Celanese Corp. of America v. Ribbon Narrow Fabrics Co.

33 F. Supp. 137, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3032
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 9, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 137 (Celanese Corp. of America v. Ribbon Narrow Fabrics Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Celanese Corp. of America v. Ribbon Narrow Fabrics Co., 33 F. Supp. 137, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3032 (S.D.N.Y. 1940).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

The complaint alleges infringement of two patents, one to Dreyfus, No. 1,773,967, relating to a process of cutting fabric’and the product thereof, and patent No. 2- 086,238 to Herbert Platt, for a ribbon cutter. The answers of defendant to plaintiff’s interrogatories, followed by an inspection of the defendant’s plant, led to the withdrawal of the Platt patent and a decree of non-infringement as to that patent was consented to at the opening of the trial.

The Dreyfus patent in suit was granted on August 26, 1930 on an application filed October 5, 1927. The invention relates to a method of cutting fabric made of thermoplastic or organic derivatives of cellulose, so that the cut edges will not fray or ravel. The specification recites that theretofore whenever a woven or knitted fabric was cut in the ordinary manner by means of a knife or shears it was found necessary to hem or sew the cut edge before the fabric could be used in order to avoid raveling along the cut edge. Dreyfus indicates that the fabric to be used in practicing his invention is made in whole or in part of a material that can be fused by the action of heat, or can be dissolved by a solvent, or can be softened by a softening agent. He states that the fabric may be composed entirely of one of the thermoplastic compounds of cellulose, or of a mixture of such compounds, and adds that the fabric need not be entirely of the above cellulose compounds, but may be a mixed fabric containing yarns of the cellulose compounds and yarns of vegetable or animal fibres. Examples of such mixed fabrics are mixed cellulose acetate and natural silk, mixed cellulose acetate and cotton, mixed cellulose acetate and wool, eta.

*138 The fabric is cut by means of knives or other cutting means, which, as the specification recites, may be “either hot or cold, and the cut edges are sealed against fraying by fusion or by the action of the solvent or of a softening agent.” No specific degree of heat is mentioned, but “The temperature of the cutting device should preferably be sufficiently high to melt the freshly made edge, but not so high as to melt any of the material appreciably distant from the edge, since if too much material is melted the edge so made will be of irregular thickness due to the formation of globules or molten material.”

An alternate process is suggested: “Or else the sealing may be further completed when the cutting is done by a hot knife, or it may be done entirely when the cutting is done with a cold knife or mechanism by fusing the cut edges by passing the same along a hot surface maintained at the temperature above indicated, or even by the use of a flame.”

A third variety of process is effected by the application of a solvent: “The solvent should preferably be applied in such a manner that the solvent is permitted to remain at the edge of the material being treated, or is permitted to penetrate to a point only slightly removed from the edge in order to prevent the destruction of the fabric.”

Claims 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 16 and 17 are in issue. The first five of these are directed to a process; the last three define an article. The process claims differ somewhat in detail. Claims 6 and 7 describe the sealing of the cut edge by fusing; claims 8 and 9 provide for the employment of a heated blade, and claim 11 uses the broader term, “a heated means”.

Of the product claims, 12 defines the edge as one partly liquefied and then permitted to solidify; 16 and 17 define the edge as sealed by fusion.

The witness Whitehead, an engineer in the employ of the plaintiff, described the research work which culminated in the invention of the patent in suit. Commercial cellulose acetate was produced during the last war, and yarn for the first time towards the end of 1919. As its name indicates it is a combination of acetic acid and cellulose. In the commercial forms the percentage of acetic acid is usually between 54 and 55. In the manufacture of yarn the mass formed is dissolved in a volatile solvent such as acetone.

The main business of the plaintiff corporation, as explained by Whitehead, is to sell yarn; but in addition to making and selling yarn is engaged in the manufacture of fabrics of standard widths from 36” to 40" or thereabouts. Fabric, before it is ready for the market, has to be scoured, dyed and finished.

Difficulties of manufacture were encountered in the cut ribbon field. It was explainecl that cellulose acetate yarn has a very low co-efficient of friction, that is, it slips readily and tends to ravel easily at the edge.

To remedy the fault, at first applying adhesives such as gums and resins to the cutting edge was considered. Such use of adhesive did not meet all requirements, for the ribbons were not fast for laundry. The gum would wash out or become tacky in high or humid atmospheres. The difficulty was then discussed with Camille Dreyfus, the inventor of the patent in suit. Dreyfus suggested that they cut and actually seal the edge of the solvent without penetrating the main body of the fabric, and that “we might even cut and seal -it with heat”.

In applying the solvent, the filament along the edge was dissolved by acetone being squirted thereon, and a film was formed at the edge. The heat method cut and fused the edge together.

The defendant attacks the validity of the patent on a number of grounds. It appears that the defendant corporation, which was organized in 1920, conducts a business of cutting large bolts of fabrics of all kinds into ribbons of desired widths. It also more receritly has purchased complete fabrics of various kinds which it cuts into ribbons of desired widths for sale. Since 1920 the defendant has employed other methods of cutting fabrics into ribbons, one known as the cold and glue process, the other the hot knife process. It is the hot knife process which is charged to infringe the Dreyfus patent. It is the contention of the defendant that the machine which in the early years was used to cut various kinds of fabrics is the same machine as is employed by them for' cutting cellulose acetate fabrics. The particular machines employed for cutting the cellulose acetate yarn were used by the defendant as early as 1923 and- continuously since. In that respect such use ante-dates the filing date of the application for the *139 patent in suit by about four years. If the Dreyfus patent is valid there would appear to be no doubt that the defendant infringes the claims in suit, but invalidity is vigorously asserted. The essence of the invention 'would seem to be the sealing of the edges of the cut fabric either by the action of a solvent or through the application of heat.

Among the prior art patents, that to Small et al., granted August 2, 1927, on an application filed April 7, 1923, is interesting as disclosing a process and an apparatus for cutting sheets of “celluloid-like” materials which contain no or at most only a small amount of volatile solvent.' The Small invention applies in particular to such celluloid-like plastic material consisting of or having a base of cellulose acetate.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 137, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 492, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/celanese-corp-of-america-v-ribbon-narrow-fabrics-co-nysd-1940.