FMC Corp. v. Hennessy Industries, Inc.

650 F. Supp. 688, 2 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1479, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15976
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedDecember 24, 1986
Docket79 C 4660
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 650 F. Supp. 688 (FMC Corp. v. Hennessy Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
FMC Corp. v. Hennessy Industries, Inc., 650 F. Supp. 688, 2 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1479, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15976 (N.D. Ill. 1986).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

MORAN, District Judge.

This litigation is but one facet of ongoing commercial warfare with a tenacity and duration rivaling the Peloponnesian War. And this memorandum and order relates only to the first facet of a trifurcated litigation. The parties, after over 3500 pages of trial testimony and numerous depositions and exhibits, filed post-trial briefs in excess of 450 pages, and this court, after long delay, is finally prepared to rule. Unlike many patent cases this litigation has *690 been fact-intensive, turning on “who, what, where, when” primary facts. Like many patent cases, however, it has also been dominated by claims of inequitable conduct (“fraud”) in the Patent Office. Rulings thus require an extensive review of those facts, although by no means in the wealth of evidentiary detail argued in the post-trial briefs.

Hennessy Industries, Inc. (“Hennessy/Coats”) is the assignee of three patents on power tire changers which it claims are infringed by tire changers sold by FMC Corporation (“FMC/Vulcan”). FMC/Vulcan denies infringement. It further contends that each of the patents is invalid or, in any event, is unenforceable. Each party seeks attorneys’ fees and, in the case of Hennessy/Coats, treble damages, on the ground that the other was a particularly egregious wrongdoer.

Predecessors of the present Hennessy Industries, Inc. were distributors for an Iowa company, Coats Company, which manufactured manual and semi-power tire changers. In January 1962 Hennessy Industries, Inc. acquired the assets of Coats Company and thereafter continued to manufacture and distribute tire changers under the Coats trade name. Manual and semi-power tire changers had become increasingly popular after the Second World War, after the introduction of safety rims increased the physical effort necessary to remove a tire from a wheel. Tubeless tires were introduced in 1954 and their removal was even more difficult. Their increasing use created a potential and growing market for full-power tire changers. It cannot be said that by 1962 there was a long felt need for full-power tire changers to which there had been no adequate response, but certainly the time for profitable commercial exploitation had arrived. The name and distribution facilities of Hennessy/Coats provided a solid base for the addition of full-power tire changers to the Hennessy/Coats line, but a major contributing factor to Hennessy/Coats dominance in the full-power tire changer industry thereafter was its acquisition and exploitation of patent rights.

The first, and by far most important, of these was the Tabordon patent 3,255,801, filed March 14, 1962, issued June 14, 1966, and now expired (’801 patent). Much of the controversy in this litigation relates to the events leading up to the filing of that patent application and what was known or should have been known, and when, by persons connected to Hennessy/Coats. Hennessy/Coats claims that it first learned only after this litigation was filed of a semi-power version sold prior to March 14, 1961 (the critical date for purposes of 35 U.S.C. § 102), and that it then promptly disclaimed claim 1, the only claim which arguably but by no means certainly was anticipated by the earlier device. FMC/Vulcan does not argue, at least not seriously, that the Tabordon full-power tire changer was anticipated by prior art other than by the semi-power device. It contends, however, that the full-power tire changer was in public use or on sale in this country more than one year prior to the date of application, in contravention of 35 U.S.C. § 102(b); that even were that not so the full-power tire changer was obvious in light of the prior art, which included both the Tabordon semi-power tire changer and other full-power changers and therefore not patentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103; and that it has shown by clear and convincing evidence that Hennessy/Coats was guilty of inequitable conduct in the Patent Office, not only prior to the filing of the Tabordon application but also thereafter, both with respect to the ’801 and other patents.

That takes us, then, both to a determination of what happened in northern Wisconsin during the late winter of 1961, as reconstructed a score or more years later, and what people knew or should have known (in a fraud in the Patent Office sense) about those happenings. A determination of the primary facts leads to the application of a legal standard about which there can be relatively little room for argument: whether the evidence supporting facts establishing a statutory bar or obviousness is so clear and convincing that it overcomes the presumption of validity.

*691 Royal C. Tabordon had either died or was seriously ill when this case was tried; the court does not recall. While he had been deposed on several occasions he did not testify at trial. His deposition transcripts reflect an aging and ill witness of uncertain hearing and memory rather fiercely protected by his attorney and spouse. What we do know from him and others is that Tabordon had four or five years of schooling, could speak and understand English adequately although his native language was Walloon, and wrote English poorly. He lived in Casco, Wisconsin, where for a number of years he bought and sold cattle and, thereafter, in the ‘50s or earlier, made tire changing tools of his own devising in his barn. The devising was solo; he sometimes had a helper to construct the equipment he sold. Sometimes he peddled his equipment himself. At other times he relied on others in the locality for distribution. It was, at least until he sold out to Hennessy/Coats in 1962, a marginal livelihood. Tabordon had some knowledge of patents, including the concept of a statutory bar and the desirability of establishing a record of when he conceived of an idea, and, through a Green Bay, Wisconsin, patent attorney, Stanley Binish, he had filed and prosecuted prior patent applications. The record does not establish, however, that he had any real understanding of what was patentable, as opposed to what he considered a good idea, or that he understood the legal meaning or implications of claims language, reduction to practice and the like.

Well prior to the critical date Tabordon developed and sold the “EZ tire changer:” a semi-power tire changer with diametrically opposed upper and lower bead breakers (shoes to break the tire bead from the rim) powered by a single power source to break the beads loose in a single-powered operation through the use of a pneumatic piston. That semi-power device anticipated (and not just arguably) claim 1, which Hennessy now disclaims. PMC contends that the full-power tire changer was also in public use or on sale before the critical date and that, in any event, the full-power tire changer was obvious when the semi-powered unit is considered, as it must be, as prior art.

We turn, then, to the evidence concerning the first contention relating to public use or sale. Here the court relies more on documentary evidence than testimony, or at least testimony which is not otherwise corroborated by the paper record. United States v. Kairys, 600 F.Supp. 1254, 1260 (N.D.Ill.1984), aff'd

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650 F. Supp. 688, 2 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1479, 1986 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fmc-corp-v-hennessy-industries-inc-ilnd-1986.