Erie Technological Products, Inc. v. Die Craft Metal Products, Inc.

461 F.2d 5
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1972
Docket18615
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 461 F.2d 5 (Erie Technological Products, Inc. v. Die Craft Metal Products, Inc.) 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
Erie Technological Products, Inc. v. Die Craft Metal Products, Inc., 461 F.2d 5 (7th Cir. 1972).

Opinions

FAIRCHILD, Circuit Judge.

Appeal from a judgment of the district court deciding that certain claims of a patent2 are valid, but the manufacture, use, or sale of certain machines produced by defendant did not infringe, and dismissing the action. Plaintiff contends that the district court erred in the construction of the patent and in the finding of non-infringement. Defendant denies infringement, and, without filing a cross-appeal, counters that the claims in suit are invalid.

The opinion filed by the district court3 was very carefully and thoroughly prepared. Although we do not agree with the district court in all particulars, we do agree that plaintiff’s action was properly dismissed. We shall avoid unnecessary repetition of the material in the opinion of the district court, and indicate the points at which we agree or disagree.

I. Validity: Question of Heibel’s inventorship with respect to apparatus claims 1 and b (318 F.Supp. 940-942).

There is no question but that Mr. Heibel himself had the idea of “applying a twisting force to the leads in the direction to increase the gripping force of the pairs of free ends of the leads on the intervening discs.” This element, with only slight variation, appeárs in each of the method claims in suit. The apparatus claims referred to a “clamping means imparting” such twist. Fig. 12 in the specifications (shown at 318 F.Supp. 938) depicted saw toothed clamps each pair of opposing “teeth” of which would impart to the arms of a lead a twist with respect to the position in which the arms were held by another clamp. As appears in the testimony quoted in the opinion. Mr. Heibel did not “personally design that saw tooth.” We agree with the district court that the saw tooth was an obvious type of clamping means for imparting the twist Mr. Heibel had in mind, that his [7]*7leaving the design of the saw tooth to another was immaterial, and that these apparatus claims did not fail on the theory that “he did not himself invent the subject matter sought to be patented.” 4

II. Validity: Anticipation at Radio Ceramics (318 F.Supp. 942).

The district court found that certain testimony summarized in the opinion did not sufficiently establish that the process of manufacture of capacitors at Radio Ceramics included “Applying a twisting force to the leads in the direction to increase the gripping force of the pairs of free ends of the leads on the intervening discs.” Since two of the witnesses, Frazier and Wilbur, described a reverse twisting or bending process in order to create a tension or gripping force in the leads before insertion of the disc, the finding is not clearly erroneous. We think, however, that this testimony concerning a tensioning process bears upon the conclusion with respect to obviousness.

III. Validity: Obviousness (318 F.Supp. 943-951).

1. The Scope and Content of the Prior Art. Scope and content are adequately set forth under this heading and also as admissions of the plaintiff under the next heading (318 F.Supp. 943-947).

2. The Differences Between the Prior Art and The Claims in Issue. (318 F.Supp. 947-950). We do have areas of disagreement with the district court under this heading. At page 948, the district court concluded that application of the twisting force is within the claims in suit only when it occurs between the clamping means intermediate the hairpin lead and the U shaped bridge end of the lead, and not when it occurs between the intermediate clamp and the free ends of the lead. We finding nothing in the language of the claims in suit (all set forth, 318 F.Supp. 939, 940) which either states or implies such limitation. The specifications clearly indicate the contrary, since they recite as follows: “The clamping members [imparting the twist] could be located on the side of the [intermediate] clamping members . nearest the condensers in which case the twisting force would be applied in the opposite direction, i. e., the arm 4 would be depressed and the arm 5 would be lifted, thereby depressing the free end 6 into tighter engagement with the electrode 2 and lifting the free end 7 into tighter engagement with the electrode 3.”

In view of the clear language just referred to, the fact that a torque is produced in each arm of the lead when the twisting force is applied between the intermediate clamp and the bridge end of the lead, but not when the twisting force is applied between the intermediate clamp and the free ends of the lead does not support the limitation found by the district court. We think the court erroneously reasoned that what Heibel described as a twisting force could be one only when it produced as one resultant a torque in each arm of the lead, notwithstanding Heibel’s clear statement in the specifications that he meant it to include a force which depressed one arm and lifted the other when applied between the intermediate clamp and the free ends.

The episodes in the history of the prosecution of the Heibel and Riley patents, described by the district court, are not, in our opinion, significant with respect to interpreting the claims so as to be subject to this limitation. Cancellation of original claim 5, quoted on page 948, did not estop plaintiff from asserting its claims free of this particular limitation (with respect to the portion of the lead at which the twisting force is to be applied).

The limitation just referred to must also be deleted from the list of “key differences” between the prior art and the claims in issue, given by the district court at 318 F.Supp. 950. In our opinion, the significant difference is the twisting of the hairpin lead, while its intermediate portion is held in position by the carrier strips or other clamping means, in such [8]*8direction as increases the gripping force between the free ends of the lead.

Some forms of bending or twisting in order to produce a gripping force on the disc when inserted between the free ends of the lead were known in the prior art, i. e., the bend or arch as in Ehrhardt, p. 943, 4, lead wires being sprung as in Herrick, p. 944, and the twisting done at Radio Ceramics. Had the judge accepted the testimony of Buckley and Erbe, the twist they described was virtually an anticipation, although applied very near the free ends of the lead. But accepting the testimony of employees Frazier and Wilbur, they were producing a gripping force by a kindred, though not identical, process. The Kraft patent, p. 945, 6, described similar twisting for a similar purpose, though in a different device and with a different material. The closing of a clamp on the intermediate portion of the lead after insertion of the disc between the two free ends itself produces a slight twist, increasing the gripping force exerted on the disc by the free ends of the lead.

We do agree with the district court that the process particularly described in the portion of original claim 5, italicized in the district court opinion, page 948 (and described in the specifications and illustrated in Fig. 6, p. 936) is not protected by the claims in suit. Cancellation of original claim 5 estopped plaintiff from claiming that this process is the equivalent of any method described in the claims in suit. The process, however, involves bending the arms of the lead before the intermediate clamp is closed, and the increase in gripping power between the free ends of the lead occurs when the clamp is closed.

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461 F.2d 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erie-technological-products-inc-v-die-craft-metal-products-inc-ca7-1972.