Cowles Co. v. Frost White Paper Mills, Inc.

77 F. Supp. 124, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 37, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2632
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMarch 22, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 77 F. Supp. 124 (Cowles Co. v. Frost White Paper Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cowles Co. v. Frost White Paper Mills, Inc., 77 F. Supp. 124, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 37, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2632 (S.D.N.Y. 1948).

Opinion

MEDINA, District Judge.

This case involves alleged infringement by defendant Frost White Paper Mills, Inc. and contributory infringement by theintervener American Paper Machinery & Engineering Works, Inc. of the method claims 1, 2, 3, 4 and 13 contained in Patent No. 2,351,492, of which the plaintiffs are respectively the -assignee and licensee. The pleadings also present the issue of validity.. The apparatus claims of the said patent are-not involved.

In the manufacture of paper there are certain preliminary procedures by which the stock is prepared in readiness for feeding to the paper machines. The materials-used vary considerably and in the aggregate-present problems and difficulties which the industry has met in various ways. Typical materials are wood pulp in the form of laps, rolls, waste paper, which commonly contains a quantity of dirt and foreign material, broke, fro-zen groundwood, and news-print ends. The preparation of these materials involves three distinct steps, all of which were for many years performed more or less at the same time by the operation of the old-fashioned Hollander beaters-It is first necessary to defiber the material, and to break it down into the individual fibers; this is called pulping. Hydration, the second step, is caused by a rubbing and crushing of the walls of the individual fibers, which results in a swelling of the fibers as the absorption of the water takes place and there also results -a fibrillation of the ends of the fibers, giving them a [125]*125brush or broom-like appearance. Another result of the hydration is a generally gelatinous consistency of the stock. Finally, it is necessary to cut the fibers in a manner appropriate for the particular kind of paper to be manufactured. In the course of time the paper making industry followed the general trend of specialization and the Hollander beaters were supplemented by various types of breaker beaters and Jordans.

Prior to the development of the machines hereinafter discussed, there was always a substantial demand for any machine which would more efficiently and less expensively perform all or any of the functions of the traditional Hollanders. The element of time was always a matter of importance and this was likewise true of the saving of labor and power. Any improvement in the thoroughness and dispatch with which the entire operation or any part thereof could be concluded was of great practical utility.

Edwin Cowles, the patentee of the patent involved in this case, became interested in the development of a washing machine which functioned by the operation of a jet which had the effect of removing the dirt and performing the cleaning operation in the small washing machines first developed. Experiments on larger machines with a jet of much higher pressure, and a nozzle having somewhat the appearance of a fire hose, resulted in a fraying of the cloth and fabric which led to the abandonment of the venture. He got the idea, however, that the very thing which caused the fraying of the fabric in a washing machine might be serviceable in connection with the pulping of paper stock. After some years of experimentation with various devices, he abandoned the notion of an apparatus containing nozzles and on October 29, 1940 obtained Patent No. 2,219,571 on an apparatus, among the purposes of which were the treatment of paper stock and “defiberizing” generally. This apparatus consisted of a container in which was a shaft, operated from above, to which was affixed an impeller consisting of a circular disk with two or more grooves either in the top or bottom faces or both. The operation of this grooved impeller at a peripheral velocity in excess of 2,000 feet per minute was supposed to cause the “defiberizing.” The theory of this patent as described therein was: “These jets, impinging on the relatively stationary liquid through which they pass, exert a highly disintegrative effect on any solids immersed or suspended therein.”

Mr. Cowles testified that the jets which were thrown from the grooves of this impeller produced a disintegrating effect of the same type as was caused by the fire hose nozzle which ejected a high velocity jet in the washing machine upon which he was earlier experimenting. The patent thus obtained on October 29, 1940 contained seven apparatus claims but no process claims whatever.

The final development was the patent in suit which was issued on June 13, 1944. The apparatus consisted of a vat, the bottom and sides of which had a certain conformation shown in Fig. 1, in which certain fixed directional vanes 5 may be imbedded “to direct the stock which is discharged from the impeller in an upward direction and to restrain to some extent the circulation in a horizontal plane.”

An impeller of certain dimensions in proportion to the vat was placed at the bottom of the vat and this “impeller disk” was provided with a number of impeller vanes 14 mounted adjacent to the rim of the disk and projecting upwardly from the upper surface thereof. The specifications provide that “The height of the vanes above the surface of the disk is small relative to the diameter of the disk at the circumference which intersects the mid point of said vanes, and should not exceed a ratio of 1 to 30.” The specifications also provide that the impeller should be rotated at a rate sufficient to discharge the stock at the rim of the impeller with a velocity of at least 1,000 feet per minute.

It is repeatedly indicated in the specifications and to some extent also in the claims, that the alleged invention utilizes “the principle of refining and defibering by discharging stock at high velocity through a surrounding body of relatively stationary stock.” It is stated that “the desired refining and defibering action takes place along [126]*126the surfaces cif the body of stock which is moving at high velocity” and reference is made to the earlier patent above referred to by way of explanation of the manner in which this alleged principle of hydraulic shear was developed in the patent in suit to a point of high efficiency.

The method claims involved herein are as follows:

“1. The method of pulping paper stock in batches which comprises introducing the required amount of water into a tank, introducing the entire charge of fibrous material required to produce the desired batch consistency into said tank at one time, and maintaining a vortical circulation with a hollow core in said tank .whereby floating solid material is submerged by the action of the vortex.
“2. The method of pulping paper stock in batches which comprises introducing the required amount of water into a tank, introducing a charge of solid fibrous material into said tank at one time, said charge being sufficient to produce a stock consistency in excess of 3% in the finished stock, and maintaining a vortical circulation with a hollow core in said tank whereby floating solid material is submerged by the action of the vortex.
“3. The method of pulping paper stock in batches which comprises introducing the required amount of water into a tank, introducing the entire charge of fibrous material required to produce the desired batch consistency into said tank at one time, maintaining a vortical circulation with a hollow core in said tank whereby floating solid material is submerged by the action of the vortex, and subjecting the solid fibrous material to defibering action at the bottom of said vortex.
“4.

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282 F. Supp. 118 (E.D. New York, 1968)
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Bluebook (online)
77 F. Supp. 124, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 37, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cowles-co-v-frost-white-paper-mills-inc-nysd-1948.