Merrill Hebert v. Lisle Corporation, Defendant/cross-Appellant

99 F.3d 1109
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1996
Docket95-1114, 95-1153
StatusPublished
Cited by128 cases

This text of 99 F.3d 1109 (Merrill Hebert v. Lisle Corporation, Defendant/cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrill Hebert v. Lisle Corporation, Defendant/cross-Appellant, 99 F.3d 1109 (Fed. Cir. 1996).

Opinion

PAULINE NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.

Mr. Merrill P. Hebert, proprietor of an automobile repair shop in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, invented a tool for the removal and reinstallation of warped exhaust engine manifolds and obtained United States Patent No. 4,914,940 (the ’940 patent). While the patent application was pending he submitted his invention to the Lisle Corporation, a manufacturer of specialty automotive tools. The submission was rejected. Lisle later commercialized a similar tool. Upon Mr. Hebert’s suit for patent infringement the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, pursuant to jury verdict, entered judgment 1 that the ’940 patent was valid but that it was unenforceable due to inequitable conduct in the procurement of the patent in the Patent and Trademark Office (PTO). The issues of infringement and damages were tried but were not decided.

On Mr. Hebert’s appeal we conclude that the judgment of unenforceability can not stand, for there was not substantial evidence that material information was withheld from the patent examiner, nor substantial evidence of intent to deceive or mislead the examiner., On Lisle’s cross-appeal we affirm fhe district court’s rulings on Lisle’s conditional motions, and affirm the court’s denial of attorney fees.

I. THE INVENTION SUBMISSION

During certain automobile repairs it is necessary for the mechanic to remove the exhaust manifold in order to reach the site of the repair. However, engine heat often warps the manifold so that it is not easily removed or reinstalled. Mr. Hebert’s tool, called an exhaust manifold spreader, facilitates removal and reinstallation of the warped exhaust manifold. By reusing instead of discarding the warped manifold, the cost and inconvenience of obtaining one or more replacement manifolds (depending on the type of engine) is saved.

On March 6, 1986 Mr. Hebert filed the patent application that led to the ’940 patent. In early September 1987 he responded to a Lisle Corporation advertisement in a magazine directed to auto mechanics, wherein Lisle sought the submission of novel tool designs. The advertisement stated that tools submitted to Lisle’s Invention Disclosure Program “may be produced and sold by Lisle Corporation under an attractive Royalty Agreement that will bring you an income for years to comé” and that submission to Lisle’s program was “A PROVEN SUCCESS FORMULA!”

Lisle sent Mr. Hebert an Invention Disclosure Agreement form that provided that any submission “is on a non-confidential basis” and “does not obligate LISLE in any way.” Mr. Hebert through his lawyer returned the signed Agreement on September 14, 1987, with a patent drawing and other parts of his pending patent application and a model of his tool. On September 23, 1987 Lisle rejected the submission, stating that:

[O]ver the years twelve (12) other inventors had sent in a very similar tool *1113 idea_ Several years ago we made prototypes and gave them to area garages to see if these tools would work very-well. We must not have received a very positive response because Management has not been interested in pursuing this idea.

On May 17,1989 Lisle’s Manager of Development and Engineering wrote again to Mr. Hebert:

Over the last few years we have had correspondence with you and many other inventors concerning a tool for spreading exhaust manifolds. Since we are getting ready to manufacture a tool for this application, we felt that it was important to contact all of the inventors who have submitted invention disclosures to us and let them know our final decision on this product. In general, all the ideas which we have received have been either a jack using a single thread and nut or a jack using two threads, one left hand and one right hand. Since we have received many invention disclosures indicating a need for this tool we have finally decided to manufacture a tool of the second type mentioned above.

In the letter Mr. Hebert was told that he would not receive any compensation because he was “not the first inventor in either of the above categories.”

Mr. Hebert’s lawyer responded on May 24, 1989, reminding Lisle of Mr. Hebert’s pending patent application and warning about unauthorized use of his invention. Lisle’s lawyer answered on June 7, 1989, pointing out that Mr. Hebert’s disclosure was not in confidence and stating that he was “neither the first to submit the idea to the Lisle Corporation nor do we have any record of his patent rights in the invention.” The letter included the following:

I also note that in 1987 you were put on notice of significant prior art relating to Mr. Hebert’s invention. You were specifically advised of twelve other inventors who developed tools which appear to constitute prior art. You were also advised that Lisle Corporation made prototypes for such products and distributed them within the United States. I must only presume that you provided all of this prior art information to the U.S. Patent Office.

These letters from. Lisle were a principal basis of Lisle’s charge .of inequitable conduct before the PTO. Lisle’s expert witness testified that Mr. Hebert was required to provide the patent examiner with this “prior art information,” and that failure to do so rendered the patent unenforceable for inequitable conduct.

The jury found the patent valid, but unenforceable for inequitable conduct. The district court denied duly made post-trial motions, and this appeal followed.

II. TRIAL PROCEDURES

At trial Lisle argued that the ’940 patent was invalid based on lack of novelty, obviousness, and a public use/on-sale bar. The jury held by special verdict that the patent was valid. Lisle does not appeal the judgment of validity. However, Lisle argues that the district court unfairly restricted Lisle’s presentation of its invalidity case. This argument appears to relate to Lisle’s motion for a conditional new trial of the issue of validity.

Lisle states that in addition to the ten witnesses permitted by the court, Lisle asked to present eleven additional witnesses but was limited to proffering their testimony and placing it into evidence at the end of the trial. Lisle states that eight of these additional witnesses would have testified about their tool designs submitted to Lisle, in addition to the two witnesses who actually appeared on this issue. Lisle does not state that any of these omitted witnesses would have presented prior art that was not otherwise in evidence. Lisle states that the testimony of two other restricted witnesses related to damages and one related to infringement, and that Lisle did not have time to fully examine its technical expert.

The .import of Lisle’s strong criticisms of the trial judge’s case management .is not readily apparent. We take note that the trial judge conducted a four day pre-trial eviden-tiary hearing on all the issues and evidence and that there were extensive pre-trial submissions, in addition to the week-long trial. It appears that the testimony of the omitted *1114 witnesses was either cumulative to testimony that was presented, or irrelevant to the appealed issues. See Fed.R.Evid.

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Bluebook (online)
99 F.3d 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-hebert-v-lisle-corporation-defendantcross-appellant-cafc-1996.