BRADLEY CORPORATION v. LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC.

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedMay 25, 2021
Docket1:19-cv-01240
StatusUnknown

This text of BRADLEY CORPORATION v. LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC. (BRADLEY CORPORATION v. LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BRADLEY CORPORATION v. LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC., (S.D. Ind. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF INDIANA INDIANAPOLIS DIVISION

BRADLEY CORPORATION, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) No. 1:19-cv-01240-SEB-DML ) LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC., ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER

This cause is before the Court on the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [Dkt. 135] filed by Plaintiff and Counter Defendant Bradley Corporation ("Bradley"). Bradley filed this declaratory judgment action seeking clarification regarding certain rights and obligations relating to a settlement and license agreement between Bradley and Defendant and Counter Claimant Lawler Manufacturing Co., Inc. (“Lawler”). Lawler's counterclaim alleges that Bradley breached this same agreement in various ways, including by "designing around" Lawler's intellectual property. Lawler has also pled a quantum meruit claim in the alternative. The parties filed a previous round of partial summary judgment motions, which the Court addressed in a November 30, 2020 Order. As is relevant here, in our November 30 Order, we granted Bradley's partial motion for summary judgment on its per se patent misuse affirmative defense, the effect of which is that Bradley's royalty obligation under the parties' agreement ended February 26, 2019, the date on which the last Lawler patent practiced by Bradley's products expired. Bradley has now moved for partial summary judgment regarding aspects of two of Lawler's counterclaims, to wit, Lawler's breach of contract counterclaim based on alleged

"designing around" by Bradley and Lawler's quantum meruit counterclaim. More specifically, Bradley seeks a ruling (1) that Lawler's potential damages for its "designing around" counterclaim are limited to those products that actually underwent the design changes that Lawler alleges in its counterclaim constitute a "design around"; and (2) that quantum meruit is available, if at all, for only those activities that occurred after February 26, 2019, when the last patent encompassed by Bradley's products expired. In response,

Lawler requests that the Court sua sponte grant summary judgment in its favor on its "designing around" counterclaim and argues that its quantum meruit counterclaim is not date limited. For the reasons detailed below, we GRANT Bradley's Partial Motion for Summary Judgment and decline to sua sponte grant partial summary judgment in Lawler's favor on

its "designing around" counterclaim. Factual Background1 Bradley and Lawler are competitors in the commercial washroom and emergency safety industry, specifically competing in the thermostatic mixing valve ("TMV")2 and emergency safety shower and eyewash markets. In March 2001, following several years

1 We have drawn heavily from the factual recitation set forth in our order addressing the parties' cross-motions for partial summary judgment and have amended those facts only to the extent relevant to address the issues now before us. 2 TMVs are used in safety showers and eyewashes to "maintain the tempering of the water regardless of extreme fluctuations in the supply of hot or cold water to the thermostatic mixing valve." Exh. N, Col. 1, lines 64–67. of litigation, Bradley and Lawler entered into a Settlement Agreement to resolve a lawsuit involving allegations of patent and trade dress/trademark infringement as well as

various state law claims. The Settlement Agreement contained several subparts, including confidentiality agreements, a patent and trade secret license agreement ("the License Agreement"), and consent decrees. This litigation arises out of the License Agreement, specifically, the parties' dispute regarding the interpretation and application of the royalty provisions. Under the terms of the License Agreement, Bradley received a license to make,

use, and sell the "Licensed Product," to wit, TMVs covered by “Lawler Patent Rights” or that "utilize[ed] any Lawler Trade Secrets." Dkt. 1-1 §§ 1.4, 2. "Lawler Patent Rights" are defined in the License Agreement as “patent rights arising out of or resulting from U.S. Patent Nos. 5,323,960 ["the '960 patent"] and 5,647,531 ["the '531 patent"], U.S. Patent Application No. 09/165,880 ["the '880 application"], filed on October 2, 1988, and

all continuations, divisions, continuations-in-part, resulting patents, reissues, reexaminations, foreign counterparts, patents of addition, and extensions thereof.” Dkt. 1-1 § 1.2. In addition to the patent rights arising out of or resulting from the '960 and '531 patents, this definition also encompassed patent rights arising out of or resulting from the following additional patents issued from continuation and divisional

applications claiming priority to the '880 application: U.S. Patent Nos. 6,315,210; 6,543,478; 6,851,440; 7,191,954; 8,579,206; 9,218,006; D494,252; and D762,818 (collectively, "Kline-1 Patents"). As defined by the License Agreement, "Lawler Trade Secrets" are "the trade secrets and confidential information of Lawler … regarding the design, performance, testing, assembly, pricing, and marketing of [TMVs] to which Kevin B. Kline had access during his employment … [by] Lawler between 1988 and

1997." Id. § 1.3. Mr. Kline was a Lawler employee until 1997, when he joined Bradley. As part of the Settlement Agreement, Mr. Kline signed a confidentiality agreement that covered confidential information he had obtained or created during his employment with Lawler, including information disclosed in Addendum A attached to the agreement. Addendum A was thereafter filed as part of a U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/314,803

("the '803 application"), filed August 24, 2001. The following patents issued from continuation and/or divisional patent applications claiming priority to the '803 application: U.S. Patent Nos. 7,717,351; 8,123,140; 8,544,760; 9,081,392; 9,625,920; and 10,216,203 (collectively, "Kline-2 Patents"). Bradley has marked TMVs with patent numbers from patents covered by the Lawler Patent Rights, including patents from the

Kline-1 and Kline-2 families. As consideration for the licenses granted in section 2 of the License Agreement, Bradley agreed to pay Lawler royalties on certain products sold by Bradley. Specifically, the royalty section of the License Agreement applies a 10% royalty on the "Selling Price" of "Licensed Units" or "Repair Parts." Id. § 3.1. "Licensed Units" are defined as "each

unit of Licensed Product covered by one or more claims of the Lawler Patent Rights made by or for Bradley or an Affiliate as finished product in a [TMV]." Id. § 1.5. "Repair Parts" are defined as "all parts and kits used to replace or repair parts of [TMVs] ….," (id. § 1.8), which are not, themselves, complete TMVs. The term of the License Agreement extends until the expiration "of the last to expire of the Lawler Patent Rights," unless terminated earlier for default. Jd. §§ 6.1-6.2. The last utility patent coming within the Lawler Patent Rights was U.S. Patent No. 8,579,206 ("the '206 patent"), which expired on February 26, 2019. Compl. § 20. The only remaining unexpired patent after February 26, 2019 that is encompassed within the Lawler Patent Rights is Lawler's U.S. Design Patent No. D762,818 ("the '818 patent"), which was filed in 2015 and will expire on August 2, 2031. Id. 4] 21-22; Dkt. 1-4. The '818 patent covers a TMV body design embodied in various Bradley TMYVs that were released to the market as early as 1998, including TMV model numbers $19-2100 and S$19-2200. Pfund Decl. 9 22-23, Exh. 15-17.

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BRADLEY CORPORATION v. LAWLER MANUFACTURING CO., INC., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-corporation-v-lawler-manufacturing-co-inc-insd-2021.