RJ Machine Co. v. Canada Pipeline Accessories Co.

116 F. Supp. 3d 795, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92233, 2015 WL 4395374
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 15, 2015
DocketCase No. A-13-CA-579-SS
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 116 F. Supp. 3d 795 (RJ Machine Co. v. Canada Pipeline Accessories Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RJ Machine Co. v. Canada Pipeline Accessories Co., 116 F. Supp. 3d 795, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92233, 2015 WL 4395374 (W.D. Tex. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER

SAM SPARKS, District Judge.

BE IT REMEMBERED on the 1st day of June, 2015, the Court held a bench trial in the above-styled cause, and the parties appeared by and through counsel. The trial of this matter lasted two days, and the Court heard testimony from the following witnesses: Dale Sawchuk, Blaine Sawchuk, Michael Roseborough, John Chandler Schuessler, Gregg Perkin, Gary Martin, and Stephen Stark. Having considered the evidence and testimony presented at trial, the arguments of counsel, the parties’ briefs, and the governing law, the Court enters the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Findings of Fact

I. Background

Plaintiff RJ Machine Company, Inc. (RJ Machine) manufactures and sells a “flow conditioner” product and seeks to call its product by the name “50E.” Defendant Canada Pipeline Accessories Co. Ltd. (CPA), which owns registered trademarks in the words “50E” and “CPA 50E,” opposes RJ Machine’s efforts to call its flow conditioner by the name “50E” and has threatened enforcement of its trademark rights in the event RJ Machine proceeds to market using CPA’s mark. In response, RJ Machine filed the instant declaratory judgment action, seeking, among other things, a finding by the Court that CPA’s registered marks are not protecta-ble under trademark law.

In basic terms, a “flow conditioner” is a device used in pressurized pipelines to assist in the measurement of the flow of fluids (liquid or gas). The basic goal of a flow conditioner is to manipulate fluid flow conditions to achieve accurate metering. Testimony from multiple witnesses indicated there are different types of flow conditioners. For instance, CPA’s expert, Ste[799]*799phen Stark, testified there are tube bundle flow conditioners, which existed as early as the mid-1900s, vane-style flow conditioners, and tabbed flow conditioners. Another category of flow conditioner is the perforated plate, which, in layman’s terms, is a metal plate with holes, and the holes can vary in number, size, and arrangement. There a number of different manufacturers of perforated plate flow conditioners, including Gallagher, Emerson, Canalta, Mitsubishi, and others. CPA sells a particular type of perforated plate flow conditioner at issue in this case, which it calls the “CPA 50E” or the “50E.” RJ Machine also makes a perforated plate flow conditioner and seeks to call it the “50E.”

II. Origins of the CPA 50E

Blaine Sawchuk, an engineer, previously worked for a company called NOVA Gas Transmission (NOVA) from 1979 to 1997. While working for NOVA, he became familiar with a prototype flow conditioner developed and tested internally by NOVA’s research and development team. Dr. Umesh Karnik performed the research and testing, and labeled the prototype the “NOVA50-E”1 in a paper he wrote in 1995. Pl.’s Trial Ex. 10 (the 1995 Karnik Paper).

The NOVA 50E flow conditioner discussed in the 1995 Karnik Paper was an improvement on a design originally invented and patented by Elizabeth Laws. Id. at 4. The patent, United States Patent No. 5,341,848, . is owned by Den Norske Stats Oljeselskap A.S. (Statoil). PL’s Trial Exs. 14 (the Laws Patent), 13 (Statoil/CPA License Agreement indicating Statoil’s ownership of the Laws Patent). ' The design from the Laws Patent involved one center hole, a circle of eight holes around that center hole, and a circle of sixteen holes around the circle of eight holes. Laws Patent at 1. The Court refers to the concentric circles design from the Laws Patent as the “1-8-16 Design.” Karnik considered two 1-8-16 Designs: the NOVA 60 because it had an overall solidity of 60% and the NOVA 50 because it had an overall solidity of 50%. 1995 Karnik Paper at 4. The NOVA 50 was tested with a number of • different hole sizes, creating the NOVA 50A, NOVA 50B, NOVA 50C, NOVA 50D, NOVA 50E, NOVA 50F, and NOVA 50G. Id. at 10. The paper concluded the NOVA 50E was the highest performing flow conditioner among the NOVA 50 options. Id. at 11.

Blaine Sawchuk read the 1995 Karnik Paper and learned about the -NOVA 50E while working for NOVA. Blaine Sawchuk confirmed he understood the “50” in “NOVA 50E” to refer to the solidity of the flow conditioner and that he understood the different NOVA 50 models were based only on slight changes in hole diameter. In 1997, he left NOVA to start his own company with his brother, Dale Sawchuk. That company was CPA. After starting CPA,, the Sawchuks obtained permission from NOVA “to manufacture and sell the flow conditioner developed by NOVA,” See PL’s Trial Ex. 22 (NOVA Permission Letter). NOVA is in the business of gas transmission and. only conducted research [800]*800and development with respect to flow conditioners. While the NOVA 50E prototype emerged from that research and development work, NOVA has never manufactured or sold flow conditioners itself, nor used “NOVA 50E” or “50E” in commerce.

According to the NOVA Permission Letter authored by NOVA engineer Phil Barg and dated March 25, 1997, NOVA was “happy to grant [CPA] permission” to manufacture and sell the flow conditioner developed by NOVA, but NOVA included the following four conditions: - (1) all patent issues were to be resolved by CPA; (2) the flow conditioner “should not be named the NOVA Flow Conditioner, or after NOVA in any other way”; (3) CPA’s literature should reference the work done by NOVA; and (4) CPA should not imply NOVA supports or endorses the marketing of the flow conditioner. Id. Barg stated NOVA “appreciate^] the work [CPA] [was] doing to move the [NOVA-developed] flow conditioner through the process to be accepted by Industry Canada, and [would] try to provide data or help if [CPA] need[ed] it.” Id.

In addition,' since at least part of the technology underlying the NOVA 50E was covered by the Laws Patent, CPA obtained a license in 1997 from Statoil for the right to use the flow conditioner design disclosed by the Laws Patent. See Sta-toil/CPA License Agreement. Specifically, Statoil granted “CPACL”2 a non-exclusive license “to manufacture and install in metering stations in Canada and United States of America an unrestricted number of the K-Lab Laws and K-Lab Laws Model Nova Flow Conditioner under PATENTS.” 3 Id. ¶ 3.1. In other words, CPA obtained a nonexclusive license to make and sell the NOVA 50E. The license would end upon the expiration of the Laws Patent, which occurred in March 2012.

Under the agreement, however, CPACL obtained no ownership rights in the “TECHNOLOGY.” Id. ¶3.2. “TECHNOLOGY” is defined as “any and all technical information related to the K-Lab Laws Flow Conditioners as claimed in the PATENTS and as described in TECHNICAL INFORMATION.” Id. ¶ 2.3. “TECHNICAL INFORMATION” references Exhibit 2 of .the agreement, and Exhibit 2 includes the “Design Manual for K-Lab Laws Flow Conditioner.” Id. ¶ 2.5; id. at 17. The K-Lab Design Manual describes the basis for the design and installation of different types,- of K-Lab flow conditioners, including the-NOVA 50E. See PL’s Trial Ex. 26 (the K-Lab Design Manual) at 1. The K-Lab Design Manual includes detailed descriptions for the NOVA 50E. Id. ¶ 4.3. In sum, CPA had a nonexclusive right — as of 1997 — to manufacture and sell flow conditioners with the NOVA 50E design, but it did not own the underlying technology.

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116 F. Supp. 3d 795, 2015 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 92233, 2015 WL 4395374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rj-machine-co-v-canada-pipeline-accessories-co-txwd-2015.