Automatic Equipment Manufacturing Company v. Danko Manufacturing, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Nebraska
DecidedSeptember 8, 2021
Docket8:19-cv-00162
StatusUnknown

This text of Automatic Equipment Manufacturing Company v. Danko Manufacturing, LLC (Automatic Equipment Manufacturing Company v. Danko Manufacturing, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Automatic Equipment Manufacturing Company v. Danko Manufacturing, LLC, (D. Neb. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA

AUTOMATIC EQUIPMENT MANUFACTURING COMPANY, a Nebraska company; 8:19-CV-162

Plaintiff/Counter- Defendant, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

and

CREED-MONARCH, INC., A Connecticut Corporation;

Intervenor/Counter- Defendant vs.

DANKO MANUFACTURING, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company;

Defendant/Counter- Plaintiff.

I. INTRODUCTION This matter comes before the Court on the parties’ various pretrial motions. Filing 77; Filing 79; Filing 86; Filing 97; Filing 105; Filing 108. The Court grants Plaintiff’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Expert Witness Testimony on Patent Infringement and Invalidity, Filing 77; grants Plaintiff’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence and Testimony of Non-Comparable Licenses, Filing 79; grants Defendant’s Motion to Supplement, Filing 105; denies Defendant’s Consolidated Motions in Limine, Filing 86; denies Plaintiff’s Motion to Strike, Filing 97 as moot; and denies Defendant’s Motion to Strike, Filing 108. II. BACKGROUND Plaintiff, Automatic Equipment Manufacturing Company doing business as Blue Ox, and Intervenor, Creed-Monarch, Inc. (jointly, “Blue Ox”),1 seek a declaratory judgment to the effect that Defendant’s, Danko Manufacturing, LLC’s (“Danko’s) patent for a towed-vehicle brake detection system is invalid. Filing 4 at 2. Danko filed a counterclaim alleging Blue Ox infringed on said patent. Filing 8 at 11-14.

The patent at the center of the dispute is U.S. Patent No. 10,137,870 (“the ’870 Patent”) which was issued by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on November 27, 2018, and which is presently assigned to Danko. Filing 4-1 at 2. The ’870 Patent describes a brake-lock detection system. Filing 4-1 at 2. It is used when one vehicle is towing another, and the user wishes to employ both the towing and towed vehicles’ brakes. Filing 4-1 at 11. To do so, the user installs an auxiliary brake activation system in the towed vehicle which serves to activate the towed vehicles brakes at the same time as the towing vehicle brakes. Filing 4-1 at 11. The invention described in the ’870 Patent “relates to . . . a structure and method for detecting when the brakes of a towed vehicle are locked by a brake activation system.” Filing 4-1 at 11.

The parties have filed various pretrial motions in advance of the jury trial set in this matter for September 14, 2021. The Court will address each motion in turn. III. ANALYSIS A. Plaintiff’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Expert Witness Testimony on Patent Infringement and Invalidity Blue Ox first moves in limine to exclude Danko from presenting “expert testimony on the on the issues of infringement, validity, and claim construction,” lay opinion testimony regarding whether any prior art reference(s) limit or invalidate the claimed patent, and any opinion testimony

1 Plaintiff Blue Ox and intervenor Creed-Monarch assert the same interests and have submitted combined briefing. regarding a witness’s “subjective interpretation” of the claims. Filing 77 at 1-2. Danko argues the inventors should be permitted to testify from their personal knowledge regarding “[their] own subjective interpretation[] of [their] own patent, of competitive devices, [and] of prior art.” Filing 103 at 2. The Court grants Blue Ox’s motion. Jared Burkhardt and Daniel Decker are two of the inventors of the ’870 patent. Danko

agrees that it did not designate Decker, Burkhardt, or indeed anyone other than its damages expert, as an expert witness, and the deadline for expert designations has passed. Filing 55 (setting expert- witness disclosure deadline for January 19, 2021); Filing 103 at 1 (Danko conceding it “elected not to make a technical expert a part of its case in chief”). However, it argues that its inventor– witnesses should be permitted to testify regarding “the details of their inventions, competitive brake control systems, and prior art,” provided “Danko makes a proper foundational showing that [they] are skilled artisans.” Filing 103 at 4. Blue Ox agrees Decker and Burkhardt should be permitted to testify “about facts concerning the patent and the development of that invention” but not about their opinions regarding infringement and invalidity. Filing 110 at 3 n.1.

Rule 701 governs non-expert opinion testimony: If a witness is not testifying as an expert, testimony in the form of an opinion is limited to one that is:

(a) rationally based on the witness’s perception;

(b) helpful to clearly understanding the witness’s testimony or to determining a fact in issue; and

(c) not based on scientific, technical, or other specialized knowledge within the scope of Rule 702.

Fed. R. Evid. 701. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has found that inventors not otherwise qualified as experts cannot offer opinion testimony and are limited to presenting factual testimony. See Verizon Servs. Corp. v. Cox Fibernet Virginia, Inc., 602 F.3d 1325, 1339–40 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (“The district court properly allowed testimony from the witnesses about the patents they invented based on their personal knowledge, and properly excluded these same witnesses from providing expert testimony on invalidity for which they had not previously provided expert reports or been qualified as an expert.”); Air Turbine Tech., Inc. v. Atlas Copco AB, 410 F.3d 701,

714 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (“[T]he fact that [the witness] may have particularized knowledge and experience as a co-inventor of the claimed invention does not necessarily mean he also has particularized knowledge and experience in the structure and workings of the accused device. Under these circumstances, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in concluding that [the witness’s] testimony amounted to improper expert testimony.”). Accordingly, because Decker and Burkhardt have not been disclosed or qualified as expert witnesses, the Court concludes they are limited to presenting factual testimony based on their personal knowledge and may not present expert opinion testimony. Accordingly, Blue Ox’s Motion in Limine, Filing 77, is granted.

B. Plaintiff’s Motion in Limine to Exclude Evidence and Testimony of Non- Comparable Licenses Blue Ox next moves in limine to prevent Danko’s damages expert, Darrell Harris, from presenting testimony based on what it views to be license information and technology that are not comparable to the ’870 patent. Filing 79; Filing 80 at 1-2. Danko responds that Harris worked with the only available comparison information and his testimony should not be excluded. Filing 102 at 2. The Court concludes Harris’s comparable-licenses testimony must be excluded. Danko’s damages expert, Darrell Harris, submitted an amended damages report in June 2021 calculating the potential damages to which Danko would be entitled should Blue Ox be found to have infringed Danko’s patent. Filing 83-1 at 1. In support of this assessment, Harris considered what a reasonable royalty rate might have been had Danko and Blue Ox agreed upon such a license rate at the outset. Filing 83-1 at 2; see also Georgia-Pac. Corp. v. U.S. Plywood Corp., 318 F. Supp. 1116, 1120 (S.D.N.Y. 1970) (stating one factor in the determination of the amount of a reasonable royalty is what the patentee and infringer would have agreed upon if both had been

trying to reach an agreement at the time the infringement began), modified sub nom. Georgia-Pac. Corp. v. U.S.

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