Amiesite Asphalt Co. of America v. Interstate Amiesite Co.

4 F. Supp. 504, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1250
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedAugust 21, 1933
DocketNo. 942
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 504 (Amiesite Asphalt Co. of America v. Interstate Amiesite Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amiesite Asphalt Co. of America v. Interstate Amiesite Co., 4 F. Supp. 504, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1250 (D. Del. 1933).

Opinion

NIELDS, District Judge.

Amiesite Asphalt Company of America^ filed its bill of complaint charging the defendant, the Interstate Amiesite Company, with (1) unfair competition in trade in the-use of the word “Amiesite,” and (2) infringement of plaintiff’s registered trade-mark “Amiesite” for a “paving.composition comprising crushed stones coated with asphaltic or other bituminous, resinous, or carbonaceous matter.”

Defendant answers that the right to the-use of the trade-name “Amiesite” passed into the public domain in 1926 upon the expiration of certain United States patents granted to Joseph Hay Amies in 1909; and that the alleged trade-mark “Amiesite” was void because it had never been used to signify the-source or origin of the patented paving material or pavement, and had been procured by a false representation that it had been soused. Defendant also in its answer by way of counterclaim alleges that it has suffered-substantial loss in its business as the result' of plaintiff’s threats and false representations, to defendant’s customers and to the-public, that defendant could not make or sell Amiesite, and that those who bought defendant’s product could be sued for infringement.

In 1909 the long search of Dr. Joseph-[505]*505Hay Amies for a “cold mix” in the paving art culminated in the granting of seven patents, the adoption of “Amiesite” as the trade-name for the patented material, and the attempted registration of “Amiesite” as a trademark. In the same year 1909, Dr. Amies or Amies Asphalt Company, the assignee of his patents, advanced from the experimental stage and for the first time made a business or commercial use of his inventions. Licenses to manufacturers of paving materials and road builders were granted. The most important Amies patent was No. 934,494, in which he broadly claimed a “new and useful Composition for Paving Purposes,” applied for February 20, 1909, and issued September 21, 1909. The process invented was specified in a single claim in these terms: “I place a batch quantity of broken stone, gravel or like materials upon a mixing board or in a mixing machine and mix them with any desirable light oil. I then pour thereon and thereover and mix well therewith a due quantity of boiling asphalt or other like elements suitable for paving compositions. I then throw thereon and mix therewith a due amount of air slaked lime or crushed carbonate of lime or a mixture of these to cover the individual particles of the said composition, and thus form a granular and friable mass that will adhere together and form a solid mass under pressure.”

The single claim of the patent reads: “The herein described method of making a composition for paving purposes which consists in taking mineral materials and the like, coating them with a light oil, then mixing them with a binder as hot asphalt, and then coating the particles of the said composition with air slaked lime, crushed carbonate of lime, or lime powder, as fully set forth.”

The other six patents granted upon applications filed between December 26, 1908, and May 1, 1909, and issued between August 3, 1909, and December 7, 1909, all related to the paving art and cover a variation in or improvements upon the process of patent No. 934,494. These seven patents became known to the.trade as the “Amies 1909 patents.”

Briefly, the cold mix produced from the Amies process when ready for market is “a granular and friable mass,” in formation not unlike popcorn, composed of (1) an aggregate, preferably a mineral aggregate, (2) a light oil or liquefier, (3) asphaltic cement, (4) lime, and (5) a filler. The use of a light oil or liquefier in the paving art was not new, but the particular use of a liquefier in the Amies process was new. The liquefier is not used merely as a solvent to cut back the asphalt as in other contemporary methods. Dr. Amies taught that a light oil or liquefier should be used to prime or coat the cold stone, and thereby to suspend the solidifying pf the asphaltic cement. While in storage or in transport the liquefier keeps the mass in a granular and friable condition. When the mass is laid and packed the volatile liquefier quickly passes off and a solid road surface remains.

In this ease we are dealing with the interrelation of a trade-name with a-patent monopoly. Was the trade use of the trade-name “Amiesite” for the paving material and the pavement contemporaneous with the monopoly acquired under the Amies patents of 1909? The answer involves a brief review of forty years. This lapse of time can be conveniently divided into three periods: (1) The experimental stage; (2) the early period of commercial use; (3) the period of recognized and undisputed monopoly.

The experimental stage covered the period when the patented paving material was not bought and sold. It covers the personal experiments of Dr. Amies from 1890 to 1907, reference to which will he made hereafter.

The early period of commercial success, or second stage, began in 1908 with the invention by Dr. Amies of paving compositions and methods of laying the same which resulted in his application for the seven patents that issued in 1909. In each of these patents an essential feature is the use of a liquefier or light oil to coat the crushed stone or aggregate before adding the asphalt. The next step was the New Jersey experiment to test the invention, known as the “Magnolia Road” experiment, in Camden county, N.' J. This experiment was made by Dr. Amies with the co-operation of a quarry man and the permission of a road engineer. Then followed in rapid succession the application by Dr. Amies’ company to register “Amiesite” as a trade-mark; the granting of licenses under the Amies patents to manufacture and sell Amiesite in certain Eastern states and the right to grant sublicenses.

Amies Road Company, the chief licensee of the Amies patents, was organized by a quarry man named Eastbum, and by a road engineer named Albertson. Doubtless Dr. Amies hoped to enlist those concerned with the source of the material for his mixture and those concerned with its purchase.

At the start, Dr. Amies and his licensee ran into difficulties. To grasp this early period of commercial use it is necessary to take [506]*506account of these difficulties. They are best indicated in the opening statements of counsel. The solicitor for the plaintiff stated: “After the organization of the Amies Road Company in 1909, the company embarked upon a policy of granting further licenses for the purpose of extending their territory and of course increasing their royalties. They fan into difficulties with the Warren Company, which was the owner of certain patents for road materials, and the Warren Company claimed that the Amies Road Company was violating certain of its patents.” The solicitor for defendant stated: “That new and useful pavement was patented by Dr. Amies or attempted to be patented — the patents are not very good patents, but they were intended for that purpose, and there are six or seven of them, and during the 17 years that those patents lasted no one questioned the validity of the monopoly under those patents. It was generally respected.”

Dr. Amies made a very real contribution to the paving art. That is recognized throughout the world to-day. But not so at the start. He was then on thin ice with a stalwart competitor ready to push him under. The situation demanded care and caution. “Warrenite,” the product of Warren Brothers Company of Boston, was a bitulithic pavement of asphalt and stone. In it a liquefier was also used. In 1909 the broad claims of the Warren patents threatened Amiesite.

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4 F. Supp. 504, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amiesite-asphalt-co-of-america-v-interstate-amiesite-co-ded-1933.