The D.L. Auld Company v. Chroma Graphics Corp.

714 F.2d 1144, 219 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 13, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13650
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1983
DocketAppeal 83-585
StatusPublished
Cited by142 cases

This text of 714 F.2d 1144 (The D.L. Auld Company v. Chroma Graphics Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The D.L. Auld Company v. Chroma Graphics Corp., 714 F.2d 1144, 219 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 13, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13650 (Fed. Cir. 1983).

Opinion

MARKEY, Chief Judge.

BACKGROUND

On October 15, 1981, the D.L. Auld Company (Auld) sued Chroma Graphics Corp. (Chroma) in the Eastern District of Tennessee for infringement of Patent No. 4,100,-010 (the Waugh patent) issued on a continuing application filed July 2, 1976 of an *1146 original application filed June 12, 1974. The patent claims are drawn to a method of forming foil-backed inserts in the form of cast decorative emblems. 1

The parties agreed on trial and entry of judgment before and by a magistrate and on direct appeal from that judgment.

Chroma took a discovery deposition of the inventor, Robert E. Waugh, who was also Vice President for Research and Development of Auld, the assignee of the patent. Submitting portions of that deposition and documents from Auld’s files, Chroma moved for summary judgment on the ground that the invention had been “on sale” for more than one year before June 12, 1974. 35 U.S.C. § 102(b).

Auld opposed the motion and asked for oral hearing, submitting other portions of Waugh’s discovery deposition, an affidavit amending answers to interrogatories, affidavits of Robert A. Wanner and David L. Auld, both with attachments, and pages from a Waugh deposition taken in another case.

Chroma replied, submitting further parts of the Waugh discovery deposition.

On October 22, 1982, the magistrate entered an order granting the motion, accompanied by a memorandum opinion.

Auld moved to vacate the order because no hearing had been held. The magistrate treated the motion as one to alter or amend under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) and held a hearing. The magistrate then entered an order denying Auld’s motion, accompanied by a memorandum opinion.

ISSUES

(1) Whether issues of material fact were present, rendering issuance of summary judgment improper.

(2) Whether absence of an oral hearing before issuance of the original order rendered that order invalid in this case.

OPINION

(1) Propriety of Summary Judgment A. General

The primary principles governing summary judgment are so well settled as not to require citation of authority. A summary judgment may not issue when material issues of fact requiring trial to resolve are present. Evidence and inferences must be viewed and drawn in a light most favorable to the nonmoving party. The moving party bears the burden of showing absence of a material fact issue and doubt will be resolved against that party. Summary judgment is an important means of conserving judicial and other resources. It must, however, be carefully employed in appropriate cases for an improvident grant may deny a party a chance to prove a worthy case and an improvident denial may *1147 force on a party and the court an unnecessary trial.

Concurring as they must in applicability of the foregoing principles, 2 the parties assert respectively the presence and absence in the record of an issue of fact material to a determination of whether the claimed invention was on sale before the critical date, June 12, 1973.

Though Auld asserts the contrary on appeal, the magistrate fully applied the principles listed above, saying in his memorandum opinion:

The only issue before the Court was whether the defendant was entitled to Summary Judgment as a matter of law or whether disputed issues of material fact remained requiring that the case proceed to trial.
Various indicia of intent to sell preclude any serious possiblity [sic] that these efforts were merely experimental. First of all, sales representatives, not the Research and Development people, carried these samples around in their briefcases and showed them to customers. Prices and delivery times were discussed. Mr. Waugh’s deposition makes it abundantly clear that, over a period of about four years, the D.L. Auld Company attempted to obtain orders for emblems made according to the patented process. This is precisely the activity that Section 102(b) attempts to limit to one year.
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Even the most indulgent reading of The D.L. Auld Company’s business records and the deposition testimony of its Vice-President for Research and Development Robert E. Waugh precludes any other finding but that at least some sample products were made in the laboratory according to the Waugh patent and were offered for sale well outside of the statutorily protected year.

Waugh’s invention is a method. The parties cite numerous cases involving “on sale” considerations in respect of product inventions under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b). The focus of inquiry here, however, is on the method. If Auld produced an emblem by the method of the invention and offered that emblem for sale before the critical date, the right to a patent on the method must be declared forfeited. Metallizing Engineering Co. v. Kenyon Bearing & Auto Parts Co., 153 F.2d 516, 68 USPQ 54 (2nd Cir.1946). The “forfeiture” theory expressed in Metallizing parallels the statutory scheme of 35 U.S.C. § 102(b), the intent of which is to preclude attempts by the inventor or his assignee to profit from commercial use of an invention for more than a year before an application for patent is filed. The record includes testimonial and documentary evidence establishing that the claimed method was employed in preparing a number of sample emblems and that Auld attempted to profit from use of that method by offering some of those samples for sale to a number of potential buyers well before the critical date. Those facts operate to create a forfeiture of any right to the grant of a valid patent on the method to Auld.

Where a method is kept secret, and remains secret after a sale of the product of the method, that sale will not, of course, bar another inventor from the grant of a patent on that method. The situation is different where, as here, that sale is made by the *1148 applicant for patent or his assignee. Though the magistrate referred to § 102(b), he did so in recognizing that the “activity” of Auld here was that which the statute “attempts to limit to one year.” In so doing, the magistrate correctly applied the concept explicated in Metallizing, i.e.

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714 F.2d 1144, 219 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 13, 1983 U.S. App. LEXIS 13650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-dl-auld-company-v-chroma-graphics-corp-cafc-1983.