TurboCare Division of Demag Delaval Turbomachinery Corp. v. General Electric Co.

45 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4185, 1999 WL 181893
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 31, 1999
DocketCiv.A. 95-30069-MAP
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 45 F. Supp. 2d 110 (TurboCare Division of Demag Delaval Turbomachinery Corp. v. General Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TurboCare Division of Demag Delaval Turbomachinery Corp. v. General Electric Co., 45 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4185, 1999 WL 181893 (D. Mass. 1999).

Opinion

ORDER

PONSOR, District Judge.

For the reasons stated in the accompanying Memorandum, the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Neiman is hereby adopted in toto. Defendant’s motion for summary judgment for unenforceability is hereby DENIED, and defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment for invalidity is ALLOWED. The clerk will set a date for a status conference to set a schedule for future proceedings.

MEMORANDUM REGARDING REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION ON DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT OF INVALIDITY AND FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT OF UNEN-FORCEABILITY OF US. PATENT NO. 5,087,115

I.INTRODUCTION

This is an action seeking damages for infringement of two United States patents: Patent No. 4,436,311, entitled “Segmented Labyrinth-Type Shaft Sealing System for Fluid Turbines” (the “’311 patent”) and Patent No. 5,037,115, entitled “Piston Ring Assemblies for High Temperature Seals” (the “’115 patent”). Some of the background facts are set forth in a previous opinion of this court on an earlier motion regarding plaintiffs first cause of action, raising the ’311 patent. 1 See TurboCare Div. of Demag Delaval Turbomachinery Corp. v. General Elec. Co., 938 F.Supp. 83 (D.Mass.1996).

In this memorandum the court will address GE’s motion directed at plaintiffs second cause of action. The motion seeks partial summary judgment regarding two of three claims in the T15 patent, on the ground of invalidity, and summary judgment on the entirety of the second cause of action because the incorrect patent fee was paid at the time of the patent’s issuance in 1991.

GE’s motion was referred to Magistrate Judge Kenneth P. Neiman, who has issued a Report and Recommendation to the effect that the motion asserting invalidity be allowed and the motion raising the failure to pay the proper fee be denied. Both parties have filed objections to the Report and Recommendation. Since this court’s de novo review reveals that Magistrate Judge Neiman’s analysis was entirely correct, the court will adopt his recommendation and rule in accordance with it. The detail and care exhibited by the Report and Recommendation, attached to this memorandum at Exhibit A, make lengthy discussion here unnecessary.

II.FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The pertinent facts of record are set forth in the Report and Recommendation at pages 3-10. They are essentially undisputed and need not be repeated here.

III.DISCUSSION

Disposition of the defendant’s motion requires this court to address only two relatively straightforward questions. First, does the fact that the inventor of the T15 *112 patent, Ronald E. Brandon, paid the “small entity” patent issuance fee of $525.00 when the patent issued in 1991, instead of the “large entity,” fee of twice that amount, render the ’115 patent unenforceable? Second, were the first two claims of the ’115 patent “anticipated” by a patent application for an essentially identical apparatus, the so-called “Hitachi reference,” made to the Japanese Patent Office in the late 1970s and disclosed to the public on November 29, 1977?

The answer to the first question is not difficult. As a preliminary matter, the law is far from settled that a simple error in payment of a fee amount will irretrievably extinguish an inventor’s patent rights. The one opinion cited by the defendant in support of this rather draconian proposition, DH Technology, Inc. v. Synergystex International, Inc., 937 F.Supp. 902 (N.D.Cal.1996), even though it involved facts far more egregious than those presented here, has been reversed on appeal. See 154 F.3d 1333, 1342 (Fed.Cir.1998). More importantly, the record is undisputed that in 1991 Brandon, not the large corporate entity Imo, owned the patent. As it happens, Brandon owns the patent to this day. In fact, Imo did not even possess a formal license agreement permitting exploitation of the patent until 1994. The plain truth is that an informed applicant in Brandon’s shoes, operating in good faith, would have paid the $525.00 fee in 1991. The most that could even be colorably (though unpersuasively) argued is that Brandon made a minor, good faith error, because Imo’s possession of some sort of implied license made the higher fee more appropriate. The demand for such dire consequences for this mistake, if mistake there was, has no foundation.

The answer to the second question requires a slightly more complex analysis but in the end is equally manifest.

The court’s inquiry will begin will the patented device itself, a solid ring assembly used to seal the steam input areas of steam turbines. The basic underlying engineering problem arises from the fact that where the pipe carrying steam passes through and into the turbine casing, some sort of seal must be provided to prevent steam leakage and resulting loss of turbine efficiency. The challenge to a designer of such a seal is prodigious, because the extremely hot steam coming in through the pipe, called the “snout” pipe, will cause both the pipe and the turbine casing to expand and move relative to each other. The seal has to allow for such movement while maintaining a tight fit.

Prior art assemblies employed to attack this problem used an array of alternating small and large piston rings. The small rings had an inner circumference nearly identical to the outer circumference of the snout pipe, and the larger rings had an outer circumference nearly identical to the inner circumference of the turbine casing. The small and large rings could slide in relation to each other, permitting some motion while providing a tight seal.

This solution had a serious drawback, which the Brandon patent attempted to address. The fit between the outer, larger rings and the turbine casing, and between the inner, smaller rings and the snout pipe was so snug that assembly of the seal was often difficult. Moreover, after years of exposure to high temperature steam, oxide coatings would develop on both sets of rings, tending to lock them into position and undermine their essential mission, which was to move and expand while maintaining the seal. In addition, the oxide layers made it difficult to disassemble the seal for normal maintenance without damaging the turbine casing, snout pipe or the rings themselves.

Claim 1 of the patent describes an assembly in which the large rings expand more than the surrounding casing when exposed to extreme heat (meaning, in technical terms, that they possess a greater “coefficient of thermal expansion”) and the small rings expand less than the, snout pipe. As a result, when the turbine is shut *113 down, and therefore cool, the larger rings will fit more easily into position within the casing, and the smaller rings will slide more easily over the snout pipe. When the turbine resumes operation, and heats up, the larger rings will expand more than the surrounding casing, making a tight fit, and the smaller rings will expand less than the snout pipe, with the same result. Significantly, Claim 1 makes no mention of the actual material that might be used to manufacture the rings in order to insure the different rates of expansion.

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45 F. Supp. 2d 110, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4185, 1999 WL 181893, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turbocare-division-of-demag-delaval-turbomachinery-corp-v-general-mad-1999.