Ferag AG v. Grapha-Holding AG

905 F. Supp. 1, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16464, 1995 WL 643420
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedOctober 26, 1995
DocketCiv. A. 91-2215-LFO
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 905 F. Supp. 1 (Ferag AG v. Grapha-Holding AG) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferag AG v. Grapha-Holding AG, 905 F. Supp. 1, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16464, 1995 WL 643420 (D.D.C. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

OBERDORFER, District Judge.

Plaintiffs Ferag AG and Ferag, Inc. and defendant Grapha-Holding AG are two of only a very few companies that manufacture bindery equipment used to assemble or join together pages of brochures and magazines. Even in this age of computers, the demand for innovations in the binding of printed materials continues since the output of printing presses greatly outpaces the output of bindery machines. See Declaration of Ted W. Mayer at 3. The goal of these new developments is simply to increase the speed of the binding process, which has been limited by the fact that when sheets of paper move too quickly, they tend to fold, crease, tear, and flutter.

At issue in this case is defendant’s Weber patent, which discloses a bindery machine that plaintiffs claim has been anticipated by plaintiffs’ prior Meier ’755 patent. Plaintiffs also ask for a declaratory judgment that two of plaintiffs’ machines, one introduced at an industry show in 1991 (the “Print ’91” machine) and the other shown in September 1993 (the “IPEX” machine), do not infringe the Weber patent. Defendant has filed a counterclaim asserting that plaintiffs’ Print ’91 machine infringes its Weber patent.

The Weber patent contains Claims 1-27. Currently pending is plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment that would invalidate Weber Claims 1-3, 5-11, 17-20, 26, and 27, and plaintiffs motion for summary judgment of the non-infringement of Weber Claims 4, 12-16, and 21-25. As to invalidity, defendant denies that Weber Claims 1-3, 5-11, 17-20, 26, or 27 are invalid as anticipated by the Meier ’755 patent. Thus, only invalidity Claims 1, 6, 9, 17-19, 26-27 remain at issue. As to non-infringement, defendant agrees that Claims 12-16, 21, and 25 are not infringed; leaving in dispute infringement Claims 4 and 22-24. For the reasons stated below, an accompanying Order grants plaintiffs’ motion with respect to non-infringement and denies plaintiffs motion with respect to invalidity and grants summary judgment to the defendant on that issue.

*3 I.

A.

The patent in dispute is U.S. Patent 4,735,-406, which discloses a “Machine For Making Brochures and the Like,” invented by Walter Weber and assigned to defendant Grapha-Holding AG. It issued on April 5,1988, from an application filed May 28, 1986, based on a Swiss application which was filed on June 4, 1985. See drawing attached as Appendix I.

The machine disclosed by the Weber patent uses a rotating cylinder with several chains or earners radiating from the cylinder-like paddles on a paddlewheel. (The single carrier, non-rotating saddle stitcher has long been the industry standard.) Individual folded sheets move linearly along the edge of each carrier (i.e., parallel to the axis of the cylinder), and the entire cylinder rotates. The accumulated pages are then carried to the saddles, where they are stapled. The increase in speed comes from the fact that there are several carriers rotating beneath the feeder rather than the traditional single chain or carrier moving linearly beneath the feeder.

For purposes of plaintiffs’ non-infringement claim, two other aspects of the Weber patent are relevant: its stapling device and its sheet feeding units. Stapling takes place on the saddles, which are downstream of the carriers gathering the sheets of the brochure together. The connecting apparatus “comprises two staple applicators mounted on a yoke.” Weber col. 6,1. 2-3. The yoke rocks in a pendulum movement around the outer perimeter of the cylindrical drum. Each applicator is fitted with means for applying as many staples as necessary to ensure that the sheets of each brochure are secured to each other. The applicator staples the brochures together at the folds of the collected sheets; and Claim 4 further defines the connecting means as “includ[ing] means for simultaneously stapling the backs of sheets of a plurality of accumulations to each other” (emphasis added).

The other aspect relevant to plaintiffs’ non-infringement claim is the Weber device’s “sheet feeding units,” which are limited by several Claims throughout the patent. For the purposes of plaintiffs’ motion, only Claims 22-24 are relevant. In Claim 22, the Weber patent discloses “[t]he machine of claim 1, wherein each of said feeding units comprises means for delivering a stream of partially overlapping sheets wherein each preceding sheet overlies the next-following sheet.” Claims 23 and 24 are dependent upon Claim 22. Claim 23 discloses “[t]he machine of claim- 22, wherein said delivering means includes means for conveying the sheets of the respective stream with the folded backs constituting the leaders of the sheets.” Claim 24 discloses “[t]he machine of claim 23, wherein each of said feeding units further comprises means for opening successive sheets of the respective stream including means for engaging the folded backs of the sheets.”

B.

The prior art which plaintiffs allege anticipates the Weber patent is U.S. Patent 4,408,-755, a “Method and Apparatus for Forming Multi-sheet Printed Products, Especially Newspapers and Magazines,” invented by Jacques Meier and owned by plaintiffs (“Meier ’755”). The Meier ’755 patent issued on October 11, 1983 (approximately four-and-a-half years before the Weber patent), from an application filed February 17, 1981 based on a Swiss application which was filed on March 11, 1980. See drawing attached as Appendix II. Like the Weber patent, the Meier ’755 patent is designed to form multi-sheet printed products such as newspapers, magazines and brochures.

The machine disclosed by the Meier ’755 patent also consists of a cylindrical drum containing radially protruding support ribs spaced evenly from each other around the drum. The drum has three infeeder or inlet sections arranged next to one another. Three transport devices feed the paper into the inlet sections. The transport device consists of a series of individual grippers, which remove folded sheets of paper from a stack.

The stack of folded paper delivered by the transport device into the inlet sections is a single, continuous, interconnected web of paper similar to the continuous form paper used in a dot matrix or daisy wheel computer *4 printer. In order to avoid the difficulties associated with the “gathering” of individual signatures or sheets, the Meier ’755 device transports the paper without cutting the continuous web into individual sheets.

For purposes of plaintiffs’ non-infringement motion, the construction and operation of plaintiffs’ Print ’91 machine is relevant in two respects: its stapling mechanism and its sheet feeding units. The Print ’91 machine’s stapling device is described in detail in U.S. Patent No. 5,172,897 (A “Process and Apparatus for Collecting and Stapling Folded Printed Sheets”) invented by Egon Hánsch and assigned to plaintiff Ferag AG (“Hánsch ’897”). The machine’s stapling station is located downstream of the feed stations, where the sheets have been gathered together. The stapling mechanism consists of a “self-enclosed track of travel for stapling heads extend[ed] around a collector drum” with several supports. “A stapling head is assigned to each support. The stapling heads rotate mutually synchronously about the axis of rotation of the drum.” Hánsch ’897 Abstract.

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905 F. Supp. 1, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16464, 1995 WL 643420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferag-ag-v-grapha-holding-ag-dcd-1995.