Richard D. Albert, Cross-Appellant v. Kevex Corporation, Cross-Appellee

741 F.2d 396
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 20, 1984
DocketAppeal 83-720, 83-781
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 741 F.2d 396 (Richard D. Albert, Cross-Appellant v. Kevex Corporation, Cross-Appellee) 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
Richard D. Albert, Cross-Appellant v. Kevex Corporation, Cross-Appellee, 741 F.2d 396 (Fed. Cir. 1984).

Opinion

RICH, Circuit Judge.

Both parties, Richard D. Albert (Albert) and Kevex Corporation (Kevex), have petitioned this court for a rehearing of our decision of March 6, 1984, reported at 729 F.2d 757, 221 USPQ 202 (1984), in consolidated appeals No. 83-720 and No. 83-781. As was done in the ease of the original opinion, we deal with these petitions separately. We rely on knowledge of the original opinion for factual background.

Appeal No. 83-781

This appeal dealt with the decision of the District Court respecting Counts 4 and 5 of the amended complaint on which summary judgment of dismissal had been granted below on January 17,1983. 1 On appeal, we vacated that judgment which, as to both counts, had been predicated on statutes of limitation, an issue with respect thereto being whether the statutes had been tolled. We found that there were disputed factual issues involved and remanded for trial to resolve them.

By its present petition, Kevex calls the court’s attention to the fact that with respect to Count 5 only, which was for violation of the antitrust laws, the District Court rested its decision on an additional ground which, it asserts, requires affirmance as a matter of law of the summary judgment on Count 5 regardless of the ultimate decision on the statute of limitations question. That asserted ground is that on the record Albert has failed to raise a genuine issue of fact by showing that Kevex has sufficient market share with respect to the involved instruments to be capable of a monopolization offense. Ke-vex augments the record by supplying a transcript of the hearing on summary judgment wherein the District Court made it clear that the Count 5 summary judgment rested both on the statute of limitations and on a finding that Kevex’s “market share is too small to allow a monopoly.” Kevex argues that we did not consider the latter point because nothing was said about it in our opinion. Our opinion had, moreover, pointed out that the District Court had “entered a written order granting, without elaboration, Kevex’s motion for partial summary judgment on Counts 4 and 5.” In other words, the order gave no reasons for its granting.

*398 Albert, in reply, postulates that we must have considered the relevant market question, though it was not mentioned in our opinion, because it was “fully and extensively briefed by the parties,” which, indeed, is true. Albert argues on this petition that that issue, like the statute of limitations issue, raised substantial issues of fact. In the briefs on appeal at least 15 pages of argument were devoted to this question and we certainly considered them in deciding to remand Count 5 for trial. Dealing with Counts 4 and 5 collectively, as we did, it was an inadvertence on our part that we failed to mention the relevant market fact issues in our opinion. The parties’ arguments on the matter range from black to white, Kevex asserting that not over 7.2% of the market is in its hands and Albert asserting something closer to 100%, the big question being what is the relevant market. We consider this dispute, being both highly factual and important, to be unsuited to summary disposition on the basis of declaration evidence.

Our decision to vacate and remand for trial with respect to Count 5 is therefore adhered to. The petition of Kevex for rehearing is granted only to the extent that we have carefully considered it and is in all other respects denied.

Appeal No. 83-720

This appeal was from the District Court’s summary judgment on Count 3 of the complaint holding Kevex’s Porter patent 3,919,-548 invalid. We vacated that judgment and remanded with instructions to dismiss Count 3, which was predicated on the existence of “interfering patents” under 35 U.S.C. § 291, for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction because it had not been established that the Porter patent “interfered” with either of Albert’s two patents in suit. That subject-matter jurisdiction question was argued below by Albert solely with respect to Count 3 of the complaint and on the basis that 35 U.S.C. § 291 (“Interfering patents”) gave the District Court jurisdiction over the Porter patent. In speaking of subject-matter jurisdiction herein, we refer only to jurisdiction over the Porter patent. 2 When Albert brought its motion for summary judgment of invalidity of the Porter patent, filed August 9, 1982, he relied entirely on Count 3 and § 291 as his basis for subject-matter jurisdiction saying: “Thus, the validity of the Kevex [Porter] patent is directly an issue in the current suit.” Kevex filed a prompt response concisely pointing out that the court lacked jurisdiction over the Porter patent for want of “a fundamental jurisdictional fact: that the Porter patent interferes with the Albert ’885 patent.” Kevex also pointed out that “There is no other independent jurisdictional basis by which the Court may reach the issue of validity of the Porter patent.” Kevex stated: “this present objection is so fundamental that Kevex deemed it necessary to be raised at this time so that the Court may consider it before all other issues.” 3 Kevex later filed a more complete memorandum again *399 objecting in detail to the court’s subject-matter jurisdiction over its Porter patent. Albert responded by asserting that “there is no doubt that this Court has jurisdiction to determine patent matters under 35 USC § 1 et seq.,” that “the Court has the power to determine all issues directly involved in the case,” that “plaintiff has a perfect right to attack the validity of the Porter patent,” notifying the court that it “can dismiss Count 3 if the Porter patent is invalid,” and concluded by saying:

The validity of the Porter patent is critical to the determination of plaintiff’s claims, and in particular plaintiff’s claims regarding an interference [Count 3], as well as those for wrongful interference [Count 4] and anti-trust [Count 5] raised in the counts of the Amended Complaint. [Emphasis ours.]

Against this background, the District Court granted Albert’s motion for summary judgment of invalidity of the Porter patent by its order of December 27, 1982, containing findings of fact and conclusions of law. Respecting its power to do so, after this hotly debated jurisdictional argument, 4 all it said on that point was in the following Conclusion of Law:

11. The Court has jurisdiction over the subject matter involved pursuant to 27 [sic, 28] U.S.C. § 1338 and 35 U.S.C. § 1 ei seq.

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741 F.2d 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-d-albert-cross-appellant-v-kevex-corporation-cross-appellee-cafc-1984.