Pet Incorporated v. Kysor Industrial Corporation

404 F. Supp. 1252, 193 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12635
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedApril 28, 1975
DocketG-252-71 CA
StatusPublished

This text of 404 F. Supp. 1252 (Pet Incorporated v. Kysor Industrial Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pet Incorporated v. Kysor Industrial Corporation, 404 F. Supp. 1252, 193 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12635 (W.D. Mich. 1975).

Opinion

*1253 OPINION ON CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

MILES, District Judge.

Plaintiff, Pet Incorporated (“Pet”), instituted this action on October 8, 1971 seeking a declaratory judgment that seven patents owned by or licensed to defendant, Kysor Industrial Corporation (“Kysor”), were invalid, unenforceable and not infringed by reason of Pet’s manufacture of two open-front refrigerated display cases known as the Models J-456 and J-345. Kysor and its licensor, Dualjet Corporation (“Dual-jet”), counterclaimed charging Pet with infringing the seven patents included in Pet’s complaint plus three additional patents owned by Kysor. Under the reply to the second amended counterclaim, Pet raised as a defense the defense of patent misuse. The essence of the alleged misuse is that Kysor’s patent rights have been the basis of an agreement by which Kysor has sought to create monoply rights of far broader scope than any to which it was entitled under the patent laws.

On this basis, Pet has now moved for summary judgment seeking the dismissal of the counterclaim, contending that as a matter of law, Kysor’s misuse of its patents renders them unenforceable and thus forecloses their use as a basis for its counterclaim. Kysor has responded with its -own motion for summary judgment. The latter motion seeks a ruling from this Court that there has been no misuse of these patents. Before considering in more detail the arguments of the parties and the nature of the concept of patent misuse, a short history of this litigation will help put these motions in better perspective. Both parties engage in the development, manufacture and sale of open-front refrigerated display cases. The HussmanPet units utilized a so-called “direct” cooling system, whereby a cold air flow is directed against and across the product prior to its becoming part of the air curtain insulating the product from the outside ambient air. The Dual-JetKysor units incorporated an “indirect” cooling system whereby cool air is directed through ducts in the shelves, thus cooling the product by conduction before it is formed into part of the air curtain. Each party obtained patent rights on aspects on these cooling methods and by 1965, each party had developed units which resembled those developed by the other. As a result, cross claims of patent infringement were made. These disputes were settled by the so-called “1965 Agreement.”

The Agreement provides that:

“HUSSMANN agrees not to bring suit for infringement under any of the HUSSMANN patent rights against DUAL JET, or any of its subsidiaries, licensees or sublicensees, for the manufacture, use or sale of any DUAL JET unit embodying any of the HUSSMANN patent rights, but only insofar as they are embodied in the DUAL JET unit. This paragraph is not to be construed as granting DUAL JET, its licensees or sublicensees, any right or license under the HUSS-MANN patent rights.

III. COVENANTS OF DUAL JET

DUAL JET agrees not to bring suit for infringement under any of the DUAL JET patent rights against HUSSMANN or any of its subsidiaries, licensees or sublicensees, for the manufacture, use or sale of any HUSS-MANN unit, embodying any of the DUAL JET patent rights, but only insofar as they are embodied in the HUSSMANN unit. This paragraph is not to be construed as granting HUSSMANN, its subsidiaries, licensees or sublicensees, any right or license under the DUAL JET patent rights.

Speaking in terms of the basic features of each unit, the parties were also able to define the scope of the respective patent rights involved in the 1965 Agreement:

*1254 HUSSMANN unit: As used herein, the term “HUSSMANN unit” shall mean low temperature upright refrigerated display cabinets in which the main refrigation system shall include air distribution means for circulating a substantial portion of low temperature air into and through the product area and in direct contact with the product therein for cooling the product, and to discharge the remaining portion of low temperature air into an air curtain across the open front of said cabinet.
Since it is difficult to ascribe an exact percentage with respect to the “substantial portion” of low temperature air circulated into and through the product area according to the foregoing definition of “HUSSMANN unit”, it is understood and agreed that the salient characteristic of the HUSSMANN unit is the positive circulation of low temperature air through the product area for direct and controlled cooling of products by intentional engineering design and manufacture to provide this salient characteristic.
DUAL JET unit: As used herein, the term “DUAL JET unit” shall mean low temperature upright refrigerated display cabinets in which the main refrigeration system shall include air distribution means for circulating substantially all low temperature air around the product area in a duct having only conductive heat exchange therewith for indirect cooling of the product and to discharge substantially all low temperature air from said duct into an air curtain across the open front of said cabinet.
Since it is difficult to ascribe an exact percentage with respect to “substantially all” low temperature air discharged into the air curtain across the open front according to the foregoing definition of “DUAL JET unit”, it is understood and agreed that the salient characteristic of the DUAL JET unit is the positive discharge of low temperature air into the air curtain for indirect cooling of products by intentional engineering design and manufacture to provide this salient characteristic . . . ”

More importantly for our purposes, the parties reached an apparent agreement as to the effect this Agreement was to have on their future activities with respect to refrigerated display cases. It was agreed that:

HUSSMANN will not depart from its present engineering and manufacturing know-how in the direction of the DUAL JET unit utilizing essentially only indirect product cooling.
•X- * * * * -X-
DUAL JET will not depart from its present engineering and manufacturing know-how in the direction of the HUSSMANN unit utilizing direct and controlled product coolings.

Thereafter, Pet commenced marketing • a display cabinet known as Model J 456. Kysor, charging that this unit utilized its indirect cooling method, in contravention of the 1965 Agreement, sued Pet for breach of contract in the Circuit Court for Wexford County, Michigan in June, 1971, seeking specific performance of the Agreement, and injunction restraining Pet from manufacturing units .“employing the indirect method of product cooling.” (pi Ex B, para A). The case was then removed to this Court and Kysor moved to remand it back to the state court. This motion was denied by the then District Judge Albert Engel. Kysor appealed this ruling and it was reversed by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in an opinion reported at 459 F.2d 1010. It was there held that:

“Kysor is free to file and maintain a .

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Bluebook (online)
404 F. Supp. 1252, 193 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pet-incorporated-v-kysor-industrial-corporation-miwd-1975.