Alfred Hale Rubber Co. v. Morse & Burt Co.

10 F.2d 843, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 964
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 843 (Alfred Hale Rubber Co. v. Morse & Burt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alfred Hale Rubber Co. v. Morse & Burt Co., 10 F.2d 843, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 964 (E.D.N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

Plaintiff seeks in this action to restrain the alleged infringement by the defendants of patent No. 1,479,497, issued by the United States Patent Office to David A. Cutler, dated January 1, 1924, and to recover damages. The defendants have interposed the answer of invalidity and noninfringement.

No evidence of any sort has been presented that in any way connects the defendant Cantilever Shoe Shop, Inc., with the alleged infringement; therefore the complaint should be dismissed as to them, with costs.

The patent in suit is for the process of attaching rubber soles to boots and shoes. The invention is said by the patentee in his specification to primarily consist in' his “method of applying and securing the outer rubber or yielding sole or Combined sole and heel to the shoe, independently of stitching the same, and in a manner to conceal, protect, and cover the stitching, if any, utilized [844]*844.in the construction of the shoe to which the elastic outsole is applied.”

In carrying out his invention, the patentee says in his specification that he makes the shoe — either welt or McKay. — in the usual manner, but that he secures, during the process of manufacture, “a thin rubber layer or intermediate sole to the shoe insole or to the attached welt. This may be by the usual welt stitching or McKay stitching. Preferably also I form this thin rubber sole of unvuleanized rubber, or a suitable rubber compound. I then prepare the main outer sole, also of yielding material, such as unvuleanized rubber or vuleanizable rubber compound of suitable size, thickness, and shape to complete the outsole of the shoe. I then coat the contacting surfaces or one of the surfaces and apply the outer sole to the previously attached rubber sole, preferably a thin strip or intermediate sole. These contacting surfaces are coated with a suitable solvent, which will act on the rubber itself to partially dissolve the same and permit the two soles by slight pressure and in a short space of time to. become thoroughly and substantially integrally united.”

The patentee also says, in his specification, “that, where unvuleanized rubber is employed as at the outer sole and preferably also as the intermediate sole, a coating of benzol or the like will sufficiently dissolve the contacting and coaeting' faces of the two soles as to practically and solidly unify the rubber in both. * * ” ”

The patent in suit is not limited to crepe rubber, but the midsole is described as “preferably” made of “unvuleanized rubber” or a suitable rubber compound, and the main or outer sole the patentee says may be “unvuleanized rubber” or “vuleanizable rubber eom•pound.”

A rubber compound is a mechanical mixture of crude rubber, with other materials such as sulphur or pigments. This is quite different from crepe rubber, and a vulcanizable rubber compound is a compounded rubber in condition to be vulcanized, and this surely does not describe crepe rubber.

Crepe rubber is mentioned but once in the patent, and that is in the specification where it is said, “The outsole, also of suitable rubber, preferably Colombo or other raw, unvuleanized rubber such as crepe, or latex. * * * »

The patent has but one claim, which reads ■as follows:

“The improved process of attaching to footwear two layers of unvuleanized rubber unified into a single outsole, which consists in providing two solelike layers, each of less thickness than that of the combined out-sole, first applying one layer to the footwear and securing the same thereto by mechanical fastenings, then partially dissolving either or both of the contacting surfaces of the layers to be united, and then applying and holding the Outer layer to the surface of the mechanically attached layer, until the partially dissolved surfaces become unified, whereby .a complete solidified outersole of unvuleanized rubber is produced, haying the mechanical attachments concealed therein.”

The shoe made and sold by the defendant Morse & Burt Company (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1) is stipulated to have been made as follows: “By first mechanically fastening a layer of ‘crepe’ rubber to the shoe, then coating the outer surface of said layer with benzol and the surface of another layer with benzol, then placing the two coated surfaces together, and holding them in position until the two layers adhered to each other.”

The rubber used by the defendant in its shoe in evidence is unvuleanized rubber, and benzol is a solvent, therefore, if the patent in suit is valid, no further consideration will be required of the question of infringement.

The defendant in its brief relies on the defense of invalidity. The defendant offered in evidence the following patents of the prior art:

British patent No. 1987, A. D. 1858, issued to Warne, for improvements in the construction of elastic pavements, etc., discloses that the use of a solvent to make two pieces of unvuleanized rubber adhere together is old.

United States patent No. 34,682, issued to Godfrey, for improvement in india rubber boots and shoes, dated March 18, 1862, discloses double india rubber soles, each vulcanized, which are so formed that they will adhere to each other when cement is applied without being held pressed together.

United States patent No. 616,470, issued to Kennedy, for rubber soled leather shoe, dated December 27, 1898, discloses a leather upper provided with the usual insole. Secured to the upper by mechanical means is a layer formed of leather, which extends out beyond the edge of the upper, a middle sole formed of textile material impregnated with rubber, which is of the same size and shape as the said layer of leather, and secured thereto by mechanical means, and may also be secured to the upper by mechanical means, but such fastenings are independent of the [845]*845fastenings to said layer and an outer sole and heel which are vulcanized to the outer surface of the middle sole without any mechanical fastenings.

United States patent No. 790,558, issued to Butterfield, for composite boot or shoe, dated May 23,1905, discloses a layer of leather called the middle sole, and a layer of vulcanized rubber called the tread sole. Butter-field is doing in a slightly different way just what Kennedy was doing.

United States patent No. 1,306,996, issued to Brown, for shoe, dated June 17, 1919, discloses a shoe bottom made of more than one layer of material, the insole being mechanically secured, the middle sole being in part mechanically secured, the outside sole and heel put in place, and the shoe is vulcanized, thus having an outer sole which is not secured by any mechanical fastenings. The patentee says: “My invention relates to a new and improved shoe of a character which can be manufactured by the methods commonly employed in a rubber shoe factory, as distinguished from methods commonly employed in a leather boot and shoe factory.”

The defendant also offered British patent No. 200,383, issued to Greengate and Irwell Rubber Company, Limited, and Walter Hubbard, effective date July 12,1923. This patent is not prior art, and was offered by defendant “to show people all over the world were doing the same thing at the same time;” the application date being July 22, 1922.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 843, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 964, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alfred-hale-rubber-co-v-morse-burt-co-nyed-1926.