Ernst Johan Jens Henriksen and W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company v. Cory Corporation

327 F.2d 409
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1964
Docket14070_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 327 F.2d 409 (Ernst Johan Jens Henriksen and W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company v. Cory 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
Ernst Johan Jens Henriksen and W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company v. Cory Corporation, 327 F.2d 409 (7th Cir. 1964).

Opinion

DUFFY, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit alleging infringement of Henriksen Patent No. 2,678,634 issued on May 18, 1954, and entitled “Writing Instrument.”

Co-plaintiff, W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company, acquired from Henriksen an exclusive right to make, use and sell in the United States, writing instruments embraced within the scope of the claims of the Henriksen patent.

The patent in suit relates to the construction of a ballpoint pen. The specification describes the pen as including an ink reservoir and a writing ball mounted in a nib in the forward end of the reservoir. Two vents are provided in the rear end of the reservoir in order to prevent a vacuum from forming in the air space above the ink as the ink is withdrawn from the reservoir during the writing operation.

The defendant asserts the invalidity of the patent in suit, claims non-infringement and urges as a further defense, the alleged misuse of Henriksen Patent No. 2,678,634.

The principal issue in the suit pertains to what is designated as the “follower.” In the writing instrument described in the patent in suit, during writing, ink is fed by gravity to the writing ball. The diameter of the reservoir is such that if the pen is inverted, the ink would normally flow rearwardly through the vent and out of the reservoir. To prevent such a flow of the ink, a follower is inserted in the reservoir and is positioned on the upper surface of the ink. Another *410 purpose of the follower is to prevent air mixing into the ink which might form bubbles and thus interfere with the writing functions of the pen.

The follower is frequently referred to as “follower mass.” This follower must be other than ink and is of such a character that it does not mix with ink.

The pens manufactured and sold by defendant all have an ink reservoir, a writing ball and a follower. However, defendant claims that its follower has a composition different from the one claimed in the patent in suit, and hence there is no infringement.

Henriksen, the patentee, does not claim to be the originator of ballpoint pens or of such pens with a follower. All of the claims of the Henriksen patent are directed to a follower which is “pulpy.”

On July 1, 1955, plaintiff Henriksen granted to co-plaintiff, W. A. Sheaffer Pen Company, a license which was designated “exclusive.” Under the terms of the license agreement, Sheaffer was required to grant licenses to seven other pen manufacturers who were named in the license. One additional licensee was provided for, who was to be selected by mutual agreement of Sheaffer and Henriksen. The license to Sheaffer specified the precise nature and form of the sublieenses which Sheaffer was required to grant. Included was the provision that such sublicensees must accept a license not only under the patent in suit, but under various foreign patents, and to pay minimum royalties on both United States and foreign sales.

The District Court held the patent in suit valid, and that it was infringed by defendant’s writing instrument. Also, the District Court failed to find that plaintiffs had misused the patent in suit.

Although defendant’s claim of invalidity was strongly urged in the District Court, that issue has been virtually abandoned on this appeal. In any event, we are of the view that the finding and conclusion of the District Court that the patent is valid, is justified by the record before us.

On the question of infringement, it is undisputed that defendant’s follower is composed of Texas Star “0” grease. 1 This grease is a common lubricating grease and, therefore, is a “greasy substance.” Defendant strongly urges that Henriksen clearly disclaimed followers which were of a greasy substance, and that he is now attempting to assert that the “pulpy” claims in the patent in suit cover followers made up from a greasy substance.

Defendant relies on the well-establisher principle that a patentee cannot regain in court, claims covering devices which he specifically abandoned in the Patent Office. North Star Ice Equipment Company v. Akshun Manufacturing Company, 7 Cir., 301 F.2d 882, 886.

As originally filed, Henriksen’s application described the followers in this language :

“6 is a lid or follower slidably mounted within the ink reservoir 3 adjacent the surface of the ink or paste 7 contained therein. This lid or follower which may be a cylindrical body of small weight f. inst. a body of light metal or a solid or semi-pasty body of a composition of paraffin or may consist of a substance having approximately the same viscosity as the ink but of such a nature that it is unable to mix therewith, is adapted to prevent the air admitted through the air intake 5 to contact the surface of the ink 7 and also to prevent the ink from flowing from the reservoir into the interior of the barrel.
“Alternatively the lid or body 6 may consist of a layer of viscous or pulpy mass of substantially the same viscosity as the ink and having a color which is distinctly different from the color thereof, thereby providing means for advertising the user when the ink in the reservoir is *411 approaching exhaustion which will become apparent from the change of color on the writing paper when the pulpy mass above the ink column is extracted through the ink feeding channel to the writing ball.”

The original specification thus appears To divide followers into two groups. In the first, the follower is a body of light metal or a solid or semi-pasty body of a ■composition of paraffin; and, in the second, the follower may be a viscous or pulpy mass similar in viscosity to the ink, but of a different color so as to advise the user when the ink in the reservoir is near exhaustion.

Some two years after the filing of the ■original application, Henriksen added the following three claims:

“28. In an ink reservoir for ball point fountain pens including an ink column within said reservoir; a viscous mass adjacent the surface of said ink column and providing an air tight follower above said ink column within said reservoir, said viscous mass being of such a nature that it is unable to mix with said ink.
“29. In an ink reservoir for ball point fountain pens including an ink column within said reservoir; a layer of a greasy substance above the surface of said ink column, said greasy substance forming an air tight follower capable of sliding within said reservoir following the surface of said ink column, the nature of said greasy substance being such that it is unable to mix with said ink.
“30. In an ink reservoir for ball point fountain pens including a column of pulpy ink within said reservoir ; a layer of a pulpy mass on the surface of said ink column, said pulpy mass having substantially the same viscosity as the pulpy ink and forming a slidable follower within said reservoir, said pulpy mass and said pulpy ink being immiscible with each other.” (Emphasis supplied).

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Bluebook (online)
327 F.2d 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernst-johan-jens-henriksen-and-w-a-sheaffer-pen-company-v-cory-ca7-1964.