E-T Industries, Inc. v. Whittaker Corp.

523 F.2d 636, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12626
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1975
Docket74-1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 523 F.2d 636 (E-T Industries, Inc. v. Whittaker Corp.) 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-T Industries, Inc. v. Whittaker Corp., 523 F.2d 636, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12626 (7th Cir. 1975).

Opinion

523 F.2d 636

187 U.S.P.Q. 369

E-T INDUSTRIES, INC., Plaintiff-Defendant-Appellee,
v.
WHITTAKER CORP. and Des Plaines Grand Automotive Speed
Center, Inc.,Defendants-Plaintiffs-Appellants.

No. 74-1924.

United States Court of Appeals,
Seventh Circuit.

Argued Feb. 24, 1975.
Decided Sept. 25, 1975.

Richard Bushnell, Chicago, Ill., for defendants-plaintiffs-appellants.

Irwin C. Alter, Chicago, Ill., for plaintiff-defendant-appellee.

Before CASTLE, Senior Circuit Judge, and SWYGERT and STEVENS, Circuit Judges.

STEVENS, Circuit Judge.

Were it not for the fact that the invention was a step in a direction opposite to what was considered good engineering practice, Beith's discovery of an automobile wheel that would fit different makes of cars would surely be considered obvious. The principal question presented by this appeal is whether the district court's findings that Beith ignored the risks that would have deterred others skilled in the art saves the patentability of an otherwise obvious conception.I.

The parties are competing manufacturers of "mag wheels."1 Mag wheels are specially designed wheels, usually cast aluminum and sometimes containing a magnesium alloy, intended to enhance the appearance of a car. They are more expensive than normal wheels. A buyer of such wheels, especially one who frequently changes cars, often wants to use the same wheels on successive cars. Car wheels, however, are not interchangeable because there has been no standardization among automobile manufacturers on the arrangement of the lugs which project from the brake drum or axle to secure the wheel. The lugs, of course, are arranged in a circle and usually there are five for each wheel. The most popular makes of cars, however, employ lug bolt circles of three different radii 41/2 inches for Ford and Chrysler cars; 43/4 inches for Chevrolets; and 5 inches for the larger General Motors cars. The marketability of a mag wheel is significantly greater if it will fit all three of the most frequently used lug bolt arrangements than if it will fit only one.2 The purpose of Beith's invention was to make a wheel that would fit lug bolt circles of different radii.

Beith's solution to the problem was simple. He elongated the lug apertures in the wheel sufficiently to accommodate lug bolts arranged in circles of different radii; he then inserted adapters to fit snugly into the enlarged lug apertures; each adapter, in turn, contained a hole through which the lug projected. One set of adapters contained off-center holes. If such an adapter was turned in one direction, the opening would be 41/2 inches from the axle; reversed, the radius would be 5 inches. In a second set of adapters a central hole would accommodate a radius of 43/4 inches.

The patent describes various shapes of lug openings and adapters to fit them. The basic idea, however, was simply an enlarged lug opening to be fitted snugly with one or more inserted adapters, the position of which would determine the lug circle radius which the wheel would fit.

Beith conceived his invention in January of 1965. At that time he was running a small company manufacturing custom wheels with three different predrilled bolt patterns.3 He took one of those wheels and enlarged the lug aperture by drilling all three standard lug patterns into it and then experimented with cardboard inserts to make sure that the wheel would fit all three sizes.

He requested the foundry which was casting wheels for his company to sandcast the new wheel for him with the enlarged lug openings. Beith testified that executives of the foundry expressed concern about their ability to sandcast the holes accurately and about the possibility that the wheel would be weakened by the elimination of additional metal, which in turn might subject the company to product liability problems. A second foundry, which used a permanent mold process rather than sandcasting, agreed to make wheels for Beith. That company insisted, however, that Beith make better drawings and recommended an engineer to review the project.

Beith discussed the problem of weakening the wheel by enlarging the lug apertures, but the engineer "felt that it could be accomplished, or at least we could certainly experiment; the only way we would really know was to go ahead and make the drawings, have molds made, cast some wheels and really, because there was no testing at that time, market the product and find out the real test, the real proof. It was all conjective at that point as to whether the product would function out on the highway, on the automobiles, in the marketplace." Tr. 77.

Beith filed his original patent application in July. In October, 1965, he tested the new wheel in operation, found that it worked, and began to sell it commercially. Sales increased dramatically. Plaintiff had commenced operation on an investment of $750; in 1970, Beith sold the company to Filter Dynamics for FDI stock valued at $1,375,000. Thereafter, annual sales grew from about $2,500,000 to almost $13,000,000 in three years.

At about the same time that Beith developed the patented wheel, several employees of defendant Ansen were experimenting with the "Fujii wheel" so named because it was placed on the 1951 Chevrolet which an Ansen employee named Dennis Fujii drove to work every day. The Fujii wheel was a standard wheel on which the lug apertures were enlarged to hold an insert which enabled the wheel to fit the 43/4 inch lug circle. The insert used in the Fujii wheel would fit only a Chevrolet, but it is apparent that the Fujii concept, just like Beith's, would be equally useful with different inserts for different sizes.4 Defendant adduced oral testimony to prove that the Fujii wheel was in public use more than a year before Beith filed his patent application. The district court found this evidence of doubtful reliability.5 Moreover, he noted that Ansen did not proceed with the development of an interchangeable wheel employing the Fujii concept, but instead developed an entirely different wheel embodying a so-called "knock-off lug" modeled after wheels used on racing cars.

Later, after acquiring Ansen, defendant investigated the Beith patent and started to manufacture and sell wheels which the district court found to infringe.

The district court reviewed the prior art in detail. We need mention only two items, Adair6 and Siler.7

Adair disclosed a wheel which will fit lug circles not only of different diameters but also containing different numbers of lugs. Like Beith, it had elongated lug apertures to accommodate different sizes, but it also had extra openings, some of double width, to make it possible to fit six as well as five lugs with the same wheel.8

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Bluebook (online)
523 F.2d 636, 187 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1975 U.S. App. LEXIS 12626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-t-industries-inc-v-whittaker-corp-ca7-1975.