Doughnut Mach. Corp. v. Demco, Inc.

51 F.2d 364, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1504
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJuly 1, 1931
DocketNos. 1616, 1697
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 F.2d 364 (Doughnut Mach. Corp. v. Demco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doughnut Mach. Corp. v. Demco, Inc., 51 F.2d 364, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1504 (D. Md. 1931).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

These two suits involve alleged infringements of five patents covering machines for the automatic frying of doughnuts. Pour patents are involved in suit No. 1616, namely, Tomlinson patent, No. 1,320,662, filed March 15, 1918, issued November 4, 1919; Sherman and Morris, No. 1,414,713, filed June 7, 1919, issued May 2, 1922; Bergner patents, No. 1,492,541, filed October 29,1919, issued April 24, 1924, and No. 1,665,017, filed July 10, 1919, issued April 3, 1928. The remaining patent is involved in suit No. 1697, which was brought by supplemental bill, and, although heard separately, by stipulation the material part of the evidence in suit No. 1616 was brought into the second suit. This patent is to Nye, No. 1,599,916, filed March 7, 1924, issued September 14, 1926.

Plaintiff company is a large manufacturer of automatic doughnut making machines and special flours. It appears from the evidence that three of the defendants, namely, the Joe-Lowe Corporation, Demeo, Inc., and Nye-Mosher Manufacturing Company, are closely interrelated in the manufacture also of automatic doughnut making machines and in the sale of flour; and also that the Joe-Lowe Corporation is in fact the selling agent for Demeo, Inc., Nye-Mosher Manufacturing Company, and for Nymeo Doughnut Machine Corporation, which latter company succeeded to the business of the Nye-Mosher Manufacturing Company in 1929. All three of these defendant companies have interlocking directors and officers, with the same office facilities in New York City, their principal place of business, and all have co-operated in selling the machines manufactured by the Nye-Mosher Manufacturing Company, Dem-eo, Inc., and Nymeo Doughnut Machine Corporation, in connection with flour manufactured by the parent company, namely, the Joe-Lowe Corporation. It is in evidence that various machines alleged to infringe were sold and at other times given away in connection with contracts for flour. The remaining defendant, namely, the E. H. Koes-ter Bakery Company, a Baltimore concern, is joined as defendant on the ground that it has participated in the alleged infringement by owning and operating in its bakery two of the machines in suit.

Doughnuts, crullers, or sticks, as they are variously called, depending largely upon their shape, consist of specially prepared dough, fried in grease. The automatic frying of doughnuts, which, as appears from the evidence in these eases, has become a very extensive, profitable business, as well as the advantages to be derived from this form of cooking as opposed to the more primitive methods, may best be understood by a consideration of the effect of the hot grease upon the raw dough. When the raw dough is placed in the hot grease, it immediately sinks, creating gases within the dough which cause it to expand, so that it becomes buoyant and tends to rise vertically to its point-of deposit in the hot grease. The automatic machines may all be said to have three main objects, to be accomplished mechanically: First, to form and deposit the piece of raw dough in the grease; second, to pro°gress it from the point of deposit to the point where its cooking is completed; and, third, to take it out of the grease when the cooking is completed.

These automatic machines may be divided into three classes: First, the flotation type, which frys the doughnut while it'floats.on the surface of the grease, thus requiring that the doughnut be progressed, turned over about the middle of the course of its cooking, progressed again until the cooking is completed, and then taken out of the machine. Second, the submerged type, which progresses the doughnut while submerged throughout the entire period of cooking. Third, the combination flotation and submerged type, which may or may not embrace a device for turning over the doughnut in the course of the cooking process, and which provides for a period of floating and progressing of the doughnut on the surface of the grease so that, in its semfeooked state, it can expand during the flotation interval or intervals, which are sometimes described in the art as “breathing spaces,” since, if continuously submerged, the doughnut loses its ability fully to expand, without which the dough becomes more tough and consequently less-edible. Also, by this [366]*366combined method, the proper amount of grease absorption is better controlled.

Because of the number of plaintiff’s patents that are here involved and the variations in the types of machines embraced thereunder, it is not possible to summarize them by a composite description. Suffice it to say that, with some exceptions, hereinafter noted, the basis of plaintiff’s entire claim rests upon the turnover device covered by its several patents, which device, it contends, defendants are infringing by their machines which, it claims, perform, for all practical purposes, although in a somewhat different manner, the same function covered by the broad claims in plaintiff’s patents

Defendants’ machines here in issue are of two main types, designated throughout the litigation, and hereinafter described, as types A and B. Both types have long rectangular troughs with automatic conveyors, also an automatically operated dough-former at one end, and dough-depositor at the other end of the trough. Tested by the heretofore given classification; defendants’ type A machine is a combination flotation and submerged cooker. It consists of a cooking vat, or trough, some seven feet long and two feet wide. At one end of the vat are two dough cutters or formers. From these, to the point where the finished doughnut is taken out of the liquid by an ejector-conveyor, is a distance of six feet. Beneath the cutters is a small conveyor belt completely submerged, which carries the raw dough, while submerged, to a second conveyor, which engages the dough as it rises from the first conveyor and carries it forward. This second convey- or, which is some twelve inches long, with its lower side slightly submerged, keeps the dough submerged and propels it forward into an area where it comes to the surface- and floats along for some six inches, and is then engaged by a continuously operating rotary pusher, having a feathering paddle which enters the liquid in a radial position and leaves it in a rectangular position, turning the doughnut over while partly floating and partly submerged. Thereafter the doughnut passes in a floating position over another area of some twelve inches, until it is engaged by a third conveyor some eighteen inches long, inclined downward, the funetioii of which is to hold the doughnut completely submerged until cooked uniformly all over, when it is again allowed to rise to the surface and float freely for the space of some ten inches, until it is engaged by an ejector-conveyor, which removes it from the trough, the cooking process being complete. The doughnut is propelled from one end of the tank to the other by the conveyor belts, by the movement of the cooking liquid, and by the paddle mechanism.

Defendants’ type B. machine also falls within the third class, namely, it is a combined flotation and submerged cooker. It is made in several forms, but basiely it consists of a hopper or cutter at one end of the cooking vat or trough, from which the dough drops and sinks to a conveyor completely submerged, by which it is moved for a distance of from three to live inches. The dough then rises and encounters the under side of a second conveyor, which is slightly submerged in order that the dough may be kept beneath the surface.

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Bluebook (online)
51 F.2d 364, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doughnut-mach-corp-v-demco-inc-mdd-1931.