Uarco Incorporated, a Corporation v. Moore Business Forms, Inc., a Corporation

440 F.2d 580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 1971
Docket18303
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 440 F.2d 580 (Uarco Incorporated, a Corporation v. Moore Business Forms, Inc., a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uarco Incorporated, a Corporation v. Moore Business Forms, Inc., a Corporation, 440 F.2d 580 (7th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

DUFFY, Senior Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff (Uarco) brought this suit for the alleged infringement of its United States Patent No. 3,104,799 (799) which was issued to Donald J. Steidinger on September 24, 1963 with eighteen claims. The defendant, Moore Business Forms, Inc. (Moore) counterclaimed for a finding of invalidity and of noninfringement.

Moore filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging invalidity of the patent in suit as being obvious in view of prior art patents to Bonnaffon, No. 697,971; Wanser, No. 2,148,886 and Sherman, No. 2,257,766. The District Court denied this motion stating: “A patent such as this, which is designed for use in complex electrical processing machines, should not be declared invalid on a motion for summary judgment just because it has some features in common with a 1902 [Bonnaffon] method of using one sheet at a time to make an envelope structure.”

However, at the conclusion of the trial, the District Court found the patent in suit invalid as being obvious in view of the prior art, 306 F.Supp. 369. The Court also awarded attorney fees to Moore for a period commencing with the date when Moore notified Uarco of the existence of Bonnaffon Patent No. 697,971.

Envelope assemblies manufactured and sold by defendant Moore under the name “SPEEDIMAILER” were accused by plaintiff of infringing claims 3, 5 and 10 of the patent in suit. Those manufactured and sold under the Suburban Trust name were accused of infringing claims 1 to 6, 10 to 13 and 18. Claim 13 was abandoned after the trial. It recited a single unit of the series set forth in claims 1 to 6 and 10 to 12.

The envelope assemblies alleged by plaintiff to be made in accord with its patent (799) have been sold by it to the public under the name “DATA-MAILER.” This product “DATA-MAILER” followed substantially the disclosure of figures 1 through 4 of the (799) patent in suit.

Sales grew rapidly. There was no other such product on the market with which it competed. By 1968, annual sales of “DATA-MAILER” reached about three and a half million dollars.

Defendant Moore Business Forms, Inc. is the largest single manufacturer of business forms in the United States. In March 1965, the defendant’s Products Manager wrote to his Company officials that it was important for Moore to come up with something to compete with Uarco’s new product [DATA-MAILER]. Eventually defendant began producing its “SPEEDIMAILER” which did successfully compete with the plaintiff’s product.

The field or area involving the claimed invention is that of continuous business forms. In actual use, business forms necessarily have several different parts. These include stationery sheets of various kinds and shapes which are intended to be transmitted through the mails to various recipients. Bills, premium notices, invoices or university grades are among the uses for such forms.

Envelopes are a required part of the business form assembly and are used both for enclosing the record sheets or forms for movement through the mails and also, in many instances, as a return envelope to be sent out with the original mailing.

It is essential to apply certain personal and individualized information to *582 both the carrying envelope, the sheet material contained inside, and, in many cases, to the return envelope as well. Prior to the use of computers, tabulators and the like, this type of business mailing was carried out piece by piece. However, with the advent of the automated machines, effort was made to have the personalized information applied to the form sheets as a continuous strip or ribbon. But even when this was done, envelopes still had to be individually addressed and stuffed. This was so because each envelope still existed as a separate entity, constructed from a single folded sheet and thus difficult to be adapted to continuous strips.

Efforts were made to attach the individual envelopes to a long carrier strip, but this operation still ultimately necessitated hand stuffing and sealing. Attempts were then made to substitute layers of plies with spot carbons and tear strips for the individually stuffed and sealed envelopes. These plies were constructed in continuous strips with the contents of each envelope sealed inside. The spot carbons allowed a single printing for both the outside master sheet and an internal information sheet. Both the Wanser Patent and the (799) patent in suit dealt with this type of operation.

Specifically, the (799) or Steidinger patent describes “an assembly having a series of sealed stuffed envelopes.” Steidinger utilizes continuous form stationery assemblies of individually sealed envelopes, each containing inserts which are to be imprinted by means of spot carbons while enclosed in the sealed envelopes, and manufactured from superimposed ply strips. The top ply comprises the business record and the underlying plies form the envelopes and their contents.

In the Steidinger assembly, the envelopes have a single tear strip, usually located on the left edge, by which the recipient opens the envelope. A thumb tab indentation allows him to remove the contents easily. Before being opened, these same tear strips anchor the contents of the envelope in place so that all forms are lined up in proper registration for printing. This single tear strip arrangement is accomplished in Steidinger by pre-cutting the insert strip in spaces corresponding to the top and bottom of the outer envelope, creating an insert web structure which allows the outer envelope to be glued together, while permitting up to three margins of the insert to be freed for easy opening. It is this tear strip operation adapted to continuous strips which the Patent Office held and which plaintiff asserts here, distinguishes Steidinger from the prior art.

During prosecution of the application of the Steidinger patent in suit, the Patent Office cited the Wanser and Sherman patents. However, after recognizing what it considered to be the differences between the claimed construction and the disclosure of the prior art, the Patent Office issued the patent with the eighteen claims in the exact same form as when originally filed.

Three patents are prior art to the Steidinger patent.

Sherman (October 7,1941).

Sherman covered a “series connected envelope and check” which utilized spot carbons to imprint both a master and internal sheets as well as portions of an outer envelope. The envelope in Sherman was positioned in a pocket on the underside of the assembly and required hand stuffing and sealing. Sherman disclosed feed holes on the assembly strips, for adaptation to tabulators or computors.

Wanser (February 28,1939).

Wanser disclosed a continuous series of sealed, stuffed envelopes with the contents contained therein. Like Steidinger, the series was connected by perforations. Unlike Steidinger, there were tear strips on all four sides of the envelope all of which were required to be removed in order for the contents to be extracted. There was no cut out web insert ply structure in Wanser.

*583 Bonnaffon (April 22,1902).

Bonnaffon deals with a single envelope construction with a possible insert enclosed. Bonnaffon always folds one sheet of paper.

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440 F.2d 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/uarco-incorporated-a-corporation-v-moore-business-forms-inc-a-ca7-1971.