integrated into the flush system;
4) a dam which collects water in a pool uphill from or directly on the dairy floor and abruptly openable to send a sheet of water cascading through the dairy sweeping the manure to the downhill drains.

Admittedly, all the elements are old. However, prior to this patent, the concept of a controlled sheet of water to do the scouring and washing of the floor had not been used in barn construction. The prior art involved the use of spot delivery of water by high pressure hoses. None of the prior art documents shows a floor washing means constructed to collect a pool of water uphill from or on the floor so that, when the water is abruptly released, it will flow as a sheet to wash almost instantaneously all barn floor areas and discharge cow offal into drains. That is the crucial element of this patent.

The plaintiff’s patent is a modest commercial success. Over 70 dairies spanning the United States now utilize the patented manure flush system. Each installation is licensed under the patent pursuant to a one-payment, standard fee of $1500.00 plus $1.00 per cow. (App. 190, 191.)

A valid patent must be, not only novel and useful, but also nonobvious. 35 U.S.C. § 103. While the ultimate question of patent validity is one of law, a determination of nonobviousness rests on several basic factual inquiries. Those inquiries, prompted by § 103, are three in number.

“Under § 103, the scope and content of the prior art are to be determined; differences between the prior art and the claims at issue are to be ascertained ; and the level of ordinary skill in the pertinent art resolved.”

Graham v. John Deere Co., 1966, 383 U.S. 1, 17, 86 S.Ct. 684, 694, 15 L.Ed.2d 545.

The crucial issue of obviousness can only be resolved through reference to the precise facts presented, not through *170 logical or intuitive analysis distorted by the invention's simplicity and retrospective self-evidence.

In the instant case, plaintiff presented cogent and convincing evidence that the gap between its patented system and the prior art was wide and ultimately bridged only by the inventive powers of Gribble and Bennett. In contrast, defendant did not supplement the prior art references initially available to the Patent Office, nor did he cite examples of simultaneous solutions. Instead, he merely relied upon three conclusory affidavits and the testimony of one witness who admitted that no similar device existed in the prior art. (App. 246.)

A short sketch of the evidence available to the trial court will highlight the lopsided factual foundation on which the determination of the patent’s validity must rest.

(1) Evidence Presented by Defendant

While considering the Gribble/Bennett patent application in 1963, the Patent Office examiner had before him nine prior art patents and two prior art publications. Defendant introduced into evidence the two publications and only five of the patents. (Def. Exhibits 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8.) No other specific example of the prior art was revealed by defendant at trial.

Instead, defendant’s meager presentation consisted of three cursory affidavits attached to the original motion for summary judgment and the solitary testimony of Mr. Robert Price at trial.

The three affiants, Sakraida, W. C. Fairbanks and Archie Sharp, each swore to have knowledge of prior flush systems analogous to the Ag Pro patent, and each volunteered the subjective judgment that appellant’s invention was obvious. (App. 91-102.) These simplistic statements, rendered without the aid of cross-examination and devoid of specific illustrations of similar inventions, add little to an understanding of the prior art.

Defendant’s single trial witness, Mr. Robert Price, who runs a dairy in El Paso, Texas, testified that certain elements of appellant’s patented invention were known to the prior art, specifically, paved, sloped floors with downhill drains and raised stalls. (App. 239-249.) Yet, Mr. Price admitted that the patented dam-release flooding technique was novel even to him.

(2) Evidence Presented by Plaintiff

In contrast to defendant’s paltry factual presentation, plaintiff developed a full and lucid view of both the prior art and its own inventive “breakthrough.” Plaintiff skillfully juxtaposed the prevalent pre-1963 cleaning techniques with its own flush system and painted a convincing picture of a nonobvious advance.

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Bluebook (online)
474 F.2d 167, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 11840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ag-pro-inc-v-bernard-a-sakraida-ca5-1973.