Chicopee Manufacturing Corp. v. Columbus Fiber Mills Co.

165 F. Supp. 307, 118 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3685
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 27, 1958
DocketCiv. A. 631
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 165 F. Supp. 307 (Chicopee Manufacturing Corp. v. Columbus Fiber Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicopee Manufacturing Corp. v. Columbus Fiber Mills Co., 165 F. Supp. 307, 118 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3685 (M.D. Ga. 1958).

Opinion

*309 BOOTLE, District Judge.

By the complaint as amended, the plaintiff alleges that the defendant has infringed four patents issued to and owned by the plaintiff and seeks an accounting and judgment for profits and injunctive relief. The defendant denies the validity of all of the patents upon "various grounds, and denies infringement except only as to one of the design patents. The defendant also, by way of counterclaim, prays for a declaratory judgment to the effect that all of the said patents are void and that three are ■not infringed.

The Court, having tried the case with-cut a jury and having given careful consideration to the great volume of testimony adduced orally and by depositions and to the written and oral arguments of .able counsel on both sides, now makes .and incorporates in this memorandum ■opinion its findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Plaintiff and defendant are textile ■companies presently competing with each ether and with a large number of other ■companies in the field of manufacturing .and selling plastic fabrics for use as .automobile seat covers.

Of the four patents involved, two are mechanical or product patents and two .are design patents. On August 7, 1956, Letters Patent No. 2,757,437 were issued "to plaintiff upon the joint application of Harold P. Faris and Bernard R. Koenig (herein called the Faris patent), and on ■the same day Letters Patent No. 2,757,-436 were issued to plaintiff upon the application of Jonathan Ferrell Nicholl (herein called the Nicholl patent). Both -the Faris patent and the Nicholl patent -were applied for on March 31, 1955 and ■each was for an alleged invention in puffed fabrics. U. S. Letters Patent Nos. Des. 178,456 and 178,462 were also is.sued to plaintiff on the same date the product patents were issued, August 7, 1956. These patents will be discussed in the order above named, much of what is said as to the Faris patent being also applicable to the Nicholl patent and the two design patents being discussed jointly.

Patentability of Faris Invention

The Faris patent is being discussed first because it has a longer history than the others. Both it and the Nicholl patent relate to woven fabrics having puffed portions. It is claimed that the puffs are both useful and ornamental, useful in that they provide space for air circulation thus imparting “breathing” qualities and coolness to the fabric, and ornamental in that they provide an attractive three-dimensional appearance. The patent contemplates a fabric made predominantly of thermoplastic material, the fabric to be puffed and made three dimensional in that certain loosely attached or “floater” threads or filaments are used on the under side of the fabric which floaters have a higher shrinkage propensity upon the application of heat than do the threads in the main body causing those floaters to shrink to a greater extent than the main body and thereby causing the main body to buckle or puff. The specifications say in part: “The thermoplastic, heat shrinkable floats, on heating, deform where they intersect the main body of the fabric, which helps to retain the puffs in their desired form. The retention of the puffs is further enhanced wherein the main body is also thermoplastic, due to the setting or hardening of the main body of the fabric on cooling”, and again “the puffs are retained in the fabric body in use, due to the setting of the main body, including the puffed portions after the shrinking operations, by the formation of crimps in the floats or shrinkers where they intersect the main body and by the adhesion of the floats to the main body where they intersect said body at points.”

The claims set out in the Faris patent are:

“1. A woven fabric comprising a main body consisting predominantly of interwoven thermoplastic warp and weft filaments and having sharp and accentuated puffs which are retained during use of said fabric, and *310 filaments heat-shrunken from thermoplastic heat-shrinkable filaments having higher shrinkage characteristics on the application of heat than the filaments forming the main body of the fabric, said heat-shrunken filaments being floated predominantly on the back of the main body of said fabric and across the puffs.
“2. A woven fabric in accordance with claim 1, wherein at least about 75% of the total lengths of said heat shrunken filaments are floated on the back of the main body of said fabric.
“3. A woven fabric in accordance with claim 1, wherein the heat-shrunken filaments intersect said main body to define the borders of said puffs.
“4. A woven fabric in accordance with claim 3, wherein short lengths of the heat-shrunken filaments are floated over the face of the main body of the fabric.
“5. A woven fabric in accordance with claim 1, wherein the main body is heat set.”

Plaintiff makes no pretension to being the first to discover puffed fabrics, or even puffed fabrics containing thermoplastic threads or filaments. Moreover, the Faris patent itself says that “ * * the main body of the fabric is of a well known woven structure, wherein, looking at the face of the fabric as in Fig. 3 the filler or weft threads are alternately woven under two and over one of the warp threads.” In plaintiff’s brief furnished to this Court, plaintiff’s able counsel with commendable frankness and in order to arrive at the heart of the issue, says, “Three-dimensional fabrics and specifically puffed fabrics as such were old and well-known long before the Faris invention. The creation of puffs by shrinking treatments, including shrinking by heat, also was known. Moreover, the various types of weaves shown in the patent and exemplified in various embodiments of the patented fabrics are old and well-known.”

For the validity of the Faris patent, therefore, the plaintiff relies upon a combination of old and well-known elements and says that such combination constitutes an improvement of the old and well-known fabrics.

The specifications state in part: “In order to overcome the foregoing difficulties [in producing puffs sharp and accentuated and in retaining the puffs when the fabric is in use through shrinkage, wearing, tearing, etc.] confronting the user of the prior puffed fabrics, we have discovered the present invention. Our novel puffed fabrics possess sharp and accentuated puffs and the patterns produced by said puffs have a highly attractive three-dimensional appearance. Advantageously, the puffs of our fabrics are permanently retained so that the desired pattern design is preserved after a long period of use.” Thus plaintiff’s position in a nutshell is that the result of the Faris invention can be summed up as the production or the achievement of a puffed fabric having sharp and accentuated puffs which are truly permanent in and of themselves.

In studying the Faris patent we are studying a cloth, the nature of its weave, the threads from which it is made and the properties of those threads which cause the cloth to have a puffed form. The claims of the Faris patent are to a product and not to a method of weaving or puffing or making a cloth.

I make the following specific findings of fact and conclusions of law, the findings being numbered and the conclusions being lettered.

1.

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Bluebook (online)
165 F. Supp. 307, 118 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 53, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicopee-manufacturing-corp-v-columbus-fiber-mills-co-gamd-1958.