Chaparral Industries, Inc. v. Boman Industries, Inc.

697 F. Supp. 1113, 7 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1789, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15911, 1988 WL 110615
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedMay 24, 1988
Docket83-7215 JGD
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 697 F. Supp. 1113 (Chaparral Industries, Inc. v. Boman Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chaparral Industries, Inc. v. Boman Industries, Inc., 697 F. Supp. 1113, 7 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1789, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15911, 1988 WL 110615 (C.D. Cal. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

DAVIES, District Judge.

This patent infringement suit was brought by Chaparral Communications, Inc. (Chaparral) against Boman Industries, Inc. (Boman). Chaparral claims infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271. The action was tried to the Court commencing July 7, 1987.

The Issues

The complaint was filed on November 7, 1983. Four claims for relief were stated, including infringement by Boman of Chaparral’s U.S. Patent 4,414,516. On October 6, 1984, Chaparral filed its First Amended and Supplemental Complaint reasserting its original claims and adding others.

On January 28, 1986, the Honorable Pamela Ann Rymer ruled on Boman’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on certain issues and claims central to Chaparral’s Supplemental Complaint. Judge Rymer granted summary judgment on Count Two, infringement of the design patent (U.S. Patent No. 272,910); Count Three, trademark infringement; and Count Five, false designation of origin. The motion was denied on Count One, infringement of the utility patent.

This ruling, coupled with certain stipulations of the parties, limited the trial of the action to the issues raised by Chaparral’s first cause of action for infringement and Boman’s first counterclaim for invalidity of the patent. The issues for trial were clearly defined in the Pre-Trial Conference Order, filed October 27, 1986, although amended during trial. 1

The issues reduce themselves to two: (1) Is the Howard patent invalid or unenforceable because (a) it is an obvious variation of a prior patent, or (b) the patent was secured through fraudulent or inequitable conduct, and (2) does the Boman polarized feedhorn with the curved probe (“Probe B”) infringe the Howard patent.

Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(b), the issues of damages and attorneys’ fees were bifurcated. Thus, the trial was confined to the liability issues.

Background

Current satellite technology has made it possible for the consumer to receive entertainment television signals from earth-orbiting satellites on home television receivers. The devices that receive these satellite signals are dish antennae, known as “earth stations.” The market for these systems is known as the television receiver only (“TVRO”) market. The polarized feedhorns at issue in this case are an integral part of this new technology since each earth station is equipped with a polarized feedhorn.

Earth-orbiting satellites receive radio signals transmitted by ground base facilities, *1116 and then retransmit the signals at extremely high frequencies and very low power, a process known as microwave transmission. The signals are entertainment television signals directed to the consumer television entertainment market.

The signals retransmitted by satellite are in the frequency band of 3.7 to 4.2 gigaHertz and, when they reach Earth, cover a wide geographical area, known as a “footprint.” Because of the high number of television channels per satellite signal, the earth station must be capable of receiving signals at each frequency within the frequency band. An earth station which does not function properly over the entire frequency band will either lose some television channels or those channels will not be properly viewable on the television set.

The earth station is an antenna which is dish-shaped and circular with a parabolic reflecting surface. Microwave signals “fall” onto the parabolic antenna surface and are deflected to a single focal point where the feedhorn is located. The feed-horn gathers the signals and conveys them to a low noise amplifier and then to a television receiver for viewing.

When earth stations first appeared on the market, incoming satellite signals were polarized to orient in a single plane, because only a few broadcasters transmitted television signals by microwave transmission. As the TVRO market expanded, transmission by satellite increased so that earth-orbiting satellites retransmitted signals covering twenty-four television channels within the 500 megahertz transmission bandwidth. This was accomplished through a process known as “cross-polarization,” in which the signal transmitted by satellite is characterized by 12 separate channels polarized in one plane, and another 12 channels polarized in a perpendicular plane.

The earth stations must select for reception one of the two available planes of polarization before choosing a television channel. A feedhorn capable of making the selection between the two available planes is known as a polarized adjustable antenna receiving horn, or simply a “polar-izer”.

The earliest polarizers were wireless. However, they were not practically available to the TVRO market because of their expense. Furthermore, wireless polarizers were cumbersome because they had to be turned to adjust to the desired polar plane.

The polarizer with a rotating wire probe was the solution to these problems. A wire probe contains three sections, a receiving probe on one end, a launch probe on the other end, and a transmission line connecting the receiving and launch probes. Electromagnetic energy is focused by the antenna into the cylindrical portion of the feedhorn, known as the cylindrical waveguide. The receiving probe, which is perpendicular to the incoming signals, collects the energy and transmits it through the transmission line to the launch probe. The launch probe then redirects the energy towards the rectangular portion of the feed-horn, known as the rectangular waveguide.

A polarizer must receive and convey focused signal energy efficiently, with as little loss of energy as possible, in order to maintain signal strength over the entire satellite frequency band. Minimization of energy loss requires attention to “impedance-matching” in the feedhorn. Proper impedance-matching ensures the efficient collection by the receiving probe of the signal energy directed to the cylindrical waveguide, the efficient transfer of that energy through the launch probe into the rectangular waveguide, and the radiation of the signal from the rectangular waveguide to the low noise amplifier and the television receiver.

The Howard and Boman Feedhoms

Chaparral claims that H. Taylor Howard is the inventor of U.S. Patent 4,414,516 (the “Howard” patent), issued on November 8, 1983. This patent covers a polarizing feed-horn, consisting of two hollow waveguides and a wire probe. The wire probe has been referred to in this action as “Probe A.”

The Howard system involves the innovative use of a wire probe set in dielectric material and rotated by a small servo motor. The wire probe provides broad band *1117 performance. Prior to the Howard invention, wire polarizers were unable to conduct the signal from the circular waveguide to the rectangular waveguide without losing signal strength over some portion of the frequency bandwidth. As a result, certain television channels were subject to being lost or impaired unless adjustments were made in the waveguides.

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697 F. Supp. 1113, 7 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1789, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15911, 1988 WL 110615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaparral-industries-inc-v-boman-industries-inc-cacd-1988.