St. Regis Paper Company v. Bemis Company, Inc.

403 F. Supp. 776, 188 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 107, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15317
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 12, 1975
DocketP-CIV-73-31
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 403 F. Supp. 776 (St. Regis Paper Company v. Bemis Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Regis Paper Company v. Bemis Company, Inc., 403 F. Supp. 776, 188 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 107, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15317 (S.D. Ill. 1975).

Opinion

*778 DECISION AND ORDER

ROBERT D. MORGAN, Chief Judge.

This cause arises upon a complaint, under the patent laws of the United States, 35 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., alleging patent infringement. The court has jurisdiction of the parties and of the subject matter under the provisions of 35 U.S.C. § 281 and 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1332, 1338(a), 1391(c), 1400(b).

Plaintiff, a New York corporation, has its principal place of business in the city of New York. Defendant, a Missouri corporation, has a regularly established placed of business in Peoria, Illinois, within this judicial district. Both parties are manufacturers of paper and paper products, including multiwall bags of various types.

The complaint, as amended, is grounded upon three patents which are owned by the plaintiff: Lokey Patent No. 3,650,460, hereinafter Lokey, issued March 12, 1972, and Goodrich Reissue Patents numbered RE28,317 and RE 28,318, both issued January 28, 1975. These latter patents are hereinafter referred to, respectively, as the RE317 and RE318 patents.

Historic Perspective of Present Status

The application, which ultimately ripened into the Lokey patent, was filed in the Patent Office on August 13, 1962. Co-pending with the Lokey application were an application of John J. Goodrich, numbered 169,287, filed January 29, 1962, and an application of one Harm-sen, both asserting similar claims of invention. The examiner declared an interference between the three competing applications, as a result of which priority of invention was awarded to Lokey, and the Lokey patent was issued. The Goodrich and Harmsen applications were rejected.

In the meantime, a monologue of the Goodrich application was filed in France, and the same ripened into French Patent No. 1,345,471 which is owned by the plaintiff.

On June 28, 1965, an application by Mr. Goodrich and Chester E. Waxlax was filed in the Patent Office, which ultimately ripened into a patent to Goodrich and Waxlax, 3,687,356, hereinafter the 356 patent, issued August 29, 1972, and a second patent to the same, numbered 3,776,451, hereinafter the 451 patent, issued December 4, 1973. The application as originally filed contained a cross-reference stating that it was “a continuation in part” of the Goodrich 287 application. As the result of the Examiner’s requirement that an election of species be made, the embodiment of figure 14 of the drawings was elected, which ultimately ripened into the 356 patent. A divisional application was then filed which ripened into the 451 patent. As a basis for allowance of those patents, the Examiner required that the cross-reference to the 287 application be deleted by amendment of the applications. That requirement rested upon his ruling that a joint application could not derive as a continuation in part from a previous sole application by one of the joint inventors. The reference was deleted in each instance.

Plaintiff’s French Patent 471 was not cited as a prior art reference to the Goodrich-Waxlax application.

The original complaint herein alleged infringement of Lokey and the 356 and 451 patents.

Following extensive pre-trial discovery, preliminary proceedings, and pretrial conferences, the cause was scheduled for a trial, upon the issues of validity and infringement of the three patents, to commence on February 11, 1974. In the course and context of such pretrial proceedings, the defendant asserted plaintiff’s 471 French patent as a prior art reference against both the 356 and 451 patents.

On the eve of trial in late January, the plaintiff filed a motion under 35 U. S.C. § 256, praying an order directing the Commissioner of Patents to correct the 356 and 451 patents by the deletion of Mr. Waxlax as a joint inventor from *779 each patent and the addition therein of a “continuation in part” reference to the Goodrich 287 application. That motion was denied on February 1, 1974. It was thereafter renewed and again denied at the outset of the trial.

At the close of the trial, the parties were directed by the court to submit proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law and their post-trial briefs. Such documents were filed during a period extending into the month of July, at which time the cause was taken under advisement by the court. In August 1974, plaintiff advised the court and opposing counsel, by letter, that it had filed an application in the Patent Office for reissue of the 356 and 451 patents, which said applications sought the deletion of Mr. Waxlax as a joint inventor and the restoration of the “continuation in part” reference to the Goodrich 287 application.

Prior to a decision, it became apparent that the patents would be reissued, and that the 356 and 451 patents would be superseded by reissue patents. A conference was then directed by the court, at which the plaintiff was granted leave to substitute those reissue patents when the same became available for the 356 and 451 patents. The parties were authorized to supplement the record pursuant to the demands of that changed situation and directed to submit revised findings and conclusions and such supplemental briefing as the premises were deemed to require.

The claims of each RE317 and RE318 patent are identical to those of the superseded 451 and 356 patents, respectively. The reissue patents differ from the original patents only in showing Goodrich, alone, as the inventor, and in reciting that the patents are issued upon an application which is a continuation in part of the 1962 Goodrich 287 application.

It seems apparent that both the Section 256 motion before this court and the subsequent reissue applications sprang from plaintiff’s belated realization that its own French 471 patent might be a prior art reference against both the 356 and 451 patents, and that the same had not been cited during processing of the Goodrich-Waxlax applications. It is equally apparent that both the motion and reissue applications were designed to recapture the “continuation-in-part” cross reference to the Goodrich 287 application and an effective filing date of January 29, 1962, for the applications as thus revised.

material, said bag having a front surface and an oppositely disposed rear surface adapted to overlap said front surface at one end of said tube when said bag is in its assembled *780

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403 F. Supp. 776, 188 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 107, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-regis-paper-company-v-bemis-company-inc-ilsd-1975.