E-Z Paintr Corp. v. Thomas

113 F. Supp. 827, 98 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 248, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2661
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 26, 1953
DocketCiv. A. No. 8454
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 113 F. Supp. 827 (E-Z Paintr Corp. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E-Z Paintr Corp. v. Thomas, 113 F. Supp. 827, 98 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 248, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2661 (E.D. Mich. 1953).

Opinion

KOSCINSKI, District Judge.

Plaintiff E-Z Paintr Corporation, as licensee, filed suit for infringement of two patents. During the proceedings the patentee, L. P. A. Touchett, was added as involuntary party plaintiff, and Earl E. Thomas as party defendant.

The patents in issue are No. 2,427,581 relating to improvement in paint applicators, granted September 16, 1947, on application filed April 4, 1945, and No. 2,444,584 relating to improvement in sloping bottom trays and support structures, granted July 6, 1948, on application filed October 12, 1945.

The defendants deny infringement and, by counterclaim, seek declaratory judgment of invalidity of both patents. The claims of both patents appear in the margin.1

Findings of Fact

Paint Roller No. 2,427,581

1. Admittedly, the patent is neither on the roller nor the sleeve or cover of the roller, separately, but in the combination.

2. Rollers for application of paint to surfaces are old and all the component parts of the roller have been available for years. Touchett claims that he is the first to make a combination of the available materials, and that the invention resides in a combination of the roller with a resilient core, a sleeve between the core and a lamb’s wool-cover which is paint retaining, and that this is a novel construction, combination and arrangement of parts as described in the claims of the patent.

3. The specifications state that Iamb’s wool has been found highly desirable and successful for using with oil base paints, and that the sleeve of the invention is preferably made of a piece of lamb’s skin with the wool side facing out, and, that

“It is believed that its deep pule of closely packed and exceedingly fine but highly resilient fibers which stand substantially on end more or less duplicate the action of a conventional paint brush during passage over a wall surface to be painted.”

4. The pioneer rollers for application, of paint consisted of cylindrical wooden dowels with either woven, wool carpeting or mohair covers which were glued or tacked on to the dowels. About 1942 metal cylinder rollers came into use with either a one-piece metal cylinder or two half cylinders, [829]*829and a mesh or cardboard sleeve with cover, which could be slipped on or telescoped over the cylinder.

5. Rollers later appeared with lamb’s wool covers, with either mesh or cardboard sleeves. A piece of lamb’s skin was cut to fit the outside of the roller and tacked onto the cylindrical wooden dowel with the lamb’s wool on the outside. With this innovation the rollers conformed to the description in the specifications of the Touchett .patent. Defendants proved to the court’s satisfaction that one Elmer Kramer, of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and one Carl J. Ernst, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, both of whom are painters and decorators with more than twenty years experience in that trade, used this type of roller for stippling, painting, and decorating, in their respective localities, at least as early as March, 1941, and more than two years before Touchett’s application was filed.

6. In 1942 Stanley Coughlan, doing business as Stan-Hall Company, manufactured for defendant Thomas Products a steel roller consisting of two half cylinders welded to the end cups, otherwise in all respects similar to Touchett’s subsequently patented roller. There were four welding spots on each end of the Thomas roller, leaving two unwelded corners on each end of the roller to give it resiliency and the necessary spring tension for holding the woven wool carpet sleeve on the roller. Several thousand rollers of this type were delivered to defendant Thomas Products. Early in 1942, because. of military restrictions, the supply of steel was unavailable for general industrial use and no more of these steel rollers were manufactured until late in 1945. The Thomas paint rollers were marketed and sold throughout 1942 to 1945. The only difference between the 1942 Thomas steel roller and the plaintiffs’ steel cylinder described in the patent claims is that the Touchett cylinder is made of a lighter metal. In a pre-trial deposition Touchett makes the following statement:

“I told you that there was lamb’s wool rollers, and I want to say it without any question there was lamb’s wool rollers prior to the time that I ever conceived a paint roller.”

'7. Several months before filing his application Touchett visited one Otto.F. Gar-gen, owner since 1935 of a decorating company known as the Bro-Kade Wall Finishing Company in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, who showed Touchett a lamb’s wool roller he used for applying , oil base paints. Touchett, himself a painter, subsequently purchased a Thomas metal roller in a Milwaukee paint store, and also acquired a Sherwin-Williams Kem-Tone wooden dowel roller, called the Roller-Koater, with a woven wool carpeting cover, and made some experiments by tacking onto it a lamb’s skin in the same manner as described in the specifications of the patent and as practised by others several years before Touchett’s application.

8. Touchett claims as novel the cylindrical core of the roller which is described in connection with the appearance of the metal cylinder rollers in 1942. He merely substituted a metal screen sleeve for the cardboard and mesh sleeve of defendant Thomas’ ‘roller.

9. The “relatively deep fibrous pile” of the Touchett patent paint roller cover is an indefinite description of the material used in the cover of the roller. The woven wool carpeting and mohair covers are both relatively deep fibrous piles and were used long before Touchett. The word “relatively” is defined in the dictionary as “in a relative manner; in relation or respect to something else; not absolutely.” Under this definition the fibers may be short, medium or long, depending upon the surface to be painted. It is worthy of note that the president of plaintiff corporation testified that plaintiff corporation was making and selling rollers with long fibers for painting fences. The language of all three patent claims concern-ins the use of a “deep fibrous pile” is, too indefinite for the ordinary person skilled in the art to make a paint roller according to the claims of the patent, and the testimony just referred to would seem to indicate that.

10. The paint retaining feature relied upon by plaintiff is also relative, since it cannot be successfully argued that the paint brush does not have paint retaining qualities. In effect, the argument made here by plaintiff is that the cover of the Touchett [830]*830paint rollers retains more paint than the paint brush. That is not invention, but at the most, the use of a tool which enables the user to apply the paint to a somewhat larger area before another loading of paint.

11. The non-dripping feature claimed for the combination is not present in the claims, and while the specifications claim such a quality for the combination, the test made in court during the progress of this case did not completely demonstrate that quality.

Paint Tray No. 2,444,584

12. The sloping bottom tray 2 is a paint container used in connection with painting by roller instead of by brush.

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Related

Touchett v. EZ Paintr Corporation
150 F. Supp. 384 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 F. Supp. 827, 98 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 248, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-z-paintr-corp-v-thomas-mied-1953.