Standard Oil Company v. Montedison

540 F.2d 611
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1976
Docket75-2436
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 540 F.2d 611 (Standard Oil Company v. Montedison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Oil Company v. Montedison, 540 F.2d 611 (3d Cir. 1976).

Opinion

540 F.2d 611

191 U.S.P.Q. 657

STANDARD OIL COMPANY, a corporation of Indiana, Appellant in
No. 75-2436,
v.
MONTEDISON, S.p.A., a corporation of Italy, et al.
Appeal of E. I. duPONT de NEMOURS & COMPANY, in No. 75-2437.
Appeal of PHILLIPS PETROLEUM COMPANY, in No. 75-2438.

Nos. 75-2436 to 75-2438.

United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.

Argued May 24, 1976.
Decided July 21, 1976.

Thomas F. Reddy, Jr., Pennie & Edmonds, New York City, for appellant in No. 75-2436.

Roger A. Hines, E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Co. Legal Department, Wilmington, Del., for appellant in No. 75-2437.

Harry J. Roper, Neuman, Williams, Anderson & Olson, Chicago, Ill., for appellant in No. 75-2438.

George B. Finnegan, Jr., Morgan, Finnegan, Pine, Foley & Lee, New York City, for appellee.

Before MARIS, ADAMS and HUNTER, Circuit Judges.

OPINION OF THE COURT

MARIS, Circuit Judge.

These are appeals taken pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) from an interlocutory order of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware denying motions by the plaintiffs, Standard Oil Company (herein Standard Oil), E. I. duPont de Nemours & Company (herein duPont) and Phillips Petroleum Company (herein Phillips), for leave to amend their complaints in civil actions filed in the district court to review, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 146, an award of priority of invention made by the Board of Patent Interferences of the Patent Office, now known as the Patent and Trademark Office,1 to the defendant, Montedison, S.p.A. (herein Montedison).

The history of the controversy involved in the cases may be briefly summarized. Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 135, Interference No. 89,635 was instituted and declared in the Patent Office on September 9, 1958 to permit the Board of Patent Interferences of that Office to determine the question of priority of invention as to the following five patent applications all claiming a new composition of matter, crystalline polypropylene:2

Application of John Paul Hogan and Robert L. Banks, assigned to Phillips, filed January 11, 1956, Ser. No. 558,530.

Application of Edwin J. Vandenberg, assigned to Hercules, Inc., filed July 21, 1955, Ser. No. 523,621; accorded benefit of Ser. No. 500,041 filed April 7, 1955.Application of Warren Nesmith Baxter, Nicholas George Merckling, Ivan Maxwell Robinson and Gelu Stoeff Stamatoff, assigned to duPont, filed December 30, 1955, Ser. No. 556,548; accorded benefit of Ser. No. 451,064, filed August 19, 1954.

Application of Giulio Natta, Piero Pino and Georgio Mazzanti, assigned to Montedison, filed June 8, 1955, Ser. No. 514,099; accorded benefit of Italian application No. 24,227 filed June 8, 1954.

The interference proceeding lasted for over 13 years during which the parties' extensive discovery efforts generated numerous ancillary proceedings in the federal courts.3 The Board of Patent Interferences, after compiling a considerable record, including a large number of exhibits and the testimony of 126 witnesses, finally brought the lengthy and complex proceeding to a close on November 29, 1971. The Board awarded priority of invention to Natta and his coinventors, Pino and Mazzanti, the senior parties to the interference, to whom the Commissioner of Patents on February 6, 1973 issued Patent No. 3,715,344. Claim 1 of that patent is similar to the count of the terminated interference. Montedison is the present owner of the application filed by Natta et al. and of the patent subsequently issued on their application.

Standard Oil, duPont and Phillips, three of the assignees and present owners of applications of losing parties to the interference, instituted civil actions, pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 146, in the District Court for the District of Delaware to challenge the Board's decision.4 The three plaintiffs, each of whom brought suit individually in January, 1972, named as defendants the assignees of the other parties to the interference proceeding in the Patent Office. These three cases and a fourth § 146 suit filed in the District Court for the District of Columbia by Standard Oil and subsequently transferred to the District Court for the District of Delaware which also named the assignees of the other parties to the interference as defendants were assigned in the district court5 to Judge Wright who, in September, 1972, stayed the actions until the resolution of earlier-filed, related patent infringement actions which were then pending before him in the district court.

These infringement actions, which had been instituted by Montedison in the years between 1965 and 1969 against a number of alleged infringers and consolidated by the court under Civil Action No. 3343, involved Montedison's Patent No. 3,112,300 issued November 26, 1963 on a divisional application, Serial No. 701,332, the original parent application being the one involved in Interference No. 89,634. Patent No. 3,112,300 covers a species of crystalline polypropylene, crystalline polypropylene being the subject matter of Interference No. 89,634 and of the claims in Patent No. 3,715,344, the patent awarded to Montedison at the conclusion of the interference proceeding. Phillips and a subsidiary of Standard Oil, Amoco Chemicals Corporation, were among the defendants in the consolidated infringement action.

The infringement action was settled shortly before the trial of that action was scheduled to start in February, 1975. Active prosecution of the § 146 suits was then resumed. Standard Oil, duPont and Phillips immediately filed motions for leave to amend and supplement their complaints brought under § 146 to add new charges against Montedison on the basis, as they alleged, of new information received by them since the complaints were filed in the district court.6 Standard Oil, in addition, sought on the basis of the new charges to introduce a new cause of action under the Declaratory Judgments Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, and to include in the relief it sought a prayer that the court adjudge and decree Montedison's Patent No. 3,715,344 invalid and unenforceable. The district court by order of September 25, 1975 denied the motions. The appeals before us are taken from that interlocutory order. On May 15, 1975, prior to the entry of that order, the four pending § 146 actions had been consolidated by the district court under its Civil Action No. 4619.

The proposed amendments would have added charges against Montedison involving issues of unpatentability of invention, misjoinder of inventors and fraud. As to its alleged fraudulent conduct, Montedison was claimed to have deliberately misrepresented and failed to disclose material facts in the process of filing and prosecuting its patent applications Serial Nos. 514,099 and 701,332 in the Patent Office and in the proceedings before the Board of Patent Interferences.

In its opinion filed August 1, 1975, 398 F.Supp.

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Bluebook (online)
540 F.2d 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-oil-company-v-montedison-ca3-1976.