Bailey v. Dart Container Corp. of Michigan

980 F. Supp. 584, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15072, 1997 WL 622720
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 29, 1997
DocketCIV. A. 94-10758-RCL
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 980 F. Supp. 584 (Bailey v. Dart Container Corp. of Michigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Dart Container Corp. of Michigan, 980 F. Supp. 584, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15072, 1997 WL 622720 (D. Mass. 1997).

Opinion

LINDSAY, District Judge.

Report and Recommendation accepted.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION RE: PLAINTIFF BAILEY’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION OF REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION RE: BAILEY’S CROSS-MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT OF INFRINGEMENT OF U.S. PATENT NOS (sic) 4,322,015 AND 4,473,167 (DOCKET ENTRY # 153)

ORDER RE: MOTION FOR IMPOSITION OF OTHER SANCTIONS FOR FAILURE OF PLAINTIFF JOHN A. BAILEY TO COMPLY WITH THE LOCAL RULES OF THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS (DOCKET ENTRY #72)

March 12, 1997

BOWLER, United States Magistrate Judge.

On April 24, 1996, this court issued a Report and Recommendation (Docket Entry # 108) on a motion for summary judgment filed by plaintiff John A. Bailey (“Bailey”), owner of U.S. Patent Nos. 4,322,015 (“the ’015 patent”) and 4,473,167 (“the 167 patent”). On December 13, 1996, this court issued a second Report and Recommendation (Docket Entry # 145) concerning two issues raised by defendant Dart Container Corporation of Michigan (“Dart”) in a motion to reconsider (Docket Entry # 111) the April 24, 1996 Report and Recommendation. In the course of issuing a ruling on Dart’s motion for reconsideration (Docket Entry # 111), this court offered Bailey the opportunity to file a motion to reconsider the portion of the April 24,1996 Report and Recommendation (Docket Entry # 108, pp. 47-49) which dealt with the prosecution history estoppel effect of a 1968 patent issued to Henry M. Chang (“the Chang patent” or “Chang”).

On January 2, 1997, Bailey filed a motion for this court to reconsider whether he properly distinguished the Chang prior art reference in such a way as to allow the term “tear impression” to include non-continuous faults extending from the edge of the rim engaging means. (Docket Entry # 153). After conducting a hearing on January 21, 1997, this court took the motion to reconsider (Docket Entry # 153) under advisement.

Also pending before this court is the issue of whether to impose a monetary sanction on Bailey and/or counsel for their violation of LR. 40.1(e). In December 1994 Dart filed a motion requesting dismissal of this action or, in the alternative, a monetary sanction due to Bailey’s failure to comply with LR. 40.1(e). The December 13, 1996 Report and Recommendation recommended against dismissal as a sanction and, instead, intimated that a monetary sanction would suffice. Dart’s initial motion, supporting memorandum and reply brief (Docket Entry # # 72, 73 & 88) failed to detail the amount of an appropriate monetary sanction. Instead, Dart summarily requested a monetary sanction and a further opportunity to be heard. (Docket Entry # 73). Accordingly, this court set the January 21, 1997 hearing to give both Bailey and Dart the opportunity to address the proper amount, if any, of a monetary sanction. Dart and Bailey have submitted certain pleadings with respect to the amount of such a sanction (Docket Entry # # 168, 169 & 173) and the issue is therefore ripe for review.

I. PLAINTIFF BAILEY’S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION OF REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION RE: BAILEY’S CROSS-MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT OF INFRINGEMENT OF U.S. PATENT NOS (sic) 1,322,015 AND 1,173,-167 (DOCKET ENTRY # 153)

The April 24,1996 Report and Recommendation discussed the Chang patent (Docket Entry # 108, pp. 46^49) in the course of recommending the denial of Bailey’s motion for summary judgment (Docket Entry # 108, pp. 44-51). Because the opinion included *587 alternative bases to deny Bailey’s motion for summary judgment irrespective of the prosecution history estoppel effect of the Chang patent (Docket Entry # 108, pp. 50-51), however, the merits of the recommendation to deny Bailey’s motion for summary judgment on these alternative bases is not under review. Neither Bailey nor Dart sought reconsideration with this court of these alternative bases. The recommendation to deny Bailey’s summary judgment motion based on these alternative grounds therefore remains unaffected by this opinion and, thus, this court need not revisit the recommendation to deny Bailey’s summary judgment motion.

With respect to the Chang patent, the April 24, 1996 Report and Recommendation determined that, “One skilled in the art reading [the] prosecution history would therefore not interpret the term impressions in claim 1 of the ’015 or the 167 patents as including or beginning at faults on the outer edge of a container lid.” (Docket Entry # 108, pp. 47-48). The opinion also stated that, “By distinguishing the slits or faults in Chang from the impressions in the claimed invention, Bailey relinquished the ability to extend the scope of the ’015 and the 167 patents to encompass impressions which include the structural equivalent of faults.” (Docket Entry # 108, p. 48). Finally, the opinion read, in the context of discussing Bailey’s reference to the Chang patent in the prosecution history, that, “[A] competitor is objectively and reasonably entitled to conclude that Bailey relinquished a scope of the ’015 and the 167 patents which would encompass impressions which begin at a fault on the outer edge of the container lid.”

The issue for reconsideration, therefore, is whether the term “tear impressions” can include a fault and, if so, the location of such fault[s] in light of the prosecution history and Bailey’s discussion therein of the Chang patent. Before turning to the prosecution history, however, claim interpretation initially involves examining the language of the claim in light of the specification and the prosecution history. 1 Accordingly, this court initially turns to the claim language and the specifications of the ’015 and ’167 patents visa-vis tear impressions and faults. 2

Claim 1 of the ’015 patent claims, “a pair of spaced apart tear impressions extending inwardly from the edge of the container lid.” The pertinent language concerning tear impressions in claim 1 of the ’167 is identical to the above quoted language except that the ’167 patent substitutes the words “rim-engaging means” for the words “container lid.” Dependent claim 3 of the ’015 patent claims the limitations set forth in claim 1 and adds the feature of a fault at the end of each tear impression. 3 The language of dependent claim 3 of the ’015 patent reads as follows, “The container lid of claim 1 wherein the exterior end of each tear impression is faulted through said polymeric sheet material.” Dependent claim 7 of the 167 patent mirrors dependent claim 3 of the ’015 patent except for the omission of the words, “through said polymeric sheet material.”

The language defining the term “tear impression” in claim 1 of the ’015 and the 167 patent therefore makes no reference to faults. Rather, the aforementioned dependent claims add the feature of a faulted tear impression with the fault located at the exterior end of each tear impression.

The specification supports this interpretation. Without referring to a faulted characteristic, the ’015 patent gives a general definition of tear impressions as being “spaced apart” and “extending inwardly from edge (20).” The specification further notes that *588

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980 F. Supp. 584, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15072, 1997 WL 622720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-dart-container-corp-of-michigan-mad-1997.