The Borden Company v. Clearfield Cheese Co., Inc., a Pennsylvania Corporation

369 F.2d 96, 152 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 9, 1966
Docket15614_1
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 369 F.2d 96 (The Borden Company v. Clearfield Cheese Co., Inc., a Pennsylvania Corporation) 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
The Borden Company v. Clearfield Cheese Co., Inc., a Pennsylvania Corporation, 369 F.2d 96, 152 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076 (3d Cir. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

GANEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the lower court’s granting of the defendant’s motion for summary judgment.

The plaintiff filed suit for patent infringement against the defendant by complaint dated May 22, 1964, alleging that the defendant had infringed the Brandenberger patent, a Swiss patent which had not been used theretofore at any time, anywhere in the world, since its issuance on April 25, 1950, which it had acquired on May 19, 1964, just three days previously.

The plaintiff, Borden Company, is a New Jersey corporation having its principal place of business in New York City, New York, and the defendant, Clearfield Cheese Company, is a Pennsylvania corporation having its principal place of business at Curwensville, Pennsylvania, and is the second largest processor of cheese and cheese products, maintaining plants in Utah, Wisconsin and Missouri.

A brief history of the ease shows that sometime in the mid-50’s, the defendant was manufacturing individually packaged cheese slices under a process which was created and developed by one of its employees, Arnold N. Nawrocki. A patent was secured by the defendant on August 25, 1956, known as the Nawrocki patent, No. 2,759,308, for “Apparatus For Producing Individually Wrapped Cheese Slabs”. These Nawrocki individually packaged slices proved not to be commercially satisfactory, as did several other individually packaged slices of cheese being sold throughout the United States and Canada. It was at this time that the defendant became aware of the Brandenberger patent, as it cited it as a reference in its application. What is sought to be enjoined here is not the Nawrocki patent, but a secret process unpatented, one known only to a few employees of the defendant-company working in an isolated building to which access is extremely limited, to such a degree that even top executives are not permitted to enter. The defendant-company, in the development of this secret process over a period of about three years, spent approximately $154,000. The market for the individually wrapped cheese slices began building up to a large degree because of the great demand on the part of housewives for the product since theretofore wrapped cheese had only been marketed in slices of eight or ten, or in half-pound packages. An indication of this is that from October 1, 1963, to September 30, 1964, the defendant and its subsidiaries sold over 29,000,000 pounds of individually wrapped slices of cheese for a sum in excess of $13,000,000.

Sometime in the mid-50’s, the defendant-company contacted the plaintiff-company to determine whether the plaintiff-company would be interested in their (defendant’s) making up for the plaintiff individually sliced cheese packages under the plaintiff’s (Borden’s) label, and the plaintiff, Borden, advised defendant, Clearfield Cheese, it was not interested. There was no question about the cheese itself to be used in the process, whether it would be the plaintiff’s or the defendant’s, as the plaintiff was only concerned with the process of individually wrapped cheese slices for sale. A conference, initiated by the plaintiff, Borden, on October 25, 1963, sought the defendant’s help in packaging wrapped cheese slices under the Borden name. The defendant, Clearfield, wrote a letter to the plaintiff on December 4, 1963, advising it of the difficulties which might ensue from supplying the plaintiff with individually *98 wrapped slices of cheese. The first difficulty stated was that it had not been able to keep up with its own current demand and, additionally, that it was investigating some legal problems which might be encountered under the Robinson-Patman Act. Upon receipt of this letter, plaintiff made a notation on it as follows: “12/12/63 — Do not be in a hurry to answer.”, as well as another notation, “1-27-64 Hold till patents are cleared up.”

As has been indicated, suit was filed on May 22, 1964, by the plaintiff against the defendant, three days after plaintiff’s acquisition of the Brandenberger patent. As adverted to, the complaint alleged the defendant’s process had infringed the plaintiff’s patent and prayed for a final injunction against further infringement by the defendant, as well as an accounting for damages adequate to compensate for the infringement.

The defendant filed an answer denying infringement and alleged a counterclaim asking for a declaratory judgment holding the patent invalid under 35 U.S.C. § 103, and alleging that the subject matter thereof was obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art and citing a number of earlier patents performing the same function as that of the patent in suit. Interrogatories were posed by the defendant to the plaintiff requesting an outline in detail of the steps of the process used by the defendant which infringed plaintiff’s patent. Arthur B. Erekson, Vice-President of the Borden Company, answered describing the process on the basis of his knowledge which was gleaned only from that which was visible in examining the cellophane package of the defendant, having never seen nor heard described the defendant’s secret process, since the defendant refused to disclose the same. To the same effect was his deposition, as well as other officers of the plaintiff-corporation who had been deposed. When plaintiff noticed the defendant’s officers for the taking of depositions, defendant filed a motion for a protective order with respect to their secret process and before this came on for hearing, the defendant also filed a motion for summary judgment. However, previous to the filing of the motion for summary judgment, the defendant had filed affidavits for the President of its company, as well as one by Karl B. Lutz, a patent lawyer and member of a Pittsburgh law firm, which stated in paragraph 5 thereof, “I am confident that if it becomes necessary to try this case on the merits, it will be determined that defendant’s ‘secret process’ does not infringe the Brandenberger patent on which plaintiff relies; * * * ”

At the hearing on the “Motions for the Protective Order and for Summary Judgment”, which was the label thereon, at the close thereof the defendant offered the pleadings, interrogatories and depositions it had taken and the plaintiff, likewise, offered its pleadings, the patent in suit, its file history and the prior art patents cited by the Patent Office. At argument and in their briefs, defendant contended, one, that, due to a long relationship between these parties about this very process, including correspondence between them which the defendant contended had not become conclusive prior to the time the plaintiff found this Swiss patent which it was presently using, should estop them since this conduct invoked the equitable doctrine of estoppel, as the facts on the record in the deposition stated, and, accordingly, the plaintiff should be barred from proceeding with this suit. The second ground urged in the motion for summary judgment is that when the plaintiff filed this suit it had no probable cause to think the defendant was violating the patent, since Mr.

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369 F.2d 96, 152 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 369, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4076, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-borden-company-v-clearfield-cheese-co-inc-a-pennsylvania-ca3-1966.