Durand v. Bethlehem Steel Co.

34 F. Supp. 134, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 335, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2753
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJuly 19, 1940
DocketNo. 1223
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 F. Supp. 134 (Durand v. Bethlehem Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Durand v. Bethlehem Steel Co., 34 F. Supp. 134, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 335, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2753 (D. Del. 1940).

Opinion

NIELDS, District Judge.

This is the usual patent infringement suit. Plaintiffs charge defendant with infringement of Durand patents No. 1,924,-028 (claims 1-4, 7-9, 11 and 12), No. 1,-918,089 (claim 3) and No. 1,918,090 (claims 1, 4 and 5). Defendant pleads that all the claims in suit are invalid for anticipation and lack of invention and are not infringed.

Plaintiff, Jean Baptiste Durand, is the patentee and owner of the patents in suit. Plaintiff, Societe D’Electro-Chimie D’Electro Metallurgie et des Acieries Electriques D’Ugine, a French corporation, holds an exclusive license under the patents. Birdsboro Steel Foundry & Machine Company is a licensee and agent of the French corporation in granting licenses in the United States. Defendant, Bethlehem Steel Company, is a Delaware corporation.

Patent No. 1,924,028 is for the “Manufacture of Foundry Molds”. The patent is directed to the use of a sand cement composition for casting. As will appear, Durand was not the first to use such compositions for castings.

For many years there have been two principal methods of molding; the green sand and dry sand methods. Green sand molds are used shortly after being made, while the dry sand molds are oven dried or heated to drive off the moisture. The constituents have been and still are sand, binder and water. In these two methods the practice has always been to hold the water content down as low as practical. Foundry Practice (1906), a standard work, states: “The sand should be mixed evenly and to a dampness such that it will stick together when squeezed in the hand, but no.t so wet as to show moisture or dampen the hand.”

From early days it was the practice for the molder to determine whether the molding mixture had the proper amount of moisture by the feel of the sand which was ascertained by squeezing a handful in the hand. As the usual mix had clay in it, the “feel” was due both to the clay and to the moisture. Such mixtures were friable and crumbly. Too much water in the sand clay mixes lowered the permeability of the mold. That was one of the reasons why water had to be held within a definite range. Green and dry sand molds are still used much more extensively than sand-cement molds. Thus [135]*135Birdsboro, a licensee of the French corporation, does twice as much green sand molding as sand cement.

Patent No. 1,924,028.

Durand forms his molds and cores out of pure silicious or argillaceous foundry sand and a binder of cement or lime. The molding sand is mixed in the dry state with cement. The only example of the mix in the patent is “five parts of sand to one part of cement”, by volume. He states that “water is added in such proportion that the mixture does not become pasty or plastic, but always stays subhydrated, i. e. the proportion of water is such that a part of the cement, mixed with the sand, does not set”.

The mixture is placed in dismountable wooden boxes for molding in earth or metallic frames and rammed or pressed down slightly. The. molds are left to bind or set for several hours. The patentee states that the 5 sand to 1 cement mixture when molded, “can be handled without special care in about six hours after use, this being the average time of setting”.

Durand makes it clear that he poured while wet. He states that most of the water is removed by chemical combination with the binder. He asserts as the result of his invention that ramming of the molds is unnecessary; the chemical removal of the water by hydration of the binding means in the preparation and setting of the mixture eliminates the staving operation; the elimination of contraction and deterioration of the sand enables the accurate retention of the shape of the molds; unskilled employes are employed; foundry flasks are eliminated; the same sand-composition may be employed for cores and molds. Durand also states that “an essential feature of this invention is the use of only so much water as will keep the mixture always in a sub-hydrated state and not permit it to become pasty or plastic, * * *. This calls for an upper limit of hydration considerably below the lower limit thereof prescribed according to the usual practice in making similar compositions, and below the limit commonly prescribed for the purpose of causing the hydraulic binder to set completely.”

In the second paragraph of his specification Durand describes what he says was the prior molding practice. His statement is misleading since it refers only to dry sand molding. He does not mention green sand molding which required no drying before use, or the prior sand cement molding disclosed in the Smith patent. The inference from this paragraph is that Durand uses no outside heat for his molds (yet all his licensees do) and that the sand had to be dried before use in the prior practice whereas usually there was no preliminary drying of the sand.

“Sub-hydrated” is a word coined by Durand or his attorneys for use in his application. The experts had never seen it before reading it in the ’028 patent. As a direction to foundrymen as to how much water to put in the sand cement mix it is meaningless. No quantities or proportions are indicated in this patent.

Durand’s Patents U89 and ’090.

The ’089 application was filed April 4, 1930; the ’090 on March 10, 1933 as a division of the earlier patent, the two specifications are practically identical. The ’089 relates to a process and the ’090 to a composition and to foundry molds. Two objects are stated. The main object is “to utilize in the process of my aforesaid application [’028], in place of the natural sands therein described, artificial sands of any composition which have the property of becoming set when mixed with a hydraulic cement, and have also the refractory property necessary for resisting the cast molten metal”.

The second object is to use as “artificial” sands material obtained by crushing old molds made by the ’028 sand cement process. The proofs show that no one ever used any of the artificial sand mentioned by Durand for mold surfaces which come in contact with the molten metal. The supposed invention in the ’090 patent is stated to be for a “Composition for Foundry Molds”. The composition is the mixture of artificial sands and an hydraulic binder. .

Bethlehem does not use artificial sand. It mixes with the cement a new almost pure silicious sand. The patent ’089 can not cover the use of silicious sand with cement since such sand has been used by Bethlehem since 1901. The sand in each instance is used in the same way and for the same purpose so there can be no invention in thus using it. As will appear hereafter all the claims of the ’089 and [136]*136’090 patents are anticipated by the Smith patent.

Regardless of the question of the validity or invalidity of the Durand patents they undoubtedly enjoyed a marked commercial success in Europe and in the United States. There is a large number of licensees paying substantial royalties. At one time defendant negotiated for a license. Not being able to agree upon the amount of royalty to be paid defendant declined to take a license. Thereupon defendant instituted a thorough search into the prior art and as a result thereof determined that the Durand patents were void and that licenses .thereunder were worthless.

The Durand patents are instances of the familiar stuffed shirt patents. The simple idea of severely restricting the water content is'obscured behind the use of the formidable word “sub-hydrated”. Thousands of children from generation to generation have made mud pies.

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Related

Durand v. Bethlehem Steel Co.
122 F.2d 321 (Third Circuit, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
34 F. Supp. 134, 46 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 335, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durand-v-bethlehem-steel-co-ded-1940.