Henry J. Modrey v. American Gage & MacHine Company

478 F.2d 470, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 10170
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 1, 1973
Docket282, Docket 72-1534
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 478 F.2d 470 (Henry J. Modrey v. American Gage & MacHine Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry J. Modrey v. American Gage & MacHine Company, 478 F.2d 470, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 10170 (2d Cir. 1973).

Opinion

*471 OAKES, Circuit Judge:

This appeal is from a summary judgment granted to a patent licensor against his licensee in a suit for the second payment allegedly due under the license agreement. That license agreement has now been terminated. Out of the usual maze of claims, counterclaims, and cross claims which patent litigation so frequently entails emerges one central question. The question is whether the district court was correct in concluding that no triable issue of fact is raised by appellant’s contention that under the terms of the license agreement, which was executed before the patent itself was granted, the patent claims ultimately granted to the appellee-licensor did not contain “significant coverage” of the licensed device. The device is an automatic dispenser of magnetizable items such as screws, pins, rivets and the like. For reasons that will appear below, we believe that the district court was incorrect : a triable issue of fact does appear. Accordingly the summary judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded. The decision of the district court is reported at 339 F.Supp. 1213.

Appellee Modrey, an inventor, and one Steinmeyer (from whom Modrey took an assignment) applied on July 30, 1966, for the patent now at issue. The invention has some reference in the trade as “Pintrex” or as a “Pintrex” machine or as a part of a “Pintrex” system. After filing the application Modrey entered into a license agreement with C.E.M. Company, a manufacturer, in no way related to the appellant, of “spring pins,” which are simply small, straight, cylindrical rods. Subsequently Modrey entered also into negotiations with Size Control Company (hereinafter “Size Control”), a division of the appellant, concerning a further license to use and exploit the “Pintrex’.’ device.

These negotiations were essentially in three stages, and culminated in the license agreement now in issue. The first stage established, among other things, that Size Control would pay Modrey two installments of $15,000 each, one on the signing of the license, the second upon the issuance of a patent, although the terms of the patent grant were not established at this stage. The invention referred to was described in the application as including the following general features: a frame provided with a bin or receptacle containing a quantity of the items to be dispensed, such as pins or screws; a rotary conveyor, consisting of either a disc or a drum, supported by the frame and dipping into the bin or receptacle; a number of elongated magnets so affixed to the disc (it is unnecessary for present purposes to refer to the drum) as to attract to its surface the items to be dispensed; and a passageway or chute so aligned with the magnets that upon rotation of the disc the items would be brought one by one into the passageway or chute whence they could be dispensed in the given manufacturing or packaging operation. 1 The disc was referred to in the negotiations and will be referred to in this opinion as a “magnetic feeder disc.”

In the second stage of negotiations Size Control took the position that the license agreement should be modified so as to make the payment of the second installment of $15,000 (for which Mod-rey instituted this suit) conditioned not upon the grant of any patent under the application but only upon the grant of a patent containing the first claim thereof —Claim 1 — as it then existed. Claim 1 rather broadly referred to a conveyor having magnetic elements spaced apart in the direction of travel with the conveyor arranged to pass for part of its travel through a supply of the items to be dispensed, and a conventional discharge chute along the path of the mag *472 netic elements. 2 Because Modrey pointed out that Claim 1 was quite broad and that the Patent Office often requires the language of a broad claim to be narrowed in scope, he refused to agree to Size Control’s proposal.

The parties compromised in what we term the third stage of negotiations, and payment of the second installment by Size Control was conditioned upon the grant of claim(s) containing “significant coverage of the magnetic feed disc as shown in Figs. 1 and 2.” It is of this stuff that commercial law suits are so often made; a compromise to reach agreement, leaving undefined except ultimately by the court the specifications of the compromise — the word might as well have been the much overworked “substantial.” It is in connection with just such ambiguous terms that, as Professor Corbin reminds us, see 3 A. Corbin, Contracts § 542 (1960), proof of surrounding circumstances and the use of other extrinsic aids to interpretation are so important in reaching a result that in the end is after all at best, perhaps, an informed guess based upon subsequent rationalization.

At this point of negotiations, Modrey executed the license agreement, on June 19, 1968. 3 The agreement was also executed by Size Control, on July 8, 1968, and it paid the first installment of $15,000 to Modrey as required. Meanwhile, however, the patent office had, on July 1, 1968, issued its first Action on the application, rejecting Modrey’s Claims 1-15 among others, including the broad claims relative to the “magnetic feeder disc” shown in Figures 1 and 2; the rejection was under 35 U.S.C. § 102, on the basis that the claims were anticipated by the prior art, specifically Patent No. 2,836,947 and Patent No. 3,065,841. Each of these patents related to a selection and feeder device (or dispenser) using apparently a disc or drum with imbedded magnets to attract objects such as bottle caps from a bin or receptacle and to feed them into a chute. We say “apparently” because these patents are not part of the formal record, although they have been furnished to us gratuitously by the appellant in a special appendix.

Modrey did not advise Size Control of the action by the Patent Office, but so *473 narrowed his Claim 1 as hopefully to avoid the problem encountered. Whether or not the narrowing of the claim rendered the “coverage” of the magnetic feeder disc no longer “significant” is the question of law we must determine preliminarily. If we decide that there are genuine issues of material fact raised in appellant’s affidavits on this point then we must remand to the district court for a taking of evidence. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e); see First National Bank v. Cities Service Co., 391 U.S. 253, 288-290, 88 S.Ct. 1575, 20 L.Ed.2d 569 (1968); Dol-gow v. Anderson, 438 F.2d 825, 827 (2d Cir. 1971).

Crucial to decision on the preliminary question of law is the way in which Claim 1 and accordingly its dependent claims were narrowed to obtain the patent. What had been referred to in the application as “magnetic elements secured to said conveyor spaced apart in the direction of travel” was amended to read “magnetic elements secured to said conveyor lengthwise spaced apart and oriented

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478 F.2d 470, 177 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 545, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 10170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-j-modrey-v-american-gage-machine-company-ca2-1973.