De Cew v. Union Bag & Paper Corporation

57 F. Supp. 388, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 459, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedAugust 16, 1944
DocketCivil Action 108
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 57 F. Supp. 388 (De Cew v. Union Bag & Paper Corporation) 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 Corporation, 57 F. Supp. 388, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 459, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955 (D.N.J. 1944).

Opinion

SMITH, District Judge.

This is a suit under the patent laws for the infringement of two patents of which the plaintiff is admittedly the owner. The one, No. 1,558,845, hereinafter referred to as ’845, issued on an application filed by the plaintiff on June 7, 1924; the other No. 1,589,947, hereinafter referred to as ’947, issued on an application filed by the plaintiff on September 19, 1925. The defendant denies infringement and challenges the validity of the patents.

The patents pertain generally to the manufacture of paper and relate particularly to improvements in the method of sizing the cellulose fibers of which papers are made. The claims of the respective patents are limited to the successive mechanical steps of the methods therein defined; the chemical process is concededly old. The present suit is directed to an alleged infringing method practiced by the defendant in the manufacture of kraft papers and liners.

State of The Art

An extensive recital of the history of the paper industry seems unnecessary, but it should be noted that the progress of the industry has been marked by numerous inventions, discoveries, and technical improvements. The patents in suit must be examined and appraised in the light of these advances, and, therefore, a general knowledge of the art of paper manufacture, and particularly that branch thereof to which the said patents relate, is necessary, not only to the proper interpretation of the claims, but also to the adequate understanding of the issues here presented. It is with this in mind that we undertake an outline of the state of the art, omitting, of course, the technical detail.

*391 Papers are made of cellulose fibers derived from many sources, e. g., wood, jute, hemp, straw, flax, rags, etc. The several methods of manufacture, although they may differ in technique, according to the nature of the raw material and the quality of the paper, are essentially the same. Kraft papers, such as those manufactured by the defendant, are made of cellulose fibers derived from wood, and the art of manufacturing such papers, as hereinafter outlined, is apposite here and illustrative of the methods in common use.

The wood, cleaned and suitably prepared, is cooked in a solution of caustic alkali and reduced to pulp; the ligneous constituents of the wood are thus removed, leaving a soft, wet, and slightly cohering mass of insoluble cellulose fibers. This fibrous material, having been thus extracted and prepared, is converted into paper in three successive operations, identified in the industry as “beating,” “refining,” and “felting.” These operations have remained essentially the same for many years although there have been many improvements in the apparatus used in their performance.

The pulp, brought to a predetermined fluidity and consistency by the introduction of water, is milled in a hollander, 1 in which the pulp is circulated between a bed-plate and a rotating roll, each of which is equipped with blunt metal bars or knives. This operation imparts to the fibrous material the physical properties essential to the formation of the paper; the individual fibers are isolated and suspended, shortened, and hydrated, and the stock becomes gelatinous. This stock, after having been thus treated and prepared, is then refined in a jordan, 2 in which the stock passes between the inner periphery of a conical shell and the outer periphery of a rotating plug, each of which is equipped with blunt metal bars or knives. This operation, as the term “refine” imports, improves the physical qualities imparted to the fibrous material in the initial operation, and, in addition, “brooms” or “fibrillates” the fibers.

These successive operations, except for the apparatus in which they are performed, are similar, and in each of them the fibers are subjected to a “beating action” which differs only in degree. This “beating action” imparts to the fibers certain physical properties which not only contribute to the formation of the paper but also enhance its quality and strength. It necessarily follows that the “beating action,” indispensable in the manufacture of paper, is peculiarly essential in the manufacture of kraft papers.

It should be observed that the “beating action” of the hollander and the “beating action” of the jordan are basically indistinguishable in practice, principle, or result. The hollander and the jordan, designed to perform identical functions, are similar in their essential structural elements, and differ only in their form of construction; the jordan, which was invented and introduced many years after the hollander, in 1858, may be utilized as a hollander, and in many modern paper mills has replaced it.

The final operation, the formation of the paper, is continuous and consists of three successive steps which are carried out on the paper machine, or Fourdrinier. The stock, previously prepared in the manner described, and diluted with water, is conducted to the paper machine, and the paper is formed in the following manner: First, the stock is conducted onto an endless belt of wire cloth on which the fibers are felted and the excess water removed; second, the moist sheet thus formed is passed through a series of press rolls which set the fibers and compact the sheet; and third, the sheet is passed through a series of heated drying rolls which dry and finish the paper. A cylinder machine is frequently used instead of a Fourdrinier, but the operative steps of the final operation are substantially the same.

The modern paper mill is so constructed, and the equipment is so arranged, as to permit either an intermittent or continuous flow of stock from the hollander to the paper machine. There is between the hollander and the jordan a storage chest, hereinafter referred to as the “beater chest”; there is between the jordan and the paper machine a storage chest, hereinafter referred to as the “machine chest.” These chests are equipped with appropriate apparatus to control the flow of stock. It seems unnecessary for our present purposes to describe the construction and operation of this equipment, but it is necessary to note its relative location.

Sizing, the art to which the patents in *392 suit relate, overcomes the absorptive quality of the fibers and imparts to the finished paper its water resistant property. There are two processes in common use: The one, “engine sizing,” which is carried out in the stock as a concomitant operation in the preparation of the stock, and the other, “tub sizing,” which is carried out on the paper after the formation of the sheet. The former differs from the latter in operative principle, but this difference is not substantial.

The “engine sizing” process, as herein-above stated, is carried out as a concomitant operation in the preparation of the stock. The chemical ingredients, aluminum sulphate and rosin emulsion, are introduced as the stock is prepared, and in the following manner: First, the rosin emulsion is introduced into the stock at the hollander, where it is thoroughly mixed with the stock to insure uniformity; second, the aluminum sulphate, either dry or in solution, is introduced into the stock at the hollander, but after the “beating action” has been completed and the beater roll has been raised.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F. Supp. 388, 62 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 459, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1955, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-cew-v-union-bag-paper-corporation-njd-1944.