Buehler AG v. Ocrim S.P.A. Ocrim America, Inc.

836 F. Supp. 1305, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13833, 1993 WL 392865
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 17, 1993
Docket4:90-cv-00771
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 836 F. Supp. 1305 (Buehler AG v. Ocrim S.P.A. Ocrim America, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buehler AG v. Ocrim S.P.A. Ocrim America, Inc., 836 F. Supp. 1305, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13833, 1993 WL 392865 (N.D. Tex. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SANDERS, Chief Judge.

A nonjm'y trial was held in this patent case on July 6-13, 1993. From the evidence produced at trial, the Court reaches the following decisions. With regard to Plaintiffs’ claim of infringement of United States Patent numbers 4,140,285 and 4,339,083, the Court finds for Defendants. The patents are infringed neither literally nor under the doctrine of equivalents.

With regard to Defendants’ counterclaim of invalidity and unenforceability of the patents in suit, the Court finds for Plaintiffs. On Defendants’ remaining counterclaims of antitrust, tortious interference with contract, and misrepresentation under the Lanham Act, the Court finds for Plaintiffs.

Any finding of fact below may be deemed a conclusion of law, and any conclusion may be deemed a finding.

I.FINDINGS OF FACT

A. INFRINGEMENT

1. Plaintiff Buehler AG, a Swiss corporation, is the owner by assignment of the two patents in suit. Buehler AG is engaged in the design, manufacture, and worldwide sale of flour milling equipment. Wanzenried Testimony [“Tst”]; Plaintiffs’ Exhibit [“PX”] 11.

2. Plaintiff Buhler, Inc., is a wholly owned American subsidiary of Buehler AG and is incorporated under the laws of Minnesota. Buhler, Inc., sells roller mills and complete flour mills to customers in the United States, Canada, and the Caribbean. Buhler, Inc., also provides engineering services, maintenance, and spare parts to its customers. Wanzenried Tst; PX 11.

3. Defendant Ocrim S.p.A. is an Italian corporation that manufactures and sells roller mills and flour mills in worldwide competition with 'Buehler AG. Bonoldi Tst; Rizzi Tst.

4. Defendant Ocrim America, Inc., is a wholly owned American subsidiary of Ocrim S.p.A. and is incorporated under the laws of Kansas. Ocrim America sells roller mills and complete flour mills in the United States. Bonoldi Tst; Rizzi Tst.

5. Defendant Farmers Elevator of Dawn, Inc. [“Farmers”], is a Texas milling company that is a customer of Ocrim America. Dillehay Tst. Farmers has been indemnified by Defendants Ocrim for liability in this suit. Id.

6. Defendants Ocrim SpA and Ocrim America have sold and Defendant Farmers has bought and used, in the United States, LAM grain roller mills accused of infringing the patents in suit. Dillehay Tst; PX 9, 20, 21. Defendants Ocrim have sold a total of approximately thirty-seven LAM roller mills in the United States. PX 26, 56.

7. A roller mill is a machine in a flour mill that grinds raw wheat or other grains in the production of flour. The grain is fed into the “roll gap” between parallel rollers, and the *1311 rollers grind the grain. The roll gap can be adjusted in increments of a fraction of a millimeter to obtain a uniform coarse or fine consistency of the product. See Winteler Tst; Hibbs Tst; PX 1, 2.

8. The patents in suit are United States Patent No. 4,140,285 [“the ’285 patent”] and United States Patent No. 4,339,083 [“the ’083 patent”]. Neither patent is considered by Plaintiffs to be a “key” or “pioneer” patent. See Turner Tst; DX 646.

9. The ’285 patent was filed in the United States on July 14, 1977, as application serial number 815,559. The ’285 patent issued on February 20, 1979. PX 1.

10. The ’083 patent was filed on April 21, 1980, as a continuation of the ’285 patent application. The ’083 patent issued on July 13, 1982. PX 2; Oisher Tst.

11. The specifications for both patents in suit are identically worded. See PX 1, 2. Plaintiffs represent to the Court that the two patents are intended to cover the same invention and “can be treated in this lawsuit as a single patent.” Plfs’ Proposed Findings and Conclusions, at 9. In order to obtain claim allowance for the ’083 patent in light of the ’285 patent, Plaintiffs submitted a terminal disclaimer, deeming the expiration date of the ’083 patent to be the same as the ’285 patent. DX 600.

12. Ocrim has no patents on any feature of the LAM. Bonoldi Tst; Turner Tst.

13. Plaintiffs’ MDDK and MDDL roller mills are each the embodiment of both patents in suit. Winteler Tst. The MDDL roller mill is identical to the MDDK, except that it has double the number of rollers, tie members, and so on. See Winteler Tst. Reference to the MDDK throughout this opinion applies to the MDDL as well.

14. Attachment A is an accurate diagram of the MDDK roller mill as embodiment of the ’285 claim elements relevant to the disposition of this case. See DX 341. Attachment B is an accurate diagram of the MDDK roller mill as embodiment of the ’083 claim elements relevant to the disposition of this case. See DX 342. Attachment C is an accurate diagram of the LAM roller mill. 1 See DX 343.

15. The claims at issue in the ’285 patent are Claims 1 and 2. For the ’083 patent, Claims 1, 2, 7, 8, 10-12, and 17-19 are at issue. The sole independent claim for each patent is Claim 1. See Oisher Tst; Turner Tst.

16. Claim 1 of the patents in suit describes the MDDK’s “roll package,” which comprises the rollers, mechanisms for controlling the roll gap, and structural member on which the subassembly is mounted. See PX 314; Maechler Depo., at 39.

17. In the MDDK, the roll package forms a closed system of forces. That is, the forces and vibration generated by approximately four tons of pressure generated between the rollers in grinding grain are contained within the roll package; the forces and vibration are not transmitted from the structural member, on which the roll assembly is mounted, to the base or frame. Winteler Tst; PX 1, 2, 36B; Blanco Tst; Turner Tst; Oisher Tst.

18. Force containment within a roll subassembly has several advantages. First, the traditional massive metal frame, always necessary in the past to contain the grinding force and vibration and to stabilize the roller mill, is no longer necessary. Second, noise is reduced. Third, the amount of “throughput,” or milled grain, can be increased. Fourth, the roll package can be manufactured, installed, and maintained independently from the frame. And fifth, the roll gap is stabilized, obviating the need for frequent manual adjustment of the roll gap by the miller. See Winteler Tst; PX 1, 2; Bonoldi Tst; Blanco Tst. This final advantage is critical to a flour mill’s ability to achieve increased levels of automation. Bonoldi Tst; Blanco Tst.

19. A “closed” loop of forces that includes the base or frame in the loop is well-known in the art; it is the elimination of the base from the loop that is the achievement of the *1312 MDDK. Hibbs Tst; see PX 1, col. 2, 3; PX 2, col. 2, 3.

20. The MDDK roll package is “independent.” That is, it can be assembled, installed, maintained, and replaced independently of the base. Winteler Tst. In practice, Plaintiff does not remove the roller assembly as a unit for purposes of maintenance or replacement.

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836 F. Supp. 1305, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13833, 1993 WL 392865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buehler-ag-v-ocrim-spa-ocrim-america-inc-txnd-1993.