Consolidated Water Power & Paper Co. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.

107 F. Supp. 777, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 146, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3888
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 13, 1952
DocketCiv. A. Nos. 4373, 4782
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 F. Supp. 777 (Consolidated Water Power & Paper Co. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Water Power & Paper Co. v. Kimberly-Clark Corp., 107 F. Supp. 777, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 146, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3888 (E.D. Wis. 1952).

Opinion

TEHAN, District Judge.

This is a consolidation of two separate actions brought by the plaintiffs alleging infringement of a process patent, United States Letters Patent No. 1,921,368, issued on August 8, 1933 and relating to a process of coating paper. The coated paper produced by plaintiff and defendant by use of processes claimed by plaintiffs to be covered by the patent in suit is the kind used by popular magazines such as Life and Look. Infringement of Patent No. 1,921,369 was also alleged in one of the suits originally, but by stipulation the two actions were consolidated and Patent No. 1,921,369 was withdrawn.

Plaintiffs seek injunctive i-elief and an accounting and damages. Since the patent expired during the pendency of the suit, the question of injunctive relief need no longer be considered and the only matter to be determined is whether or not an accounting should be ordered.

Plaintiffs allege that their coating process invention was one of the greatest advances in the paper-making industry in that it taught an economical and efficient method of applying a mineral surface on a web of paper as it moved through a paper-making machine and thereby so reduced the cost of making paper for use in fine half-tone printing that it revolutionized both the paper-making and the printing industries. Defendant alleges that the patent taught nothing which was new or useful to the paper-making industry.

Untreated paper is a web of interlaced wood fibers which by reason of its uneyen surface and its inability to properly receive or hold ink is unsuitable for quality printing and particularly for fine halftone pictorial illustrations. A clay or [779]*779similar mineral surface, however, receives and holds ink well and provides the smooth even surface necessary for fine printing.

The value of a mineral surface for printing was recognized for many decades prior to the date of the patent in suit, and paper coaters had worked out various formulae for obtaining such mineral surfaces. The commonly used methods involved the two operations of applying coating to the paper and then, after application, smoothing the applied coating by means of brushes. The brush coatings were applied to the paper in numerous ways, and might be brushed on, applied by felts carrying the coating, or by rolls dipping into the coating solution, or they might be spattered on by spatter brushes. After application, the coating had to be smoothed by brushes, usually a series of brushes increasing in fineness and softness as the paper progressed.

It was necessary that the amount of water in the coating composition be sufficient so that the removal of water by absorption into the paper would not cause the coating to set up or become immobile before the brushing operation was complete. The amount of water required to accomplish this was such that without the brushing operation, the paper would be detrimentally streaked. In addition, the amount of water used was so great that the paper, even after brushing, could not be brought into contact with heated dryers of the type used in paper manufacturing, and brush coated papers were usually dried by “festooning.” Festooning consists of suspending the paper in loops about eight feet high from thin rollers spaced close together on racks so that the paper hangs in festoons between them. Festooning took up much space and greatly limited the speed of operation, since the faster the operation, the greater the length of festoon required.

Brush coating produced beautiful paper but it was slow and costly and could not be operated on the paper-making machine, partly because of the^ great difference in speed between the two operations, and the space necessary for festooning. In addition, paper making must be done continuously since the starting up of a paper machine is a difficult operation, and brush coating operations were somewhat temperamental. Because of lumps, hairs, brush marks and pole marks from the festooning rods, brush-coated paper usually had to be cut into sheets and each sheet inspected. The cost of inspection and high percentage of rejections added to the cost, and since little of it was available in rolls, it was largely used in sheet-fed presses rather than the high speed rotary presses which are normally roll fed and utilized where a large volume of work is to be done.

The first idea of Massey, the patentee and one of the plaintiffs herein, to produce coated paper was to use a conventional offset press ink distributing system comprising an ink fountain and a multiplicity of transfer and oscillating rolls. In answer to defendant’s interrogatories he stated that he reduced his invention to practice in March 1930. This was done not on a paper machine, but on a commercial Miehle offset printing press of the Columbian Engraving Company in Chicago, Illinois. In order to coat the entire surface of the paper, it was necessary to put in a blank plate instead of an ordinary printing plate. The water rolls and three top rolls were then disconnected so that there were left in the roll system, in addition to the applicator rolls, a nest of 17 rolls over which the coating mixture was transferred before it was applied to the applicator roll.

In May, 1930, the application was filed upon which Patent No. 1,921,368 was eventually issued, this being a continuation of an application, Serial No. 450,614, which was filed in the United States Patent Office earlier that month.

The patent in suit was issued on August ' 8, 1933. The specification of the Massey patent in suit describes the use of a multiple roller structure similar to that used in a printing press. In the patent, Massey discloses, for each side of the paper web to be coated, a roll arrangement, having in addition to the applicator roll, 13 other rolls. In other respects the roll arrangement is substantially identical with that disclosed in the Miehle press drawing (Exh. U-3). The specification says that this multiple [780]*780roller structure preworks the coating mixture and thereby accomplishes:

(a) A substantial elimination of fluid so as to reduce it to a plastic state, requiring no further substantial elimination of fluid.
(b) The production of a smooth, uniform concentrated film on the applicator roll before application of the film to the paper.

One or both of these features is set forth in each of the claims in suit, and the file wrapper shows that Massey emphasized these points during the prosecution of the patent.

The first coater built to carry out the process of the patent is shown by Defendant’s Exhibit 6, and was installed on the No. 9 paper machine at the Bryant Paper Company in Kalamazoo, Michigan,- in the fall of 1932. The coating composition had a solids content of approximately 52%. Paper coated on the original coater at Bryant was printed upon and sold for fine half-tone printing. This machine cost $150,000 ánd followed closely the original printing press idea, employing a roll arrangement and an ink fountain not greatly different from those disclosed on the Co-lumbian Miehle press and in the patent in suit. The Bryant coater, in addition to the applicator rolls, emploj^ed 11 rolls between the ink fountain and the applicator roll.

Meanwhile, in 1932 the defendant company commenced to use, and is still using a process known as the G-K process employing a pair of applicator rolls without the use of brushes^ similar to the process described in the Traquair Patent No.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. Supp. 777, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 146, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-water-power-paper-co-v-kimberly-clark-corp-wied-1952.