E. I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Union Carbide Corporation

369 F.2d 242
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1967
Docket15678
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 369 F.2d 242 (E. I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Union Carbide Corporation) 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
E. I. Du Pont De Nemours and Company v. Union Carbide Corporation, 369 F.2d 242 (7th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

DUFFY, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff (du Pont) brought this suit against defendant (Carbide) for alleged infringement of three patents owned by du Pont. Carbide answered as to two of the patents. The third patent was United States Patent No. 3,018,189 issued to George W. Traver (Traver) on January 23, 1962, for a “Method of Conditioning Polyethylene Surfaces for the Adhesion of Materials Coated Thereon and Resulting Product.” Carbide moved for summary judgment as to the Traver patent.

The District Court granted summary judgment holding Traver Patent No. 3,018,189 invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 102 (b) on the ground that the invention claimed in that patent was in public use or on sale more than one year prior to the date of an effective application for the patent.

The Court held that this issue had been resolved against du Pont by findings in an earlier case in another court between the same parties, and, because of the doctrine of collateral estoppel, could not be re-litigated in the case at bar.

The earlier case was a civil action brought under 35 U.S.C. § 146. It was brought to review a Patent Office decision holding Traver to be the first inventor of an invention also claimed by Carbide. The case was heard by Judge Frederick O. Mercer at Peoria, Illinois. Judge Mercer concluded, as had the Patent Office, that Traver was the first inventor. He caused judgment to be entered in favor of Traver and du Pont and against Carbide. Union Carbide Corp. v. Traver Investments, Inc., S.D.Ill., (1965), 238 F.Supp. 540. This earlier case often is referred to in the briefs as the “Peoria case.” 1 The case on which this instant appeal is based is sometimes referred to as the “Chicago case.”

For many years, polyethylene film has been an important commercial plastic. Hundreds of millions of pounds have been *244 sold annually in the United States. A typical use of the material is the transparent garment bag used by drycleaners.

Prior to 1949, it was recognized that the surface of the polyethylene film as then manufactured would not retain ink. Printed matter could be placed thereon, but the ink would flake off and wash away when exposed to moisture. The entire polyethylene industry sought to find some way to improve ink retention. All those interested regarded such retention as necessary so that ornamentation and advertising could be applied to and retained on the film.

In 1949, Traver conceived the idea of treating polyethylene film with the electrical discharge from a tubular gas-filled lamp, in order to make the film more ink retentive. He experimented with a metal roller, an argon-filled tubular lamp spaced from the roller, and a transformer having its secondary coil in circuit with the lamp and the roller, so as to produce an electrostatic discharge from the lamp to the roller.

Traver discovered that by passing polyethylene film over the roller and exposing it to a discharge of sufficient intensity from the lamp for a sufficient period of time, the film would retain subsequently applied printing ink.

By December 1949, Traver achieved successful treatment with a continuous-process treatment machine which was necessary for commercial exploitation. In March 1950, he delivered his first order for commercial use.

On October 26, 1950, Traver filed his earliest patent application. His claims define the invention broadly in terms of exposing the surface of polyethylene to the action of electrostatic discharge. Traver filed second and third applications in 1952 and 1953 respectively, as continuations-in-part of the 1950 application. The claims of these applications continued to define his invention as subjecting polyethylene film to the action of electrostatic discharge.

The Patent Office suggested other applicants copy Traver’s Claim 16 for the purpose of setting up an interference. The other applicants did so. The Patent Office then instituted an interference proceeding to determine which applicant was the first inventor. The Adams and Wakefield application was assigned to Carbide.

Carbide moved to amend the interference issue by substituting the following claims from its own application:

“The method of treating a polyethylene body to render a surface thereof adherent to ink impressions subsequently imprinted thereon which consists of subjecting the surface of the body to high voltage electric stress accompanied by corona discharge to improve its bonding properties whereby upon printing said treated surface the ink impressions strongly adhere thereto.” 2

The Patent Office re-defined the issue for purpose of interference in three claims or “counts.” Each of the three counts incorporated the narrower term “corona discharge.” All three interfering applicants adopted these counts.

On July 25, 1960, the Board of Patent Interferences decided Traver was entitled to an award of priority of invention defined in terms of corona discharge by reason of an actual reduction to practice at least by March 4, 1950.

On November 17, 1961, Traver amended his application so as to eliminate from the claims any reference to corona discharge and to reinstate the claim language he had used in his 1950 application. Claim 36 of the amended application (later Claim 1 of the Patent) defined the invention as

“The method of treating a polyethylene body to render a surface thereof adherent to printing ink, *245 which consists in subjecting said surface to the action of electrostatic discharge while employing an alternating current, to render said treated surface receptive and strongly adherent to printing ink.”

These are the claims of the patent in suit and which are now before us.

Following the amendment, the Patent Office held that the new claims were adequately supported by the 1950 application, which had been filed less than one year after the alleged public use, and dismissed the petition to institute public use proceedings which had been filed by one of the applicants.

Traver’s 1953 application finally issued on January 23, 1962 as Patent No. 3,018,189. In the meantime, suit had been brought in Peoria under 35 U.S.C. § 146 to review the action of the Patent Office with respect to the interference, seeking a judicial determination that Carbide’s applicants and not Traver were the first inventors.

Although Judge Mercer decided the issue before him, i. e. priority, in favor of Traver, his opinion indicates that at some time or times during the ten-day trial, he had some doubts on the subject. During the trial, Carbide continuously and strenuously attempted to persuade the Court that Traver had not been the first inventor of the corona discharge process.

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Bluebook (online)
369 F.2d 242, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-i-du-pont-de-nemours-and-company-v-union-carbide-corporation-ca7-1967.