American Lecithin Co. v. J. C. Ferguson Mfg. Works, Inc.

19 F. Supp. 294, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1851
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedApril 27, 1937
DocketNo. 530
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 F. Supp. 294 (American Lecithin Co. v. J. C. Ferguson Mfg. Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Lecithin Co. v. J. C. Ferguson Mfg. Works, Inc., 19 F. Supp. 294, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1851 (D.R.I. 1937).

Opinion

MAHONEY, District Judge.

The Americaff Lecithin Company has brought this suit to enjoin contributory infringement by J. C. Ferguson Manufacturing Works, Inc., for an accounting of profits, and for damages. It involves the alleged contributory infringement of United States letters patent No. 1,781,672, issued November 11, 1930, to Earl B. Working on application filed July 16, 1930. The complainant corporation owns the patent by assignment. The specification recites that:

“The alleged invention relates to confectionery and in particular has reference to improving chocolate or other material usually containing a large percentage of cocoa butter, including mixtures of chocolate with added cocoa butter and mixtures of cocoa or chocolate with added fats from other sources, such as are sometimes useful in the confectionery industry, whereby the stability of the resulting product is improved.”

The patent in this case has to do with the chocolate industry in the making of chocolate bars and chocolate coatings which are used by candy manufacturers.

The source of chocolate is the cocoa bean. From a process of roasting and pressing there is developed from the cocoa bean what is known as bitter chocolate, or chocolate liquor. When the temperature is reduced to normal temperature, this solidifies and is then known as “bitter chocolate.” As such it is the basis of the chocolate industry. When mixed with sugar it is known as “sweet chocolate”; when mixed with milk it is known as “milk chocolate.” The bitter chocolate contains a fat which is cocoa butter.

In the making of bar chocolate and chocolate coatings for candy, there is usually added to the bitter chocolate or chocolate liquor an additional amount of cocoa butter, and in the manufacturing of chocolate there has been considerable difficulty in the making of bar chocolate and coatings for candy. During the making of chocolate for bar use or for coatings, the chocolate, under some conditions, turns gray. It also turns gray on the 'shelves and in the windows of the retailers. This has long been recognized by the chocolate trade as undesirable.

The graying may be caused by improper cooling or by some other incident in the manufacture. It is well understood in the chocolate trade that the cocoa butter comes to the surface and causes graying. There are many other different suggestions as to the real cause of it. In the manufacture, if the chocolate is not of the proper fluidity or viscosity, it may turn gray in the making, and it may not allow an even distribution of the chocolate over the chocolate drop. To get the proper fluidity, additional cocoa butter is used and right at that point the graying may arise.

Many attempts have been made to overcome such difficulties. Gums and starches have been added to stabilize the cocoa butter and to prevent graying and at the same time to get the proper fluidity more cocoa butter must be added.

Lecithin is a natural product. It is a phosphatid. It is found in eggs and in vegetable life and in other bodies. It is also extracted from the soya bean.

This patent covers the method and the result of the method of adding lecithin to the chocolate.

In the making of chocolate for coatings or bar chocolate, there is added to the bit[296]*296ter chocolate an optimum amount of lecithin, in accordance with the directions in the patent. This brings about a reduction in the cocoa butter content because the lecithin brings the proper fluidity without the addition of cocoa butter. This addition of an optimum amount of lecithin retards the time of graying. It does not prevent graying. By the use of this added lecithin in the making of chocolate there is a greater tolerance in the times and in the temperature. '

Because lecithin contained phosphatids it had been used principally in connection with health foods in Europe. Attempts had been made to use it in certain articles of food in this country, but they were not followed out. It is maintained that from the experimental work of the patentee came this patent for the use of lecithin in chocolate manufacturing.

The complainant maintains that the chocolate industry did not respond at once to the suggestions made in the patent, and that it has been compelled to expend much time and money in educating the industry in such use. Until now, complainant says, there’ is almost a general adoption of this use of lecithin and much of it has been sold.

; The patent has thirteen claims of which claims numbered 3, 8, and 13 are distinctly involved. The claims are as follows:

“l.- A chocolate mass adapted for coating cores of confectionery, comprising chocolate and a small percentage of added lecithin, the percentage of lecithin being sufficient to at least retard ‘graying/
“2. A chocolate mass adapted for coating cores of confectionery, comprising chocolate and a small percentage of added lecithin, the percentage of lecithin being sufficient to enable the fatty constituents of the mass to be reduced below the amounts heretofore commonly employed, while the viscosity and covering power of the mass are still substantially as good as in the masses heretofore commonly used.
“3. In the art of making confectionery, the herein described improvement which comprises incorporating, at any stage of the manufacture, with confectionery material including chocolate carrying such amounts of fatty material as to be normally subject to ‘graying,’ a sufficient percentage of lecithin to retard ‘graying/
“4. A new material in the confection industry, comprising a chocolate composition suitable for coating candy cores, and containing about 0.1 to 0.5% of lecithin, cores coated with such product being less subject to ‘graying’ at high atmospheric temperature than is ordinary chocolate coating.
“5. A chocolate mass having a consistency and melting point suitable for coating confections, containing a small percentage of lecithin, and containing less thah the usual content of cocoa butter and similar fats.
“6. A chocolate mass having a consistency and melting point suitable for coating candy cores, cakes and the like, containing not substantially over 1% of lecithin, such product having a substantially greater tolerance towards water than has ordinary chocolate coating mass.
“7. In making chocolate confections, the step of incorporating with a chocolate coating material which, by itself, applied as a coating would be liable to ‘graying,’ an amount of lecithin sufficient to reduce such ‘graying’ tendency and coating confectionery cores with such material.
“8. A chocolate coating mass which contains a smaller amount of fat than that normally required for satisfactory dipping, and an amount of lecithin sufficient to impart a sufficient degree of fluidity thereto, to make it satisfactory for application as a coating, by dipping.
“9. In making chocolate confections, the herein described step of adding a small amount, not substantially over 1%, of lecithin, to a chocolate mass, the amount of lecithin so added being sufficient to reduce the ‘graying’ tendency.

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Related

American Lecithin Co. v. Warfield Co.
105 F.2d 207 (Seventh Circuit, 1939)
American Lecithin Co. v. Warfield Co.
23 F. Supp. 326 (N.D. Illinois, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 294, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-lecithin-co-v-j-c-ferguson-mfg-works-inc-rid-1937.