Clark v. Ace Rubber Products, Inc.

108 F. Supp. 200, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2227
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 22, 1952
DocketCiv. A. No. 25995
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 108 F. Supp. 200 (Clark v. Ace Rubber Products, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Ace Rubber Products, Inc., 108 F. Supp. 200, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2227 (N.D. Ohio 1952).

Opinion

McNAMEE, District Judge. '

Plaintiffs are the owners of patent 2,-436,139, which .was applied for April 6, 1946 and issued February 17, 1948. They bring this action for infringement. Defendants deny infringement and assert that the patent is invalid. They also allege that plaintiffs do not come into- this court of equity with clean hands and urge dismissal of the action on that ground.

The alleged invention consists of a unitary molded rubber mat designed to1 cover both the tread and riser portions of stairs or steps. Plaintiff James C. Clark is the inventor and owner of a two-thirds interest in the patent. Plaintiff Donald Gottwald is the assignee of a one-third interest therein.

Two claims were allowed, but the alleged infringement is of claim 1 only, which reads as follows:

[201]*201“A molded rubber stair mat comprising a portion for lying flat on a horizontal stair tread, a portion for lying flat against a vertical stair riser, and a portion between said tread and riser engaging portions to lie close to the front edge and underside of said tread and having a groove in its outer surface along which the mat may bend to fit into the angular space at the intersection of the tread and riser, said riser - portion being long enough to wedge between adjacent stair treads whereby the mat may be positioned and maintained in snug engagement with the riser and bead of the stair.”

The product has been a commercial success. From March, 1946 to March, 1952 plaintiffs’ licensee, the Crown Rubber Company, has sold between three and one-half to four million of the patented mats at a total sales price of approximately two million dollars and paid royalties to plaintiffs in an amount estimated between ninety-five and one hundred thousand dollars. For the most part, these sales have been made without advertising other than “envelope staffers,” to Sears, Roebuck & Company, Montgomery Ward & Company, and the retail stores of the Goodyear, Goodrich, and Firestone Tire & Rubber companies.

It is conceded that none of the references to the prior art were anticipations of plain tiffs’ alleged invention. It is the claim of defendants, however, that in the years 1934 to 1940, inclusive, a rubber molded stair mat substantially the equivalent of the patented mat was manufactured and sold by the then licensees of plaintiffs and that such predecessor mat was either in full anticipation of the product -here claimed to be infringed or that such improvement as there may be in the patented mat is the result of mere mechanical skill. The facts upon which this claim rests are as follows:

Sometime in the year 1934 Clark conceived the idea of a stair mat of rubber and fabric construction to cover the tread and riser portions of stairs or steps as a cheaper and more efficient substitute for carpet and other stair coverings then in use. His original concept was of a mat consisting of two separate pieces of rubber spaced apart, with a piece of fabric coextensive with the pieces of rubber and vulcanized to them. The fabric covered the entire back of the unitary structure and formed a hinge between the separate pieces of rubber, which was designed to permit the mat to be fitted into the angular space between the underside of a step and the front side of the riser below it. Clark applied for a patent on this mat under application No. 711,717. He disclosed his idea to the Trump Rubber 'Company, who agreed to manufacture and sell the mats and pay Clark a royalty therefor. Clark thereupon became an employee of the Trump Rubber Company and was charged with the duty of supervising the manufacture of these mats. Meanwhile 'he prosecuted his application for a patent. The application was twice rejected and, apparently because of the bankruptcy of the Trump Rubber Company in 1935, was finally abandoned in March, 1936.

Clark testified that none of the mats described in application No. 711,717 were sold while he was employed by Trump. During the period of that employment, however, Clark devised a second mat, hereinafter referred to as Exhibit A, which was manufactured and sold by Trump. The second mat (Exhibit A) differed from the first in that it was a unitary molded mat consisting entirely of rubber except for a two-inch strip of fabric imbedded in the under-surface across the back of tihe groove which lies between the tread and riser portions of the mat. Several of these Exhibit A mats were sold by Trump, the precise number being itnknown.

The Ace Rubber 'Company succeeded to the business of Trump after the latter’s bankruptcy and continued Clark in its employ under the same royalty agreement the latter had with Trump. Between the years 1936 and 1940, inclusive, more than two thousand of these mats with the strip of fabric on the back were sold by the Ace Rubber Company. The number of mats sold annually was as follows : 1242 in 1936; 675 in 1937; 245 in 1938 ; 24 in 1939; 83 in 1940.

The defendants made an effprt to show that the Ace Rubber Company manufactured and sold mats with the strip of fabric [202]*202omitted, but the weight of the evidence is the other way. It is clear that all the mats sold during the years prior to the war had a strip of fabric on the back. The function of the fabric strip was to reinforce the rubber at its point of greatest strain and to prevent cracking and tearing at that point.

Clark received royalties on these sales made by Ace. Two cancelled checks in evidence, dated December 8, 193(5 and June 23, 1938, in the respective amounts of $12.50 and $13.47, represent royalty payments made by Ace to Clark.

Although it was represented that there was an application pending for a patent on Exhibit A, there was no application for a patent on this mat. With the advent of the war and the restrictions upon the use of rubber, the manufacture and sale of Exhibit A mats was discontinued.

Upon the termination of the war Clark entered the employ of the Crown Rubber Company. At that time he devised the mat which is the subject of the patent in suit. As indicated, the patented mat is made entirely of rubber, the reinforcing fabric strip used on the predecessor mat being omitted. The omission of the fabric strip represents the only important difference between the patented mat and Exhibit A. A light weight and inferior grade of rubber was used in the manufacture of Exhibit A. By using a “better stock” and “thicker stock” it was practicable to remove the reinforcing fabric strip.

In his direct testimony Clark stated that Exhibit A was difficult to bend at the groove so as to fit snugly into the angular space ' between the under surface of the stair and the front surface of the riser below, and that such mats could be made only in single cavity molds of short life, capable of producing not more than 25 to 50 mats. He stated that the all-rubber patented mat can be made in gang molds in which two to four mats are molded simultaneously and which have a life of from 1000 bo 1500 mats. In explanation of the purpose sought to be accomplished by the omission of the fabric strip Clark said: “I was trying to get the mat where we could make them in production, and make more than one at a time and still retain the strength here.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. Supp. 200, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 24, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-ace-rubber-products-inc-ohnd-1952.