E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Glidden Co.

1 F. Supp. 1007, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1914
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 7, 1932
DocketNo. 5544
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 F. Supp. 1007 (E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Glidden Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Glidden Co., 1 F. Supp. 1007, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1914 (E.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is a suit for relief by injunction and damages for the alleged infringement of reissue patent No. 16,803, to Edmund M. Flaherty, assignor to E. I. du Pont De Nemours & Co., for low-viscosity lacquer and film produced therefrom, reissued November 29, 1927, upon an application for reissue filed September 19, 1927. The corresponding original patent was granted May 24, 1927, upon an application filed May 23, 1921.

The plaintiff’s title to the patent, the incorporation and places of residence of the parties as alleged, and the jurisdiction of the court are admitted and notice of infringement proved.

The sale by the defendant of nitrocellulose enamel containing nitrocellulose whose viscosity characteristic is below the limit defined in the claims of the patent is admitted, but there is no reference in the stipulation as to the source of the nitrocellulose base used in the defendant’s lacquers, or to the [1008]*1008method by which the viscosity o£ its nitrocellulose is reduced.

The defendant purchases its nitrocellulose from the Hercules Powder Company.

The viscosity characteristic of the nitrocellulose so purchased is reduced by boiling in water under pressure without chemical reducing agents. This is an old method wholly different from the chemical viscosity-reducing treatment disclosed in the Flaherty patent.

The patent in suit is for a product and not for a method or process, and as I understand the plaintiff’s position, it does not contend that defendant follows or imitates in any way the method of reducing the viscosity of nitrocellulose disclosed in the patent, but insists that the method by which the viscosity of the nitrocellulose is reduced does not make any difference.

The charge of infringement is based solely upon the fact that the defendant uses a viscosity nitrocellulose base lower than the upper limit defined in the claims of the patent in suit.

This suit is based upon claims 2, 3, 6, 8, 9, 12, and 17 of the patent in suit.

Claims 2, 3, 6, and 9 are directed to the lacquer.

Claims 8,12, and 17 to the coating resulting from the use of the lacquer.

All of the claims in suit specify the presence of the resinous ingredient, and all of them except claims 8, 9, and 17 also specifically refer to the presence of a softener.

Claims 3 and 17 are specific to pigmented lacquers as distinguished from clear lacquers.

All of the claims in suit specify that the viscosity characteristic of the nitrocellulose is “below” “or less than” a defined standard.

In claims 2, 3, 9, and 12 the standard is defined with reference to the viscosity of a solution consisting of 16 ounces of the nitrocellulose in a gallon of pure ethyl acetate.

In claims 6, 8, and 17 this standard is defined with reference to the viscosity of a 25 per cent, solution of the nitrocellulose in the particular mixed solvents specified in example 1 of the patent.

All the claims in suit refer to the viscosity characteristic of the nitrocellulose.

The two definitions of the standard mean the same thing, although in one ease the viscosity of the solution referred to in the definition is 25,000 centipoises, and in the other ease the viscosity of the solution referred to in the definition is 1,200 centipoises.

This is true because wliile nitrocellulose itself has no viscosity, it has the characteristic or capacity of making any solution, in which it may be dissolved, more or less viscous, and the extent to which it makes a solution viscous depends partly upon the particular solvents, and partly upon the concentration of the nitrocellulose in the solvents.

The eentipoise is a unit used by the United States Bureau of Standards for the measurement -of viscosity, and the bureau keeps on hand solutions of viscosity measured in centipoises.

Any one who desires to determine the viscosity of an unknown solution can on request obtain from the Bureau of Standards a sample by specifying the solution of viscosity he desires and compare it with the unknown solution by means of suitable instruments.

The Stormer viscometer referred to in the patent is a suitable instrument for that purpose.

The patentee in the patent in suit states as his purpose the production of an improved low viscosity nitrocellulose lacquer, and then defines his invention or discovery as follows: “According to my invention pyroxylin solutions, and particularly lacquers, haying an abnormally high nitrocellulose content in conjunction with a'suitably low viscosity are produced by subjecting pyroxylin mixtures of the character hereinafter described, for a prolonged period, say from one to three weeks, preferably at ordinary room temperature, to the action of a metal salt of a weak acid, for example an alkali-forming metal acetate. The discovery of the action of salts of this kind on the viscosity of pyroxylin solutions is described in the patent of Earle C. Pitman No. 1,636,319, and the application of this discovery to the reduction of viscosity of pyroxylin solutions is claimed broadly therein. By a particular application of this discovery to high percentage pyroxylin solutions, I have found it practicable to produce solutions, such as lacquers and colored enamels, of such a high pyroxylin content that they will deposit in two coats a film as heavy and satisfactory as the ordinary solutions do in four coats or more.”

He then in detail states two specific examples in both of which the “metal salt of a weak acid” employed as a chemical viscosity-reducing agent is sodium acetate; and points [1009]*1009out that by following the procedure set forth in these examples, a 25-40 per cent, pyroxylin solution may be obtained, having a viscosity below 25,000 eentipoises at 28° centigrade.

The next two paragraphs name a number of other “metal salts of weak acids” that may be used as a viscosity reducer in the place of sodium acetate, and a number of other well-known solvents of nitrocellulose that may be employed.

These paragraphs are not statements of Flaherty’s discovery, hut of Pitman’s patent, No. 1,639,619.

The specification contains no further disclosure of methods or of alternatives, but the remainder consists of a number of statements differentiating the “new lacquer” from prior lacquers made from “cellulose nitrate which has not been subject to the above subscribed treatment with sodium acetate or a similarly functioning agent,” all of it beyond the words last quoted having been added at various times during the prosecution of the application.

The substance of these statements is that laeqners made from nitrocellulose treated with Mr. Pitman’s viscosity-reducing agents will, as in the examples given, contain more solids at any given viscosity than the usual nitrocellulose lacquers, by virtue of the fact that the viscosity characteristic of the nitrocellulose has been reduced, and that by reason thereof the resulting lacquer has greater covering power, and the desired thickness will be produced by a smaller number of coats.

The patentee discloses in the patent in suit, as a novel and patentable idea of means, his discovery that the application to the making of lacquer films of Mr. Pitman’s method of reducing the viscosity characteristics of nitrocellulose solutions will produce superior films.

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Related

E. I. Du Pont De Nemours & Co. v. Glidden Co.
67 F.2d 392 (Second Circuit, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
1 F. Supp. 1007, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-i-du-pont-de-nemours-co-v-glidden-co-nyed-1932.