中文 | PLASTICS NEWS.COM  
 
Saturday
November 21, 2009
News
China Home
China Blog
Business/Economy
Materials
Machinery
Molds/Tooling
Design/Innovation
Environment
Beijing Olympics
Calendar
Opinion
K show Webcast
Trade Associations
End markets
Automotive
Packaging
Consumer Products
Computers/Telecom
Electrical/Electronics
Medical
Building/Construction
Processes
Injection Molding
Extrusion
Blow Molding
Thermoforming
Rotational Molding
Services
About Us
Contact Us
Classified Ads
Advertise
Privacy Policy
Story Reprints
This site is published by Plastics News, Crain Communications' international newspaper for the plastics industry.
 
More Automotive News
 
Gas-assist suit against ADAC dismissed
By Bill Bregar
PLASTICS NEWS REPORT
 
DETROIT (August 11, 2009) -- A court dismissal has ended a gas-assisted molding patent infringement lawsuit filed earlier this year by two affiliates of Gain Technologies Inc. against automotive molder ADAC Plastics Inc.

ADAC lawyer Thomas Young said Melea Ltd. and Plastic Molded Technologies Inc. first wanted $200,000, but the two sides ended up reaching a settlement that brought the price down below the cost of continuing the litigation.

Young declined to say how much the final settlement was worth, but he blasted Gain Technologies, which is owned by Michael Ladney.

“This is the end of the road for the Gain/Melea patents. I think they’re worn out at this point,” Young said. He added that two of the three patents listed in the lawsuit have expired.

A lawyer for Gain, Robert Tuttle, declined to comment on terms of the settlement, which he said is confidential. But Tuttle said: “The Gain/Melea patents are alive and well. They’re still being enforced.”

Melea and PMT sued Grand Rapids, Mich.-based ADAC on Feb. 10. Melea holds the patents marketed by Gain, of Shelby Township, Mich.

The lawsuit was dismissed on July 6 with prejudice — a legal term that means Gain cannot file a new suit against ADAC on those issues.

Gain charged that ADAC infringed its patents by using gas-assist controllers from Alliance Gas Systems Inc., which stopped making gas-assisted molding equipment in 2004 and sold its patented technologies to Cinpres Gas Injection Ltd., a rival to Gain. Cinpres was not named in Gain’s suit.

Tuttle said this marks Gain’s final legal action involving Alliance Gas Systems.

ADAC denied infringing on Melea patents, in court documents filed with the suit in U.S. District Court in Detroit.

ADAC lawyer Young said the lawsuit was weak. “I though the suit was junk and so did the people at ADAC. It was the last suit brought by Melea against a string of injection molding companies just to collect money,” Young said.

ADAC’s in-house lawyer, John Shape, declined to comment. A Gain executive did not return a telephone call for this story.



[ Back | Top ]
 
The PN China Blog








Material Insights

PN reporters Frank Esposito and Bill Bregar cover NPE's possible move.
NPE2009 videos
NPE2009 videos Plastics News' extensive coverage of NPE2009, North America's largest plastics trade show, included 17 news videos shot on-site in Chicago. View the English-language clips here.
Partners
 

Home | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy Policy

Entire contents copyright 2009 by Crain Communications Inc.
All rights reserved.               Terms & Conditions

For information about this web site contact webmaster@plasticsnews.com