Lydall Thermal/Acoustical, Inc. v. Federal Mogul Corp.

566 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51973, 2008 WL 2697170
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJuly 3, 2008
DocketCase 07-12473
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 566 F. Supp. 2d 602 (Lydall Thermal/Acoustical, Inc. v. Federal Mogul Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydall Thermal/Acoustical, Inc. v. Federal Mogul Corp., 566 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51973, 2008 WL 2697170 (E.D. Mich. 2008).

Opinion

CLAIM CONSTRUCTION DECISION

AVERN COHN, District Judge.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

I. Introduction.605

II. Background.606

A. The '260 Patent.606

B. Claim 45.607

III.Legal Standards.608

IV. Analysis . 611
A. Claim terms. 611

1. “flexible”. 611

2. “thermal and acoustical insulating” 611

3. “needled”. 611

4. “fibrous batt of fibers” . 611

5. “fibers located at a bottom portion of the batt and a top portion of the batt” . 615

6. “needledly disposed through the batt”. 615

7. “tufts of fibers”. 616

8. “protruding from the fibrous batt”. 617

9. “from a tufted upper surface and a tufted lower surface of the batt” 619

10. “tufted upper surface”

11. “tufts on the upper surface are secured to that surface by the adhesive”. 620

12. “permanently adhered”. 620

13. “tufted upper surface”. 620

B. Other . 620
V. Conclusion . .620
I. Introduction

This is a patent case. Plaintiff Ly-dall/Accoustical, Inc. (Lydall) is suing defendant Federal-Mogul Corporation (Federal-Mogul) claiming infringement. The patents in suit are U.S. Patent Number 6,092,622 and U.S. Patent Number Re: 39, 260 (collectively, “the '260 patent”) covering a thermal and acoustical insulating shield. 1 Claim 45 has been designated as the paradigm claim. Before the Court are the parties’ claim construction briefs relating to interpretation of the ambiguous words/phrases in claim 45 of the '260 patent, i.e., Markman. 2 Broadly stated, Ly-dall says that the ambiguous terms are either not in need of interpretation or should be interpreted in accordance with their ordinary meaning, particularly referring to standard dictionary definitions. Federal-Mogul says that the specification defines the meaning of the terms in ques *606 tion, resulting in a more restrictive interpretation than the standard dictionary definition.

The parties filed briefs and the Court held a Markman hearing at which it requested supplemental papers. The supplemental papers have been filed. The matter is ready for decision.

The respective positions of the parties are displayed in the claim chart attached as Exhibit A. Exhibit A also depicts the interpretation by the Court which governs further proceedings in this case. Exhibit B is the Court’s identification of the key reference numerals used in the patent. As the Court has repeatedly observed, claim construction in a Markman proceeding is always tentative and its conclusions are open to change as the case unfolds in the validity and infringement phases. Such is the case here. 3

II. Background
A. The '260 Patent

The ABSTRACT describes the invention:

A flexible, adhesively attachable, self-sealing, thermal and acoustical insulating shield has a needled, flexible, fibrous batt having an insulating layer of insulating fibers disposed between opposite binding layers of binding fibers. Binding fibers of each binding layer are nee-dledly disposed through the insulating layer and an opposite binding layer to provide tufts of binding fibers protruding from the opposite binding layer so a to form a tufted upper surface and a tufted lower surface of the batt. A flexible adhesive is disposed and adhered substantially over the upper surface and, preferably, over lower surface of the batt such that the tufts on the upper and lower surfaces are secured to the surfaces by the adhesive. A flexible, protective foil is adjacent to, and preferably permanently adhered by the adhesive to, the lower surface of the batt. The protective foil has edge portions which extend beyond edges of the fibrous batt and the edge portions have a flexible adhesive disposed and adhered substantially over upper edge surfaces of the edge portions. The shield may be flexed *607 and pressed to configure and permanently attach the tufted upper surface to an object to be shielded and the edge portions may be pressed to permanently attach the edge upper surfaces of the edge portions to the object so as to self-seal the edge portions to the object.

The SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION reads in pertinent part:

Thus, the present invention provides a flexible, Thus, the present invention provides a flexible, adhesively attachable, self-sealing, thermal and acoustical insulating shield. The invention is based on several primary and subsidiary discoveries.
Accordingly, briefly stated, the present invention provides a flexible, adhesively attachable, self-sealing, thermal and acoustical insulating shield. Just as in the above-noted U.S. patent application, the shield has a needled, flexible, fibrous batt having an insulating layer of insulating fibers disposed between opposite binding layers of binding fibers. Binding fibers of each binding layer are nee-dledly disposed .through the insulating layer and an opposite binding layer to provide tufts of binding fibers protruding from that opposite binding layer. This forms a tufted upper surface and a tufted lower surface of the batt. A flexible adhesive is disposed and adhered substantially over the tufted upper surface of the batt such that the tufts on the tufted upper surface are secured to that surface by the adhesive. A flexible, protective foil is disposed adjacent to the tufted lower surface of the batt.

The invention is depicted in Figure 5, shown below:

[[Image here]]

B. Claim 45

Claim 45 (broken down into appropriate clauses) reads:

A flexible, adhesively attachable, thermal and acoustical insulating shield, comprising:
(1) a needled, flexible, fibrous batt (U0) of fibers (44, 45), some of the fibers (í5) located at a bottom portion of the batt (W) cmd a top portion of the batt (40) being needledly disposed through the batt (40) to provide tufts (Jp6) of fibers (45) protruding from the fibrous batt (40) so as to form a tufted upper surface *608 (17) and a tufted lower surface (18) of the batt (40);
(2) a flexible adhesive (50), disposed and adhered substantially over the tufted upper surface (47) such that the

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Related

Lydall Thermal/acoustical, Inc. v. Federal-Mogul, Corp.
344 F. App'x 607 (Federal Circuit, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
566 F. Supp. 2d 602, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 51973, 2008 WL 2697170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydall-thermalacoustical-inc-v-federal-mogul-corp-mied-2008.