Ford Motor Co has been sued for allegedly infringing a patent that covers a fuel-injection system it uses in its top-selling F-150 truck.
According to a federal complaint made public on Thursday, TMC Fuel Injection System LLC of Wayne, Pennsylvania, is the assignee and owner of the January 2008 patent, which covers a fuel flow process that improves fuel economy, cuts exhaust emissions and reduces idle speed.
It was invented in 2002 by a Harvard University-trained engineer that TMC employed, Shou Hou, who in later years communicated several times with Ford personnel about TMC, possibly licensing the technology to the automaker, the complaint said.
TMC said that in August 2008, Ford decided against licensing the technology but has been incorporating it in vehicles, including the F-150.
Saying it has been “irreparably harmed” by Ford’s “willful and deliberate” infringement, TMC is seeking a halt to any infringement, plus compensatory and triple damages.
Ford spokesman Todd Nissen declined to comment and said the Dearborn, Michigan-based automaker had just learned about the lawsuit.
TMC filed its case with the U.S. District Court in Philadelphia.
Robert Sachs, a partner at Shrager, Spivey & Sachs, who represents TMC, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Ford’s F-Series pickups are by far the largest-selling vehicle in the United States, as reported by automakers.
Sales totaled 350,455 from January to July, 44 percent higher than No. 2-ranked Toyota Camry, and 57 percent higher than the F-Series’ main rival, the Chevrolet Silverado-C/K.
Ford shares fell 3 cents to $9.29 in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
The case is TMC Fuel Injection System LLC v. Ford Motor Co, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, No. 12-04971.
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