Celluloid Manuf'g Co. v. American Zylonite Co.

26 F. 692, 23 Blatchf. 444, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993

This text of 26 F. 692 (Celluloid Manuf'g Co. v. American Zylonite Co.) 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
Celluloid Manuf'g Co. v. American Zylonite Co., 26 F. 692, 23 Blatchf. 444, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993 (circtsdny 1886).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

This is a bill in equity to restrain the defendants from the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 156,358, granted October 27, 1874, to John W. Hyatt and Isaiah S. Hyatt, assignors to the complainant, for “an improvement in the manufacture of celluloid.” The defenses are want of novelty, non-patentability, and public use, in the United States, of the alleged improvement for more than two years before the application for the letters patent, with the consent and allowance of the patentees. Under the defense of want of novelty, the patents which the defendants introduced in evidence and relied upon were three American letters patent to Daniel Spill: No. 91,377, dated June 15, 1869; No. 97,454, dated November 30, 1869; and No. 101,175, dated March 22, 1870.

An understanding of the ease depends materially upon a knowledge of the state of the art at the date of the patent in suit, and I therefore give a brief history of the article which is now known as “zylonite” or “celluloid.” Pyroxvline or gun-cotton, “an explosive obtained by immersing vegetable fiber in nitric and sulphuric acids, and subsequent drying,” (Knight, Mech. Diet.,) was invented by Schonbein in 1846. The great anticipations which were originally had of the invention, as a substitute for gunpowder, were never realized. It proved to be too dangerous and uncertain to be used as an explosive material. In 1847 or 1848, Dr. Maynard, of Boston, discovered that it could be dissolved in alcohol and ether, and used as a vehicle for medicines, and as a substitute for sticking plaster, and gave the name “collodion” to this solution. Passing by the introduction of collodion by Frederick Scott Archer, in 1851, to the art of photography, Alexander Parkes, of England, discovered, in 1855, •that a solution of pyroxyline, mixed with other articles, could be [693]*693made, after tlie solvent was evaporated, into a substance having the qualities of ivory or of horn, and which could be easily moulded or worked and receive any desired color. Mr. Darkes suggested a number or solvents, took out a number of patents, entered vigorously upon the manufacture of the material, which he called “Parkesine,” and made exhibitions of the various articles into which it was wrought; but from some cause Ms enterprise lacked success, and was abandoned in 1867.

The general question of solvents lay at the bottom of the practical difficulties in the manufacture. After the pyroxyline had been dissolved, the problem was how to get rid of the solvent, so that the conversion of the dissolved material from a semi-fluid, state into a hard substance, or a substance that would become hard, vims practicable. Evaporation was the method which was used. In 1869, Mr. Daniel Spill, of England, received the American patent No. 97,454, which fairly represents the extent of information which the public or any individual had at that time on the question of pyroxyline solvents. His subsequent patent, No. 101,175, also represents the point which had been reached, at its date in 1870, in the process of transforming dissolved pyroxyline into zylonite, the name which Mr. Spill gave to the completed article. In No. 91,377, dated June 15, 1869, he had described an invention relating to the production of compounds containing zyloidine which, in “the admixture of zyloidine with animal, fish, vegetable, or mineral oils, oxidized or otherwise, such, for example, as vegetable or mineral tar, lard oil, cod-liver oil, linseed oil, or heavy coal oils, or with mixtures oí the same, together with the admixture of other ingredients, such as paraffine, camphor, rosins, fat, wax, India rubber, gutta-percha, or balata gum, or mixtures of the same, so as to produce a material or materials which may be employed, either alone or in conjunction with pigments or other inert bodies, for the production of a compound which may be applied for useful purposes in the suds, such as for moulding into forms, or for rolling info sheets or otherwise, for spreading either upon or between fabrics, or otherwise, or for the coating of metals and wood.” No. 97,454 related, the patentee stated in his specification, “to the preparation and use of certain solvents of zyloidino, and which differ from the ordinary or known solvents of zyloidine, in that those menstrua which are employed are not necessarily in themselves solvents of zyloidine, but become so by the addition of the bodies, compounds, or substances herein referred to.” The inventions consisted in tho employment, as a solvent of zyloidine, of one of seven described combinations of ingredients, and “in the employment of any two or more of any of the before-mentioned solvents, either in the proportion of about equal parts, or in other proportions.” Tho second solvent which the patentee described was “camphor or camphor oil, or mixtures of the same, in conjunction with alcohol or spirits of wine, the. same to be employed in about equal proportions.” It has been de[694]*694cided by Mr. Justice Blatchfoed that the public had been previously informed by Mr. Parkes that dehydrated or strong alcohol was of itself a solvent of pyroxyline, and was instructed to mix it with camphor as such solvent, and that, therefore, Mr. Spill’s improvement, so far as the use of camphor and alcohol was concerned, -was not patentable. Spill v. Celluloid Manuf'g Co., 22 Blatchf. 441; S. C. 21 Fed. Rep. 631.

This somewhat vague patent was followed by No. 101,175, which was for a method of converting vegetable fibers into zyloidine, for a process of bleaching, and for a process of dyeing it, and for a mode of preparing it for spreading upon surfaces of fabrics in a semi-iiuid condition, and for a process of treating it so as to bring it to a nearly dry condition for the production of solid articles. From the patent it appears that Spill’s practice was to dissolve one part of zyloidine in from five to twelve parts of solvents, — five parts would produce a stiff paste, — to which solution pigments were added, and the paste was then “strained through a fine sieve, under pressure, to remove any mechanical impurities, after which operation it is in a fit condition for spreading upon surfaces or fabrics in a semi-fluid condition.” When the compound was to be prepared for the production of solid articles, the paste, after it had been strained, was placed in an airtight chamber provided with mechanical stirrers, the chamber being “in connection with a condenser and a reservoir, and also, by preference, being in connection with an exhausting or vacuum-producing apparatus.” Heat being applied to the mixing apparatus, and the agitator being set in motion, the solvents are evaporated and conveyed away to the condenser for future use. It thus appears that Mr. Spill first made a paste, then strained the solution to remove mechanical impurities or undissolved particles of zyloidine; and, to make solid articles, the excess of volatile solvents was then evaporated in an air-tight machine connected with a condenser for saving such' solvents. By this process, zylonite was made at and prior to 1874. The article had defects incident to its method of manufacture. By reason of an imperfect admixture of zyloidine, and an unnecessary amount of liquid solvent, there remained lumpy particles of undissolved fiber; the excess of liquid must be mechanically evaporated; and, notwithstanding the evaporation, the solid article was too soft unless made hard and strong by the admixture of some other substance.

In 1870, John W. Hyatt, Jr., and Isaiah S. Hyatt made the important discovery that camphor alone, when mixed with pyroxyline, the mass being treated to from 150 deg. to 200 deg.

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26 F. 692, 23 Blatchf. 444, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/celluloid-manufg-co-v-american-zylonite-co-circtsdny-1886.