Zoomar, Inc. v. Paillard Products, Inc.

152 F. Supp. 328, 113 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 469, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3396
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 5, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 152 F. Supp. 328 (Zoomar, Inc. v. Paillard Products, Inc.) 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
Zoomar, Inc. v. Paillard Products, Inc., 152 F. Supp. 328, 113 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 469, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3396 (S.D.N.Y. 1957).

Opinion

IRVING R. KAUFMAN, District Judge.

This is an action for alleged infringement of two patents relating to variable focal lens systems for motion picture and television cameras. These patents are No. 2,454,686 (hereinafter called 686), issued November 23, 1948, and No. 2,718,817 (hereinafter called 817), issued September 27, 1955.

Plaintiff, a New York corporation manufacturing and selling varifocal lenses, alleges that defendant, by selling certain lens systems called Pan-Cinor 70 and Pan-Cinor 100, is infringing the above patents owned by plaintiff. The alleged infringing lens systems are manufactured in France by Societe d’Optique et de Mecanique de Haute Precision and are sold in this country by the defendant, a New York corporation. A United States Patent, No. 2,778,272 covering the alleged infringing devices was issued on January 22, 1957.

The defendant’s answer, inter alia, denied infringement and alleged the invalidity of both patents. In addition, the answer contained two counterclaims; one, for a declaratory judgment that the patents in suit are invalid and not infringed, and two, for damages based upon a claim of unfair competition.

A varifocal lens is an optical device composed of lenses which are movable in relation to each other and are operable to vary the size of the image of an object without substantial displacement or defocusing of the image from a predetermined focal plane. In the fields of motion pictures and television, a varifocal lens makes it possible for the cameraman to produce a “zoom” effect, i. e., a continuous enlargement of the image without moving the camera from a fixed position, thereby obviating the use of a dolly or traveling camera support.

The basic principle of varifocal lenses is the physical law that if the distance between two optical elements is changed the combined power and equivalent focal length of these two elements necessarily also changes — producing magnification or demagnification of the object. The lenses, however, not only change their combined focal length, but they also change the position of their combined focal plane in relation to any fixed point of reference. To make such a lens combination usable, therefore, it is necessary to compensate in some way or another for this movement of the focal or image plane.

Prior to the plaintiff’s first device, purportedly made in accordance with patent 686, the varifocal lensqs utilized in the motion picture field were of the so-called mechanically compensated type. Compensation was achieved in those devices by coordinated or interrelated movement of various cams, gears or levers which displaced the lens elements with respect to each other and also moved the system as a whole to keep the image plane stationary and coinciding with the film plane of the motion picture camera. Mechanical compensation permitted exact focusing throughout the range of the “zoom” operation. On the other hand, due to the need for highly precise and complicated construction, these devices were extremely costly and the mechanical linkages tended to wear out easily, throwing the image out of focus. For these *330 reasons, the mechanically compensated devices did not enjoy a great deal of commercial success although some are still on the market.

The devices involved in the present suit effectuate compensation by purely optical means. They avoid the constructional difficulties by sacrificing, to some extent, the superior optical qualities of the mechanically compensated devices. In the case of devices purportedly made according to plaintiff’s patents, the image is in exact focus three times during the zooming operation. In the defendant’s devices, exact focus is attained four times during the range of operation. The deviations throughout the remainder of the zoom, however, are within accepted optical tolerances in each case, although concededly superior in the alleged infringing devices.

With regard to plaintiff’s first patent application (686), the only prior art cited to the Patent Office were mechanically compensated varifocal lenses for motion picture camera use. The plaintiff successfully contended there that its device was a sufficiently novel and meritorious advance over the mechanically compensated prior art. At trial, plaintiff adequately distinguished its means for effecting compensation optically from the mechanical means, and the defendant did not seriously contest that the Patent Office erred in deciding that this was a valid distinction.

The defendant’s position with regard to the validity of 686 rests basically on the following grounds: that the applicable prior art covered more than varifocal lenses for motion picture cameras; that optically compensated varifocal lenses for other uses had been known to the art before 686 but were not considered by the Patent Office; that 686 does not represent an inventive advance over that prior art; and that even if the device allegedly constructed according to patent 686 would represent an inventive advance, the patent itself is nevertheless invalid for failure to sufficiently disclose the invention, for describing it in solely functional terms and for making its claims excessively broad.

Specifically, defendant relies upon two U.S. patents: No. 2,078,586 issued to R. Richter on April 27, 1937 for a Device for Illuminating Microscopic Objects; and No. 2,209,532 issued to K. Michel on July 30,1940 for a Microscope.

In the Richter patent, the inventor did not intend to make a zoom lens for use in taking motion pictures but rather to create a device which would provide for continuous variation in the size of the image of a source of light, to permit a continuous changing of the numerical aperture of the microscope. He was faced with the same difficulty encountered in the other variable focal instruments in that as the image would be magnified it would tend to leave the desired focal plane. To correct this problem, he employed optical, rather than mechanical compensation.

The patent indicates that Richter considered whether optical compensation would prove useful for other purposes such as the construction of varifocal telescopes. Recognizing that optical compensation would not be exact throughout the zoom range and believing that such “exact images are desired” in telescopes, he rejected the possibility.

The idea of utilizing optical compensation in other varifocal devices, however, was not rejected by Richter’s coworker, Michel. In the Michel patent for a microscope which would permit near simultaneous photography and subjective examination of the microscopic image, the inventor disclosed that “A special improvement can be arrived at * * * by using as a projection system a pancratic” [i. e. varifocal] “optical system which permits a continuous change in the magnification of the image in the image plane of the imaging receiving device without any change in the acuity of the image.”

Prior to this patent it was believed that in order to get an enlarged micro-photograph, it would be necessary to move the camera back. (Tr. p. 196). *331 Michel’s patent envisioned a device for the taking of still photographs at the various magnifications of the image, without moving the camera. It too, however, did not envision the taking of motion pictures.

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152 F. Supp. 328, 113 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 469, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zoomar-inc-v-paillard-products-inc-nysd-1957.