Corning Glass Works, in No. 15923 v. Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, in No. 15924

374 F.2d 473, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7050
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 1967
Docket15924_1
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 374 F.2d 473 (Corning Glass Works, in No. 15923 v. Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, in No. 15924) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corning Glass Works, in No. 15923 v. Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, in No. 15924, 374 F.2d 473, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7050 (3d Cir. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GERALD MeLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judge.

On November 8, 1963, plaintiff,' Corning Glass Works, filed a complaint charging defendant, Anchor Hocking Glass Corporation, with infringement of both product and process claims of its Stookey patent. 1 In answer, defendant denied the infringement charge and further asserted that plaintiff’s patent was invalid because: 1) of indefiniteness, 2) the method claims covered inoperative species, and 3) the claims were not patentable over the prior art. Defendant also charged unenforceability by reason of fraud on the Patent Office and included a declaratory judgment counterclaim. On April 26, 1965 defendant amended its answer and counterclaim. The amended answer was directed at a charge of misuse in connection with plaintiff’s alleged unlawful fair trading of its product “Corning Ware”. 2 The additional two counts, to the counterclaim alleged an anti-trust violation and unfair competition with both these charges resting on the contention that plaintiff obtained its patent by intentional fraudulent misrepresentation.

The case was brought to trial in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware before Chief Judge Caleb M. Wright. As set out by the District Court, the issues to be decided were: the validity of the patent, the allegations of fraud and the question of infringement. Counts two and three of defendant’s amended counterclaim were dismissed by the court’s final judgment of March 29, 1966 and the charge of misuse contained in the amended answer was deferred to a future time.

In his opinion, Corning Glass Works v. Anchor Hocking Glass Corp., 253 F. Supp. 461 (D.Del.1966), Judge Wright found in favor of the plaintiff on the question of fraud and further that the doctrine of unclean hands was not applicable to the facts in the case. On the allegations of invalidity, the court found that plaintiff’s invention was patentable over the prior art and that defendant “failed to make even a prima facie showing of inoperativeness”, i. e., that the claims of the patent were too broad. In dealing with defendant’s charge that the patent was invalid on the ground that its claims were indefinite and vague, the court was satisfied that the claim language was definite. However, the court found that the patent was unenforceable “ * * * because in 1956, when the application was made, and in 1960, when the patent issued, to determine the percent crystallinity within this 7 to 10% margin of error required costly and lengthy independent experimentation to devise a test to ascertain whether a product was within the bounds of the patent claims.” 253 F.Supp. 461 at 479.

The Stookey Patent

The patent in suit was the development of Dr. Stanley Donald Stookey, the present Director of Fundamental Chemical Research at the Corning Glass Works. Dr. Stookey’s patent teaches the devitrification or crystallization of glass into a glass ceramic material called Pyroceram. Starting with a glass the process initiates a change so that the end product no longer has the properties of glass but rather crystalline properties.

Glass by its nature is a super cooled liquid which at a high temperature has an amorphous molecular structure unlike the ordered structure of a crystalline material. As the glass is cooled it becomes viscous until it reaches its final rigidity where it has the same molecular structure it possessed as a liquid. A pure transparent glass will not contain any crystals because its molecular structure is not receptive to crystallization. However, if at some point prior to or during the cooling *475 phase small particles or imperfections are introduced, crystallization will occur. These microscopic particles are called nuclei and these nuclei initiate the growth of crystals.

In the manufacturing process of glass, nucleation is synonymous with imperfection, because the area that is crystallized has different properties than the rest of the glass which will weaken the glass to the breaking point or cause undesired opaqueness. Through the discovery of Dr. Stookey, however, the nuclei are artificially introduced so that their production and number are controlled independently of the crystallization of the main body of glass. In the words of Dr. Stookey, “[t]he effect of producing these billions of nuclei throughout the body, the nuclei being such small particles that they can’t be seen except perhaps by the electron miscroscope — they are too small to see with the ordinary optical microscope — but each one of those billions has a similar effect herein producing eventually after heat treatment an individual crystal, and the difference there is that without very much heat treatment each of these crystals grows until it comes into contact with the other crystals growing along with it until finally the material is all crystalline, or essentially all crystalline.”

Coming’s patent teaches that glass can be converted to a predominately crystalline or semicrystalline ceramic body having “* * * at least 50% by weight * * * of crystallizable glass-making ingredients, * * 3 To identify and determine the quantity of crystals the patent suggests the use of a “ * * * conventional X-ray powder spectrometer or diffractometer, equipped with a Geiger counter and a curve — or trace — drawing device, * * 4 It was precisely the percent crystallinity and the method measuring that percentage that became the focal point of the District Court’s determination to invalidate plaintiff’s patent.

The Stookey patent was charged by the defendant to be invalid for vagueness since independent experimentation was required to determine: 1) whether a given glass formula will make a pyroceram, 2) the size of the resulting crystals and whether they interlock and 3) percent crystallinity. Before passing upon defendant’s assertions, however, the court deemed it necessary to deal with the preliminary issue of whether the 50% crystallinity criterion was definite within the meaning of 35 U.S.C.A. § 112.

Finding that the claim language (50% crystallinity) was definite the District Judge turned to consider whether the limits of the patent were indefinite by the standards of 35 U.S.C.A. § 112. The problem of construing the patent’s limitations was further complicated by the existence of a 7 to 10% margin of error in measuring percent crystallinity by X-ray diffraction. 5 Thus, the court’s basic question was rephrased to discover “whether this 7 to 10% margin of error in determining percent crystallinity is so great as to make the patent claims indefinite with 35 U.S.C.A. § 112.” 253 F.Supp. 461 at 478.

The court set forth three standards upon which the doctrine of indefiniteness rests: 1) protection of the patentee, 2) the encouragement of the inventive genius of others and 3) the assurance that the subject of the patent will be dedicated ultimately to the public. 6 In light of these standards the court was satisfied that the margin of error was not so large as to be indefinite. The court concluded that where a margin of error does exist *476

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Bluebook (online)
374 F.2d 473, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 1, 1967 U.S. App. LEXIS 7050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-glass-works-in-no-15923-v-anchor-hocking-glass-corporation-in-ca3-1967.