Dixie Cup Co. v. Paper Container Mfg. Co.

169 F.2d 645, 78 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 222, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 16, 1948
Docket9558
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 169 F.2d 645 (Dixie Cup Co. v. Paper Container Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixie Cup Co. v. Paper Container Mfg. Co., 169 F.2d 645, 78 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 222, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076 (7th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a final judgment, entered January 19, 1948, in an accounting for patent infringement. The opinion of the lower court in the original suit is reported in D.C., 43 F.Supp. 518, and the decision of this court in 7 Cir., 130 F.2d 569. The accounting was stated by a Master in Chancery to whom the cause had been referred for such purpose, after an extensive hearing. The judgment was predicated upon the report of such Master and awards the plaintiff the sum of $2,096,-062.23, as damages, with interest at 5% from date, $71,163.50 as attorney fees, $3,141.61 as taxable costs, directs that the *647 defendant reimburse the plaintiff for Master’s fees advanced in the sum of $12,500 and court reporter’s fees in the amount of $1,512.90, and directs that a permanent injunction issue against the defendant from further infringement.

A number of patents and claims were involved when the case was before this court on former appeal. So far as material to the instant proceeding, this court affirmed the lower court in its holding that defendant was estopped to deny the validity of the Smith & Bild patent No. 2,203,510, and that the defendant had infringed claims 9, 10, 23 and 24 thereof. The machines complained of and the only ones before this court on former appeal are known and referred to as defendant’s Original Spiral machines. In addition, there are involved in the instant proceeding what are referred to as defendant’s Modified Spiral machines and the Merta machines. The former embody certain changes in the Original Spiral machines made by the defendant in order to avoid further infringement after those machines had been held to infringe. The Merta machines, invented by George Merta of Los Angeles, California, were purchased by the defendant and put into operation some time before the original trial.

The most important issue on this appeal arises from defendant’s contention that plaintiff is estopped by the file wrapper history of its patent relative to claims 9 and 10 to assert infringement as to the Modified Spiral and Merta machines. This issue apparently was ignored by the Master and the court below. Before considering this issue, we shall refer to the Master’s theory upon which we predicated his finding of infringement. Not only did the Master ignore the file wrapper history but also the elements called for by the claims. Instead, a statement contained in the opinion of this court was made the test or basis for his adjudication of infringement.

The statement relied upon (7 Cir., 130 F.2d 569, 578), is as follows: “Smith & Bild is for an improvement over Holman and other prior art patents. In the prior machines the cup blanks were preformed and stored in a magazine from which they were fed into the machine. The essential improvement claimed by Smith & Bild had to do with the continuous feeding or advance of a strip of paper stock toward the cup-forming element with cutting means acting prior to the forming operation to successively sever cup blanks from the continuously moving strip of paper. While other points are discussed, this, no doubt, is the gist of the improvement, and the issue of infringement, so we think, must be determined largely with reference to this improvement.”

Utilizing this statement and ignoring the requirements of the claims, the Master states:

“Like the claims of the Smith & Bild patent and the adjudicated machines, defendant’s present machines accomplish—

(1) The feeding of a strip progressively toward the forming means;

(2) The severing of blanks from the strip;

(3) The control and alignment of that strip and of the blanks cut therefrom; and

(4) The presentation of the blanks accurately to the forming means.”

Obviously, the statement of this court is directed at the general nature of the improvement disclosed by Smith & Bild, but equally obvious is the fact that it does not purport to define the invention as set forth in the numerous claims of the patent. To hold, as the Master has, that the scope of the invention is to be measured by this statement would mean in effect that this court ignored the phraseology of the numerous claims and consolidated them into a single claim by a substitution of our language for that of the patentee. Certainly we had no such purpose and we do not think the statement is reasonably capable of such a construction.

We did hold that the defendant was es-topped to deny the validity of claims 9, 10, 23 and 24, and that they read directly upon defendant’s Original Spiral machines, the only machines which at that time were before the court. That was the extent of our holding insofar as it pertains to these claims. None of these claims read directly either upon defendant’s Modified Spiral machines or its Merta machines; in fact, the plaintiff concedes and the Mas *648 ter found that there was no infringement of claims 23 and 24. It seems to us that this concession is inconsistent with the reliance placed upon the quoted statement from the opinion of this court, because if that statement can be used as a basis for finding infringement of claims 9 and 10, it likewise can be used for finding infringement of claims 23 and 24. They, like claims 9 and 10, call for a continuous feeding of the paper, but claim 23 provides for “a stop member located in the path of the oncoming blank,” and claim 24 provides for “trimming means associated with said forming means.” These elements were found in the Original Spiral machines but admittedly are absent in defendant’s later machines. Claim 9 provides for “repeatedly cutting off the end of the strip crosswise along a line other than straight across said strip.” Claim 10 contains a similar requirement. This element found in claims 9 and 10 was also found in defendant’s Original Spiral machines but is not found in defendant’s later machines, and it is only by the application of the doctrine of equivalency that they are held to be infringed. As the Master stated: “Under the doctrine of equivalents, both are to all intents and purposes identical with the adjudicated machine unless the fact that the rotary knives cut completely blanks from the continuously moving strip of paper as it is fed toward the forming means in such manner that the waste is in one continuous strip rather than in small pieces, be considered of importance sufficient to negative the charge of infringement.”

We find no occasion to discuss or cite cases in support of this doctrine of equivalency embraced by the Master because it is limited by another principle commonly called file wrapper estoppel, the gist of which is that a patentee who has changed the form of his claim during its prosecution disclaims the scope of the claim in its earlier form, and the change effected by the amendment must be construed against the patentee. He is not permitted thereafter to recapture what he has disclaimed or assert the claim against any equivalents that would respond to the claim in its earlier form but which do not respond expressly to the claim as issued.

We think it unnecessary to detail the patent office history of claims 9 and 10.

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Bluebook (online)
169 F.2d 645, 78 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 222, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixie-cup-co-v-paper-container-mfg-co-ca7-1948.