Balaban v. Polyfoto Corporation

47 F. Supp. 472, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2325
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedSeptember 26, 1942
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 47 F. Supp. 472 (Balaban v. Polyfoto Corporation) 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
Balaban v. Polyfoto Corporation, 47 F. Supp. 472, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2325 (D. Del. 1942).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge,

specially assigned.

The plaintiffs sue for alleged patent infringement and the defendant answers setting up (1) patent invalidity, (2) noninfringement and (3) file wrapper estoppel. From the evidence adduced at trial, we make the following

Findings of'Fact.

1. Alexander Balaban, one of the plaintiffs, is the owner of the patent in suit, No. *475 2,083,215, issued to him June 8, 1937, for a “photographic diffusing device for enlarging and projection printing”.

2. The other plaintiff, Robert B. Wheel-an, is the owner of license rights under the Balaban patent, exclusive in the field of operating photographic portrait studios in department stores. Wheelan has owned and operated, beginning some ten years prior to 1937, under the name Wheelan Studios, a chain of photographic portrait studios located in various department stores in different cities with a central laboratory at New York City. The pictures are taken at the studios and the negatives are developed and the prints made at the central laboratory.

3. Wheelan obtained his rights under the Balaban patent in July, 1937, and proceeded to apply the Balaban disclosure to his commercial operations.

4. The defendant, Polyfoto Corporation, is a corporation of the State of Delaware. It was organized for the purpose of operating and commenced the operation of a photographic .portrait business about May, 1937, with studios in department stores and a central laboratory at Bridgeport, Connecticut. The defendant adopted the particular character of practice charged to infringe in the middle of 1938.

5. In the photographic art prior to Balaban there were two general types of printing, viz., contact printing and projection or enlargement printing. The patent in suit is concerned with the latter.

6. In contact printing the negative is in contact with or so close to the sensitized print paper that the ultimate picture is of the same size as the negative, and the print is characterized by the same clarity of detail, or lack of it, as was in the negative.

7. In projection or enlargement printing the sensitized print paper is located some distance from the negative, the arrangement being, in order, a light source, the negative spaced therefrom with the emulsion or image bearing surface located away from the light source, a lens system, and then the sensitized print paper. The extent of enlargement is dependent upon the lens adjustment and the distance between the lens and the print paper, the greater the distance the greater the enlargement, about two feet being a typical distance in operation.

8. The physics and chemistry of photography tend to emphasize wrinkles and blemishes. To counteract this and also to render the subject of a portrait print more pleasing to the sight, it had been common practice many years prior to Balaban’s development of the invention of the patent in suit to resort to what was known as “retouching”. The common procedure in this respect was to add darkening material as by lead pencil to areas on the negative, so that light thrown toward the sensitized paper in printing was correspondingly held back at the treated lines or areas, and the final print made lighter at those points. It was also common procedure to make enlarged prints from retouched negatives by all-over diffusion in an effort to reduce the effect of undesired markings. Such all-over diffusion produced prints in which the eyes and other features were rendered hazy and indistinct and lost their appearance of “sparkle”. Retouching of prints was also resorted to by adding darkening material to light areas and removing material from dark areas of the prints as by etching, necessitating subsequent coating of the prints with lacquer to conceal the retouching.

9. Such retouching methods had the disadvantages of being tedious and requiring peculiar skill, and in general resulted in the loss of the rounded modeling effect of features, the dulling or loss of delicate lines and of clarity in such important areas as the eyes, mouth, nostrils, hair and clothing of the image of the subject, — a condition which was aggravated in the case of the less skilled retouchers. Defects in a negative are necessarily emphasized and exaggerated in an enlarged print therefrom.

10. The Balaban patent discloses and claims a successful practical solution of the difficulties encountered in “retouching”. In accordance with the teachings of the patent, in the projection printing of portrait negatives, a selective diffusing mask is placed adjacent to the image bearing side of the negative on the side opposite to the light source. The mask is selectively treated so as to have areas which are clear registering in respect of the parts of the negative desired to be printed sharply, such as the eyes, mouth, nostrils, hair and clothing, and other areas which are translucent and serve to diffuse the image rays passing there-through. The diffusing surface of the mask is located an appreciable distance from the image bearing surface of the negative. In a case where the mask is directly on the surface of a transparent glass supporting plate, the thickness of the glass plate may serve to provide the desired spacing; greater or less spacing may be accomplished *476 by using glass of different thicknesses o-r by introducing a small air space. In general the greater the distance between the diffusion mask surface and the image surface of the negative, the greater the diffusion of the parts registering with the translucent areas.

11. The Balaban patent describes, by way of example, two specific ways of producing the selective diffusion mask, viz.: (1) providing transparent sheet material, such as glass or film, with a surface having translucent areas by applying thereto at the desired areas a suitable substance such as fats, oils, waxes, soaps or the like; and (2) providing transparent sheet material, such as glass or film, having a ground or frosty translucent surface, and rendering desired areas of the ground surface clear or transparent by some appropriate method, as by applying thereto a suitable substance such as balsam fir, turpentine, varnishes, oils or many other materials. The same end result as to the diffusing element and the ultimate photographic print is reached by either procedure.

12. Following the Balaban disclosure results in a simple device for and procedure of making enlarged prints of greatly improved quality having a sharpness and clarity of detail and tone in selected areas, such as the eyes, mouth, nostrils, hair and clothing, and a smooth, soft, satiny or velvety appearance over other larger areas such as the forehead, cheeks, chin and neck, with a retention of modeling and depth of dimension, and in general an over-all effect of brilliance and character with an elimination of marks due to grain and blemishes in the negative. The attainment of such results is limited to projection printing. The invention cannot be effectively practiced in contact printing.

13. Defendant at its inception had obtained rights under a camera patent owned by Polyfoto Internationale, Ltd., operating in England and Denmark. As part of the agreement defendant received technical data as to methods of printing comprising the most advanced type known and used by that company.

14.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F. Supp. 472, 55 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 141, 1942 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/balaban-v-polyfoto-corporation-ded-1942.