Herr-Voss Corp. v. Delta Brands, Inc.

900 F. Supp. 34, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13443, 1995 WL 545293
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 1995
DocketCiv. A. No. 3:92-CV-0891-P
StatusPublished

This text of 900 F. Supp. 34 (Herr-Voss Corp. v. Delta Brands, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herr-Voss Corp. v. Delta Brands, Inc., 900 F. Supp. 34, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13443, 1995 WL 545293 (N.D. Tex. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER

SOLIS, District Judge.

A six-day nonjury trial was held in this patent case beginning March 21,1995. After a careful review of the evidence presented at trial and the applicable law, the Court finds that there was no infringement of the United States Patent No. 4,614,101. The Court also finds the United States Patent No. 4,614,101 is invalid.

BASIS OF SUIT

Plaintiff, Herr-Voss Corporation (“Plaintiff’) claims that the defendants, Delta Brands, Inc. and Samuel F. Savariego (“Defendants”) induced infringement of the patent in suit, U.S.Patent No. 4,614,101 (“the ’101 patent”), and that such acts of inducing infringement were willful. Plaintiff asserts that this is an exceptional case based on its claim that Defendants willfully induced infringement of the T01 patent.

Defendants deny that they have induced infringement, and claim that the 101 patent is invalid. Defendants assert that this is an exceptional ease based on their claim that Plaintiffs claims are frivolous.

STIPULATED FACTS

1. The 101 patent, entitled “Method of Rewinding Slit Metal Strands,” was issued on September 30, 1986.

2. The 101 patent names Augustine A. For-nataro as inventor. Mr. Fornataro is the President of Herr-Voss, Plaintiff.

3. Plaintiff is the owner of the 101 patent and has been since its issuance.

4. The invention claimed in the 101 patent relates to a method for rewinding slit metal strands.

5. A significant portion of the business of both Plaintiff and Defendants is the manufacture of machinery to alter and/or to improve the characteristics of strip material starting with a master coil and ending with coils suitable for the user’s intended purpose.

6. Flat-Rolled Steel Products constitute a major classification of steel products. Flat-rolled products include sheet, strip, plate, etc.

7. There are two major categories of flat-rolled products: (1) hot-rolled products are reduced to final thickness by heating and rolling at elevated temperatures; (2) cold-rolled products are really “cold finished” products since most of the earlier thickness reduction occurs while the product is hot. Cold rolling is carried out on products which have not been heated immediately prior to the cold-rolling operation when they are reduced to final thickness.

8. Strip, hot-rolled or cold-rolled, is produced in very long length with width up to twelve feet and with the thickness of strip ranging from 0.005 inches to 0.250 inches. [37]*37Given the long length of strip, it is usually stored in a coil.

9. A master coil is a coil of strip whose width is essentially the same as it was at the completion of the rolling process in the steel mill. A master coil may be converted into two or more coils of narrower width by making continuous cuts along the length of the strip in a slitting process.

10. The equipment used in a slitting process generally includes a payoff reel to support the master coil for purposes of feeding the full width of the master coil into a slitter which employs pairs of opposed circular knives to slit or shear the full width strip into multiple strands (or “mults”) of desired widths.

11. The individual strands are rewound as coils on a rotating mandrel called a recoiler. These slit coils are produced for a consumer user who in turn produces steel forms or shapes by a variety of blanking or forming techniques.

12. A slitting line typically includes a payoff reel, a slitter and a recoiler.

13. The objective of the slitting operation is to process a master coil supported on the payoff reel by controlling the strip so that it is continuously fed through the knives of the slitter, where it is slit into the desired number of mults and widths, and, finally, to rewind the multiple strands onto the recoiler.

14. In order that the multiple coils produced by the slitting process may be further processed safely and conveniently by an end user, it is desirable that each of the coils be tightly wound and secured by applying a circumferential strap or band so that the individual coil can be removed from the re-coiler mandrel and transported to the end-user without fear of the coil unraveling.

15. The production of tightly wound coils on the recoiler or a slitting line is usually complicated by the profile of strip of the master coil typically produced in the steel mill. Steel strip from a master coil rarely has consistent thickness.

16. Across the width of the strip, the edges of the strip are almost always thinner than the center. This center “crowning” is the result of the rolling process in the steel mill. Although every attempt is made to reduce strip crowns, crown remains in varying degrees in all strip.

17. In the slitting process, the payoff reel serves two functions: (1) it supports the coil of strip on a rotatable mandrel and (2) it provides the necessary back tension for controlling and/or recoiling the strip.

18. The recoiler in a slitting line recoils the slit mults on a mandrel. The recoiler is driven by a motor which, in effect, pulls the slit mults toward the recoiler against the back tension provided by the payoff reel and other devices in the slitting line.

19. The slitter may be driven by its own motor or may be undriven. If the slitter is undriven, then power for slitting is provided by the recoiler pulling the mults through the slitting knives.

20. In the slitting process, the strip from the master coil moves through the slitter at one velocity and all of the strands provided by the slitter exit the slitter at the same velocity. The resulting strands have varying thicknesses that result from the crown of the strip.

21. Because the rotational speed of the re-coiler is the same across the width of the mandrel on which the slit strands are recoiled, the recoiler makes the same number of wraps for each strand being recoiled. However, the varying thickness of the strands results in the diameter of the coils of thicker strands increasing at a rate greater than the growing diameters of the thinner strands.

22. These diameter differences cause each mult to be wound at a velocity that is proportional to the particular diameter of the coil being formed on the mandrel.

23. These differences in velocity of the mults cause the pull of the recoiler to migrate to the thicker strands associated with the larger diameter coils, leaving the thinner strands loose.

24. The migration of tension to the thicker strands results from their being wound at a higher velocity relative to the thinner strands thus generating slack at the thinner strands [38]*38causing the thinner strands to droop and wind up loosely on their respective coils. Such loose coils are unacceptable to the end user because they can neither be handled safely nor processed readily in subsequent operations.

25. Neither Plaintiff nor Defendants have ever possessed the capability of fully testing slitting equipment at their facilities.

26. Plaintiff tested the patented method at the facilities of Samuel, Son & Company (“Samuel, Son”) in Ontario, Canada, in the late 1976 — early 1977 time frame and in June of 1980.

27. Mr. Fornataro filed the application for the ’101 patent on December 1, 1981.

28.

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900 F. Supp. 34, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13443, 1995 WL 545293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herr-voss-corp-v-delta-brands-inc-txnd-1995.