Zip Dee, Inc. v. Dometic Corp.

63 F. Supp. 2d 868, 52 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1633, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12203, 1998 WL 474120
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedAugust 4, 1998
Docket93 C 3200
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 63 F. Supp. 2d 868 (Zip Dee, Inc. v. Dometic Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zip Dee, Inc. v. Dometic Corp., 63 F. Supp. 2d 868, 52 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1633, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12203, 1998 WL 474120 (N.D. Ill. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

SHADUR, Senior District Judge.

This multifaceted and bitter dispute between Zip Dee, Inc. (“Zip Dee”) and Dom-etic Corporation (“Dometic”) has ranged across fully a dozen years and two lawsuits — one being between Zip Dee and A & E Systems, Inc. (“A & E”), the prede *869 cessor of current defendant Dometic, and the other being this action. 1 Both lawsuits have implicated various aspects of intellectual property rights relating to the metal covers for awnings that provide shelter from the elements (both sunlight and rain) for the owners of recreational vehicles (when those vehicles are at rest).

As the Appendix reflects, this litigation alone has spawned a lengthy series of opinions by this Court to deal with its numerous complexities in both the trademark-trade dress and the patent areas of law, including in part issues stemming from the impact of the earlier Zip Dee-A & E litigation lost by the latter. What is now at issue is the Markman 2 -dictated determination of the construction of the claims in Zip Dee’s United States Patent No. 4,634,172 (“ ’172 Patent”), which claims Zip Dee contends are infringed by Dometic’s Model 9000 Awning (“Model 9000”).

Here are the two relevant claims (Claims 1 and 6) in the ’172 Patent:

1. A flexible connector for connecting a metal awning cover to a vehicle, comprising a flexible water-impervious strip, means for connecting one end of said strip to the vehicle, and means for connecting the other end of said strip to the metal awning cover, whereby when the awning is in use or in an extended position said flexible strip is under tension providing a water-tight seal between the awning cover and the recreational vehicle.
6. In a recreational vehicle having a first longitudinally extending rail C-shaped in transverse cross-section and a roll-up awning having a metal cover with a second longitudinally extending rail C-shaped in transverse cross-section, the combination therewith of a water proof connector, said connector comprising a pair of rods, each rod being capable of fitting within one of the first and second C-shaped rails, a flexible water-impervious fabric connecting said pair of rods constructed and arranged to provide a water tight connection between the first and second C-shaped rails when said fabric is under tension, whereby water is prevented from flowing between the recreational vehicle and the metal cover for the roll-up awning when the awning is extended and said flexible water-impervious fabric is under tension connecting the recreational vehicle and the roll-up awning metal cover.

Dometic views not only the terms “water-impervious,” “water-tight” and “waterproof’ (terms that Zip Dee agrees must be judge-defined under Markman) but also “tension” and “connector” as requiring judicial construction. Although Zip Dee differs as to the need .for judicial definition of those last two terms, it has offered its own views in case this Court rejects its position. This opinion will address each of the subjects on which the parties part company.

For purposes of the Markman analysis, Dometic properly leads off the discussion in its opening-gun Memorandum by pointing to the importance of intrinsic evidence (that is, evidence in the patent itself) in interpreting claims — after all, one important principle underlying the full-disclosure approach of the patent statute and caselaw is that readers of a patent are entitled to rely on the objective meaning of. the language used by the inventor. Thus Dometic Mem. 5 quotes from Vitronics Corp. v. Conceptronic, Inc., 90 F.3d 1576, 1583 (Fed.Cir.1996) (citations omitted):

In most situations, an analysis of the intrinsic evidence alone will resolve any ambiguity in a disputed claim term. In such circumstances, it is improper to *870 rely on extrinsic evidence. In those cases where the public record unambiguously describes the scope of the patented invention, reliance on any extrinsic evidence is improper. The claims, specification, and file history, rather than extrinsic evidence, constitute the public record of the patentee’s claim, a record on which the public is entitled to rely. In other words, competitors are entitled to review the public record, apply the established rules of claim construction, ascertain the scope of the patentee’s claimed invention and, thus, design around the claimed invention. Allowing the public record to be altered or changed by extrinsic evidence introduced at trial, such as expert testimony, would make this right meaningless. 3

And Dometic’s counsel then go on immediately afterwards at Mem. 5 to criticize Zip Dee’s approach to the current issues:

In this case, Zip Dee is attempting to do exactly that which the Federal Circuit in Vitronics condemned — “alter” the public record by introducing the testimony of its president and other extrinsic evidence that is contrary to the unambiguous meaning of the claims as revealed by the intrinsic evidence of the specification.

But then having staked out that position, Dometic’s counsel ironically proceed to quote — with an extensive use of boldface type — from a 1986 Zip Dee advertisement in Camp-orama magazine (Dometic Mem. 14) and from the 1988 opening statement to the jury by Zip Dee’s lawyer in the prior litigation between Zip Dee and A & E (id. at 15). Although this Court recognizes the appeal of such notions akin to estoppel, Dometic really should not be enabled to advance that level of inconsistency. As Vitronics and like cases expressly direct, and as this Court will do in its ensuing Markman analysis, Dometic too should be limited to examining the intrinsic evidence as to the meaning of the critical language in the patent claims.

“Water-Impervious, “Water Tight” and ‘Waterproof’

In this first area Dometic adopts a Gertrude Stein “Rose is a rose is a rose” approach. It simply urges the literal meaning of the terms “water-impervious,” “water-tight” and “waterproof’ as denoting something that permits no water passage at all.

Zip Dee responds by proffering a number of arguments that would give a different content to those words, a content that would permit moderate quantities of water to pass the “water-impervious,” “watertight” or “waterproof’ barrier. If Zip Dee were to be successful on that score, the consequence would be that the factfinding jury would be instructed that those terms would paean: 4

that the amount of water passing through the grommeted fabric strip of the Dometic awning is negligible or so small that it does not defeat the overall purpose of the invention under a not insubstantial range of realistic rainfall and a not insubstantial range of normal awning mounting angles.

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Related

Zip Dee, Inc. v. Dometic Corp.
63 F. Supp. 2d 913 (N.D. Illinois, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
63 F. Supp. 2d 868, 52 U.S.P.Q. 2d (BNA) 1633, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12203, 1998 WL 474120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zip-dee-inc-v-dometic-corp-ilnd-1998.