Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corp. v. Anglo-American Clays Corp.

586 F. Supp. 435, 223 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 755, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17252
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedApril 25, 1984
DocketCiv. A. 80-187-MAC
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 586 F. Supp. 435 (Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corp. v. Anglo-American Clays Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engelhard Minerals & Chemicals Corp. v. Anglo-American Clays Corp., 586 F. Supp. 435, 223 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 755, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17252 (M.D. Ga. 1984).

Opinion

OWENS, Chief Judge:

Plaintiff, an assignee of United States Patent Number 3,586,523 (copy reproduced as an Appendix to this opinion), commenced the instant action seeking injunctive relief and damages due to defendants’ alleged infringements of the patent in suit. The defendants assert that the patent is invalid, and counterclaim for attorney fees incurred to prove invalidity. The issue of patent validity was tried separately before this court on September 7 through 22, 1983. This constitutes this court’s findings of fact and conclusion of law as to the issue of patent validity.

INTRODUCTION

The central Georgia area contains some of the world's large deposits of kaolin, a type of clay predominantly comprised of the mineral kaolinite. In the paper making industry kaolin is used as a pigment to impart a bright white color and opacifying properties to the pulp fibers which make up finished paper. Prior to the use of kaolin, synthetic titanium dioxide (Ti02) was the chief pigment used by the paper industry. Beginning in the 1950’s and continuing throughout the 1970’s, the price of Ti02 escalated to levels which created a commercial need for an extender or substitute pigment. During this period the major kaolin companies expended considerable resources in an effort to develop a competitive pigment produced from their abundant supplies of kaolin. Since the paper industry was very satisfied with the performance of Ti02, the production of a kaolin pigment which could match this performance, but at a lower cost, became the goal of all of the parties herein.

There are four physical properties (two of primary importance and two of secondary importance) which the market demands of a paper pigment:

Properties of Primary Importance
1. High Brightness: A pigment must be substantially white and very bright, i.e., light reflective. 1
2. Low Abrasion: The pigment must be of the lowest possible abrasion so as to minimize Fourdrinier wire wear during the paper forming process. 2
*438 Properties of Secondary Importance
3. Relatively High Oil Absorption: A relatively high 3 oil absorption quality is desirable so as to minimize ink strike-through onto the reverse of a printed page. 4
4. Relatively Low Surface Area: The surface area of the individual clay particles comprising the pigment should be as small as possible, as the larger the particles the more difficult it is to bond the pigment to the paper. 5

The key to the development of a successful kaolin pigment was to achieve both high brightness and low abrasion. However, under the prior art, the process used to increase brightness also increased abrasion. The prior art, such as the “Proctor” patent (Plaintiffs Exhibit 515), teaches that the smaller the average particle size of the pigment, the lower the abrasion value. It was well known that kaolin crude had to be reduced to the smallest particle size economically feasible in order to achieve low abrasion. Brightness is achieved by “calcining” these finely divided kaolin particles. Calcination involves heating the kaolin particles to such extreme temperatures that all water is eliminated and the internal crystalline structure is virtually destroyed. In order to produce brightness competitive with Ti02 (GE brightness above 90), the required calcination temperature had the deleterious effect of fusing the finely divided particles together into larger and thus more abrasive aggregates. The abrasion values of kaolin calcined at a sufficient temperature to produce a GE brightness of 90 plus were so high that the paper industry generally chose to incur the higher cost of Ti02 rather than the even higher cost of more frequent Fourdrinier wire replacement. Conversely, a reduction of calcination temperature, while reducing abrasion, also reduced brightness to unacceptable levels of below 90 GE. Before the product derived from the patent in suit, none of the parties herein had produced a kaolin pigment that could genuinely compete with Ti02.

The plaintiff contends that two distinct types of kaolin deposits exist within the middle Georgia area. According to the *439 plaintiff, one type of kaolin is known as “soft” clay, and is characterized by a cream color, relatively soft to the touch (capable of being crumbled in the hand), and made up of particles which have an average size of one micron or more. The plaintiff labels the other category as “gray” or “hard” kaolin, characterized by a darker gray color, relative hardness (crumbles with difficulty in the hand), and being made up of particles of an average size of V2 micron or less. The plaintiff maintains that, prior to its experiments which resulted in the patent in suit, the kaolin industry had rejected gray or hard kaolin as a possible source for a paper pigment, apparently due to its darker color.

In the mid-1960s, at least three employees of the plaintiff corporation conducted calcination experiments on hard kaolin obtained from plaintiff’s Prim mine. To their purported surprise, when known processing methods were applied to hard kaolin a very bright product resulted. Since the average particle size of this hard clay was much smaller than that of soft kaolin, two very important results were obtained. First, the extreme fineness of the particles resulted in a calcined product of very low abrasion. Second, since this very fine particle size occurred naturally, fewer processing steps were necessary prior to calcination, and the end product was thus comparatively inexpensive to produce.

Claiming that the use of this previously ignored hard kaolin was a novel invention, the plaintiff acquired the subject patent on the pigment produced therefrom. This pigment, commercially known as Ansilex, has by all standards become an overwhelming commercial success. Ansilex has become widely used as either an extender of TÍO2 or as a complete pigment in and of itself. For many years it completely dominated the market and rendered defendants’ high grade products made from soft clay virtually unmarketable. In response to Ansilex, the defendants began a determined effort to acquire deposits geologically similar to plaintiff’s Prim mine. Having done so, they commenced production of products comparable to Ansilex; plaintiff claims these products infringe the patent in suit. Very recently, the defendants have acquired the technology to produce a pigment comparable to Ansilex solely from soft kaolin at a cost which allows them to compete.

The defendants have joined in a concerted attack upon the validity of the patent in suit.

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Bluebook (online)
586 F. Supp. 435, 223 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 755, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 17252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engelhard-minerals-chemicals-corp-v-anglo-american-clays-corp-gamd-1984.