Bolson Materials Int'l v. 3D Sys. Corp.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 2018
Docket17-4111
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bolson Materials Int'l v. 3D Sys. Corp. (Bolson Materials Int'l v. 3D Sys. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolson Materials Int'l v. 3D Sys. Corp., (6th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 18a0410n.06

Case No. 17-4111

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Aug 15, 2018 DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk BOLSON MATERIALS INTERNATIONAL ) CORPORATION, originally named as Bolson ) Materials International, Inc., ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED Plaintiff-Appellant, ) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR ) THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF v. ) OHIO ) 3D SYSTEMS CORPORATION; VILLAGE ) PLASTICS COMPANY, ) ) Defendants-Appellees. ) ) ____________________________________/

Before: MERRITT, WHITE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

MERRITT, Circuit Judge. In this breach of contract action, Plaintiff Bolson Materials International Corporation appeals summary judgment entered in favor of Defendants 3D Systems Corporation and Village Plastics Company. We reverse, finding that a genuine issue of material fact exists as to the meaning of a key contractual term.

This case concerns the sale of three-dimensional (“3D”) printing supplies. Whereas an inkjet printer prints two-dimensional images on a flat surface such as paper, a 3D printer constructs a product in three dimensions, like a sculpture, out of a solid material—typically plastic. All parties involved in this case are in the business of selling 3D printing “filaments”—threads of specialized plastic 3D printing material. Functionally, filaments are to a 3D printer what ink is to an inkjet printer. Case No. 17-4111 Bolson Materials International v. 3D Systems Corporation, et al.

Plaintiff Bolson is a Canadian aftermarket seller of 3D printing filaments. Defendant Village Plastics is an Ohio-based manufacturer of 3D printing filaments. In 2008, Bolson and Village entered into a Non-Disclosure and Non-Compete Agreement (“Agreement”) governing Village’s manufacture and sale of specialized filaments produced per Bolson’s specifications. From 2008 onward, Village also sold 3D printing filaments to other customers, including resellers. In 2013, Village was acquired by Defendant 3D Systems, a South Carolina corporation. Village continued to operate as a wholly-owned subsidiary of 3D Systems. Following the deterioration of Bolson’s business relationship with Village, Bolson sued the Defendants in June 2014, alleging— alongside a litany of other claims—that Village’s sales to resellers breached the Non-Compete Agreement. 3D Systems counterclaimed for Bolson’s unpaid account balance. After years of litigation, the district court entered summary judgment against Bolson.

Bolson appeals, arguing that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on Bolson’s breach of contract, contamination, and delay claims, as well as 3D Systems’ counterclaim. Bolson additionally argues that the district court erred by granting summary judgment without allowing Bolson a reasonable opportunity for discovery.

We reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment on Bolson’s breach of contract claims. At its core, this is a case about contract interpretation. The parties’ Agreement contains an undefined and ambiguous technical term: “Fused Deposition Method” (“FDM”). Bolson’s evidence establishes a genuine issue of material fact as to the parties’ intended meaning. Thus, summary judgment is improper, and we remand these claims for further proceedings in the district court. However, we affirm the district court as to the remainder of Bolson’s claims and 3D Systems’ counterclaim.

I.

A 3D printer fabricates plastic objects based on digital models. In the late 1980s, Stratasys, Ltd.—not a party to this case—developed and patented a 3D printing technique known by the trademarked term “fused deposition modeling,” abbreviated “FDM.” The Stratasys patent expired in 2009, but Stratasys retains the “FDM”-related trademarks today.

In brief, “fused deposition modeling” works as follows. First, a computer sends a digital blueprint to the 3D printer. Inside the printer, spools of plastic thread—the aforementioned

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“filaments”—feed into the printer nozzle, which melts the filaments into a semi-liquid plastic. This plastic flows from the nozzle—like ink from a pen—onto a flat surface. There, the plastic immediately hardens, forming the first layer of the desired object. The printer then builds another plastic layer on top of the first, and so on, until the digital model has been fully reproduced, layer- by-layer, in physical form. The attached diagram depicts the mechanisms relevant to this opinion.1

Just as an empty inkjet printer requires ink cartridge refills, an empty 3D printer requires replacement filaments. In addition to the 3D printers themselves, Stratasys sold filaments for use in its machines. Starting in 2004, Stratasys attempted to eliminate competition by programming certain computer chips inside of its printers to reject third-party filaments. If you owned a Stratasys printer with this chip installed, you would have to buy Stratasys-brand filaments.

1 The diagram is based upon the Stratasys patents and other diagrams in the record.

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Canadian citizen Tim Heenan learned how to reprogram these Stratasys chips. Heenan was the president and sole officer of Bolson Materials International Corporation, which he operated out of a residence in Canada. Bolson found its niche in the 3D printing market selling corporate customers reprogrammed Stratasys chips which enabled the machines to use third-party filaments. Alongside these reprogrammed chips, Bolson sold its own line of filaments based on reverse-engineered Stratasys products.

However, while he could reprogram the chips himself, Heenan lacked the means to manufacture his own filaments. Bolson needed a regular supplier who could produce filaments that simulated the precise chemical and physical properties of the Stratasys products. Over the next few years, Bolson tested filaments from a number of vendors, including Village Plastics, a family-owned, Ohio-based company.

When Bolson approached Village in 2007, Village sold a variety of filaments marketed to 3D printing hobbyists. At the time, the Stratasys patent still remained in effect, and most hobbyists could not afford the price tag of the industrial-scale Stratasys machines. Online communities of 3D printing hobbyists designed kits which enabled aspiring hobbyists to assemble their own printers at home. Village catered to the needs of this hobbyist market.

In 2008, Village agreed to become Bolson’s regular supplier. The parties entered a Non- Disclosure and Non-Compete Agreement, governed by Ohio law. Bolson agreed to provide Village with confidential information concerning Bolson’s filaments, and Village agreed to keep Bolson’s secrets and not to compete with Bolson’s business. Confusion over the precise contours of the inartfully drafted Agreement eventually led to the instant case.

A year later, in 2009, the Stratasys patent expired, opening the floodgates to commercial imitators. Village began selling filaments to resellers servicing the burgeoning hobbyist market. Meanwhile, Bolson and Village continued to develop several lines of filaments for Bolson’s clients in the European automotive industry.

By 2012, the symbiotic relationship between Village and Bolson had begun to deteriorate. Bolson had made a habit of submitting late payments. In September, Bolson’s customers in the European automotive industry started complaining that Bolson’s filaments were malfunctioning, and the fallout allegedly cost Bolson tens of thousands of Euros in lost revenue. Making matters

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Bolson Materials Int'l v. 3D Sys. Corp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolson-materials-intl-v-3d-sys-corp-ca6-2018.