Crozier-Straub, Inc. v. Graham

28 F.2d 321, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 26, 1928
Docket3776-3778
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 F.2d 321 (Crozier-Straub, Inc. v. Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crozier-Straub, Inc. v. Graham, 28 F.2d 321, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2354 (3d Cir. 1928).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

These three patent suits were tried together but were decided by separate decrees dismissing the bill in each case. The plaintiffs, the same in each case, appealed. The appeals were heard together, will be considered together on the issue of validity, common to all, and considered separately on the issues of infringement, different in each.

These appeals bring here again Letters Patent No. 1,212,840 issued on January 16, 1917, to Francis J. Straub for a building block and method of making the same, known in the building trade as the “cinder block” and “Straub’s cinder block.” The patent was first adjudicated in Straub v. Campbell, 259 F. 570, when this court held its claims valid on a very firm finding of invention. In the suits at bar the learned trial judge, though frankly stating that in his opinion the patent is invalid and expressing his belief that had the record before this court in the Campbell Case been the same as that which was before him in these cases our judgment would have been different, nevertheless felt constrained to follow the decision of this appellate court as to' the validity of the patent but dismissed the bills on findings of noninfringement.

In view of this conviction of an able and earnest judge and also because the records in the two eases (regarding the last group as one litigation) are without doubt very different in volume, we shall give the issue of validity more extended discussion than is ordinarily given at a second trial on the same patent.

The building block of the patent is a simple one. It is of familiar shape and is intended generally for uses long known. Invention in the product, if any, resides in its constituents which are, cement and water (both old) and “a mixture of coarse and fine coal cinder and ashes, retaining all of the original mass.” Invention in the process, if any, must be found in the manner of making blocks of this constituency; that is, “in crushing and grinding an original mass of coal cinder and ashes without separation, mixing the entire mass of coarse and fine material with a suitable proportion of cement and water, and molding and drying the same in block form.”

We recognized in the Campbell Case that the use of cinders in groutings, foundations, walks, roads, and other structures was old and we learned from the few patents in the record that ashes and cinders, screened or washed or otherwise prepared and selected and proportioned with other ingredients had appeared in the patent art, but (again from the record) we found that no one before Straub had, when making building blocks, conceived the idea of taking the whole ash product — einders and ash alike, half burned and wholly burned, lumjps and dust — in fact, *322 the entire run of the grate, using the whole waste product in its raw state and rolling or grinding the whole mass. This process appealed to us as new and we also thought the product of the process, namely, the cinder block, was new, not in its form but in its make-up and characteristics. While in form it is that of the ordinary building block it has marked features, some improvements on old blocks, others wholly new.

All blocks are more or less soundproof but Straub’s is more soundproof than others with hard aggregates, doubtless for the reason that instead of being a solid mass as when made of sand or stone aggregate it is porous, containing myriads of cells; it •permits nails to be driven into it without breaking and firmly holds the nails in place; it is lighter in weight and cheaper to make than any block brought to our attention; though porous and light, it is strong; and, though strong, can be broken on nearly straight lines. With these characteristics its usefulness as a building material, especially in dispensing with the woodwork ordinarily set in the masonry for plastering, and for window-working and door working, seemed manifest. There was no evidence of how the invention was received by the trade because when that suit was brought the patent was only about a year old and but a small number of blocks had been made in the patentee’s crude little plant and sold in one locality.

On the record in the Campbell Case we thought, and still think, there was invention.

From the-record in the suits at bar we have discovered that the characteristic of the block which most .strongly impressed us, namely, its “nailability,” was not entirely new with Straub because one of the cited patents (Atterbury) disclosed a block made of cement, cinders and asbestos fibre into which nails can be driven — how effectively we do not know because as we use the term “nailability” in connection with the Straub block we do not limit its meaning to mere penetrability but extend it to holding the nails in place for the useful purpose of supplanting wood which theretofore had been employed in layers' between the masonry to receive nails and hold them; yet none of the cited patents discloses a block made entirely of ash and cinder aggregate that is nailable.

Just why the Straub block in comparison with other blocks is more soundproof, that it will receive and firmly hold nails, that it is readily broken along desired lines, that it is light yet strong, we do not know and seemingly Straub did not know when he was awarded the patent. But that does not mitigate against the fact of invention for it is not necessary that Straub should have understood and been able to state the scientific principles underlying his conception. Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consol. Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428, 435, 436, 31 S. Ct. 444, 55 L. Ed. 527 Nor is it necessary that a court in order to pass on- the validity of a patent should in every case understand and be able to state the principles of the invention. It is not known even now why Straub’s block has these qualities. It is persuasively suggested by experts that they are due to the cellular character of the block and that this is due to the natural properties of the cinder ingredient.

Confessedly the record in the Campbell Case was meager. It contained but few patents and no serious instances of prior use. The record in these eases contains 46 prior patents and publications which deal with, touch or cover ashes and cinders as aggregates in cement mixtures for a variety of purposes, disclosing a long and wide study of their uses. Regarding those patents and publications mentioned in the opinion of the District Court (where the patent numbers and publication dates may be found) as the strongest references against the validity of the patent in suit, we shall review them in order to contrast their constituents and disclosures with those of the product claim (2) of the patent, remembering that it calls for “a mixture of coarse and fine coal cinder and ashes, retaining all of the original mass, water and cement.”

The Heim patent (1869) was for a building block of one part stone lime (the Portland cement industry was developed later), coal ashes and coal dust in equal quantities of four to eight parts and two parts of potash. When this substance becomes dry it is extremely hard and highly impervious. It is the opposite of the Straub block which is resilient and cellular. -

The Dreyer patent (1879) disclosed a building block of one part each of Portland cement, mineral wool

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Bluebook (online)
28 F.2d 321, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crozier-straub-inc-v-graham-ca3-1928.