Genzyme Corp. v. ATRIUM MEDICAL CORP.

315 F. Supp. 2d 552, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10984, 2004 WL 938378
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedApril 22, 2004
DocketCIV.A.00-958-MPT
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 315 F. Supp. 2d 552 (Genzyme Corp. v. ATRIUM MEDICAL CORP.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Genzyme Corp. v. ATRIUM MEDICAL CORP., 315 F. Supp. 2d 552, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10984, 2004 WL 938378 (D. Del. 2004).

Opinion

*557 MEMORANDUM OPINION

THYNGE, United States Magistrate Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

In July 2002, this court issued a claim construction opinion following a Markman hearing 1 held in May 2002. In November 2002, a trial was held on the patent infringement dispute between Genzyme and Atrium regarding pulmonary drainage devices. Genzyme alleged damages caused by the marketing and sale of Atrium’s “OASIS” and “EXPRESS” devices, which allegedly infringed Genzyme’s “Elliot patents” (U.S. Patent Nos. 4,544,370; 4,715,-856; 4,747,844 and 4,822,346) and its “D’Antonio patent” (U.S. Patent No. 4,899,531). Both parties reserved the right after the verdict for the court to decide certain issues of law and fact. After the eight day trial, the jury found that Atrium did not infringe any claims of the patents-in-suit and that claims in issue in the ’531 and ’844 patents were invalid.

II. PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The technical overview and procedural history that follows is drawn from the trial record, the court’s claim construction, the evidence presented to the jury and the patents themselves. These sections address factual findings and procedural issues associated with each of the patents individually, and discuss the specific issues raised in the post trial motions before the court.

A. The D’Antonio Patent

Technology and Claims

The D’Antonio patent is directed toward a medical device used during surgical procedures to clear fluids and air from the body cavity. Chest drainage devices that used water columns as one-way valves to prevent the flow of fluid back into the patient also act to regulate the suction applied to the patient by preferentially allowing air from the atmosphere into the suction and collection chambers. Medical personnel would regulate the suction by varying the amount of water in U-shaped tubes within the device. Instead of employing a water-based control mechanism, the D’Antonio patent utilizes a mechanical valve that “preferentially applies suction pressure” to regulate the pressure between the chambers. This is accomplished, in part, by a gas port closing member positioned between the vacuum and collection chambers within the device.

The specific D’Antonio patent claims in dispute at trial were 1, 16, 17 and 18 of the ’531 patent. These claims provide for a “closing means” that functions to regulate the pressure between two chambers in the device.

The ’531 patent recites 2 :

A system for draining fluids from a portion of the body comprising an inlet port, a suction chamber, a suction regulator consisting of two chambers (one connected to suction and the other to the atmosphere) with an opening and a closing means be *558 tween the chambers, and a biasing means for adjusting the position of the closing means in order to regulate the pressure between the chambers (claim 1). It also claims a system similar to that in claim one where the closing means can be set to a predetermined position by applying a force to the closing means and that force dampened by a dampening means (claim 16). The dampening means is described as a dash pot (claim 17). The closing force applied in claim 16 to the closing means is determined by a biasing means (claim 18).

Procedural History

As a result of the Markman hearing and opinion, claim language in the ’531 patent was defined and subsequently included in the instructions to the jury. Relevant to the arguments before the court, a suction regulator “closing means” was defined as a mean-plus-function element of the claim. The functions set forth were opening and closing and the corresponding structure was “a ball that is disposed within the opening in the dividing means, or a hinged door, and structural equivalents thereof.” This definition was consistent with the construction that Genzyme proposed and was not subsequently disputed by Genzyme prior to or during the course of the trial, or as included in the jury instructions.

Throughout this case, including at trial, Genzyme contended that Atrium’s manufacture, use, offer for sale, and/or sale of its EXPRESS and OASIS chest drainage devices infringed claims of the D’Antonio patent. Before trial, Atrium pursued a motion for summary judgment for non-infringement of the D’Antonio patent, contending that its accused devices did not contain the disclosed “spherical ball” limitation defined by the “closing means” as specified in the patent. The court ruled in favor of Genzyme holding that the structural equivalence of “a ball disposed within the opening in the dividing means or a hinged door” was a disputed issue of material fact. Concomitantly, the issue of structural equivalents was the thrust of the dispute between the parties.

At trial, expert testimony distinguished Genzyme’s device from the prior art and established its functional equivalence to Atrium’s device. Testimony was also offered suggesting that a ball and flat plate were interchangeable structures. In addition, testimony revealed that other structures were present in the Atrium devices that had equivalent functions to the “closing means” described in the D’Antonio patent. Finally, expert testimony explained how the Atrium devices potentially infringed.

In contrast, testimony for the defense revealed that a weighted ball is not equivalent to a flat disk. Other evidence showed that Atrium invested in the research and development of its suction regulator and found that the use of a “ball” in its design was not commercially available nor economically feasible at the time. Under cross examination, Genzyme’s witnesses testified that Deknatel (a predecessor company of Genzyme) did not, nor did any commercial chest drainage device, use a ball within an opening or a hinged door as a suction regulator closing means. The prosecution history revealed that in distinguishing the ’531 patent from Willwrath et al., 3 D’Antonio argued that Willwrath’s spherical element was not disposed within the opening, and he claimed that his “closing means was responsive to slight variations in pressure on the opposite sides thereof ... providing a preferential draw from the patient.” This feature also distinguished his claims from the Akiyama. 4 *559 However, Dr. D’Antonio testified on cross-examination that a ball within an opening is equivalent to a flat plate because “one could cut the top and bottom off the ball.”

B. The Elliot Patents

These patents disclose devices that remove fluid and air from a patient’s chest cavity through the use of vacuum suction. Body fluids are drained through a tube into a collection chamber within the device. Proper operation requires the use of one-way “valves” to prevent the reverse flow of collected fluids due to negative inhalation pressure. Prior art devices used a water column to act as a one-way valve or “water seal” to prevent reverse flow.

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315 F. Supp. 2d 552, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10984, 2004 WL 938378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/genzyme-corp-v-atrium-medical-corp-ded-2004.