George K. Austin, Jr. v. Marco Dental Products, Inc.

560 F.2d 966, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 529, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11626
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1977
Docket76-3749
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 560 F.2d 966 (George K. Austin, Jr. v. Marco Dental Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George K. Austin, Jr. v. Marco Dental Products, Inc., 560 F.2d 966, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 529, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11626 (9th Cir. 1977).

Opinion

EUGENE A. WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:

This appeal raises issues concerning a patent’s validity and infringement: (a) the “on sale” proscription; (b) nonobviousness; (e) combination of known elements; (d) standards for reissuance and (e) intervening rights.

Appellee, George K. Austin, Jr., alleges that appellant, Marco Dental Products, Inc. (Marco Dental), infringed Claim No. 1 in his patent [U. S. Patent No. Re 28,649] for a “dental handpiece control.” His company, Adec, Inc., manufactures it under the trade name “Auto-Trol.” Marco Dental sells a similar device.

Claim No. 1 describes a mechanism which automatically controls the flow of air and water to a compact dental handpiece. The device combines a dental handpiece, a control block assembly and a hanger valve assembly. In operation it permits the automatic feeding of drive air, cooling water and air, and chip air 1 without requiring the dentist to adjust for each of the three to seven handpieces he may use with a typical patient.

Central to Austin’s invention is the innovative use of flexible diaphragms to regulate the flows, such as those required in high speed drills. The district court succinctly described their function:

Behind each handpiece is a control block. When a dentist uses a handpiece, the air and water will flow into the control block, down a port to the diaphragm (which is flexed open when the handpiece is picked up), up the adjacent outlet port, out to the handpiece. When the dentist uses an adjacent handpiece, the air and water flow straight through the interceding control block and into the control block behind the handpiece being used. In this way, air and water only flow across the diaphragm of the particular control block connected to the handpiece being used.

Austin conceived his invention on a summer weekend in 1968 and by August of that year had constructed a prototype of the control block. Adec issued ' a wholesale price list effective September 1,1968 giving prices of four Auto-Trol models. A newsletter of October 7, 1968 sent to Adec customers introduced the new unit and other items. The prototype was displayed at a dental convention in Miami on October 27, 1968.

The original patent application was filed on October 24,1969 and a patent was issued in February 1972 as No. 3,638,310. Three months later Austin sued Marco Dental for infringement.

On September 27, 1974 Austin filed for a reissue of his patent because the language of claims 1 and 4 was defective. He later *969 submitted an amendment requesting that claims 17, 18 and 19 be cancelled, based on prior art patents brought to his attention by Marco Dental. Following the patent’s reissue (No. Re 28,649) in December 1975, Austin filed an amended complaint for patent infringement.

The “on sale” issue was segregated from others. The district court held a trial in February 1976 on the issue whether the Austin invention had been “on sale” more than one year prior to October 24,1969, the filing date of the original patent application. The court held that it had not been “on sale” and denied Marco Dental’s request for interlocutory certification.

The remaining issues of validity and infringement of the Austin reissue patent were tried later. Only claim 1 was at issue and the district court entered judgment for appellee after determining that the Austin patent was valid and infringed.

I.

“ON SALE”

The “on sale” provision, 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) states, in pertinent part:

A person shall be entitled to a patent unless—
(b) the invention was patented or described ... in public use or on sale in this country, more than one year prior to the date of the application for patent in the United States.

The rule of this circuit in determining whether the invention was “on sale” more than one year before the patent application was expressed in Robbins Co. v. Lawrence Mfg. Co., 482 F.2d 426 (9th Cir. 1973), where we said:

A sale or an offering for sale precludes any inquiry into the experimental nature of the sale unless the contract of sale or the offering for sale contains an express or clearly implied condition that the sale or offering is made primarily for experimental use.
Thus the sale or offering would not ipso facto invalidate the patent nor preclude further inquiry into the experimental nature of the use where the contract or the offer . . showed that the device was still experimental and that no workable prototype had been made (Am-erico [sic] Contract Plate Freezers, supra); ....

Id. at 433 (emphasis in original).

The invention must be completed before sales efforts become a bar. Appellant contends that Austin’s invention, the control block was fully completed by August 1968, two months before the critical date of October 24,1968. To support its argument Marco Dental points primarily to the Adec wholesale price list of September 1, 1968 and the October 7 Adec newsletter to its customers with its brief description of the Auto-Trol and the picture of a mock-up.

Amerio Contact Plate Freezers, Inc. v. Belt-Ice Corp., 316 F.2d 459 (9th Cir. 1963), also involved drawings and a mock-up of a freezing device shown to customers prior to the critical date. We held that, unless there was in existence a fully-operative device incorporating the invention prior to the critical date, there could be no “placing of the invention on sale in the sense intended by the statute.” Id. at 464.

Ordinarily . . . selling activity . prior to the time that a fully-operative article or apparatus incorporating the invention comes into existence, is not a reliable indicium of competitive exploitation. Until at least an operative prototype has been completed and tested, the competitive effectiveness of such activity, in all probability, will be impaired by the aura of continuing developmental, experimental and testing effort. Moreover, at this stage, such activity is likely to be more for the purpose of eliciting needed changes in design and testing whether the market potential warrants continuance of the project, than to launch full-fledged commercial exploitation.

Id. at 465.

The annual price list was mailed to Adec dealers after the conception of the invention and completion of a test model embodying the underlying principle, but before development of an operative Auto-Trol prototype.

*970 The newsletter invited Adec customers to view the company’s new products at Adec’s exhibition booth at the American Dental Association convention in Miami on October 27-29, 1968.

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Bluebook (online)
560 F.2d 966, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 529, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 11626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-k-austin-jr-v-marco-dental-products-inc-ca9-1977.