Fleischman Yeast Co. v. Federal Yeast Corporation

8 F.2d 186, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 186 (Fleischman Yeast Co. v. Federal Yeast Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleischman Yeast Co. v. Federal Yeast Corporation, 8 F.2d 186, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593 (D. Md. 1925).

Opinion

SOPER, • District Judge.

The Fleisehman Yeast Company filed its bill of *187 complaint to enjoin the Federal Yeast Corporation against the infringement of patents No. 1,449,103 to Hayduek, and No. 1,419,127 to Nilsson and Harrison. The defendant’s answer put in issue the validity, and, if the claims be narrowly construed, the infringement, of the patents. The first patent, which for brevity will be called 103, was based on an application filed October 30, 1920, by Frederick Hayduek of Germany, assignor to the Fleisehman Company, and carries the effective date of invention of March 15, 1915, the filing date of Ilayduck’s corresponding German patent. The American patent was granted under the provisions of the Act of Congress of March 3, 1921 (41 Stat. 1313 [Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 3923, §§ 0433a-9431h]), permitting foreign inventors, whose rights to United States patents would otherwise have been forfeited on account of war conditions, to have such rights restored. The second patent, hereinafter called 127, was issued to Martin Nilsson and Norman S. Harrison, assignors to the Irteisehman Company, on their application filed January 7, 1919. Both patents wore issued on March 20, 1923, directly to the Fleisehman Company as assignee.

Both patents relate to processes for the manufacture of bakers’ yeast. The evidence shows that yeast is a broad term, which includes a wide variety of both wild yeast and cultivated yeast. Wild yeasts multiply rapidly, and, like weeds, tend to drive out the cultivated kinds. The latter have been cultured and bred for a variety of purposes. Hace 32, obtained by pure culture in Germany, is regarded as the best bakers’ yeast. The product, which is used in the baking industry, must possess special qualities and properties. Most yeasts, if placed in dough, either do not produce a sufficient quantity of gas to make a light loaf, or produce too much. They attack the gluten of the bread excessively, or, spoil its texture, or form substances of unpleasant taste and odor. Bakers’ yeast forms the right amount of gas, is favorable to the texture of the bread, and does not have an offensive taste or odor. It is of suitable color. Moreover, it has lasting qualities, while many other varieties rapidly deteriorate and become a slimy unattractive mass, unsuitable for bread making.

Yeast is a small cellular micro-organism. In its ordinary significance, it is a conglomerate mass of infinitesimally small cells. It multiplies by self-propagation, limited by the means of subsistence, and the quality and yield are greatly affected by the conditions under which propagation is carried on. Yeast has been manufactured for at least 50 years by innoculating a wort; that is, by preparing a clear liquid solution and stocking it with a small amount of seed yeast. Such worts include substances to nourish the yeast cells, and are called yeast nutrient solutions. It has been known to the art for a long period that yeast feeds upon sugar, nitrogen, its chief constituent, phosphorus, and other elements, and it lias therefore been common practice to employ nutrient solutions containing these elements in yeast assimilable form. Thereby the number of cells and the total mass is multiplied. The field for investigation and improvement has been the composition of the nutrient solution, and the character of the process employed during the period of growth.

For many years it was the custom, in the commercial manufacture of yeast, to use cereal materials exclusively, namely, corn for sugar material, and rye and barley malt for nitrogen, phosphorus, etc. Molasses has also been used instead of corn, since it contains, not only sugar material, ’ but also assimilable nitrogen and other ingredients necessary for yeast growth. All of the nutrient substances in cereals and molasses are organic in character; that is to say, they originate in the life processes of plants. It has also been ascertained that the yeast food may be supplied from mineral, or inorganic, sources, such as ammonium and phosphoric acid salts, containing nitrogen and phosphorus, and that yeast will thrive on substances of both sorts jointly used.

The process for the production of yeast, and the process for the production of alcohol have somewhat in common. But there are important differences, dependent upon which substance is to be made. In both processes, seed yeast is placed in a nutrient solution containing nitrogen and sugar. Nitrogen is the factor limiting the amount of yeast produced. If the production of yeast is desired, a high ratio of nitrogen to non-nitrogenous material must bo maintained, for, when the yeast has absorbed the nitrogen, its multiplication ceases, and its remaining activity is expended in the production of alcohol. In order to obtain the greatest yield of yeast, the yield of alcohol must be restricted, or, if possible, eliminated altogether. On the other hand, in the production of alcohol, only so nmcji yeast need be made as will actively ferment the sugar. In the first stage of the process, the yeast grows until the nitrogen is exhausted, whereupon the main fermentation begins, during which *188 the yeast attacks the sugar and converts it into alcohol. When the process is concluded, the yeast as such is discarded, although it has some value as food for cattle. Obviously, when alcohol is to be made, the fermentative powers of the yeast are chiefly brought into play,- while its reproduction function is most employed when a substantial yield of yeast is the object of the process. The problems of the distiller and brewer on one hand, and of the yeast manufacturer on the other, are kindred but they are not the same.

The Fleisehman business was established in 1869. It has grown to a great size, as indicated by the fact that the assets of the company amount to about $35,000,000, including nine manufacturing plants in various parts of the United States. It is the leading yeast manufacturer in this country. The history of the changes in its factory process during the past 20 years, culminating in those covered by the patents in suit, illustrate the efforts of the trade to secure an improved process and product. During this period, the company has made a substantial annual expenditure - to keep abreast in its method of production with the development in yeast manufacture in this country and in Europe. It has employed a general superintendent of manufacture, a practical yeast manufacturer at each plant, and a corps of chemists who have continually experimented in search of improvements.

In 1904, and for a long time prior thereto, the Fleisehman Company was using the so-called old process (O. P.) in which the raw materials for the nutrient solution consisted entirely of cereals, to wit, corn, rye, and barley malt. The average yield of yeast amounted to 12 per cent, of the raw material, and at the same' time there was produced about 7 gallons of alcohol for each 100 pounds of material. About 1911 a new process (N. P.) was introduced. In it, corn, corn malt, barley malt, and malt sprouts were used. The most important change was the introduction of a process of aeration in which air was forced through the wort for the purpose of furnishing oxygen and thereby stimulating the multiplication of the yeast. The nutrient for the yeast was still obtained from cereal sources- — sugar from the corn, and nitrogen from organic material, such as malt sprouts. From the new process, there were obtained average yeast yields of 28 per cent, of the raw material, and a certain amount of alcohol.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 186, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleischman-yeast-co-v-federal-yeast-corporation-mdd-1925.