Filon Plastics Corp. v. H. Koch & Sons

243 F. Supp. 636
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJanuary 29, 1985
DocketNo. 38645
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 F. Supp. 636 (Filon Plastics Corp. v. H. Koch & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Filon Plastics Corp. v. H. Koch & Sons, 243 F. Supp. 636 (N.D. Cal. 1985).

Opinion

SWEIGERT, District Judge.

This is an action for patent infringement brought under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1338 (a) and Sec. 1400(b) with a related cause of action for unfair competition under Sec. 1338(b). Defendant has counterclaimed for a declaration of invalidity.

Plaintiff, Filón, claims infringement of Shorts Reissue Patent No. 24,804 which was applied for February 21, 1958, and issued March 29, 1960 to plaintiff as assignee of the inventor Calhoun Shorts. This patent is a reissue of an original Shorts Patent, No. 2,784,763, applied for October 2, 1952 and issued March 12, 1957.

The Reissue Patent, ’804, adopts its claims 1-25 from the original Shorts patent ’763, and adds new claims 26-40.

In issue in this case are original claims 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, 12, 13, 16, 21, and 22, of which claims 1 and 22 (method claims) and claim 16 (an apparatus claim) are representative. Also in issue are reissue claims 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, [638]*63834, 35, and 36, of which claim 34 (an apparatus claim) is representative.

The patent is for an apparatus and method for making fiberglass-reinforced plastic sheet material, specifically to produce fiberglass reinforced plastic sheets of any desired cross-section, e. g., flat or corrugated, by a continuous process.

The apparatus, as shown in the photographs of plaintiff’s own machine, P. Ex. 35, consists essentially of three sections joined together. The first section is the “sandwich” making section, the second is an oven in which the “sandwich” of cellophane, liquid resin, and fiberglass reinforcing material is shaped and then cured to full hardness, and the third section is the cut-off and trim apparatus.

In the apparatus, a continuous lower sheet or film of cellophane is fed into the machine. Liquid resin is fed onto this lower film, leveled to a predetermined depth and retained on the film by means of lengthwise bars which turn up the outer edges of the film. Into the resin is then laid the reinforcing fiberglass. The reinforcing material sinks into the resin and is also forced down into the pool of resin so that all air in the reinforcing material is displaced by the resin. The upper cellophane film is lowered onto the resin-impregnated fiberglass upon the lower film and the composite sheet is then'rolled to consolidate the laminated structure to a predetermined thickness. The laminated structure is then drawn through a series of forming shoes while the sheet is heated to set the resin. Such shoes may be flat or of corrugated or other desired form. The set resin is then cooled, and the finished sheet material is edged and cut into panels of desired length.

The patent is a combination of some old • elements with other claimed novel elements — among the latter being the direct deposit of resin upon a moving cellophane film, deposit of the reinforcing material on the moving resin, spaced shoes or dies in an oven to progressively form the sheet, and pre-shrinking of the cellophane film.

Defendant contends that neither its apparatus nor its method, as illustrated in the photographs of P. Ex. 37, infringes any of the claims asserted against it by plaintiff. Defendant has also raised the issue of invalidity which we will separately discuss.

INFRINGEMENT

Infringement — Claims 1, 2 and 22

Claim 1 of ’804 reads as follows:

“The method of making composite sheet material which comprises moving longitudinally a lower surface film, depositing heat settable liquid resin on such lower surface film, during continued longitudinal movement of such lower surface film carrying the resin, laying into such liquid resin stranded reinforcing material and thereby displacing the air in such reinforcing material with resin, covering the reinforcing material and resin with an upper surface film, consolidating the intermediate resin and reinforcing material by applying pressure to the lower surface film and thus forming a composite sheet, moving such composite sheet longitudinally through a heated zone and thereby setting the resin, and during such movement through at least the initial portion of such heated zone engaging opposite surfaces of the composite sheet and thereby shaping into a desired form the cross-sectional configuration of the sheet.”

Plaintiff’s expert read the words of this claim directly on defendant’s accused machine. The expert’s testimony, and the photographs of defendant’s machine, appear to the Court to confirm that there is a literal infringement, or at least, infringement through the doctrine of equivalents.

“In determining whether an accused device or composition infringes a valid patent, resort must be had in the first instance to the words of the claim. If accused matter falls clearly within the claim, infringement is made out and that is the end of it.” Graver Tank [639]*639& Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Products Co., 339 U.S. 605, 607, 70 S.Ct. 854, 855, 94 L.Ed. 1097 (1950).

Defendant contends that his step of depositing or laying chopped fibers onto the liquid resin cannot be considered covered by the words “laying into such liquid resin stranded reinforcing material” because of certain representations made by the inventor, Shorts, in an interference proceeding in the Patent Office, No. 88818 (D. Ex. D). Shorts there claimed, on motion to dissolve certain of the counts in the interference proceeding, that his invention did not encompass a loose fiber mat being deposited on top of the liquid resin.

However, it is “well settled that in interference cases the doctrine of equivalents, applied in infringement cases, has no application.” McBride v. Teeple, 109 F.2d 789, 799, 27 CCPA 961 (1940). Therefore, plaintiff is not estopped from claiming that the chopped fiber used by defendant does constitute “stranded reinforcing material” within the meaning of claim 1. The chopped fibers are cut from glass roving (continuous, stranded, glass fibers) and constitute “stranded reinforcing material” even though the strands are rather short.

Claim 2 differs from claim 1 only in that “glass mat” is used in the words of the claim rather than “stranded reinforcing material.” In all other respects the claim is the same.

Plaintiff’s expert testified that, in his opinion, the loose, chopped fibers deposited by the Koch apparatus constituted an unbonded mat (Rep. Tr. p. 768). We are also of the opinion that defendant’s loose fibers form a kind of mat. This mat is not, perhaps, the kind of mat contemplated by the specifications since the mat cannot be mounted on a roll to be dispensed into the machine, but, nevertheless, a mat in the sense that it is incorporated into the plastic sandwich as reinforcing material.

Defendant also contends that his machine does not infringe claim 1 because the weighted “sandbags,” used to press on the upper surface of the sheet as it moves through the oven, are not in “the initial portion of * * * heated zone * * that initial means the beginning, the front, and, therefore, since defendant’s sandbags are located some thirty feet from the entrance to his oven they are not in the “initial portion.”

The Court does not agree with this contention.

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243 F. Supp. 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/filon-plastics-corp-v-h-koch-sons-cand-1985.