Permagrain Products v. US Mat & Rubber Co.

Decision Date24 April 1980
Docket NumberCiv. A. No. 78-1967.
Citation489 F. Supp. 108
PartiesPERMAGRAIN PRODUCTS, INC. v. U. S. MAT & RUBBER CO., INC.
CourtU.S. District Court — Eastern District of Pennsylvania

John T. Clary, Philadelphia, Pa., for plaintiff.

Richard H. Elliott, Doylestown, Pa., for defendant.

SUR PLEADINGS AND PROOF

LUONGO, District Judge.

Plaintiff, Permagrain Products, Inc., manufactures a vinyl-laminated wood floor covering product, Genuwood, which it advertises as a unique combination of attractiveness and durability. Permagrain contends that an employee of its predecessor in interest learned trade secrets necessary to produce Genuwood, and then revealed this technology to U.S. Mat & Rubber Co., Inc., which proceeded to market Naturwood, a product which Permagrain alleges is quite similar to the original version of Genuwood. Although Naturwood was not widely sold, and is not currently produced, Permagrain contends that if it is marketed the two products will be confused, and that Permagrain will suffer injury because Naturwood is an inferior product likely to have problems after installation, and its bad reputation will carry over to Genuwood. Permagrain seeks to enjoin U.S. Mat from manufacturing Naturwood or any similar product until 1983. U.S. Mat contends that it did not appropriate any trade secrets in producing Naturwood, but rather employed methods widespread in the art of lamination at that time.

The matter was tried on December 3, 1979. Thereafter the parties submitted requests for findings of fact and conclusions of law, together with briefs on the legal issues. On pleadings and proof, I make the following

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff is Permagrain Products, Inc., a Pennsylvania corporation with its principal place of business in Pennsylvania, engaged in the manufacture of wood products.

2. Defendant is U.S. Mat & Rubber Co., Inc., a Massachusetts corporation with its principal place of business in Massachusetts, engaged in the manufacture of various floor coverings.

3. Starting in 1976, Permagrain began to manufacture Genuwood, a vinyl-laminated wood floor covering product which is used in high-traffic areas where conventional wood floors ordinarily cannot be used for lack of durability.

4. Permagrain purchased the technology to make Genuwood from ARCO Chemical Company in July, 1976. ARCO Chemical had purchased the technology from General Electric Company in February, 1976, which acquired it when Parkwood Laminates, Inc. became a division of General Electric in 1974.

5. Genuwood is constructed in a series of layers: a top layer of clear vinyl, a second layer of overlapped wood veneer, 1/85th of an inch in thickness, a third layer comprised of a fiberglass screen, providing dimensional stability, a fourth layer, of vinyl, and a final layer, consisting of a patented bondable surface with a peel-off adhesive over an alpha impregnated cellulose layer.

6. Starting in 1977, U.S. Mat began to manufacture Naturwood, a floor covering product with the same general uses as Genuwood.

7. Naturwood is constructed in a series of layers: a top layer of clear vinyl, a second layer of wood veneer, 1/30th of an inch thick, the edges of which are glued, five layers of core vinyl, and a back layer of asbestos felt.

8. Victor J. Dossi was an employee of Parkwood, and continued with Parkwood after its takeover by General Electric. He was in charge of quality control for the Genuwood process.

9. When General Electric was negotiating to sell the Genuwood process, Dossi contacted one of the bidders with an offer to work for it and develop a similar product in the event that it did not acquire the rights to Genuwood from General Electric.

10. Dossi left General Electric in September, 1976, and was employed by U.S. Mat & Rubber in March, 1977.

11. Some three to four months later, as a result of Dossi's efforts, U.S. Mat began to manufacture Naturwood.

12. Dossi admits having learned the general methods used to produce Genuwood while working at General Electric, but denies copying or taking any records of a technical nature from General Electric.

13. Lamination of wood and vinyl through the use of pressure and heat was a technique known to the art of plastics lamination in 1977, although the rate of success for this type of lamination was not high.

14. Permagrain's patent for Genuwood claims protection only for the bondable back surface of the product. The patent discloses in some detail the design and the material composition of the product, as well as the method of assembly, including the range of temperatures and pounds of pressure for lamination, but it claimed no patent protection for them.

15. The material composition of the product may also be discovered from Permagrain's advertising, and from the product itself, which can be dissected into its component parts.

16. Both Genuwood and Naturwood involve the lamination of wood and vinyl through heat and pressure. However, aside from the top layer of clear vinyl, there are significant differences in construction. Naturwood's top veneer is thicker, and glued together; it has five layers of core vinyl, rather than Genuwood's fiberglass screen; and it has an asbestos backing, rather than Genuwood's patented bondable surface. Furthermore, the lamination processes for each differ in press temperature and pressure.

17. When installed on a floor, the products can be distinguished by the naked eye, in that Naturwood has visible glue lines, whereas Genuwood does not.

18. At least two other companies manufactured similar products in 1977.

19. Several years' experimentation were required before Genuwood was perfected. U.S. Mat had difficulty in perfecting Naturwood, and production of it was discontinued after only a small quantity was manufactured. It is not currently being produced.

20. U.S. Mat never attempted, through its advertising or otherwise, to portray Naturwood as being Genuwood, or to confuse potential consumers of the two products as to the origin of Naturwood.

DISCUSSION

Permagrain seeks injunctive relief prohibiting U.S. Mat from manufacturing or marketing Naturwood for a period of three years, which it claims is justified on several grounds.

First, in its complaint, Permagrain alleged that U.S. Mat violated the Pennsylvania Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, 73 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 201-1, et seq. Section 201-2(4) of the Act prohibits the passing off of goods and services as those of another. Assuming for purposes of argument that the Act is applicable in this case, there is simply no evidence that U.S. Mat ever attempted to pass off its product, Naturwood, as being the same as or in any way connected with Genuwood. (Finding 20.) It does not follow that, simply because the products have similar uses and a somewhat similar appearance, U.S. Mat is attempting to pass off its product as being the same as Permagrain's product. Furthermore, under Pennsylvania law, Permagrain does not have a private cause of action against U.S. Mat, since the Act limits private suits to goods purchased by consumers for their personal use. 73 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 201-9.2. See Commonwealth by Packel v. Ziomek, 352 A.2d 235 (Pa.Cmwlth.1976).

Permagrain also alleged in its complaint that U.S. Mat has violated the Lanham Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1125(a). Section 1125(a) prohibits a manufacturer from using a false description or designation of origin of a product. As noted above, there simply is no evidence that U.S. Mat did so in the marketing of Naturwood.

Permagrain's strongest possible ground for relief is that U.S. Mat wrongfully made use of Permagrain's trade secrets in producing Naturwood. Theft of trade secrets is a common law tort governed by the applicable state law, in this case the law of Massachusetts.1

"The essence of the wrong is the obtaining of unjust enrichment and unfair competitive advantage through inequitable conduct, usually a breach of confidence. In particular . . . the courts rather consistently impose liability on a proprietor of a business who employs unfair means, characterized by breach of confidence, to acquire otherwise undisclosed plans...

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