Byron Weston Co. v. L. L. Brown Paper Co.

20 F.2d 183, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1221
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 2, 1927
DocketNo. 2516
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 183 (Byron Weston Co. v. L. L. Brown Paper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Byron Weston Co. v. L. L. Brown Paper Co., 20 F.2d 183, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1221 (D. Mass. 1927).

Opinion

MORTON, District Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of reissued patent to Weston on method of making paper, No. 13,730, dated May 12, 1914. It was heard in open court, and at the conclusion of the testimony I took a view of the defendant’s machine in operation at its mill in North Adams, Mass., and of the plaintiff’s machine in its mill at Dalton, Mass. On the'view, I made a careful examination and study of the operation of each machine at the point to which the patents relate, and numerous experiments were made in my presence at each place. The information gained in this way has been extremely helpful in arriving at a decision.

The plaintiff’s patent is upon a method of making a thin stripe (or “strip”) in a sheet of paper. The stripe makes the sheet more flexible on that line, and such paper is widely used in loose-leaf record and account books, because it will lie flatter than ordinary paper. The plaintiff’s invention provides a simple and comparatively inexpensive way of accomplishing a result which theretofore had only been achieved by less direct methods and at much greater expense.

The process relates to paper-making machines of the Foundrinier type. They are very largo, being over 100 feet Jong. Paper stock is fed into one end and a completed sheet of paper is turned off at the other. They are perfectly well known in the art, and I shall not undertake a description of one, but will go directly to the point here involved.

The paper stock consists of fiber in suspension in water; it is very fluid. As it flows to the web wire on which the paper is formed, it is 99 per cent, water and runs like water. The first step is to oven up its thickness across the wire. This is done by slice bars, which are merely straight edges set at proper distances above the moving web wire. The thickness of the web of paper is [184]*184determined by the second slice bar. As the web moves forward, it is shaken sidewise to interweave the fibers, and the water is continuously withdrawn. The stock becomes less and less fluid ns it progresses, and more and more pulpy, until finally it becomes a pulp much like very soft blotting paper. By suction boxes and roller pressure the remaining water is extracted, and the paper is then dried over heated rolls.

The thin stripe, or “hinge,” as it is also called, is about two inches wide (as I saw it), and the problem was how to make such a stripe of proper and even fhiekness, without forming ridges along its edges, which would interfere with the successful use of the paper commercially. Weston discovered that this could be done by the use of air applied either by pressure or suction through a nozzle held close to the wet stock. It was a simple and practical idea, which works successfully.

The single claim in the suit reads:

“2.. The method herein described of manufacturing paper having a thinned portion, which consists in removing from the web at the portion to be thinned, along a defined line, some of the material by the application of air pressure thereto.”

On the plaintiff’s machine no air blast is used. Suction nozzles are placed above the liquid stock a short distance ahead of the drag bar, or second slice bar, at a point where the stock is sufficiently matted and pulpy not to run into and fill up the thinned portions, and they suck away enough of the stock to make a stripe of proper thinness. The stripe thus created remains and becomes permanent as the web dries. The same result can be obtained, although rather less successfully, by the application of a flat jet of air of the proper width and force at a point somewhat further ahead, where the stock has become too pulpy to flow. A good deal was said by counsel and parties, especially on the view, as to the location of the air jet. This is not defined in the patent. The change in the stock from fluid to pulp takes place by gradual and pretty even gradations in a travel of 8 to 10 feet in the web wire, and I do not think that any invention is involved in applying the air pressure at one point or another, although I quite understand that great differences in final results might be caused by differences in that respect. With the disclosures of the patent, anybody skilled in the art would be able to apply the air jet and air suction to a paper-making machine for the purpose specified.

As to the validity of the Weston patent:

There seems to have been no demand for a sheet of paper with a thin stripe until that occasioned by the use of loose-leaf books, which is comparatively recent. The efficacy of a “hinge” formed by thinning the sheet had been known for some time before Weston entered the field, and the thin portion had been made in other ways — e. g., by grinding the finished paper. There is no suggestion in the prior art of a “hinge” formed in the paper as it was manufactured. The only patent which is relied upon as an anticipation, or is of much significance in the prior art, is that to Kron, Ho. 762,914, dated January 31, 1905. The defendant contends that it is a complete anticipation. The purpose of this patent was to split rqlls of .asbestos, or other short fibre material, while in a wet, pulpy condition, into very narrow strips for the purpose of spinning. Kron accomplished this by causing “a number of fine sprays of jets of liquid, steam, or air * * * to impinge upon the web of pulp as this is formed and carried forward.” Kron patent, p. 1, line 36 et seq. “The jets or sprays which produce the dividing furrows are projected under a very high pressure, and are of great fineness, so that the furrows produced are so fine that, in the subsequent pressing and pressure-drying of the web, they become practically closed, while the fibers of the material which connect the intervening strips are, nevertheless, so readily separable that a slight pull suffices to draw off the strips from the apparently uniform and undivided web.” Page 1, lines 48-58. It is said from the defendant that this patent discloses the use of air under pressure to thin to the dividing point a wet web of fibers, and that, given this knowledge, no invention was involved in widening the jets and reducing the pressure, so as to form a strip which was wide and was left sufficiently thick to hold together.

In the seven years between the publication of the Kron patent and the filing of the Weston application, nobody in fact took this step or made such use of Kron’s disclosure. As I have said, Weston was, on the evidence before me, the first to use air to form a hinge, as well as the first to form a hinge in the wet stock. The Kron patent was directed to a very different purpose from the patent in suit. Kron’s object was to slit a relatively thick web into strips, which could be readily pulled apart and put into spinning machines. He was not at all concerned with the problem to which Weston’s invention is directed. The fact that air under high pressure could be used successfully to slit a close[185]*185ly compacted wet web furnishes no suggestion, I think, that air might be used against a rather fluid stoek to form a wide thin stripe. This view of the Kron patent eliminates most of the defendant’s argument as to the prior art, and renders a detailed consideration of it unnecessary. Tho principles of law involved are too well settled to require discussion.

On all the evidence, I find and rule that the Weston patent was not anticipated by Kron and is valid.

The final, and the most difficult, question is whether the defendant infringes. Tho defendant’s machine does not have the nozzle of the Weston patent.

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Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 183, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/byron-weston-co-v-l-l-brown-paper-co-mad-1927.