Bracewell v. Passaic Print Works

107 F. 467, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4531
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedMarch 19, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 F. 467 (Bracewell v. Passaic Print Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bracewell v. Passaic Print Works, 107 F. 467, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4531 (circtsdny 1901).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

This is an action for infringement of letters patent, No. 499,(589, granted Junfe 13, 1893, to William T. Wbitebead, as inventor, and Henry D. Dnpee, as assignee of one-half interest, for an improvement in aniline-black resists. The patent is now owned by the complainant. The application was filed January 16, 1893. A disclaimer was filed by the complainant August 21, 1894.

[468]*468The Patent after Disclaimer.

Omitting the portion disclaimed the specification reads as follows:

“My invention relates to the production of colored patterns in cloth by a resist on an aniline-black ground, and has for its object the method of producing cloth having colored patterns on an aniline-black ground, substantially as will be described. Heretofore, in slop-padding or dyeing aniline-black goods and printing thereon a color discharge, great difficulty has been found in preventing too great an oxidation of the black, before the printing on of a pattern or figure, overoxidation making the production of a clear-cut pattern or figure impossible. I have overcome this difficulty by first printing the cloth in a color resist, as hereinafter described, then slop-padding or dyeing the goods in the aniline-black liquor and suitably drying the cloth. My invention is equally well adapted for the production of colored patterns, by mixing coal-tar colors, or extracts of dyewoods, with the resist, in about the proportions hereinafter set forth. The shade may be produced from a coal-tar color, as for instance, I may take six pounds of a zinc compound; one and one-eig'hth gallons of water; nine ounces safranin; and one and one-half pounds of starch, and thoroughly mix and boil. If other coal-tar colors are desired, Bismarck brown, methyl blue, malachite green, oxyphenin, chrysamin, methyl violet, or any one of the coal-tar colors having the property when used in combination with a zinc compound of fixing itself to the fabric, may be employed. I have found in my experiments that most of the so-called basic colors will fix properly with zinc compound, but some of the acid colors, such as soluble blue and violet and acid magenta, fail to properly fix with the oxide and produce good results. If the color is to be produced from dyewood or berry extract, I may take, for instance, six pounds of a zinc compound; one and one-half gallons of water, and thoroughly mix. Then I take three pints Persian berry extract, 48° Twaddle, and add the proper amount of starch to produce a good impression on the cloth, and to this I add one pint chrome acetate, 82“ Twaddle, and mix all well together." The quantity of Persian berry is varied according to the shade desired. For other colors extracts of logwood, sapan, fustic, quercitron, bark, etc., can be used in place of the berry liquor, in varying proportions according to the shade desired. While I have particularly specified oxide, hydrate and carbonate of zinc under the term zinc compound, I do not desire to be restricted tp the same, for while oxide of zinc is preferred by me for general use any zinc compound may be employed with good results. Nor do I confine myself to the exact stated quantity of zinc. The gist of my invention lies in the employment of a zinc compound, as the essential or active element, as stated, in a resist.
“I claim—
“(2) In the herein described process of producing cloth having colored patterns on aniline-black grounds, printing the pattern upon the cloth in a resist containing a zinc compound as its essential or active element, and a color, suitably drying the cloth and thereafter treating the cloth with a solution of aniline-black by blotching, slop-padding or dyeing, substantially as described.”

The first claim is entirely exscinded.

The disclaimer closes with the following statement:

“He hereby limits the word ‘color’ in line 52 of the second claim to coal-tar colors or dyewood extracts such as are referred to in the present disclaimed specification.”

The suit was commenced August 18,1898. The hill as filed alleged infringement of another patent which, however, was withdrawn at the hearing.

Defenses.

The defenses are ambiguity of the specification and lack of novelty and invention. Infringement is admitted.

[469]*469The Disclaimer.

The disclaimer was filed for the reason, stated therein, that through inadvertence, accident or mistake the specification and claims of the patent were too broad. The patent as granted covered white and pigment colored patterns; the effect of the disclaimer is to limit it to patterns produced with certain coal-tar colors and dyewood extracts. There is no pretense that Whitehead, by the original specification, intended to defraud or mislead the public or that the disclaimer was unreasonably delayed. No new supplemental description is required to make the present claim intelligible,

This court had occasion to examine the law of disclaimers in Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Julien Electric Co. (C. C.) 38 Fed. 117, 133 137. It is unnecessary to repeat what is there stated. In addition to the authorities there cited the recent case of Thompson v. N. T. Bushnell Co., 37 C. C. A. 456, 96 Fed. 238, is applicable to the present situation. The disclaimer becomes part of the original specification and must he considered in construing the patent and considering the rights of the parties. The disclaimer is conclusive evidence that the owner of the patent is not entitled to the subject-matter disclaimed and it is, at least, prima facie proof that the device or process thus relinquished was old when the patentee made his contribution to the art. Matters disclaimed are no longer a part of the invention and the patent must be construed as if such matters had never been included in the specification. Dunbar v. Myers, 94 U. S. 187, 193, 194, 24 L. Ed. 34. The court is unable to perceive why the disclaimer is not a proper and valid one. In short, were this action pending upon the original patent and it should now appear that the process as practiced with the coal-tar colors or dyewood extracts referred to was new and useful and the result achieved was a distinct improvement in the art of color printing on cloth, would it not be the duty of the court to permit the complainant to disclaim what Whitehead did not invent if necessary to enable him to hold what Whitehead did invent? The effect of the disclaimer is to narrow the alleged invention and although it may he conceded that the disclaimer was properly filed the question remains whether, in view of its express and implied admissions and the achievements of other experimenters along similar lines, the patent in its present form describes and covers a patentable invention. In view of what others are proved to have done and in view of what Whitehead, by implication, admits that others had done prior to his application, did his contribution to the art rise to the dignity of invention? This question it would seem can be discussed more appropriately under the head of invention than under the head of disclaimer.

The Patent in Suit.

The Whitehead patent is for an improvement in aniline-black resists. The process of the second claim relates to the production of colored patterns on an aniline-black ground.

Aniline-black was invented by John Lightfoot in 1863.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. 467, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bracewell-v-passaic-print-works-circtsdny-1901.