Aluminum Colors, Inc. v. United States Research Corp. & Technical Metal Finishing Corp.

5 F. Supp. 961, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1918
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 13, 1934
DocketNo. 6814
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 961 (Aluminum Colors, Inc. v. United States Research Corp. & Technical Metal Finishing Corp.) 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
Aluminum Colors, Inc. v. United States Research Corp. & Technical Metal Finishing Corp., 5 F. Supp. 961, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1918 (E.D.N.Y. 1934).

Opinion

BYERS, District Judge.

The plaintiff, as assignee of the patentee, sues in equity for infringement of Flick United States patent No. 1,526,127, issued February 10, 1925, application filed July 10, 1923, for “Coating Aluminum Articles.” The claims involved are numbers 5 and 10, namely:

“5. The process of coloring the surface of aluminum, which comprises providing the aluminum with an absorbent and adherent * (eleetrolytieally produced) coating of oxide of aluminum and treating the aluminum with a lake-forming dye.”
“10. An aluminum article having on its surface a dense, absorbent and adherent ‘(electrolytic) coating of aluminum oxide combined throughout its depth with a lake-forming dye, the coating being resistant to abrasion and to injury by bending the article.”

’‘•Result of disclaimer.

The changes indicated by parentheses were embodied in a disclaimer filed on or about May 27, 1933.

The trial began on June 19, 1933, and closed on. June 30th. Argument was had on October 30, 1933, and thereafter the minutes were corrected and final briefs filed.

The purpose of the patent, so far as the process is concerned, is to color aluminum by creating eleetrolytieally, on the surface of the metal, a film into which dye is introduced; the result of the operation of the process is that the metallic surface of the metal is overlaid by a coating which is a combination of the aluminum itself with nascent oxygen eleetrolytieally liberated at the anode of an electric circuit, which anode is the aluminum object itself, and this coating accepts dye of the character referred to in the patent.

That the metal when so colored is rendered widely adaptable for commercial use not previously deemed appropriate, is obvious.

Both parties practice the same process, and the differences, if any, are stipulated to be unimportant; that is to say, an electrolyte composed of about 7 per cent, of sulphuric acid in water is used, and the article upon which the film is to be formed constitutes the anode, and the container of the electrolyte is the cathode in the circuit; an electric current of about 12 to 15 volts, having a current density of from 15 to 18 amperes per square foot of exposed surface, is applied for about forty minutes; the film is [962]*962thereby created, and the anode is then detached from the circuit, rinsed in clear water and immersed in a coloring solution composed of organic dye in water solution, for such time as may be required — from one to fifteen minutes — depending upon the shading desired of a given color, and the dye solution is maintained at a temperature of from 30° to 60° C.

That the practice of the parties is substantially similar was conceded, and what has been said paraphrases the testimony as to the plaintiff’s methods; the defendants’ practice is not the subject of testimony on the part of any one who has observed it.

The most important issue in the case is 'whether the sulphuric acid electrolyte, and the current density applied in connection therewith, are within the teaching of the patent.

The defendants argue that, if such practice is within the teaching of the patent, the latter is invalid, for want of invention. If not, that they do not infringe.

In order to understand the principal issue, the Flick patent must be explained,

The recital states that the invention relates to the coating of aluminum, and that the invention has to do with coated aluminum articles, and with a process for coating them; namely, aluminum as such and finished articles fabricated therefrom. Reference is made to the ready acquisition by aluminum of a superficial film of oxide, and that such films or coatings have been proposed for various purposes, such as protection against corrosion, electric insulation, etc., and that the coatings theretofore known were unsatisfactory; the deficiencies are pointed out, namely, lack of adherence, resulting in ready scaling or breaking off of the film from the articles, particularly upon bending, and the patentee says that he has found that such oxide coatings are incapable of being satisfactorily colored because of being thin and non-absorbent.

Flick sought to provide a commercially practical process for forming on aluminum articles a dense, absorbent and adherent coating of aluminum oxide, combined with a coloring substance, which coating is resistant to abrasion and does not crack or peel off upon bending, and is combined throughout its depth with a dye.

In the practice of his invention, so far as the coating or film alone is concerned, the article is employed as an anode in the electrolysis of an aqueous solution containing ammonia, and preferably also ammonium sulphide; the electrolysis of the electrolyte being effected in an electrolytic eell suitable in size and in current capacity to the requirements.

The amount of ammonia or ammonium sulphide in the electrolyte may vary from 2 per cent, to 25 per cent., and the variations are discussed.

The patentee goes on to discuss the voltage required for forming the land of film desired. He says that satisfactory coatings have been produced with a current density as low as three and as high as twenty-five or more amperes per square inch of the article being coated, and that it is customarily so high that heating of the electrolyte solution cannot be avoided without resort to artificial cooling.

He describes how the article sought to be coated is first cleansed and then made anode in an electrolytic cell containing “* * * an electrolyte such as explained. It has been found by way of a specific example, that by using as the electrolyte an ammonium sulphide solution of the proportions stated, and by using anode and cathode areas of six square inches each, and a potential difference of two hundred and twenty volts between the electrodes, the initial current density is twelve amperes per square inch, and a very satisfactory coating of aluminum oxide is completely formed on the anode article in from one to two minutes. Under these conditions the current density falls off rapidly as the coating is formed and is only about 2.5 amperes per square inch at the end of two minutes.”

The aluminum oxide coating so formed is then described as to its appearance and physical qualities.

An advantage of the process, according to the patentee, is the rapidity with which the coating is formed, “whereas in the formation of inferior oxides by the prior art processes extended periods of time may be required.”

Coming now to the coloring aspect of the process, the patentee says that his invention contemplates a colored coating for aluminum articles. Incidental to the process that has been explained, different colored coatings may be formed, depending upon the particular electrolyte solution used, and upon the constituent elements which form an aluminum base alloy to be coated. He says: “The use of an electrolyte containing ammonium sulphide gives a coating which is bluish-gray in color. When the article being coated is [963]*963an aluminum-copper alloy, the coating usually has a decided greenish tinge. By omitting the sulphide from the electrolyte solution, a light cream-colored coating is produced.”

He goes on to say that the coating produced by the process is absorbent, which permits permanent dyeing of the coating to produce a wide variety of colors.

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Related

Aluminum Colors, Inc. v. United States Research Corp.
7 F. Supp. 609 (E.D. New York, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 961, 1934 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aluminum-colors-inc-v-united-states-research-corp-technical-metal-nyed-1934.