Cinema Patents Co. v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.

66 F.2d 744, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 98, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2762
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1933
DocketNo. 372
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 744 (Cinema Patents Co. v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cinema Patents Co. v. Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., 66 F.2d 744, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 98, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2762 (2d Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge,

The patents in suit relate' to> machine processing of motion picture film.. Processing photographie film) involves the steps of developing, fixing,, washing, and drying. Although additional! steps, such as coloring, or hardening with almim, may be introduced, tbe present ease is concerned only with the four first mentioned. Originally each step was performed manuaffiy. The exposed but undeveloped photographic film was- cut into sections of about 200! feet in. length, and eaeb section was- woundi upon a rack or drum which. [745]*745was submerged successively in the developing, fixing, and washing baths, and then hung in the drying room. Thereafter the sections were spliced together into a single reel of film of approximately 1,000 feet in length. This method was likely to result in variations in the quality of the picture due to variations in the degree of development of the several sections, and to produce scratches upon the film due to handling. When sound came to be used with moving pictures, the splicing of tho sound track produced an additional objection as the splice causes an undesirable noise. By tho method of machine processing, the exposed but undeveloped film is introduced at one end of the apparatus, mechanically advanced through successive receptacles containing appropriate chemicals or water, then through the drying chamber, and finally is delivered at the other end wound on a reel and ready for use. The sensatized face of the film is kept out of contact with the rollers which advance it through the apparatus, no manual handling or cutting and splicing is required, and the development may be to a uniform and predetermined density by regulating the speed of movement of the film and the depth of its submergence in the several baths.

Gaumont’s first patent, No. 1,177,607, relates to means for developing, fixing, and washing the film — the so-called “wet end” of the treatment. It claims both the process and the apparatus described in the specifications. Tho second patent, No. 1,209',608, relates to the dry end of the treatment; that is, to means for drying the film after it has passed through the steps of wet processing. The claims are directed only to the structure of the drying apparatus. Originally the subject-matter of both patents-was included in a single application filed February 17,1909, but the seeond patent was issued on a divisional application filed July 22, 1915.

The apparatus described in the first patent consists of a series of deep tanks or receptacles containing developer, rinse water, fixing solution, and washing water in the order named. For each tank there is a removable frame which fits over the top of the tank and supports within it two parallel shafts, one above the other, each carrying a row of spools or rollers. The spread between the upper and lower shafts of rollers is adjustable. Located above the upper row of rollers is a sprocket spool keyed to an independent shaft which is rotated by an electric motor. The teeth of the sprocket spool engage perforations in the margin of the film and thus cause the film to move forward. It travels over the upper and lower roller's in a spiral path transversely across the developer tank until it reaches a sprocket on the other side of the frame. Thence the film is led over an idler roller into a tubular-shaped, rinsing receptacle into which it dips in the form of á skewed loop'in which floats a roller; thence it passes over another idler roller to the first sprocket for the tank containing fixing solution, through which it travels in like manner as in the developer tank but in an opposite direction of travel. Thence it is passed in similar manner through the final washing tank. The film is started with the emulsion surface outermost, and by reason of its spiral path over upper and lower rollers the emulsion surface remains out of contact with the rollers and the sprockets as it moves forward. Because of the torsional strain resulting from its spiral path, Gaumont prescribes preferably spherical shaped rollers. When the film makes a single loop, as in the rinsing tube, it is given a twist so that the emulsion side will remain outermost as it goes around the lower spool,'and it is twisted back again coming up. A reservoir is provided for storing the developing solution which is fed by gravity to tho developing tank, and a constant circulation between reservoir and tank is maintained by a centrifugal pump-. To regulate the temperature of the developer there is located in the reservoir a coil of pipe through which hot or cold water may be circulated.

After the film has passed through the final washing tank employed in the wet end of tho treatment, it continues its travel to the drying apparatus of the second patent. This consists of a drying cabinet partitioned into compartments into whieh conditioned air may be admitted while the film is passing through. Its travel through is accomplished by means of a sprocket spool and upper and lower shafts of rollers, similar to the arrangement in the wet end of the apparatus, and it takes a similar spiral path from side to- side across the cabinet. The sprocket is rotated by the same e-leetric motor that drives the sprockets of the wet end. To obviate the strain resulting from shrinking of the film during drying, the lower shaft of rollers is permitted a limited up and down movement and is suspended in the loops of the film. Should .the film break, this shaft will fall and thus complete an electrical circuit which sounds a signal and stops the motor that drives both the wet and dry ends of the apparatus. Before entry into the drying cabinet the film passes over rollers supported on the outside thereof, and is formed into a skewed loop in the bight of which rests a weighted roller; the purpose of [746]*746this loop being stated to be to “compensate for any ordinary irregularities in the speed imparted by the several driving devices and thereby avoid such tension upon the film or print as might tend to rupture it.”

In the court below the patents were.held valid, but the claims in suit were accorded so narrow a range of equivalents that the defendant was held to escape infringement. As an alternative ground of decision, the District Court’s opinion states that the plaintiff, or its predecessors in title, had been guilty of sueh laches as to bar relief even if there were infringement, but the ruling as to noninfringement presents the principal question raised by this appeal and, if correct, makes unnecessary the consideration of other questions.

The machine used by the defendant is described in detail in the opinion below and that description need not be repeated here. It will suffice to refer to important differences between it and the patented apparatus. In the defendant’s machine the film is advanced in a “straight through” fashion; it takes no spiral path across the tanks. The tanks are tubular receptacles eaeh of which contains but ■a single loop of film in the bight of which floats a roller. Two rollers are mounted fixedly at the top of eaeh tube; one is an idle spool, the other a power driven sprocket.' The film enters the tube over the idle spool and is drawn out over the sprocket. There is no removable frame for eaeh tank or tube, but all the upper rollers are mounted on studs of a single beam extending the length of the machine. The lower rollers are not mounted at all, but each is suspended in the bight of a loop of film.

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Related

Keller v. American Sales Book Co.
26 F. Supp. 835 (W.D. New York, 1939)
Cinema Patents Co. v. Columbia Pictures Corp.
80 F.2d 332 (Ninth Circuit, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 744, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 98, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cinema-patents-co-v-warner-bros-pictures-inc-ca2-1933.