Precision Fabrics Grp., Inc. v. Tietex Int'l, Ltd.

367 F. Supp. 3d 487
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 8, 2019
Docket7:17-cv-3037; 7:17-cv-3038
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 367 F. Supp. 3d 487 (Precision Fabrics Grp., Inc. v. Tietex Int'l, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Precision Fabrics Grp., Inc. v. Tietex Int'l, Ltd., 367 F. Supp. 3d 487 (D.S.C. 2019).

Opinion

THOMAS D. SCHROEDER, District Judge.

These patent infringement actions are before the court on two post-trial motions filed by Precision Fabrics Group, Inc. ("PFG") for relief from a jury verdict that found that Defendant Tietex International, Ltd. ("Tietex") did not infringe its U.S. Patents Nos. 8,796,162 ('162 Patent) and 8,501,639 ('639 Patent) for flame-retardant technology for fabrics. PFG renews its prior motion for judgment as a matter of law and moves in the alternative for a new trial. (Doc. 372.)1 After careful consideration and for the reasons set forth below, the motions will be denied.

I. BACKGROUND

PFG filed the first of these two actions on August 6, 2013, in the Middle District of North Carolina and, with the follow-on lawsuit, alleges that certain Tietex products incorporating flame-retardant fabrics infringe PFG's U.S. Patents Nos. 8,796,162 ('162 Patent) and 8,501,639 ('639 Patent). The patents-in-suit describe lightweight materials designed to retard fire for a variety of applications, including garments, furniture, appliances, and vehicles. (Doc. 112-1 at 2; Doc. 112-2 at 2.) Tietex developed a similar fabric that would operate as a flame-retardant cloth for mattresses. Up until October 2016, Tietex applied to its fabric a solution known as SV-X41, which was manufactured by Royal Adhesives and Sealants, Inc. ("Royal Adhesives").2

Tietex concedes that for the approximately three-year period at issue, its accused *494fabrics met each of the limitations set forth in PFG's patents, with the exception of the claims requiring that the fabrics be coated with an "intumescent." Tietex contends that the SV-X41 coating it used is not an intumescent. The meaning of the term "intumescent" has been disputed throughout this litigation. After conducting a Markman hearing,3 the court adopted PFG's construction and held that "intumescent," as defined in PFG's patents, means "a substance that swells and chars upon exposure to heat or flame." (Doc. 57 at 20-21.) In so doing, the court denied Tietex's proposed claim construction based on a four-component definition. (Id. at 11.) Tietex subsequently conceded that its coating charred when exposed to heat or flame. (Doc. 133 at 7.) Thus, the parties agreed that the sole issue in PFG's infringement claims against Tietex was whether SV-X41 swells upon exposure to heat or flame.

PFG moved for partial summary judgment as to its claims against Tietex for infringement and Tietex's counterclaims alleging inequitable conduct and invalidity of PFG's patents. (Doc. 111.) PFG also moved to exclude the testimony of Tietex's expert, Dr. Richard Horrocks. (Doc. 116.) The court denied PFG's partial motion for summary judgment on its claims of infringement but granted its motion for summary judgment on Tietex's counterclaims. (Doc. 152 at 46.) After extensive consideration, the court granted in part and denied in part PFG's motion to exclude or limit the testimony of Dr. Horrocks. (Id. )

The parties filed a host of motions in limine prior to trial, including several directed toward the expert witnesses. Following transfer of the action to this district in the wake of TC Heartland LLC v. Kraft Foods Grp. Brands LLC, --- U.S. ----, 137 S.Ct. 1514, 197 L.Ed.2d 816 (2017), the case was tried to a jury for five days.

Central to PFG's case was the testimony of its expert, Gajanan Bhat, Ph.D. Dr. Bhat was qualified as an expert in the field of textiles, flame retardant finishes and coatings, and intumescent finishes and coatings. (Tr. at 479.)4 He testified that he tested the SV-X41 coating on successive occasions by exposing it, when applied to varying substrates, to heat and flame, several in response to criticisms by Tietex's expert. Each test applied various thicknesses of the coating, and Dr. Bhat reported that each resulted in measurable swelling of the SV-X41 to some degree. (Id. at 481, 588-90, 604-06.) For his measurements he used an electronic pressure foot, which he testified is standard in the industry and applies a fixed rate pressure to measure non-uniform fabric surfaces. (Id. at 580-81.) Dr. Bhat took magnified photographs of the test samples and opined that they showed swelling and charring when exposed to heat or flame and thus showed the classic signs of an intumescent. (Id. at 480-86, 564-65, 588, 605, 620.)

Dr. Bhat's first round tested SV-X41 on the accused fabrics. When challenged, Dr. Bhat acknowledged that these tests did not provide an accurate assessment because the coating could have interacted with the fabric. (Id. at 589).

Dr. Bhat's second round tested SV-X41 on a stainless steel pan. For these tests, Dr. Bhat used a coating of SV-X41 that was 1,250 to 1,720 microns thick, which Tietex claims is "many times thicker" than the amount Tietex actually applied to the accused fabrics under the patents-in-suit, *495thus rendering the results invalid. (Id. at 668-71.)

The third round tested the coating on an aluminum pan. These tests involved levels of SV-X41 between 633 and 1,000 microns, which Tietex contended were still multiples over the amount applied to its accused fabrics under the patents-in-suit. (Id. at 671-75.)

To respond to Tietex's contention that it actually applied, and the patents called for, coating at levels of approximately 50 to 100 microns, Dr. Bhat finally conducted tests on aluminum foil with SV-X41 in thicknesses ranging from approximately 50 to 250 microns. (Id. at 594-96, 603-04.) Dr. Bhat himself eventually reviewed microscopic cross-sectional photographs of Tietex's finished accused fabrics and opined that the thickness of the SV-X41 coating was somewhere between 150 to 250 microns. (Id. at 596, 600-03.)

PFG also relied on an email dated August 6, 2013, the day the first of these two lawsuits was filed, from Stephen Holland, president of Royal Adhesives, to Wade Wallace, president of Tietex. The email responded to a question from Wallace: "I need to know if our FR [flame retardant] chemistry would meet or not meet this specific definition of an 'intumescent system,' " according to a four-part definition of intumescent Wallace provided (which was also Tietex's proposed construction of the term prior to the court's Markman hearing). (Doc. 373-10 at 2.) In the email, Holland responded in part, "Our system behaves as an intumescent but does not exactly follow the definition below." (Id. ) The email then went on to explain the chemistry of the coating. (Id. )

PFG also presented the testimony of Walt Jones, its president, as to ownership of the patents. Ladson "Larry" Fraser, one of the inventors of the patents-in-suit, testified as to the benefits of PFG's flame-retardant bedding products. Doug Small, a PFG employee, testified to damages issues and to his observations of the thickness of Tietex's coatings. PFG presented testimony of Wallace via deposition about his having received the August 6, 2013 email from Holland. Finally, PFG presented a damages expert, Joel Wacek, whose testimony is not at issue in the post-trial motions.

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