Ellis-Foster Co. v. Gilbert Spruance Co.

28 F. Supp. 375, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2590
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 19, 1939
DocketNo. 9545
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 28 F. Supp. 375 (Ellis-Foster Co. v. Gilbert Spruance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellis-Foster Co. v. Gilbert Spruance Co., 28 F. Supp. 375, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2590 (E.D. Pa. 1939).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of U. S. Reissue Patent No. 19,967 to Weber. The original patent was applied for in 1922, was issued in 1929, and reissued in 1936.

The only claim in suit is claim 11, which is as follows: “A varnish consisting of a solution of a glycerol ester of a resin and organic carboxylic acid selected from the group consisting of phthalic, maleic fumaric, malic and succinic acids, incorporated with nitrocellulose.”

The composition claimed is properly a lacquer. The term varnish was formerly applied to all liquid wood-finishers, but today the quick-drying types are usually called lacquers. They are applied by spraying, and are particularly useful in finishing wooden articles manufactured in large quantities, such as furniture, radio cabinets, and the like. In appearance they are not distinguishable from oil or spirit varnishes except by an expert. Certain types of lacquers are also used for metal finishing, but the claim in suit describes a wood lacquer.

Infringement is not seriously disputed. There is no evidence of anticipation, and the only substantial issue is that of invention.

The patent is for a combination of nitrocellulose and a particularly described synthetic resin, in an unspecified solvent. The synthetic resin which is described in the patent as a “glycerol ester of a resin and organic carboxylic acid selected from the group consisting of phthalic * * * acids” is a three-element chemical combination, consisting of natural resin, phthalic acid and glycerine reacted together. It is generally referred to as the R. P. G. resin, the letters signifying rosin, phthalic acid- and glycerol. The proportions are not stated, but in practice two and a half parts of the resin are combined with one part of nitrocellulose.

The nitrocellulose gives toughness and durability to the film. The resin makes it adhere to the wood, imparts the proper luster, and keeps it sufficiently hard and brittle to allow for the usual finishing process which consists of rubbing with sand paper o.r pumice. It also has another function. Nitrocellulose of sufficiently low viscosity to be sprayed is so thin that two or three coats must be applied in order to get a suitable finish. The resin, without greatly increasing the viscosity of the fluid, imports enough solids into it to produce a satisfactory film upon the wood at a single spraying.

Several early patents (e. g. Fairfax, British, of 1890) say that nitrocellulose can be combined with a resin to make a varnish, and point out the toughening effect of the nitrocellulose in the product. The Fairfax patent seems to contemplate the use of the natural resins only (shellac, resin, copal, sandarac), but there were also-suggestions to be found in the art to the effect that synthetic resins may be used, and it is undoubtedly the fact that experts were generally aware of the possibility of making a satisfactory lacquer by combining nitrocellulose with either a natural or a synthetic resin, provided the right resin could be found. In addition to having other necessary qualities, the resin must, be miscible with nitrocellulose in a common solvent and should be compatible with it in as widely varying proportions as possible. Compatibility is the quality of “staying put” in the resultant liquid. Iru combinations with nitrocellulose, many resins will tend to separate, or there maybe a precipitate, which spoils the film.. Of course, with almost any resin, the-presence of a very small amount of nitrocellulose will not usually produce such, undesirable effects but unless it can be used largely enough to form the practical base-of the composition it will not do much, good.

Now it is the fact that the resin element of claim 11 was fully disclosed in the specification of a prior patent (No. 1,098,776 to Arsem, issued in 1914), although the claims of that patent are primarily directed to a resin composed of two polybasic acids (e. g. phthalic and succinic) with glycerol. The principal disclosure of the Arsem patent was an inter[377]*377action by means of which a known, hard, insoluble, synthetic resin of a still earlier art (Watson Smith resin), composed of phthalic acid and glycerol, could be made soluble and commercially available by means of the addition of a third substance. The resin which goes into the lacquer of claim 11 of the patent contains phthalic acid and glycerol in combination, but its third substance is not an acid but a natural resin — ordinary rosin — a substance not strictly an acid, but having acid properties.

However, whatever the scope of the claims of the Arsem patent, the specification points out that, “Various substances not strictly acids but having acid properties may be employed” — for the third substance — “For example, 240 parts of the glyceryl phthalate may be acted upon by 279 parts of colophony, an acid anhydrid, to form a hard, reddish-brown resin which is not the equivalent of a simple mixture of phthalic resin and colophony.” Colo-phony is another name for the rosin of the patent in suit.

At the beginning of the specification, the Arsem patent says that its resin is “suitable for the production of molded articles, electrical insulation, varnishes, etc.” It is not improbable that the varnish which Arsem had in mind is, as the plaintiff suggests, a type of varnish used for insulation where the material is applied in liquid form and hardened in situ by subsequent baking to render it permanently insoluble. Arsem was a General Electric man, and there is nothing to show that he was in the least interested in wood finishing. At any rate, there is no suggestion in the Arsem patent of combining the resin claimed or that described in the specification with nitrocellulose for any purpose whatever.

The fact remains, however, that the synthetic resin described in the Arsem specification is what Weber used as one ingredient of his lacquer, and we must assume that he got it from the Arsem patent. Thus the question is whether it was invention to take this particular synthetic resin from the hundreds, perhaps thousands, known and used for all manner of purposes and show that it will combine with nitrocellulose to make a commercially suitable lacquer.

The defendant, conceding that the combination is not anticipated, contends that the substitution of the Arsem resin (say for the shellac) in the nitrocellulose lacquer of the Fairfax patent, is mere routine laboratory procedure, and is what ordinarily takes place in any case where, by reason of industrial developments, the production of a particular material becomes commercially advantageous.

In the case of lacquers or varnishes, the art, while it recognized the possibility of nitrocellulose combinations and the advantages to be derived from the use of that substance, had made very little advance in that direction prior to 1922, principally because the high viscosity nitrocellulose of commerce was not practically usable. The defendant points out that nitrocellulose lacquers were given a tremendous impetus by the invention and marketing of low viscosity nitrocellulose, which occurred between 1921 and 1923. New solvents became cheap and plentiful (beginning about 1919) as a result of unused war stocks. At about the same time (also a postwar development) the price of phthalic acid was greatly decreased, so that the manufacture of resins derived from it became practicable. Thus, commercial barriers which had stood in the way of advances in the lacquer art were swept away shortly before or just about the date of Weber’s application.

I accept the facts as stated.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. Supp. 375, 42 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 9, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-foster-co-v-gilbert-spruance-co-paed-1939.