Teleflex Incorporated v. American Chain & Cable Co.

273 F. Supp. 573, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 511, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11267
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 11, 1967
Docket64 Civ. 1944, 2139
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 F. Supp. 573 (Teleflex Incorporated v. American Chain & Cable Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teleflex Incorporated v. American Chain & Cable Co., 273 F. Supp. 573, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 511, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11267 (S.D.N.Y. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION

McLEAN, District Judge.

In June 1964 plaintiff Teleflex Incorporated (Teleflex) brought an action for a declaratory judgment determining that Patent No. 3,015,969 issued on January 9, 1962 to Otto J. Bratz and assigned by him to his employer, defendant American Chain & Cable Company, Inc. (ACCO), is invalid and that products manufactur *576 ed and sold by Teleflex do not infringe the patent. The complaint asks for an injunction restraining ACCO from suing, or threatening to sue, Teleflex or its customers for infringement. The complaint also asks for attorneys’ fees. In July 1964 plaintiff The Morse Instrument Company (Morse) instituted a similar action seeking a declaration of invalidity of the patent and of non-infringement as to products manufactured and sold by Morse, plus an injunction, damages and attorneys’ fees. By order of this court dated August 18, 1964, the actions were consolidated for all purposes.

In its answer in the consolidated action, ACCO has pleaded two counterclaims, one against each plaintiff, for a determination that the products manufactured and sold by each plaintiff infringe the patent. The counterclaims seek an injunction against each plaintiff, an accounting for profits, damages and an award of attorneys’ fees.

In their replies to the counterclaims, plaintiffs assert that the patent, as well as being invalid, is unenforceable on various grounds, i. e., (1) because of a misrepresentation made by ACCO to the Patent Office in 1959, (2) because ACCO suppressed the invention by causing Bratz to delay unduly in applying for a patent, and (3) because ACCO’s licensing policy constitutes a misuse of the patent.

Before this action was instituted, ACCO brought an action for infringement in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida against one of Teleflex’s customers. That action, American Chain & Cable Company, Inc. v. Phillips Hardware, Inc., is still pending.

This court has jurisdiction of the present action under 28 U.S.C. § 1338(a).

The patent is on a “push-pull cable,” a device which, most simply stated, consists of a wire or “core” enclosed in a tube which is surrounded by a wire casing. The core can be moved forward or backward by pushing or pulling on one end of it, thereby exerting force upon whatever is attached to the other end. It is used, among other things, to operate automobile accelerators, brakes, and throttles of marine outboard motors.

Including the three parties to this action, there are approximately 15 manufacturers of push-pull cables of one type or another in the United States. The parties have stipulated that ACCO was the “dominant” manufacturer during the period 1950-59.

The application for this patent was filed by Bratz on April 1, 1958. It was a continuation-in-part of a previous application filed by him on March 15, 1957 which he subsequently abandoned after it had been rejected by the Patent Office.

As far as Teleflex and ACCO are concerned, this litigation is the second battle in a war which began in the Patent Office. Teleflex’s former employee, Cadwallader, also sought a patent on substantially the same cable. The Patent Office conducted interference proceedings beginning in 1959 between Cadwallader and Bratz. The Patent Office eventually decided in July 1961 that Bratz was the prior inventor.

In the meantime, Teleflex, as assignee of Cadwallader, in May 1960 petitioned the Patent Office to institute a “public use proceeding” against Bratz’s application. It alleged that a cable embodying Bratz’s claimed invention had been publicly used and sold by Fox River Manufacturing Company more than one year before March 15, 1957, the filing date of Bratz’s original application. On November 3, 1961, the Patent Office denied Teleflex’s petition on the strength of the Examiner’s conclusion that Teleflex had not made out a prima facie case of such prior public use or sale.

The patent as issued on January 9, 1962 contains 16 claims. By agreement at pre-trial the claims to be adjudicated in this action have been limited to six, i. e., claims 1, 3, 4, 6, 8 and 16.

In the course of prosecuting the application for the patent, the attorneys for *577 Bratz (who are also ACCO’s attorneys here) advised the Patent Office that:

“Claim 1 is a generic claim, both as to the casing structure and as to tube composition.”

Claim 1 reads as follows:

“In a push-pull cable assembly, a casing comprising an outer metallic sheath formed of at least one wire wrapped helically in the form of a coil having its neutral bending axis extending substantially along the center line of the coil and a resinous plastic tube disposed within and extending throughout the length of said sheath, said plastic tube being restrained against over-all longitudinal movement relative to said sheath but being free to accommodate the slight relative motion that occurs between adjacent turns of the sheath coil when the casing is bent, and a flexible metallic core element extending through said plastic tube and directly engageable therewith and freely movable longitudinally therein.”

Claim 3 is the same as claim 1 except that the phrase “resinous plastic tube” in claim 1 has been changed in claim 3 to “polytetrafluorethylene tube.” The trade name for polytetrafluorethylene is teflon.

Claim 4 reads as follows:

“A push-pull cable assembly comprising a resinous plastic tube, a flexible metallic sheath surrounding said tube, said sheath comprising a multiplicity of wires laid side by side and wrapped helically with a long pitch in the form of a closed coil having a neutral bending axis extending substantially along the center line of the coil, said sheath being applied in firm gripping relation with said plastic tube over substantially its entire length and holding it securely against over-all longitudinal movement relative to the sheath while permitting the slight relative motion that occurs between adjacent wires of the sheath coil when the sheath is bent, and a flexible metallic core element extending through said tube and directly engageable therewith and freely movable longitudinally therein.”

This claim is directed particularly to the cable construction of Fig. I of the patent drawings. It will be observed that this claim differs from the broad generic claim 1 in that the structure described in claim 1 as an outer metallic sheath “formed of at least one wire wrapped helically in the form of a coil” has been changed to a sheath “comprising a multiplicity of wires laid side by side and wrapped helically with a long pitch in the form of a closed coil * * * said sheath being applied in firm gripping relation with said plastic tube over substantially its entire length * *

Claim 6 is substantially the same as claim 4 except that the description of the plastic tube is more limited. The “resinous plastic tube” of claim 4 becomes a “polytetrafluorethylene tube” in claim 6. This claim also is directed to the structure shown in Fig. 1 of the patent drawings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 F. Supp. 573, 153 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 511, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teleflex-incorporated-v-american-chain-cable-co-nysd-1967.