Hugh W. Shumaker v. Gem Manufacturing Co.

311 F.2d 273, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 20, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1962
Docket13706_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 311 F.2d 273 (Hugh W. Shumaker v. Gem Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hugh W. Shumaker v. Gem Manufacturing Co., 311 F.2d 273, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 20, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276 (7th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

ENOCH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, Hugh W. Shumaker, brought this action against defendant, Gem Manufacturing Co., charging infringement of plaintiff’s patent No. 2,933,344, granted April 19, 1960.

The patent is directed to a pair of wind deflectors attached to the rear corner posts of a station wagon to break up the vacuum formed during forward movement of the vehicle. The vacuum created at the blunt end during forward movement of a station wagon draws road dust, dirt, grime, snow and other foreign material onto the rear window, obscuring rear vision and creating a driving hazard.

The District Court found the patent to be valid; held that claims 1 and 2 thereof 1 were wilfully and wantonly infringed *274 by defendant; and granted permanent injunction and accounting for costs. Defendant appealed.

The defendant lists the contested issues as follows:

1. The Shumaker patent No. 2,~ 933,344 here in suit is invalid as to claims 1 and 2 for lack of invention and for anticipation over the prior art.
2. The patent here in suit as to ■claims 1 and 2 is invalid because ■Shumaker did not exercise that de.gree of inventive skill necessary to ■comply with the requirements of ■Section 103, Title 35, U.S.Code, which relates to conditions for patentability.
3. The defendant has not directly infringed claims 1 and 2 of the •patent here in suit by manufacturing and selling wind deflectors as ■exemplied in Plaintiff’s Ex. 32 and ■39.
4. The defendant is not liable as a contributory infringer under 35 U.S.Code Section 271(c) 2 because the wind deflectors which it manufactures and sells are staple articles of commerce and said wind deflectors can be applied to the roofs of cars, to the hood of autos and to boats, all substantial non-infringing uses.

Defendant contends that wind deflectors and air directors are not new and form the subject of a number of prior art patents. However, the problem was an old and long existing one. Plaintiff testified that he became aware of it while driving a station wagon on a rural mail delivery route during the summer of 1956. He then conceived the idea of eliminating the vacuum by directing the slip stream of air inwardly across the rear window area. He constructed and tested deflectors to secure an inexpensively manufactured, attractive, easily adjustible device, adaptable to all conventional models, which would allow the tailgate to be opened without striking the wind deflector assembly. He also found that the deflectors kept exhaust gases and road dust from entering the vehicle if the rear window were kept open. He began selling his device in 1958, and, alone, lacking substantial merchandising experience, with a limited operating budget, relying on mail orders from advertisements in rural magazines, and his own personal visits to service stations and garages, he achieved a sales volume of about $57,000 between March 1958 and July 1960.

*275 After July 1, 1960, when he entered into an exclusive licensing agreement with Superior Industries, Inc., of North Hollywood, California, he discontinued selling his devices. Louis Borick, an employee of Superior Industries, testified that his company, from about June 1959 to December 1961, had a gross sales volume of about $450,000.

David L. Gass, an employee of defendant, testified, as an adverse witness for plaintiff, that in October or November 1959, a customer had brought in a wind deflector which Mr. Gass later found to be identical to deflectors manufactured and sold by plaintiff’s exclusive licensee, Superior Industries. He immediately started developing the accused device, completed tools and dies, and had pieces for sale in January 1960. Defendant continued from that date to manufacture and sell its deflectors in competition with those of plaintiff’s licensee.

Although he found that the vanes of defendant’s deflectors were provided with non-functional vertical embossing and their brackets utilized Phillips-head screws rather than straight slotted screws, the District Judge found the defendant’s device substantially identical with those sold by plaintiff and by plaintiff’s licensee, the vanes and brackets being interchangeable.

Defendant advertised its product through a catalog sheet containing a picture of the rear of a station wagon with wind deflectors mounted on its rear corner posts. The catalog sheet stated that these deflectors broke the vacuum, thus keeping the rear window clear, and kept exhaust gases and road dust out if the rear window were open. Defendant’s cartons bore a substantially similar picture and description, and contained instructions for installing the deflectors in an adjustable manner on the rear corner posts of a station wagon.

In April 1960, plaintiff served notice of infringement on defendant. Defendant then brought out a new catalog sheet in which deflectors were shown on an automobile hood, on a boat windshield, and singly on the roof, as well as in pairs at the rear, of a station wagon. The carton cover was similarly changed, and the instruction sheet referred to the varied pictured uses. But the instructions themselves dealt only with mounting the deflectors in pairs on the rear corner posts of a station wagon. Later a third instruction sheet added a statement that, comparable installation could be made “for cars and boats.”

Mr. Gass testified to seeing one deflector on the roof of a station wagon and one pair on a boat.

There is no question that if installed on the rear posts of a station wagon pursuant to the instructions contained in the carton, defendant’s wind deflectors constitute a direct infringement of claims 1 and 2 of the patent in suit.

Of the prior art introduced by defendant, only three patents disclosed means for breaking the vacuum behind a moving vehicle: Chalkley 1,584,275, May 11, 1926; Stalker, 1,871,396, August 9, 1932; Ishiwata, 2,199,883, May 7, 1940. We have examined these patents and are constrained to agree with the analysis of the District Court that none presents a practical solution of the problem. On the contrary, it appears that Chalkley and Stalker would require extensive modification of the vehicles to which they are attached. Ishiwata, on which defendant particularly relies, might well result in obscuring the view through the rear window. All three-were included among the patents cited by the Patent Examiner, a fact which, strengthens the presumption of patent, validity. Amp, Inc. v. Vaco Products Co., 7 Cir., 1960, 280 F.2d 518, 521; Copeman Laboratories Co. v. General Plastics Corp., 7 Cir., 1945, 149 F.2d 962, 964; Ekstrom-Carlson & Co. v. Onsrud Machine Works, Inc., 7 Cir., 1962,. 298 F.2d 765, 768.

It is true, as defendant argues, that development of a vacuum at the flat-ended rear of a forward moving vehicle is a well known physical phenomenon.

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Bluebook (online)
311 F.2d 273, 136 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 20, 1962 U.S. App. LEXIS 3276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hugh-w-shumaker-v-gem-manufacturing-co-ca7-1962.