Vincent v. Suni-Citrus Products Co. Food Processes, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp. Dan B. Vincent, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp

215 F.2d 305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 4, 1954
Docket14250_1
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 215 F.2d 305 (Vincent v. Suni-Citrus Products Co. Food Processes, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp. Dan B. Vincent, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vincent v. Suni-Citrus Products Co. Food Processes, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp. Dan B. Vincent, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corp, 215 F.2d 305 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

Another aspect or phase of the long drawn out struggle in Florida to free its *306 large and growing citrus waste processing industry from the adverse effects of patent monopoly control, 1 these are appeals, upon a consolidated record, from decrees of the district court entered in three separate patent suits, consolidated for trial below, which declared invalid and not infringed two process patents. These are Reissue Patent No. 22,865, to be referred to as “865”, issued April 8, 1947, on the basis of the Original Vincent Patent No. 2,215,944, issued September 4, 1940, to be referred to as “944”, and Patent No. 2,471,363, issued May 24, 1949 as an improvement on Patent No. 944, to be referred to as “363.”

Appellants, challenging the correctness of the decrees and the consolidated findings of fact and conclusions of law, upon which they are predicated, as erroneous in fact and in law, are here seeking the overthrow of the findings and conclusions and the reversal of the decrees.

Daniel B. Vincent, the individual pat-entee of the original patent 944, as well as of the two patents in suit, the appellant primarily concerned in this three pronged litigation, has been for many years interested both theoretically and practically in the citrus waste processing in Florida and engaged in the sale of citrus waste processing machinery therein.

Food Processes, Inc. and Dan B. Vincent, Inc., Florida corporations owned and controlled by Vincent, were used by him primarily to take title respectively to reissue patent 865 and improvement patent 363, and license the use thereof.

Both appellees are Florida corporations extensively engaged in that state in the dehydration of citrus fruit and in the manufacture of stock food from the waste citrus hulls, pulp and seed remaining after the juice has been squeezed from the fruit.

Unless otherwise indicated, both the individual and corporate Vincent interests will occasionally be hereinafter referred to generally as appellants, while the Suni-Citrus Products Company and the Minute Maid Corporation will be designated generally as appellees.

Though separately applied for and issued, the two patents in suit are closely related in basic method and in purpose and result accomplished, and present on all basic issues common questions of law and fact. Broadly described they relate generally to a method or process employed in conversion of citrus cannery waste into a dry, non-bitter, and water absorbent cattle feed. 2 As contended by appellants, both patents disclose and claim a “continuous process” whereby *307 lime is added to citrus waste in ‘ controlled and varying” amounts so as to foster the formation of a brown colored “transient” or “minutes-stable transient” gel, and the subsequent breaking down of that gel in such manner as to facilitate the removal of the bound water and bitter constituents of the waste and render it mechanically pressable. After pressing, the bulky dried product is bagged and extensively marketed commercially as a valuable and nutritious cattle feed.

The Vincent reissue patent 865, dated April 8, 1947, is based upon Vincent’s surrender of cancelled original patent 944, and is the foundation for two of the consolidated suits, namely Suni-Citrus Products Company v. Daniel B. Vincent, et al., and Food Processes, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corporation. The former case was originally filed on April 8, 1947, the date of issuance of the Vincent reissue patent, as an independent declaratory judgment action to have the Vincent 865 reissue patent declared invalid and not infringed. The latter case was originally brought by the Vincent interests against Minute Maid Corporation on specific claims of the reissue patent alleged to have been infringed, but by Minute Maid’s complaint and counterclaim the validity and infringement of all its claims was put in issue.

The third case of Dan B. Vincent, Inc. v. Minute Maid Corporation is based on Vincent patent 363, granted May 24, 1949, for an improvement in the Vincent process, and involves the issues of infringement and validity of the claims of that patent.

Issues applicable generally to all phases of this litigation are invalidity of both the 865 and 363 patents in suit as anticipated by prior patents, uses, publications, etc.; invalidity for lack of utility and patentable novelty over the prior art; and lack of infringement by either of appellees’ accused processes, because of the omission of certain steps of the Vincent processes.

Other specific defenses urged in the particular cases are; estoppel against the Vincent claim of infringement against Suni-Citrus because of Suni-Citrus’ pri- or acquisition of intervening rights as to the 865 patent, upon which that suit is based; estoppel against Vincent in both suits against Minute Maid based on the 865 and 363 patents, because of Vincent’s having previously profited from the sale of processing machinery used in the Minute Maid plant; alleged misuse of the Vincent patents in suit under a so-called “tie-in” arrangement, allegedly devised to force the sale of unpatented machinery in violation of the anti-trust laws; and unclean hands and bad faith of Vincent, in making alleged conflicting oaths and false representations before the Patent Office and the District Court, in order to secure and uphold the validity of his patents, which conduct by the patentee is repeatedly urged by appellees as an appropriate basis for denying him all equitable relief.

Upon the issues thus tendered by the parties, particularly on the defenses of prior use, of estoppel, and of misuse by Vincent of his patents, a greatly voluminous record was made, consisting of some 10,000 pages of oral and deposition testimony. Of this testimony, that of only eight out of the total of sixty-seven witnesses was taken in open court. The rest, having to do largely with the particular defenses above referred to, was taken by deposition.

The trial concluded, the matters at issue were taken under advisement and later decided by the district judge without opinion.

Adopting and filing as his own elaborate and detailed finding of fact and conclusions of law, 3 prepared and sub *308 mitted for his adoption by appellees, he found both patents and all claims thereof invalid and uninfringed, and gave judgment accordingly.

Here, with inordinately long and repetitious briefs and with an approach calculated to engender more heat than light, counsel for appellants and appellees respectively vie with each other in impugning and imputing motives and making charges and countercharges which, instead of clarifying, tend only to obscure the controlling issues in the case and render their correct determination more, rather than less, difficult.

On their part, counsel for appellants point to the district court’s sweeping acceptance and adoption of the contentions of counsel for appellees with respect not only to the defenses of invalidity and non-infringement but also to the numerous other defenses of estoppel, intervening rights, implied license, misuse of patents and false oaths of the patentee.

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Bluebook (online)
215 F.2d 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-v-suni-citrus-products-co-food-processes-inc-v-minute-maid-ca5-1954.