Buxton Incorporated v. Julen Incorporated

223 F. Supp. 697, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10094
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 10, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 F. Supp. 697 (Buxton Incorporated v. Julen Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buxton Incorporated v. Julen Incorporated, 223 F. Supp. 697, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10094 (S.D.N.Y. 1963).

Opinion

McLEAN, District Judge.

This is an action for alleged contributory infringement of a patent. Defendant denies contributory infringement, at *698 tacks the validity of plaintiffs’ patent on the basis of certain specified prior patents, and counterclaims for alleged misuse of the patent by plaintiffs. Jurisdiction arises under the Patent Act of 1952 as amended (35 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.). Those facts which are undisputed are as follows:

The patent is No. 2,789,614 issued on April 23, 1957 upon an application filed on June 14, 1955. It is owned by plaintiff Buxton Incorporated (“Buxton”). Plaintiff United-Carr Fastener Corporation (“United-Carr”) is Buxton’s exclusive licensee.

The patent is a combination patent relating to “flap closures and their fasteners.” The “flap closures” to which it relates are the closure flaps of flexible receptacles, such as purses, key cases, billfolds and the like. In essence, there are four elements to the patented combination: (1) a flap closing an opening substantially equal “in width to the length of said opening,” which folds over the wall of the receptacle to close the opening; (2) a rigid bar, specified in claim 2 to be a “metal channel bar member coextensive in length” with the straight edge of the flap; (3) a post and socket snap fastener, the post being on the flap and the socket in which it engages being on the wall of the receptacle; and (4) a metal “extension,” integral with the inner wall of the channel bar member, which carries the post element of the fastener on it. When one pulls on the flap to disengage the post from the socket and thus open the receptacle, this metal extension presses on the rim of the socket and operates as a part of a “second class lever system” to facilitate the disengaging. The advantage claimed for this combination is that it makes it possible to open the receptacle by grasping the flap at any point without “dog-earing” the ends of the flap or creasing it.

Plaintiff United-Carr manufactures metal parts or “findings” which go into this combination and sells them to manufacturers of the purses and the other receptacles. Defendant also manufactures metal findings and sells them to the manufacturers of receptacles. Defendant is thus a competitor of United-Carr.

The “finding” involved here is the metal channel bar member with its integral extension and post or stud, which I will refer to throughout as the “channel bar.” To avoid the confusion arising from the parties’ use of the words “width” and “length” to mean the same thing, I will refer to the dimension from one end of the channel bar to the other as its “width.” Under the patent, the width of the channel bar is supposed to be substantially equal to the width of the flap to which it is attached. The flap in turn is substantially equal in width to the opening which it closes.

United-Carr has sublieensed four other manufacturers of findings to make, use and sell “flap fasteners [i. e., channel bars] adapted for use in the construction covered” by the patent. These license agreements relate to flap fasteners at least l1%e inches in width. This is an arbitrary dimension, apparently selected on the theory that as a practical matter, it would be unlikely that a shorter channel bar would be used in a receptacle embodying the patented combination. In December 1958 United-Carr offered such a sublicense to defendant, but defendant did not accept it.

Before considering plaintiffs’ charge of contributory infringement, I will deal with defendant’s claims of invalidity and misuse of plaintiffs’ patent. Defendant attacked the validity of the patent by amending its answer at the trial, following my ruling that its original pleading did not sufficiently raise that issue. The amendment was specific and limited in scope. The sole basis of the attack is that the patent is anticipated by three prior patents, a German patent No. 1,-676,103 dated February 13,1954, and two United States patents, Nos. 1,765,052 and 1,765,053, each issued to Carr on June 17, 1930.

The German patent claims:

“Ball part of a snap button fastener preferably for leather goods, *699 characterized by the fact that it sits on a sheet metal piece of which part is bent around the edge of the leather and pressed against the leather and the other part of the sheet metal piece.”

In the terminology used by the parties here, this patent relates to a post element of a snap fastener “sitting on” a metal channel member which is bent around the edge of a leather flap.

United States Patent No. 1,765,052 issued to Carr on June 17, 1930, and assigned by him to United-Carr, covers a one-piece fastener stud for securing a slip cover to a panel, such as an automobile door. Patent No. 1,765,053, also issued on June 17, 1930 to Carr and assigned by him to United-Carr, also covers a one-piece stud member for attachment to a part, such as an automobile door, to be covered by a slip cover.

In addition to these, defendant has referred in its brief, although not in its amended pleading, to United States Patent No. 2,630,851, issued to Rodgers on March 10, 1953. This patent, as well as the two Carr patents, was listed in the file history of the patent in suit, and was considered by the examiner. This is a patent on a brief bag of specified construction, having a flap, the edge of which is reinforced with a “stiffening strip,” and provided with a flexible leaf spring to keep the flap upright when the bag is open.

None of these prior patents covers a combination. None relates to flap closures for receptacles such as purses or billfolds. At most, these patents cover or refer to items which conceivably could be an element of plaintiffs’ patented combination. Thus, the German patent relates to the post element of a snap fastener on a metal channel member. The Carr patents relate to the stud element of a snap fastener. The Rodgers patent refers to a stiffened edge. It does not clearly appear, however, that the items described in these prior patents are in fact similar to the corresponding element of plaintiffs’ combination. Thus, the description in the German patent of the “ball part of a snap button fastener” is too brief to permit the conclusion that this ball part is actually of the same construction as the channel bar which plaintiffs’ combination includes. The stud member described in the Carr patents does not appear to be the same as the stud element in plaintiffs’ combination. The stiffened edge of the flap in the Rodgers patent does not appear to be the same as the channel bar in plaintiffs’ combination.

Plaintiffs’ patent, of course, enjoys a statutory presumption of validity. 35 U.S.C. § 282. This presumption is reinforced as against patents which were considered and discarded by the Patent Office, as the two Carr patents and the Rodgers patent were. Ensign Carburetor Co. v. Zenith-Detroit Corp., 36 F.2d 684 (2d Cir. 1929).

The mere fact that the individual elements of the combination are not novel does not in itself invalidate the combination patent.

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Bluebook (online)
223 F. Supp. 697, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buxton-incorporated-v-julen-incorporated-nysd-1963.