Dubuque Products, Inc. v. Lemco Corporation

227 F. Supp. 108, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 329, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10342
CourtDistrict Court, D. Utah
DecidedDecember 19, 1963
DocketC 200-62
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 227 F. Supp. 108 (Dubuque Products, Inc. v. Lemco Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubuque Products, Inc. v. Lemco Corporation, 227 F. Supp. 108, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 329, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10342 (D. Utah 1963).

Opinion

*109 CHRISTENSEN, District Judge.

This cause came on regularly for trial before the court, sitting without a jury, on the 25th day of September, through the 3rd day of October, 1963. A. Yates Dowell, Jr., J. Thomas Greene, and Stephen A. West, appeared as counsel for the plaintiff. Philip A. Mallinckrodt and Richard L. Bird, Jr., appeared as counsel for the defendants. The court heard the testimony and examined proofs offered by the respective parties and heard arguments of counsel relative thereto on October 4, 1963. On the latter date the court rendered a tentative oral decision. Subsequently, with leave of court, various proposed findings of fact were submitted by the parties, together with briefs in support thereof. The court now being fully advised in the premises, makes and enters the following:

FINDINGS OF FACT

General

1. Plaintiff is and at all times herein mentioned has been a corporation of the State of Iowa with its principal place of business in said State. The defendant Lemco Corporation is and during all times herein mentioned has been a corporation of a state other than the State of Iowa, with its principal place of business in the State of Utah. The defendant Hugh M. Lyman, Jr., was during all times material herein an officer and director of the defendant Lemco Corporation, and has been during all material times and is a citizen of the State of Utah. The defendant Val R. Liljenquist is an officer and director of the defendant Lemco Corporation and is a citizen of the State of Utah. The defendant Ray V. Liljenquist, during all times herein mentioned, was and is an officer and director of Lemco Corporation and a citizen of the State of Utah. The amount in controversy herein exceeds the sum of Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) exclusive of interest and costs. Jurisdiction is founded upon the federal patent laws and also upon diversity of citizenship.

2. Clarence E. Carlo is an officer and director of the plaintiff Corporation. Prior to October, 1954, he was employed as a salesman for a California corporation, the Acme Company. During the years 1953 to 1954, Carlo was instrumental in the sale of merchandise manufactured by this company which included so-called coilable partitions, some of which had a reversing gear mechanism. This structure was generally unsatisfactory and the operations of the company were not commercially successful. Carlo was dismissed from the company in October, 1954, as a result of a dispute over his salary. He sought work elsewhere and finally formed with two associates in April, 1955, the plaintiff corporation. Meantime, the Acme Company, with which Carlo had been associated, was verging on bankruptcy. Distributors who needed coilable partitions and had used the Acme Company as a source of supply then turned to Carlo. Carlo, working as an officer of plaintiff company, made a coilable partition of which he tested a prototype in his shop. Upon installing the prototype of a full-sized partition on a job, it was found that substantial difficulties in the operating mechanism occurred. From the forming of plaintiff company in April, 1955, until just prior to application for the original patent in suit, Carlo and his company made a number of partitions which it was necessary to sell in order to establish and confirm a satisfactory operation. Application for the patent in suit, which will be discussed in detail hereafter, was filed originally on December 29, 1958.

3. Defendant Hugh M. Lyman was employed by Z.C.M.I., a department store of Salt Lake City, Utah, from February, 1957, to February 15, 1958. Z.C.M.I. was a distributor for the plaintiff corporation, selling and installing the partitions manufactured by plaintiff. During the period of Lyman’s employment by Z.C.M.I. he handled certain orders of plaintiff, including installing one of plaintiff’s partitions at the L.D.S. Ogden Sixteenth Ward Chapel. Lyman had no knowledge of coilable partitions prior *110 to his employment by Z.C.M.I. In December, 1957, Lyman was shown at his request, ostensibly as a representative of plaintiff’s distributor, installations of plaintiff’s partitions in Chicago, of which he took motion pictures with the consent of Carlo. Shortly afterward, in December, 1957, Lyman went to plaintiff’s plant without Carlo’s knowledge or consent and misrepresented that he had Carlo’s consent to take motion pictures within the plant for the alleged purpose of sales promotions for Z.C.M.I. Lyman took motion pictures within the plant, including a drilling machine and other manufacturing equipment. After taking the pictures in plaintiff’s plant Lyman edited them, retaining approximately one-fourth. In the retained portion Lyman included pictures of plaintiff’s drilling machine which was an essential instrument in the plaintiff’s manufacturing process for the partitions, which drilling machine plaintiff had developed and which it considered a confidential part of its manufacturing process.

4. After leaving the employment of Z.C.M.I., Lyman, with the other individual defendants, made plans for the manufacture of coilable partitions through the defendant corporation. Most of their information concerning coilable partitions was obtained, as more fully hereinafter mentioned, from the plaintiff corporation, without the latter’s consent and in many cases without the latter’s knowledge. Lyman and Val R. Liljen-quist examined plaintiff’s installation at the Ogden Sixteenth Ward, and with this information and other information about plaintiff’s operations which Lyman had obtained, the defendant company produced a substantially identical coilable partition at Kaysville, Utah. Subsequent to the defendant’s Kaysville installation and commencing early in 1959, the defendant made other installations which were modified in certain respects. The necessity for these modifications arose from difficulties involved in defendant’s installations. The operating mechanisms went through a series of modifications, including the use of a solenoid operating clutch. Defendant’s present operating mechanism uses a double clutch mechanism in combination with other elements. In producing coilable partitions patterned after those of plaintiff the defendant company also relied upon information obtained from a former employee of the plaintiff, Patrick C. Ochs, who from September, 1959, to February, 1961, served as plaintiff’s draftsman and later as its production manager. Oaks reproduced for the defendant company a substantial copy of plaintiff’s drawings of its operating mechanism, including the double clutch aforesaid.

Additional Findings as to Validity and Infringement of Patent (First Claim Alleged in Second Amended Complaint).

5. Plaintiff is the owner of the Carlo patent in suit, Re. 25,422, which issued July 23, 1963 on an application filed January 8, 1963. The original patent No. 2,978,019, issued April 4, 1961 on an application filed December 29, 1958. The reissue patent contains the identical four claims of the original patent and an additional claim, No. 5. The patent is directed to a coilable partition and operating means therefor, including the combination of elements recited in the aforesaid claims. Claims 1 to 4 define the operating means and recite inter alia a fixed and movable block takeup mechanism. Claim 5 does not recite a fixed and movable block.

6.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Soundvision Technologies, LLC v. Templeton Group Ltd.
929 F. Supp. 2d 1174 (D. Utah, 2013)
American Airlines v. Christensen
967 F.2d 410 (Tenth Circuit, 1992)
American Airlines, Inc. v. Platinum World Travel
769 F. Supp. 1203 (D. Utah, 1990)
Telex Corp. v. International Business MacHines Corp.
367 F. Supp. 258 (N.D. Oklahoma, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 F. Supp. 108, 140 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 329, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubuque-products-inc-v-lemco-corporation-utd-1963.