Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMarch 28, 2024
Docket0:20-cv-02497
StatusUnknown

This text of Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc. (Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc., (mnd 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC, a Utah No. 20-cv-2497 (KMM/ECW) Company,

Plaintiff,

v. ORDER

Tricam Industries, Inc., a Minnesota corporation,

Defendant.

Plaintiff Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC designs and builds multi-position ladders and holds several patents related to ladders and their components. Among them is United States Patent No. 10,767,416 (“the ’416 patent”), which generally relates to a multi-position ladder system with an innovative locking mechanism. In this action, Little Giant alleges that certain multi-position ladders sold by Defendant Tricam Industries, Inc. infringe the ’416 patent. This matter is now before the Court on the parties’ cross- motions for summary judgment and Tricam’s motion to exclude certain expert witness evidence offered by Little Giant. Pl.’s Summ. J. Mot. (Doc. 164); Def.’s Summ. J. Mot. (Doc. 167); Def.’s Mot. to Exclude (Doc. 171). Although the Court has already issued a Claim Construction Order, the plaintiff has asked the Court to engage in further construction of the “cavity” limitation in the ’416 patent. The Court addresses the ongoing battle over construction of that term prior to considering the parties’ infringement positions. Ultimately the Court concludes that Tricam is entitled to summary judgment because the accused products do not literally infringe the “cavity” limitation and prosecution history estoppel bars Little Giant from relying on the doctrine of equivalents.

BACKGROUND I. Multi-Position Ladders and Locking Mechanisms Little Giant and Tricam compete in the market for multi-position ladders. Multi- position ladders generally include two pairs of rails connected by rungs. The pairs of rails are further connected by a pair of adjustable central hinges. Each pair of rails is slidably

coupled together, with an inner set of rails nesting inside the outer set of rails. The inner rails can then slide in relationship to the outer rails, extending the overall length or height of the ladder. The inner rails can be fixed in place by locking mechanisms that are mounted on the outer rails. The ’416 patent relates to such a ladder system that, among other things, claims a novel system for a locking mechanism. Compl. ¶¶ 7, 13 (Doc. 1).

The focus of this case is on the ’416 patent’s claimed locking mechanism and whether Tricam’s ladders infringe Little Giant’s patent. Prior to the innovation claimed in the ’416 patent, multi-position ladders used “lock tabs” or “J-locks,” and Little Giant manufactured and sold ladders using lock tabs like those depicted below. Ps iE tf @

4 i \ { ,

Compl. 9. The lock tabs used internal springs that keep them pressed inward when engaged, toward the rails, and the locking mechanism included an engagement pin that passes through openings in the inner and outer rails that are aligned to secure the ladder in a particular configuration. However, the lock-tab design presented difficulties for the end user. They tended to pinch the user’s fingers, could be difficult to use, and required significant effort, especially from smaller users, given that “actuating such locking members usually requires lateral displacement of the locking members outward, or away from, the side rails of the ladders.” ’416 patent Col. 1:57-2:38 (Doc. 1-1).

Little Giant developed other locking mechanisms for its multi-position ladders over the years that represent certain improvements over the lock tabs. These include designs commercialized by Little Giant as its “Rock Lock” and “Rapid Lock” mechanisms, pictured below. rel

!

Rock Locks Rapid Locks Compl. § 10. These designs, “use . . . rotational movement and mechanical engagement to pull out and push in the locking pins and to retain the locking pins in each position until a new pivoting force is applied.” /d. § 11. Starting in 2008, Little Giant filed patent applications, including for its locking mechanisms, that led to the issuance of a family of patents that includes the ’416 patent.! II. Tricam’s Accused Ladders and Little Giant’s Claims Tricam manufactures and sells multi-position ladders in competition with Little Giant. Little Giant claims that Tricam’s “MPX” or “Gorilla Ladders” (“Accused

' The °416 Patent is a “[c]ontinuation of application No. 14/886,566, filed on Oct. 19, 2015, now Pat. No. 9,784,033, which is a continuation of application No. 13/480,897, filed on May 25, 2012, now Pat. No. 9,163,455, which is a continuation of application No. 12/399,815, filed on Mar. 6, 2009, now Pat. No. 8,186,481.” ’416 Patent at 1-2.

Ladders”)? use locking mechanisms that infringe the ’416 patent. Compl. 417. An example of Tricam’s locking mechanism, which Tricam commercialized as “Speed Locks,”> is depicted below.

Lao ‘ a. v\

Compl. § 20. Tricam’s Speed Locks attach to the outer rails of their Accused Ladders and use a rotating handle that displaces a pin through aligned opening in the inner and outer rails. The Speed Locks of Tricam’s ladders have a handle that sits atop a ramp-and-boss wedge affixed to the outer rail. When in the locked position, the handle is parallel to the rails, a pin is extended through openings in both sets of rails, and the handle stays in place as two wings sit on either side of the wedge. The boss extends into a central, circular cavity, where a rivet slot is used to attach the knob to the pin. To remove the pin, unlock the rails, and allow the ladder to be extended or contracted, the handle is

> The Accused Ladders include Tricam’s ladders with the following model numbers: GLA-MPX13; GLMPX-13; GLMPXA-14; GLMPX-14W-2; GLMPX-17; GLA-MPX17; GLMPXA-18; GLMPX-22; GLA-MPX22; GLMPXA-22; GLMPX-22W-2; GLMPX-26; GLA- MPX26; GLMPX-26W-2; GLMPXT-15; and GLMPXT-23. 3 As explained in Tricam’s briefing, it markets some of its locking mechanisms as “Gorilla Grip Locks,” but refers to all such locks as “Speed Locks” for purposes of the summary judgment motions. * There is no dispute that this central, circular notch constitutes a “cavity” within the meaning of the language of Claim 1 of the’416 patent.

rotated 90 degrees, and opposing notches on each wing then allow the Speed Lock handle to remain in place while the user moves the ladder into the desired position. Turning the handle 90 degrees back to parallel with the rails disengages the notches from the ramp, allows the pin to extend back through the aligned openings in the rails, and locks the ladder into the new configuration selected by the user. See Ver Halen Rebuttal 4] 45-51 (describing design and operation of the Tricam Speed Lock) (Doc. 180-6). A labeled image of the underside of the Speed Lock is depicted below.

a .

Center Cavity

Id. {§ 48, 96. Little Giant alleges that the Accused Ladders infringe every claim limitation of the °416 patent. See Omnibus Armstrong Decl. (Doc. 173), Ex. 21 (P1.’s Infringement Claim Charts); id., Ex. 22 (Pl.’s Suppl. Infringement Claim Charts). In Claim 1, which is the sole independent claim of the °416 patent, Little Giant claims the following: 1. A ladder comprising: a first assembly having a first pair of rails including a first rail and a second rail, and a second pair of rails including a third rail and a fourth rail, the first pair of rails being slidably coupled with the second pair rails; and a first locking mechanism comprising: a first bracket coupled with the first rail, a first component rotatable about a defined axis,

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Little Giant Ladder Systems, LLC v. Tricam Industries, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/little-giant-ladder-systems-llc-v-tricam-industries-inc-mnd-2024.