Trans-World Display Corp. v. Mechtronics Corp.

437 F. Supp. 692, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 588
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 26, 1977
Docket72 Civ. 4203 (CHT)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 437 F. Supp. 692 (Trans-World Display Corp. v. Mechtronics Corp.) 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
Trans-World Display Corp. v. Mechtronics Corp., 437 F. Supp. 692, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 588 (S.D.N.Y. 1977).

Opinion

OPINION

TENNEY, District Judge.

This is an action for patent infringement by the patentee, Trans-World Display Corporation (“Trans-World”) against Mechtronics Corporation (“Mechtronics”), a direct competitor of Trans-World in the business of supplying point-of-purchase advertising materials. 1 Trans-World seeks a determination that its U.S. Patent No. 3,674,-175, entitled “Multiple Size Package Display and Dispenser,” has been and is being infringed by Mechtronics, and an injunction against further infringement. Trans-World also seeks an accounting of the number of infringing dispensers which have been sold by Mechtronics and an award of the profits which Trans-World lost due to such infringing sales. Finally, Trans-World seeks treble damages and attorneys’ fees due to the bad faith of Mechtronics in substituting itself for Trans-World as the sole supplier of the patented dispensers to Eastman Kodak Company, the sole customer for the dispensers.

Mechtronics, in its answer and on the trial of the issues herein, predicated its defense generally on the following grounds: (1) the structure disclosed is a combination of old elements put together to form a package dispenser, producing no new function or synergistic effect, and is obvious under 35 U.S.C. § 103; (2) that Trans-World’s dispenser was “on sale” more than one year prior to November 12, 1970, the filing date of the patent application, which fact Trans-World failed to bring to the attention of the Patent Office, id. § 102(b); (3) that the patent application failed to disclose the “best mode” of carrying out the invention, id. § 112; (4) that the Mechtronics structure does not infringe Trans-World’s patent; and (5) that Trans-World’s title to the patent is defective.

Invention

The invention covered by the patent comprises a rectangular housing having within it a number of vertical chambers, each adjustable in both width and depth by the use of partition units. Each chamber is intended to accommodate a stack of film boxes all of the same size, but the boxes stacked in an adjacent chamber may be of a different size. Thus a number of stacks of film boxes, each containing a different sized film box, may be accommodated according to the wishes of the storekeeper or other person setting up the display, limited only by the overall size of the housing. Despite the difference in the sizes of the various film boxes in the vertical chambers, the front faces of all the boxes in the dispenser are flush.

Supplied with the housing are a number of separate partition units, each of which comprises two long, narrow walls permanently joined together perpendicular to each other so that the unit has an L-shaped cross-section. When a partition is inserted into the housing, one of the long narrow walls forms a side wall of a vertical chamber, and the other long narrow wall forms the back wall of the same chamber. Each vertical chamber in the housing is the space between two successive partition units which form the side walls of the chamber.

Each partition unit has top and bottom tongues which slide within grooves in the top and bottom walls of the housing, the *695 grooves extending parallel to each other and from side to side as one looks at the front of the unit. When each partition unit is placed into the housing, a particular groove in each of the top and bottom walls of the housing is selected, and the top and bottom tongues of the partition unit are inserted into these grooves. The particular pair of top and bottom grooves which is selected determines the position of the back wall of the partition unit and hence the depth of the chamber. The partition unit is then moved by sliding its tongues along the selected grooves until the side wall of the partition unit reaches the desired distance from the side wall of the preceding partition unit, thus determining the width of the vertical chamber. In this way, a number of vertical chambers are created within the housing, each chamber having a width and a depth corresponding to or slightly larger than the width and length of a particular size film box.

Finally, each partition unit has, in addition to the long narrow side and rear walls, a short top and bottom wall. Extending at an angle from the bottom wall to the rear wall of the partition unit is a ramp or “kick-plate” which serves to move the bottom-most film box forward from the stack and make it readily removable from the dispenser.

Factual and Procedural Background

Before proceeding with a discussion of the issues raised herein, it would appear essential to discuss in some detail the factual and procedural background of the ease.

On August 21, 1969 Robert Engel (“En-gel”), a sales vice-president of Trans-World, went to the principal office of Eastman Kodak Company (“Kodak”) in Rochester, New York at the request of Hamilton Driggs (“Driggs"), National Displays Manager of Kodak. Trans-World was in the business of designing and producing point-of-purchase display materials for anybody using such materials and had previously supplied Kodak with such displays. At the meeting on August 21 Driggs asked Engel whether Trans-World could come up with a gravity feed-dispenser that would hold four or five different sized boxes of film such as the dispensers cigarette companies use for boxes of cigarettes, but which could be arranged according to the particular combination of film boxes desired by the dealer and would hold the boxes so that they were flush with the front of the display. Engel returned to his office and on the following day, Friday, August 22, 1969, prepared a design requisition for a metal display to hold dispensers, width 24", depth 4", and height 20", with a divider for different widths of film, to display a product of four different sizes. The budget range was to be under $20 a piece for 5,000 units. (PL Exh. 2). On the same day Engel wrote Driggs that he hoped to have a brilliant solution within 10 days and that a model should be ready within two weeks. Following this, Engel conferred with an Alfred Eliot (“Eliot”), who was running Trans-World’s art department, and they agreed that John Jaquish (“Jaquish”), an art director at Trans-World, was best qualified to work on the problem. A meeting was arranged attended by Engel, Jaquish, Eliot, and Robert Monacchio (“Monacchio”), from the production department. 2 Although no particular date is given, the meeting probably occurred on Monday, August 25, 1969. It was at this meeting, lasting less than an hour, that Jaquish developed his “concept.”

Within a day or two of the August 25 meeting, or by August 27, Jaquish had the first model using grooves and a divider structure which embodied the principle of the invention and which was satisfactorily *696 tested. (Pl.Exh. 3). Sometime during the period from August 27,1969 and September 18, 1969 Ward Johnston (“Johnston”), an independent model maker employed by Trans-World, constructed a model which Trans-World claims no longer exists. The Court finds that this first Johnston model was the first prototype model, smaller in size than the ultimate invention but embodying all the elements of the patent. (PI. Exh. 5).

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Bluebook (online)
437 F. Supp. 692, 195 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trans-world-display-corp-v-mechtronics-corp-nysd-1977.