Levinson v. NORDSKOG COMPANY, INC.

301 F. Supp. 589, 163 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13144
CourtDistrict Court, C.D. California
DecidedJuly 7, 1969
DocketCiv. A. 67-672
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 301 F. Supp. 589 (Levinson v. NORDSKOG COMPANY, INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, C.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levinson v. NORDSKOG COMPANY, INC., 301 F. Supp. 589, 163 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13144 (C.D. Cal. 1969).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

WILLIAM P. GRAY, District Judge.

The plaintiff in this case is the original patentee and current owner of United States Patent No. 3,260,190. The patent concerns a device designed to brew coffee in the original can by perforating the top and bottom and passing hot water through the ground coffee contained therein. In conceiving and perfecting his invention, the plaintiff contemplated that its principal (or perhaps exclusive) use would be as part of the equipment of galleys in commercial airplanes.

The plaintiff charges the defendants with infringement of his patent. The defendants have put into issue the validity of the patent and have moved for summary judgment. The matter has been briefed and argued and submitted for decision. For reasons set forth in this memorandum, the motion will be granted.

The facts upon which the forthcoming summary judgment for the defendants is based are asserted, and thus established, by the plaintiff: He conceived his invention in the spring of 1956, and in 1957 he completed and successfully tested the only model of it that he ever made. One evening in the last mentioned year he exhibited his model to a Mr. Duffy, a representative of American Airlines. Mr. Duffy promptly discouraged the plaintiff by expressing the view that the commercial airlines would not be interested in the device. This comment “kind of created a mental block” in the plaintiff’s mind. He left the device shut up in the basement laboratory (later in the garage) of his home, told his attorney that if a market for the device should ever develop he wanted to patent it, and otherwise forgot about it. About five years later, in September 1962, Mr. Duffy advised the plaintiff that American Airlines had become interested in “the can idea” for brewing coffee. At that point, the invention, in the plaintiff’s words, “came back to life,” and he contacted his patent attor *590 ney and presumably instructed him to prepare a patent application. The application was filed on September 23, 1963, but the plaintiff still kept his invention secret until the patent issued, on July 12, 1966.

In the meantime, and at least by December 4, 1962, the defendants were seeking to sell to commercial airlines a coffee maker that the plaintiff contends infringes his invention.

The question for decision here is whether or not a person who, after conceiving and perfecting an invention, keeps it secret for five years until he thinks that it would receive a more favorable market, thereby forfeits his right to obtain a patent covering such invention. It seems to me that this question, under the law, must be answered in the affirmative.

Substantially the same issue was involved in Woodbridge v. United States, 263 U.S. 50, 44 S.Ct. 45, 68 L.Ed. 159 (1923), in which the plaintiff had filed an application for a patent on an invention pertaining to a rifled gun projectile. A month later, in submitting amended claims in a form that the Patent Office had agreed to allow he requested that the resulting patent, or the order to issue the patent, be held in secret by the Patent Office pending his ability to obtain a foreign patent. The Patent Office complied. Nine and one-half years later, the plaintiff requested that his patent be issued. In his letter, he explained that “I have allowed it to remain until the present time, it being only lately that any immediate opportunity of rendering it pecuniarily available has occurred.” In the resulting litigation, the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff, because of such delay, had forfeited' the right to a patent. In the opinion of the Court, Chief Justice Taft reasoned, in part, as follows:

“It was the legislative intention that the term should run from the date of the issue of the patent, and that, at the end of that time, the public might derive from the full specifications required in the application accompanying the patent, knowledge sufficient to enable it freely to make and use the invention. * * * Any practice by the inventor and applicant for a patent through which he deliberately and without excuse postpones beyond the date of the actual invention, the beginning of the term of his monopoly, and thus puts off the free public enjoyment of the useful invention, is an evasion of the statute and defeats its benevolent aim.
“In this case we have a delay of nine years and a half in securing a patent that might have been had at any time in that period for the asking, and this for the admitted purpose of making the term of the monopoly square with the period when the commercial profit from it would be highest.” (263 U.S. at 55-56, 44 S.Ct. at 47).

Except for the difference in the periods of delay, the above quoted language precisely covers the situation here concerned, and the same result must follow.

The principle that governs this case was recognized and applied in Vitamin Technologists v. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, 146 F.2d 941, 952 (9th Cir. 1944). The opinion quoted with approval a conclusion set forth in Wirebounds Patents Co. v. Saranac Automatic Machine Corp., 65 F.2d 904, 905 (6th Cir. 1933) to the effect that “* * * if the inventor, intentionally or by reason of culpable neglect, be guilty of action which unduly postpones the time when the public would be entitled to the free use of the invention, and thus defeats the policy of the patent law, the right to a patent will be lost.”

The plaintiff in this case urges that this case should be governed by 35 U.S. C. § 102, which provides that “A person shall be entitled to a patent unless

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“(c) he has abandoned the invention, or
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“(g) before the applicant’s invention thereof the invention was made in this country by another who had not aban *591 doned, suppressed, or concealed it.

The plaintiff then argues that subsection “(c)” cannot be used to deprive him of his patent because he never has abandoned it, or that, at least, a factual question is presented as to whether such abandonment occurred.

However, section 102(c) is not involved here, because as was said in Woodbridge v. United States, 263 U.S. 50, 56, 44 S.Ct. 45, 47, 68 L.Ed. 159 (1923), “This is not a case of abandonment. It is a case of forfeiting the right to a patent by designed delay.” The difference between forfeiture and abandonment was clearly pointed out by Judge Learned Hand in Metallizing Engineering Co. v. Kenyon Bearing etc. Co., 153 F.2d 516, 520 (2d Cir. 1946). He noted that a person may forfeit the right to a patent “* * * by too long concealment, even without exploiting the invention at all.”, citing Woodbridge

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301 F. Supp. 589, 163 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levinson-v-nordskog-company-inc-cacd-1969.