Engelhard Industries, Inc. v. Research Instrumental Corporation

324 F.2d 347
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1963
Docket17848_1
StatusPublished
Cited by96 cases

This text of 324 F.2d 347 (Engelhard Industries, Inc. v. Research Instrumental Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engelhard Industries, Inc. v. Research Instrumental Corporation, 324 F.2d 347 (9th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

KOELSCH, Circuit Judge.

By its complaint, Engelhard Industries, Inc. (Engelhard) charged Research Instrumental Corp. (Research) with infringement of U. S. Letters Patent No. 2,805,191, and with unfair competition. The patent was issued on September 3, 1957 to Engelhard’s assignor Hersch and is entitled “Oxygen Analysis of Gases.” In the complaint Engelhard alleged that Research had infringed “the patent” by manufacturing and selling oxygen analyzers that embodied the invention of the patent; Engelhard further' alleged that Research had unfairly competed by misappropriating, prior to the date the patent issued, confidential information relative to a working model of its analyzer.

After extensive discovery proceedings, Research moved for summary judgment in its favor. In a supporting memorandum it advanced the following reasons why summary judgment should be entered : The patent is invalid, file wrapper *349 estoppel, the patent is not infringed, and the acts of Research do not constitute unfair competition. As to all of these grounds, Research asserted that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact.

Resisting the motion Engelhard filed two affidavits, together with a statement purporting to list genuine issues of material fact. The trial court opined (D.C., 196 F.Supp. 138) that Research was not guilty of either infringement or unfair competition and accordingly did not pass on the question of validity.

Engelhard then sought a rehearing. The petition was denied and judgment was entered against Engelhard, who appealed to this court.

The Hersch patent defines a method and an apparatus for detecting electrochemically the presence of oxygen, particularly minute or trace quantities, in other gases. The apparatus includes in combination the constituent elements of the ordinary automobile storage battery or galvanic cell — that is, a container or case, two electrodes (one a negative pole or cathode, and the other a positive pole or anode), and a liquid electrolyte. 1 It operates on the well-known principle that oxygen coming into contact with the cathode and the liquid electrolyte in a galvanic cell sets up a chemical reaction which causes the production of ions; the ions flow toward the anode to produce an electric current. This current varies with the rate of absorption of the oxygen into the cell, which in turn is a function of the amount of oxygen coming into contact with the cathode. The current can be registered by a galvanometer or other measuring device.

The alleged novelty of the Hersch patent lies in the cathode. In the first of two embodiments of the invention depicted in the patent the cathode appears as a solid piece of metal; it is so suspended that a portion rests in the pool or reservoir of electrolyte in the cell. In the second embodiment the cathode is tubular and composed of metal gauze; it is positioned above the reservoir but encircles a wick that extends into the liquid.

The cathode of the accused analyzer is composed of eight pieces of fine wire screen folded in half. These double screen sections are partially immersed in the reservoir. And due to their construction the electrolyte, by means of capillary action, creeps up between the folds.

The claims in the Hersch patent are broad enough to cover a cathode composed of screen, for their only limitation is that the cathode must be of “imporous metal.” And the statement in the patent specifications that “the cathode may take the form of a solid metal element such as sheet, wire, etc., or it may be in the form of gauze, the elements of which are solid strands,” would seem to expressly show the patent monopoly extends to the use of screen.

Nevertheless, the district court, believing the doctrine of file wrapper estoppel applicable, held that Engelhard could not assert that its patent covered the screen cathode used in the accused analyzer. 2 *350 Its holding was based on the notion that Engelhard represented that his invention ■consisted of a method and apparatus in which electrolyte did not rise above the ■level of the reservoir and onto the unimmersed portion of the cathode.

We are unable to agree. It appears that when the patent application was filed the patent examiner rejected claims ■on several grounds, one being that they did not define over the prior art, particularly the patent granted to one Haller, (U. S. Letters Patent No. 2,651,612). He tentatively determined that no generic ■claim was allowable, that each of the two ■embodiments of the invention appearing in the drawings constituted a separate ¡specie of an oxygen analyzer; and he required Hersch to elect between claims specific to one or the other of those ¡species. 3

In response, Hersch amended his application. He revised some of the claims to meet the examiner’s general objections; he retained his generic claims, as lie was permitted to do, and he expressly ■elected to prosecute the specie exemplified by the wire gauze cathode, selecting accordingly certain of the claims which he believed read on the elected specie. However, the examiner ruled that, since "the latter claims as then worded spoke of the cathode as “imporous,” they described the first rather than the second specie because “wire gauze * * * [is considered] porous in the broad sense.”

If at this stage of the application Hersch had acquiesced in the examiner’s definition of the phrase “imporous cathode” and if he had continued to employ that phrase in subsequent amendments of his application he would, in effect, have withdrawn his election of the second specie and substituted for it an election of the first; and any generic claims would have been likewise limited to a method and apparatus employing an imporous cathode as opposed to one of screen or gauze. Roemer v. Peddie, 132 U.S. 313, 10 S.Ct. 98, 33 L.Ed. 382 (1889).

But Hersch did not let the matter lie. Following the examiner’s ruling Hersch again amended his application. In an effort to conform his claims to the elected specie he replaced all of the old claims with new ones. The old claims had called for an “imporous cathode” but the new ones, both specific and generic, referred to and described it as a “cathode of imporous metal.” After the language had been thus broadened, the examiner made no further objection that the claims did not comport with the election; he *351 thereafter approved the application and the patent issued with this wording. 4

Nor do any of the representations Hersch made, either in themselves or considered with the amendments, justify the placing of a limitation upon the patent claims.

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324 F.2d 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engelhard-industries-inc-v-research-instrumental-corporation-ca9-1963.