Kenall Manufacturing Company v. Cooper Lighting, LLC et al
Filing
189
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order written by the Honorable Gary Feinerman on 4/16/2019.Mailed notice.(jlj, )
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
KENALL MANUFACTURING COMPANY,
Plaintiff,
vs.
COOPER LIGHTING, LLC, and EATON
CORPORATION,
Defendants.
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17 C 4575
Judge Gary Feinerman
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Kenall Manufacturing Company brought this suit against Cooper Lighting, LLC and
Eaton Corporation (together, “Cooper”), alleging patent infringement and breach of contract in
connection with certain of Cooper’s lighting products. Doc. 1. The patent infringement claims
are directed only against two specific categories of Cooper products defined in the parties’ July
2007 Settlement and License Agreements—the Subject Single Products and the Subject
Continuous Products, referred to together as the Subject Products. Id. at ¶¶ 69-88. In June 2018,
the court dismissed the patent infringement claims except for those directed against Subject
Single Products that Cooper sold after April 1, 2008. Docs. 86-87 (reported at 338 F. Supp. 3d
841 (N.D. Ill. 2018)). Cooper moves for an order clarifying that the surviving patent
infringement claims are limited to those directed against a fixed set of Cooper products identified
in the July 2007 Agreements—and not claims against the LED products, which Cooper
developed after entering into the Agreements and which, unlike the specific products identified
in the Agreements, have LED lamps rather than fluorescent lamps. Doc. 145.
Resolution of this motion turns on whether: (1) as Cooper submits, the term “Subject
Single Products” includes only the fixed set of Cooper products identified in the July 2007
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Agreements; or (2) as Kenall submits, the term also includes Cooper’s LED products. The
License Agreement defines the term “Subject Single Products” as follows:
Whereas, Cooper has heretofore engaged in the manufacture and sale of the
Cooper Fail-Safe Harmony VR Linear Series products, namely, … (b) its 8"
and 12" Linear Single products shown and/or referred to in the Cooper
website documents (eight sheets) and additional photographs (three sheets)
attached as Exhibit B hereof, such products being referred to herein as the
“Subject Single Products” and incorporated herein by reference … .
Doc. 1-1 at p. 35. Exhibit B, in turn, sets forth specifications for two Cooper product families—
the “HVL Single 8" Linear Harmony VR 14W-108W Fluorescent” products, and the “HVL
Single 12" Linear Harmony VR 28W-216W Fluorescent” products, each available in a variety of
configurations identified in the specifications—as well as photos of some of those products. Id.
at pp. 57-68. Cooper contends that, under this definition, Subject Single Products encompass
only the specific products identified in Exhibit B. Doc. 145 at 11-20. Kenall responds that the
definition also encompasses Cooper’s LED products that, although developed after the
Agreement’s execution, are classified by Cooper as part of the two product families identified in
Exhibit B and that, according to Kenall, “retain[] the essential characteristics of the product[s]”
in those product families. Doc. 156 at 3-15.
I.
Judicial Admissions and Forfeiture
Kenall contends at the outset that Cooper’s amended answer, Doc. 93, and brief opposing
Kenall’s first set of Rule 12(c) motions, Doc. 68; see 338 F. Supp. 3d at 851 (denying those
motions), make “judicial admissions” that “all the accused products are Subject Products,” thus
foreclosing Cooper’s current position that the accused LED products are not Subject Single
Products. Doc. 156 at 3-6. “A judicial admission is a statement … that negates a factual claim
that the party making the statement might have made or considered making.” Robinson v.
McNeil Consumer Healthcare, 615 F.3d 861, 872 (7th Cir. 2010). “[I]n order to qualify as [a]
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judicial admission[],” the statement “must be deliberate, clear and unambiguous.” Ibid. (internal
quotation marks omitted). The statements identified by Kenall are not judicial admissions.
First, Kenall points to ¶ 36 of Cooper’s amended answer. Doc. 156 at 5-6 & n.1. In
response to the complaint’s allegation in ¶ 36 that “Kenall has not at any time asserted, and does
not now assert, the Subject Patents against Cooper products other than the Subject Products,”
Cooper answered: “Defendants admit that Kenall has not asserted infringement of the Subject
Patents by Defendants other than as set forth in the [earlier lawsuit that led to the Settlement and
License Agreements] and its current Complaint.” Doc. 93 at ¶ 36. That answer admits that
Kenall has not asserted the Subject Patents other than in its two lawsuits, while deferring to the
License Agreement’s definitions and the complaint’s allegations as to whether the complaint
asserts the Subject Patents only against Subject Products. Ibid. Kenall submits that by making a
partial admission without specifically denying the other allegations in ¶ 36 of the complaint,
Cooper in fact admitted the remaining allegations, too. Doc. 156 at 5 n.1. Kenall is incorrect.
True enough, Rule 8(b)(6) provides in pertinent part that “[a]n allegation … is admitted if
a responsive pleading is required and the allegation is not denied.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(b)(6). But
Cooper’s answer includes a general denial, stating that Cooper “den[ies] each and every
allegation contained in the Complaint that was not specifically admitted above.” Doc. 93 at
p. 25. Accordingly, ¶ 36 of Cooper’s answer admits only what it says it admits and nothing else.
See Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(b)(3) (“A party that does not intend to deny all the allegations must either
specifically deny designated allegations or generally deny all except those specifically
admitted.”) (emphasis added). Paragraph 36 of Cooper’s answer therefore does not contradict
Cooper’s current position that LED products are not Subject Single Products. Indeed, Cooper’s
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answer denies every allegation in the complaint suggesting that the LED products are Subject
Single Products. Doc. 93 at ¶¶ 71, 73, 75, 80.
Next, Kenall points to Cooper’s Rule 12(c) opposition brief, in which Cooper argued that
Kenall “asserts infringement [only] for products covered in the License Agreement” given that
¶ 36 of the complaint alleges that the patent infringement claims are “limited to the Subject
Patents and [are] against only Subject Products.” Doc. 68 at 5, 7 (citing Doc. 1 at ¶ 36).
Cooper’s use of Kenall’s concession that all the accused products are covered by the License
Agreement to defend against Kenall’s patent infringement claims does not amount to a
deliberate, clear, and unambiguous admission that the Agreement’s definition of Subject Single
Products includes the LED products. The issue discussed in Cooper’s brief was not which
products fell into which category, but whether Kenall, by granting Cooper a license, had
“relinquished its right to sue Cooper for patent infringement,” leaving it with only a contractual
remedy for Cooper’s alleged breaches of the Agreement. 338 F. Supp. 3d at 845.
Kenall also cites Cooper’s original answer—which the amended answer superseded—in
arguing that Cooper acknowledged “that there is ‘no disput[ing]’” that the LED products are
Subject Single Products. Doc. 156 at 5-6 (alteration in original) (citing Doc. 34 at pp. 3-4, which
is the redacted version of Doc. 30 at pp. 3-4). The pages of Cooper’s original answer cited by
Kenall consist of responses to jurisdictional allegations that have nothing to do with the
definition of Subject Single Products, and no form of the words “no disput[ing]” appears either
there or anywhere else in the answer. Doc. 30 at pp. 3-4, ¶¶ 7-12.
For these reasons, Kenall fails to establish that Cooper made judicial admissions that the
LED products are properly characterized as Subject Single Products. Kenall argues in the
alternative that Cooper forfeited its position that the LED products are not Subject Single
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Products by failing to press it in opposing Kenall’s Rule 12(f) motion to strike Cooper’s
affirmative defenses. Doc. 156 at 7-9; see Docs. 123-124 (reported at 354 F. Supp. 3d 877 (N.D.
Ill. 2018)) (granting in part the motion). But given that Kenall’s Rule 12(f) motion did not
mention LED products, Doc. 97, and that the court’s June 2018 ruling had already limited
Kenall’s patent infringement claims to those directed against Subject Single Products, 338 F.
Supp. 3d at 851, it would not have made sense for Cooper to argue in its Rule 12(f) opposition
brief that LED products are not Subject Single Products. Cooper therefore did not forfeit its
argument that LED products are not Subject Single Products.
II.
Merits
The License Agreement is governed by Illinois law. 338 F. Supp. 3d at 847; 354 F. Supp.
3d at 882, 884; Doc. 1-1 at p. 41, § 14 (Illinois choice-of-law provision). “The basic rules of
contract interpretation under Illinois law are well settled. In construing a contract, the primary
objective is to give effect to the intention of the parties.” Right Field Rooftops, LLC v. Chi. Cubs
Baseball Club, LLC, 870 F.3d 682, 689-90 (7th Cir. 2017). “A court must initially look to the
language of a contract alone, as the language, given its plain and ordinary meaning, is the best
indication of the parties’ intent.” Id. at 690 (quoting Gallagher v. Lenart, 874 N.E.2d 43, 58 (Ill.
2007)). “Moreover, because words derive their meaning from the context in which they are
used, a contract must be construed as a whole, viewing each part in light of the others.”
Gallagher, 874 N.E.2d at 58. “If the words in the contract are clear and unambiguous, they must
be given their plain, ordinary and popular meaning.” Right Field Rooftops, 870 F.3d at 690
(quoting Cent. Ill. Light Co. v. Home Ins. Co., 821 N.E.2d 206, 213 (Ill. 2004)). By contrast,
“[i]f the language of the contract is susceptible to more than one meaning, it is ambiguous,” and
in that event “a court may consider extrinsic evidence to ascertain the parties’ intent.”
Gallagher, 874 N.E.2d at 58.
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Reading the License Agreement as a whole, Subject Single Products are unambiguously
defined as the fixed set of Cooper products specifically identified in Exhibit B, and therefore do
not include Cooper’s LED products, which Cooper developed after entering into the Agreement.
First, the definition itself—which says that Subject Single Products are Cooper’s “8" and 12"
Linear Single products shown and/or referred to in the Cooper website documents (eight sheets)
and additional photographs (three sheets) attached as Exhibit B,” Doc. 1-1 at p. 35—and
Exhibit B, which contains specification sheets for two Cooper product families and photos of
specific products from those families, id. at pp. 57-68, make clear that the term “Subject Single
Products” encompasses only the specific products identified in the Agreement, not those
products plus any others that are similarly marketed and that differ only in ways that, according
to Kenall, are “irrelevant [to] both the Settlement/License Agreement and [to] the Subject
Patents.” Doc. 156 at 10. Put another way, the definition itself plainly conveys that the question
whether a given product is a Subject Single Product turns exclusively on whether that product
appears in Exhibit B’s eleven pages. On Kenall’s interpretation, by contrast, answering that
question would require determining whether the product either appears in Exhibit B or is similar
to products that appear in Exhibit B in ways relevant to the Subject Patents—a determination that
resembles an infringement analysis, and that thus threatens to erode the Agreement’s distinction
between “the Subject Products,” which are the only products targeted by Kenall’s patent
infringement claims, and “any other products within the scope of the Subject Patents,” against
which Kenall does not assert its infringement claims, Doc. 1-1 at p. 36, § 1.
The definition’s context reinforces the conclusion that Subject Single Products are the
products specifically identified in Exhibit B, not an ever-evolving set of similar products. Recall
how the definition begins: “Cooper has heretofore engaged in the manufacture and sale of the
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Cooper Fail-Safe Harmony VR Linear Series products, namely, (a) … the ‘Subject Continuous
Products,” and (b) … the ‘Subject Single Products’ … , such Subject Single Products and
Subject Continuous Products collectively being referred to herein as the ‘Subject Products.’” Id.
at p. 35 (emphasis added). The ordinary meaning of “namely” is “[b]y name or particular
mention; that is to say.” Namely, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014); see also ibid. (“The
term indicates what is to be included by name.”). Accordingly, the Agreement unambiguously
conveys that the Subject Single Products (along with the Subject Continuous Products, which are
not at issue here) are the Cooper Fail-Safe Harmony VR Linear Series products that Cooper had
manufactured and sold before signing the Agreement in July 2007. It follows that the set of
Subject Single Products was fixed at the time of the Agreement; Cooper cannot have “engaged in
the manufacture and sale” before July 2007 of products, such as its LED products, that did not
yet exist.
Further confirmation comes from the Agreement’s provisions giving Cooper until
January 1, 2008 to redesign “the Subject Single Product to have a one-piece end unit instead of
the current two-piece end unit,” and adding that if Cooper needed more time to implement the
redesign, it could “continue selling Subject Single Products” through April 1, 2008, subject to a
five percent royalty. Doc. 1-1 at pp. 36-37, §§ 2, 5.C. Those provisions reflect an understanding
of Subject Single Products as a fixed set of products already on the market, as it is not possible to
redesign or to continue to sell products that do not yet exist. It follows that Cooper’s LED
products cannot possibly be Subject Single Products.
Kenall’s arguments to the contrary fail to persuade. First, Kenall contends that LED
versions of the specific products identified in Exhibit B should be considered Subject Single
Products because “the whole … Agreement is concerned (like the Subject Patents) with the
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nature of the fixture structure, especially [its] end units,” while “[t]he type of lamp [i.e., LED or
fluorescent] is completely irrelevant.” Doc. 156 at 10. Had the parties intended to define
Subject Single Products to include future products with end units equivalent to those used in the
products identified in Exhibit B, they could have said so. Indeed, other definitions in the
Agreement show that when the parties wanted a definition to encompass future developments,
they said so. Doc. 1-1 at p. 35 (defining “Subject Patents” to include U.S. Patent No. 6,984,055
“and any additional existing and future United States and foreign patents and applications …
claiming priority to [that patent’s parent application], and any parents, divisionals, continuations,
continuations-in-part, substitutions, reissues, reexaminations, renewals and extensions of any of
the foregoing patents or patent applications”); id. at p. 36, § 1 (defining “Licensed Products” as
“the Subject Products and any other products within the scope of the Subject Patents”). The fact
that the parties did not do so with respect to the definition of Subject Single Products must be
given effect. See Right Field Rooftops, 870 F.3d at 690 (“When parties to the same contract
use … different language to address parallel issues[,] it is reasonable to infer that they intend this
language to mean different things.”) (alterations and internal quotation marks omitted);
Taracorp, Inc. v. NL Indus., Inc., 73 F.3d 738, 744-46 (7th Cir. 1996) (“If NL had wanted to
limit its … obligation to real property contamination, it knew perfectly well how to do so. … NL
could have insisted upon the language … it used so consistently [elsewhere in the contract].
Instead, NL agreed to a broad indemnity provision, and it is stuck with that provision.”). The
court’s “prime objective” in interpreting a contract under Illinois law is “to effectuate the intent
of the parties,” and the way to do that is to “enforc[e] the contract as the parties have written it.”
Land of Lincoln Goodwill Indus., Inc. v. PNC Fin. Servs. Grp., 762 F.3d 673, 679 (7th Cir.
2014).
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Second, Kenall argues that because the specification sheets in Exhibit B state that
“[s]pecifications and dimensions [are] subject to change without notice,” e.g., Doc. 1-1 at p. 60,
and because “lamp type” is a specification, id. at pp. 60, 64 (capitalization altered), laterdeveloped LED products are “referred to” in Exhibit B in that the change from fluorescent to
LED lamps was a change in specifications that the specification sheets contemplated. Doc. 156
at 10-13. Kenall’s understanding of what Exhibit B “refer[s] to” is inconsistent with the
Agreement’s clear language. As discussed above, the Agreement unambiguously defines
Subject Single Products as a fixed set of products manufactured and sold by Cooper before
July 2007, not a set of products open to future expansion. Kenall’s view that the words “referred
to” smuggle in innumerable potential changes to specifications and dimensions set forth in
Exhibit B cannot be reconciled with the Agreement’s treatment of Subject Single Products as a
fixed set. See Curia v. Nelson, 587 F.3d 824, 829 (7th Cir. 2009) (“In construing contracts, to
determine their intent, it is long established that a construction should be adopted, if possible, …
which harmonizes all the various parts so that no provision is deemed conflicting with, or
repugnant to, or neutralizing of any other.”) (quoting Coney v. Rockford Life Ins. Co., 214
N.E.2d 1, 3 (Ill. App. 1966)); U.S. Fire Ins. Co. v. Hartford Ins. Co., 726 N.E.2d 126, 128 (Ill.
App. 2000) (“A strained, forced, unnatural, or unreasonable construction [of a contract], or one
which would lead to an absurd result, must not be adopted.”).
Conclusion
Cooper’s motion to clarify is granted. In dismissing Kenall’s patent infringement claims
except as to Subject Single Products that Cooper sold after April 1, 2008, the court used the term
“Subject Single Products” as defined in the License Agreement, and the Agreement defines
Subject Single Products to include only the fixed set of products specifically identified in
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Exhibit B. The definition does not include the LED products, which Cooper developed later, and
therefore neither do Kenall’s surviving patent infringement claims.
This holding is the result of the bed that Kenall itself made. As noted at the outset,
Kenall limited its patent infringement claims to Cooper’s Subject Products. Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 69-88.
Kenall did so to give itself a clearer path to prevailing on those claims, as Cooper agreed in the
License Agreement that, if Kenall brought an infringement suit against Cooper accusing only the
Subject Products, Cooper would not contest the validity or enforceability of Kenall’s patents or
dispute that the Subject Products infringe Kenall’s patents. Doc. 1-1 at pp. 41-42, § 15; 354
F. Supp. 3d at 885-88. Kenall must live with the consequences of that choice.
April 16, 2019
United States District Judge
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