Automotive Body Parts Association v. Ford Global Technologies, LLC, No. 18-1613 (Fed. Cir. 2019)
Annotate this CaseFord’s design patents relating to F-150 trucks are titled “Exterior of Vehicle Hood” and “Vehicle Head Lamp.” Before the International Trade Commission, Ford accused members of an association of companies that distribute automotive body parts (ABPA) of infringing the patents. The ITC actions settled; the ALJ rejected an argument that the asserted patents do not comply with the ornamentality requirement of 35 U.S.C. 171, and stated that there was no legal basis for a claim of unenforceability based on either the patent exhaustion or permissible repair doctrines. ABPA sought a declaratory judgment of invalidity or unenforceability. The Federal Circuit affirmed summary judgment in favor of Ford, first noting that a design patent protects a “new, original and ornamental design for an article of manufacture” while utility patents must be functional to be patentable. The court rejected ABPA’s argument that consumers seeking replacement parts prefer hoods and headlamps that restore the original appearance of their vehicles so that there is a functional benefit to designs that are aesthetically compatible with those vehicles. If customers prefer the “peculiar or distinctive appearance” of Ford’s designs over that of other designs that perform the same mechanical or utilitarian functions, that is the market advantage “manifestly contemplate[d]” by the design patent laws. The court also rejected ABPA’s contention that Ford’s patents are unenforceable against its members under the related doctrines of exhaustion and repair.
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