De Cew v. Union Bag & Paper Corp.

59 F. Supp. 301, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 464, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2538
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedMarch 2, 1945
DocketCivil Action No. 488
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 59 F. Supp. 301 (De Cew v. Union Bag & Paper Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Cew v. Union Bag & Paper Corp., 59 F. Supp. 301, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 464, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2538 (D.N.J. 1945).

Opinion

SMITH, District Judge.

This is a suit under the patent laws for ■the infringement of two patents; the one, No. 1,753,775, hereinafter referred to as ’775, issued on an application filed by the plaintiff on May 24, 1929; the other, No. 2,041,285, hereinafter referred to as ’285, issued on an application filed by the plaintiff on September 28, 1933. These patents, like those heretofore considered and discussed in the related suit, 57 F.Supp. 388, pertain to the manufacture of paper and cover improvements in the process of sizing the cellulose fibers of which papers are made, and, although cognate, must- be separately considered and discussed.

The patents in suit cover further improvements on the art of sizing paper in the pulp, and particularly on the inventions defined in earlier patents to the plaintiff, Nos. 1,558,845 and 1,589,947. The patents and publications of the prior art discussed and considered in the related suit, including the patents there in suit, are relevant and material to the issue of validity here presented, but a repetitious discussion of them would seem to be superfluous. It is, therefore, suggested that a reading of the earlier opinion, hereinabove cited, will facilitate not'only a comprehen[303]*303sion of the art but also a proper appraisal of the present patents.

Patent No. 775

The invention of this patent is defined in claim 3 thereof, which is typical, as follows: “A method of sizing paper which consists in treating the paper making fibre with sulphate of alumina, allowing the fibres to absorb the alum” (sulphate of alumina) “until the pH of the solution is over 5, and then treating the surface of the astringent fibres with a solution of rosin size.” (Emphasis by the Court.) The other claims, which are quoted in the footnote,1 *define nothing more than specific variants of the same invention. The dissimilarity of the respective claims is not substantial, and is, therefore, not material to either the issue of validity or infringement.

It is here urged by the patentee, as it was in the prosecution of his application for the patent, that the invention, as thus defined, is a specific improvement on the invention covered by an earlier patent to him, No. 1,-585,469. The invention of the latter patent is defined in claim 2 thereof as follows: “A method of sizing paper pulp, which consists in treating the fibers (while in the beater) with sulphate of alumina and adding a stream of size emulsion to the fibers (as they are entering the Jordan engine.”) (Parentheses by the Court.) It is obvious, upon a mere comparison of the quoted claims, that the inventions of the patents are identical in substance, g-xcept for the allegedly novel concept of maintaining the hydrogen ion concentration in the stock, the degree of acidity, within the defined limits. It is of persuasive significance that upon rejection of the claims in suit on the earlier patent, this concept was urged by the patentee as the only critical distinction.

When the claims in suit are construed in the light of the prior art, as they must be, it is evident that the essence of the invention lies only in this allegedly novel concept of maintaining the hydrogen ion concentration in the stock, the degree of acidity, during the sizing operation, within the prescribed optimum, to wit, between 5.0 pH and 6.8 pH, the lower coefficient denoting the degree of highest acidity, and the higher coefficient denoting the degree of lowest acidity2 at which an effective size may be coagulated. The process of the said claims is otherwise old, the successive steps thereof, to wit, the introduction of the aluminum sulphate into the stock, thus effecting the acidification of the fibers and the surrounding solution, followed by the introduction of the rosin size emulsion, thus effécting the coagulation of the size, having been disclosed earlier not only by the patentee 3 but also by others.4 This, it [304]*304appears from the cited references, was common practice in many paper mills long prior to its disclosure by the patentee.5

It follows that the ultimate issue presented for determination is whether or not the embodiment of this allegedly novel concept —conceived by others whose disclosures preceded that of the patentee, as will presently appear — in a process otherwise old, is such an advance over the prior art as will support the claim to patentable invention. It is our firm conviction, based upon the reasons hereinafter expressed, that it is not.

State of the Art

The art of sizing paper in the pulp, as practiced in the modern paper mill, was discovei-ed and disclosed by Moritz Illig6 in 1807. This art, although not immediately accepted generally, has been in common use without substantial modification since 1880, when the manufacture of paper from wood pulp was found to be commercially feasible.7 The development of this art, consistent with the progress of the paper industry, has been marked by numerous improvements on the method of application8 but by few modifications of the chemical process. It is significant that the improvements on the chemical process, including that of the patent in suit, have been minor, despite extensive study and numerous explanations of the sizing phenomenon.

The methods of application, as distinguished from the chemical process, and the pertinent improvements thereon, were adequately considered and explained in the .opinion filed in the related suit. The present discussion is limited, so far as it is reasonably possible, to the chemical process, the applied chemistry of the art, to which the patent in suit is particularly and primarily directed.

The chemical process is one in the practice of which the hydrated cellulose fibers, suspended in a water medium, are so treated as to overcome their absorptive quality and impart to the finished paper its water repellent property. The chemical ingredients, aluminum sulphate (the coagulant) and rosin emulsion (the size), are successively introduced into the stock9 in the course of its preparation and as it flows to the paper machine.10 The resulting chemical reaction, properly controlled, produces a colloidal gel11 of aluminum resínate and rosin,12 which is adsorbed13 by the cellulose fibers. The water of suspension is removed in the final operation, felting and drying, and the rosin size is tints rendered permanent, imparting to the finished paper its water repellant property.

The chemical reaction is progressive and complex but for our present purpose may be sufficiently explained as follows: The solution of aluminum, sulphate, an acid solution having a pH value of approxi[305]*305mately 3.5 to 4.0, coagulates the rosin emulsion,14 an alkaline “solution”15 having a pH value of approximately 8:0 to 9.0, thus producing the colloidal gel of aluminum resínate and rosin, which, as heretofore explained, is adsorbed by the hydrated cellulose fibers.16 This adsorption, the ultimate sizing reaction, heretofore described in footnote 13, is ascribed to the colloidal properties of the components, the hydrated cellulose fibers and the gel.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 F. Supp. 301, 64 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 464, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-cew-v-union-bag-paper-corp-njd-1945.