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National Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co.

National Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co., 137 F.2d 255 (3d Cir. 1943),[1] is one of the earliest or the earliest federal court decision to hold that it is patent misuse for a patentee to require licensees not to use a competitive technology.[2] Such provisions are known as "tie-outs."

National Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co.
CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Full case nameNational Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co.
ArguedApril 19, 1943
DecidedJuly 13, 1943
Citation(s)137 F.2d 255; 58 U.S.P.Q. 460
Case history
Subsequent historyRehearing denied, September 2, 1943.
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingAlbert Branson Maris, Herbert Funk Goodrich, James Cullen Ganey
Case opinions
MajorityGoodrich, joined by a unanimous panel
Laws applied
Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 14

Background edit

 
Drawing of lock washer involved in National Lockwasher v. Garrett – from patent

National Lockwasher owned U.S. Patent 1,655,018, which covered split-ring, compression-spring lock washers with a construction preventing them from interlinking with one another when handled in bulk. The washer accomplishes this by making the helical ring-shaped washer extend more than 360 degrees in circumference, cutting the ends of the washer so that the end faces make an angle with the top and bottom faces of the washer, and making the spaces between the ends of the washer smaller than the thickness of the washer stock but large enough to allow compression to flatten the washer. (If the space is smaller than the thickness (cross-section height) of the washer stock, one washer cannot pass through the end space of another washer and entangle it.) A lock washer is used to prevent a screw, bolt, or nut from loosening under vibration. It operates as a spring under compression having sufficient elasticity to neutralize the play between the assembled parts that vibration causes.[3]

National licensed five other washer manufacturers under the patent. Each license "contained a provision to the effect that the licensee agrees, while the agreement is in force, that it will not manufacture any other form of non-tangling spring washers except those covered by the patent in suit." There are other forms of non-tangling spring washers on the market, which use different technology from that of the patent.[4]

The district court found that Garrett infringed the patent, that it was valid, and directed an accounting. A judgment of $18,000 was entered. Garrett appealed to the court of appeals.

Ruling of Third Circuit edit

"So what we have here," the court said, "is a patentee who gives a license to a manufacturer for a stipulated consideration, part of the consideration being that the licensee will abstain from manufacturing any other kind of nontangling spring washer except those covered by the license."[4]

The court recognized that this case was different on its facts from the Supreme Court's prior tie-in patent misuse cases such as Morton Salt Co. v. G.S. Suppiger Co., in which the Court held that a patentee "may not claim protection of his grant by the courts where it is being used to subvert" patent policy.[5] The patentee is not imposing a tie-in, but it is "using its patent monopoly to suppress the manufacture of possible competing goods not covered by its patent." The patentee:

is attempting by means other than that of free competition to extend the bounds of its lawful monopoly to make, use and vend the patented device to the extent where such device would be the only one available to a user of such an article. This monopoly is obviously not covered by the patent. A patentee's right does not extend to the use of the patent to purge the market of competing non-patented goods except, of course, through the process of fair competition.[4]

This conduct brought the case within the principle of United States v. Univis Lens Co.,[6] "which limits the granted monopoly strictly to the terms of the statutory grant." Accordingly: "The patentee has disentitled itself to recover at present for infringement by reason of its utilization of its patent monopoly to drive unpatented competing goods from the market."[7]

Subsequent developments edit

The Lockwasher case was followed by courts in several other circuits. In 2010, the Federal Circuit ruled, however, that similar conduct is not misuse. A 2015 decision of the Supreme Court may call into question the Federal Circuit's decision in that case.

Berlenbach and McCullough edit

In Berlenbach v. Anderson and Thompson Ski Co.,[8] the Ninth Circuit upheld a dismissal of a complaint for patent misuse. The offending license provided that the licensee "shall not manufacture or distribute in the United States and Canada any other safety type or automatic releasing ski binding other than" the patented one.

Earlier, in McCullough v. Kammerer Corp.,[9] the Ninth Circuit condemned a license that provided that the licensee could not "manufacture or use or rent any device which will be in competition with the device or devices covered by this license agreement." The Ninth Circuit held it improper to "extend[ ] the monopoly of the patent by suppressing the manufacture or use of competitive devices, patented or unpatented."[10]

Columbus edit

In Columbus Auto. Corp. v. Oldberg Mfg. Co.,[11] the Tenth Circuit affirmed a patent misuse ruling against a license providing that "For the duration of this contract, [licensee] agrees not to manufacture, sell or dispose of any other shock absorber which is competitive with the shock absorbers covered by said Patents."

Lasercomb edit

In Lasercomb America, Inc. v. Reynolds,[12] a copyright misuse case, the Fourth Circuit found misuse where the plaintiff copyright owner licensed its computer-assisted die-making software with agreements that forbade the licensee from permitting its personnel "to write, develop, produce or sell [competing] computer assisted die making software."

Princo edit

However, in Princo Corp. v. ITC,[13]</ref> the Federal Circuit ruled that an alleged conspiracy to suppress competing technology of another patent was not patent misuse:

[T]he alleged act of patent misuse . . . was the claimed horizontal agreement between Philips and Sony to restrict the availability of the Lagadec patent—an entirely different patent that was never asserted in the infringement action against Princo. Even if such an agreement were shown to exist, and even if it were shown to have anticompetitive effects, a horizontal agreement restricting the availability of Sony's Lagadec patent would not constitute misuse of Philips's Raaymakers patents or any of Philips's other patents in suit.[14]

Judge Bryson explained that "the question in this case comes down to this: When a patentee offers to license a patent, does the patentee misuse that patent by inducing a third party not to license its separate, competitive technology?" No precedent so holds, he insisted, and it did not fit within the requirement for misuse that the Philips-Sony agreement "have the effect of increasing the physical or temporal scope of the patent in suit."

The 2015 decision of the Supreme Court in Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment, LLC,[15] however, may call the soundness of Princo into question. The Kimble Court firmly rejected efforts to assimilate the patent misuse doctrine to antitrust law and explained in some detail the different policies at work in the two bodies of law. The Court insisted that patent policy rather than antitrust policy must govern patent misuse cases.[16] One statement of patent policy is found in the Constitution, which authorizes Congress to establish patent laws to promote the progress of the useful arts.[17] Arguably, a conspiracy to suppress a competitive technology is inconsistent with the policy to promote technological progress, as the Lockwasher case suggests.[18]

See also edit

  • Herbert Hovenkamp, Restraints on Innovation, 29 Cardozo L. Rev. 247 (2007)

References edit

The citations in this article are written in Bluebook style. Please see the talk page for more information.

  1. ^ National Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co., 137 F.2d 255 (3d Cir. 1943).
  2. ^ However, section 3 of the Clayton Act, 15 U.S.C. § 14, makes it unlawful to agree not to deal in the goods of a competitor, and machine leasing agreements were held violative of this antitrust law when they prevented lessees from obtaining machinery from competitors without first forfeiting the use of defendants' machinery. See United Shoe Mach. Corp. v. United States, 258 U.S. 451, 457 (1922).
  3. ^ National Lock Washer Co. v. George K. Garrett Co., 98 F.2d 643, 646 (3d Cir. 1938).
  4. ^ a b c National Lockwasher Co., 137 F.2d at 256.
  5. ^ Morton Salt Co. v. G.S. Suppiger Co., 314 U.S. 488, 494 (1942).
  6. ^ United States v. Univis Lens Co., 316 U.S. 241, 251 (1942).
  7. ^ Univis Lens Co., 316 U.S. at 257.
  8. ^ Berlenbach v. Anderson and Thompson Ski Co., 329 F.2d 782 (9th Cir. 1964), cert. denied, 379 U.S. 830 (1964).
  9. ^ McCullough v. Kammerer Corp., 166 F.2d 759 (9th Cir. 1948).
  10. ^ 166 F.2d at 761.
  11. ^ Columbus Auto. Corp. v. Oldberg Mfg. Co., 387 F.2d 643, 644 (10th Cir. 1968).
  12. ^ Lasercomb America, Inc. v. Reynolds, 911 F.2d 970 (4th Cir. 1990).
  13. ^ Princo Corp. v. ITC, 616 F.3d 1318 (Fed. Cir. 2010).
  14. ^ 616 F.3d at 1331.
  15. ^ Kimble v. Marvel Entertainment, LLC, No. 13-720, 576 U.S. ___ (2015).
  16. ^ 135 S. Ct. at 2413.
  17. ^ U.S. Const., art, I, sec. 8, cl. 8.
  18. ^ One commentator supports this view. See Richard H. Stern, Kimble: Patent Misuse through the Lens of Patent Policy, not Antitrust Policy, (2016) 38 Eur. Intell. Prop. Rev. 182, 189: "The effect of the Kimble decision would seem to be to roll back the line of Federal Circuit decisions culminating in Princo, which had made a showing of substantial anti-competitive effect in the relevant market an essential element of proof in most misuse cases. Kimble reaffirms the doctrine of cases holding that misuse is not antitrust and does not need a showing of actual anticompetitive effect."

External links edit

  • Text of National Lockwasher Co. v. George K. Garrett Co., 137 F.2d 255 (3d Cir. 1943) is available from: CourtListener  Google Scholar  Justia 

national, lockwasher, george, garrett, 1943, earliest, earliest, federal, court, decision, hold, that, patent, misuse, patentee, require, licensees, competitive, technology, such, provisions, known, outs, courtunited, states, court, appeals, third, circuitfull. National Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co 137 F 2d 255 3d Cir 1943 1 is one of the earliest or the earliest federal court decision to hold that it is patent misuse for a patentee to require licensees not to use a competitive technology 2 Such provisions are known as tie outs National Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co CourtUnited States Court of Appeals for the Third CircuitFull case nameNational Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co ArguedApril 19 1943DecidedJuly 13 1943Citation s 137 F 2d 255 58 U S P Q 460Case historySubsequent historyRehearing denied September 2 1943 Court membershipJudge s sittingAlbert Branson Maris Herbert Funk Goodrich James Cullen GaneyCase opinionsMajorityGoodrich joined by a unanimous panelLaws appliedClayton Act 15 U S C 14 Contents 1 Background 2 Ruling of Third Circuit 3 Subsequent developments 3 1 Berlenbach and McCullough 3 2 Columbus 3 3 Lasercomb 3 4 Princo 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground edit nbsp Drawing of lock washer involved in National Lockwasher v Garrett from patent National Lockwasher owned U S Patent 1 655 018 which covered split ring compression spring lock washers with a construction preventing them from interlinking with one another when handled in bulk The washer accomplishes this by making the helical ring shaped washer extend more than 360 degrees in circumference cutting the ends of the washer so that the end faces make an angle with the top and bottom faces of the washer and making the spaces between the ends of the washer smaller than the thickness of the washer stock but large enough to allow compression to flatten the washer If the space is smaller than the thickness cross section height of the washer stock one washer cannot pass through the end space of another washer and entangle it A lock washer is used to prevent a screw bolt or nut from loosening under vibration It operates as a spring under compression having sufficient elasticity to neutralize the play between the assembled parts that vibration causes 3 National licensed five other washer manufacturers under the patent Each license contained a provision to the effect that the licensee agrees while the agreement is in force that it will not manufacture any other form of non tangling spring washers except those covered by the patent in suit There are other forms of non tangling spring washers on the market which use different technology from that of the patent 4 The district court found that Garrett infringed the patent that it was valid and directed an accounting A judgment of 18 000 was entered Garrett appealed to the court of appeals Ruling of Third Circuit edit So what we have here the court said is a patentee who gives a license to a manufacturer for a stipulated consideration part of the consideration being that the licensee will abstain from manufacturing any other kind of nontangling spring washer except those covered by the license 4 The court recognized that this case was different on its facts from the Supreme Court s prior tie in patent misuse cases such as Morton Salt Co v G S Suppiger Co in which the Court held that a patentee may not claim protection of his grant by the courts where it is being used to subvert patent policy 5 The patentee is not imposing a tie in but it is using its patent monopoly to suppress the manufacture of possible competing goods not covered by its patent The patentee is attempting by means other than that of free competition to extend the bounds of its lawful monopoly to make use and vend the patented device to the extent where such device would be the only one available to a user of such an article This monopoly is obviously not covered by the patent A patentee s right does not extend to the use of the patent to purge the market of competing non patented goods except of course through the process of fair competition 4 This conduct brought the case within the principle of United States v Univis Lens Co 6 which limits the granted monopoly strictly to the terms of the statutory grant Accordingly The patentee has disentitled itself to recover at present for infringement by reason of its utilization of its patent monopoly to drive unpatented competing goods from the market 7 Subsequent developments editThe Lockwasher case was followed by courts in several other circuits In 2010 the Federal Circuit ruled however that similar conduct is not misuse A 2015 decision of the Supreme Court may call into question the Federal Circuit s decision in that case Berlenbach and McCullough edit In Berlenbach v Anderson and Thompson Ski Co 8 the Ninth Circuit upheld a dismissal of a complaint for patent misuse The offending license provided that the licensee shall not manufacture or distribute in the United States and Canada any other safety type or automatic releasing ski binding other than the patented one Earlier in McCullough v Kammerer Corp 9 the Ninth Circuit condemned a license that provided that the licensee could not manufacture or use or rent any device which will be in competition with the device or devices covered by this license agreement The Ninth Circuit held it improper to extend the monopoly of the patent by suppressing the manufacture or use of competitive devices patented or unpatented 10 Columbus edit In Columbus Auto Corp v Oldberg Mfg Co 11 the Tenth Circuit affirmed a patent misuse ruling against a license providing that For the duration of this contract licensee agrees not to manufacture sell or dispose of any other shock absorber which is competitive with the shock absorbers covered by said Patents Lasercomb edit In Lasercomb America Inc v Reynolds 12 a copyright misuse case the Fourth Circuit found misuse where the plaintiff copyright owner licensed its computer assisted die making software with agreements that forbade the licensee from permitting its personnel to write develop produce or sell competing computer assisted die making software Princo edit However in Princo Corp v ITC 13 lt ref gt the Federal Circuit ruled that an alleged conspiracy to suppress competing technology of another patent was not patent misuse T he alleged act of patent misuse was the claimed horizontal agreement between Philips and Sony to restrict the availability of the Lagadec patent an entirely different patent that was never asserted in the infringement action against Princo Even if such an agreement were shown to exist and even if it were shown to have anticompetitive effects a horizontal agreement restricting the availability of Sony s Lagadec patent would not constitute misuse of Philips s Raaymakers patents or any of Philips s other patents in suit 14 Judge Bryson explained that the question in this case comes down to this When a patentee offers to license a patent does the patentee misuse that patent by inducing a third party not to license its separate competitive technology No precedent so holds he insisted and it did not fit within the requirement for misuse that the Philips Sony agreement have the effect of increasing the physical or temporal scope of the patent in suit The 2015 decision of the Supreme Court in Kimble v Marvel Entertainment LLC 15 however may call the soundness of Princo into question The Kimble Court firmly rejected efforts to assimilate the patent misuse doctrine to antitrust law and explained in some detail the different policies at work in the two bodies of law The Court insisted that patent policy rather than antitrust policy must govern patent misuse cases 16 One statement of patent policy is found in the Constitution which authorizes Congress to establish patent laws to promote the progress of the useful arts 17 Arguably a conspiracy to suppress a competitive technology is inconsistent with the policy to promote technological progress as the Lockwasher case suggests 18 See also editHerbert Hovenkamp Restraints on Innovation 29 Cardozo L Rev 247 2007 References editThe citations in this article are written in Bluebook style Please see the talk page for more information National Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co 137 F 2d 255 3d Cir 1943 However section 3 of the Clayton Act 15 U S C 14 makes it unlawful to agree not to deal in the goods of a competitor and machine leasing agreements were held violative of this antitrust law when they prevented lessees from obtaining machinery from competitors without first forfeiting the use of defendants machinery See United Shoe Mach Corp v United States 258 U S 451 457 1922 National Lock Washer Co v George K Garrett Co 98 F 2d 643 646 3d Cir 1938 a b c National Lockwasher Co 137 F 2d at 256 Morton Salt Co v G S Suppiger Co 314 U S 488 494 1942 United States v Univis Lens Co 316 U S 241 251 1942 Univis Lens Co 316 U S at 257 Berlenbach v Anderson and Thompson Ski Co 329 F 2d 782 9th Cir 1964 cert denied 379 U S 830 1964 McCullough v Kammerer Corp 166 F 2d 759 9th Cir 1948 166 F 2d at 761 Columbus Auto Corp v Oldberg Mfg Co 387 F 2d 643 644 10th Cir 1968 Lasercomb America Inc v Reynolds 911 F 2d 970 4th Cir 1990 Princo Corp v ITC 616 F 3d 1318 Fed Cir 2010 616 F 3d at 1331 Kimble v Marvel Entertainment LLC No 13 720 576 U S 2015 135 S Ct at 2413 U S Const art I sec 8 cl 8 One commentator supports this view See Richard H Stern Kimble Patent Misuse through the Lens of Patent Policy not Antitrust Policy 2016 38 Eur Intell Prop Rev 182 189 The effect of the Kimble decision would seem to be to roll back the line of Federal Circuit decisions culminating in Princo which had made a showing of substantial anti competitive effect in the relevant market an essential element of proof in most misuse cases Kimble reaffirms the doctrine of cases holding that misuse is not antitrust and does not need a showing of actual anticompetitive effect External links editText of National Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co 137 F 2d 255 3d Cir 1943 is available from CourtListener Google Scholar Justia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Lockwasher Co v George K Garrett Co amp oldid 1175147520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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