Flintkote Co. v. National Asbestos Mfg. Co.

52 F.2d 719, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 36, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3760
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 10, 1931
DocketNo. 4404
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 719 (Flintkote Co. v. National Asbestos Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flintkote Co. v. National Asbestos Mfg. Co., 52 F.2d 719, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 36, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3760 (3d Cir. 1931).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill in equity charging infringement by the defendant of two patents owned by the plaintiff: No. 908,125, granted December 29, 1908, to Frederick C. Overbury and as[720]*720signed to Flintkote Company, plaintiff; and No. 1,410,018, granted March 2Í, 1922,‘to the plaintiff upon the application of O. P. Kiraeofe.

The Overbnry patent contains two claims and the Kiraeofe five claims, all of which were alleged to-have been infringed by the defendant. The Overbnry patent relates to the manufacture of shingle strips for roofing, composed of flexible waterproof material, and adapted to be laid in overlapping courses, each strip constituting a member of the covering of a roof or other surface of a building. The Kiraeofe patent relates to a machine by which the shingle strips are ehtfrom the web of waterproof material. The history of the branch of the roofing industry which lead to the application for the Over-bury patent is well stated by the trial judge and supported by the evidence as follows:

“In or about the year 1907, when the Overbury patent made its appearance, the principal form of prepared or artificial roofing, as distinguished from wood, slate, or tin, came in long rolls of specially treated paper or felt, and these rolls were laid in successive rows, each one partially covered by the overlapping of the next higher row, and the overlapping edges held together either by cement or nails.

“The Overbury aim, in part at least, seems to have been to provide artificial rooming which should have more durability and more attractiveness than had theretofore been evolved, and to that end offered several in- - ventions, one of which contemplated a roll of roofing material, straight on each lengthwise edge but cut lengthwise along the approximate center of the roll in half diamond design.

“This operation purposed as a result two rolls, each one-half as broad as the original roll, and susceptible of being superimposed one upon the other in such form as .to produce a full diamond design. This, together with the furnishing of the rolls in different colors, contemplated a form of roofing calculated to interest a publie concerned with the roofing of residences and public buildings.

“To this new style of roofing, plaintiff in its exploitation thereof, gave the name of Zolium, and while the product developed many shortcomings, it attained a market of considerable size.

“While there had been other patents granted for prepared roofing, there were none, apparently, which had been able to meet commercial demands, or which were being sold in the open market.

.“In consequence,'the only two forms in which prepared roofing appeared in or about 1907 in any practical commercial sense were as the long uncut roll and as the so-called Zolium.

“It was during this period that one of the patents in suit, Overbury No. 908,125, made its appearance, proposing a new form of roofing element, to consist -of a square-butt strip-shingle, accomplished by cutting lengthwise in a web of flexible waterproof material a series of slots arranged in line, and then cutting the web along a line intersecting the slots of the series, thus forming two strip-shingles from the web, each having notches at intervals along one edge formed by slots cut in the web. The strip when laid in place gave the appearance of several individual shingles secured together with spaces between the butts.”

The two claims of the Overbury patent are as follows:

“1. A shingle strip blank composed of an elongated sheet of flexible water-proof material, having transverse slots between its edges, the ends of the slots being between the edges of the sheet so that said edges are continuous, said blank being adapted to be converted into two operative shingle strips by severing it lengthwise between the ends of the slots.

“2. A shingle strip blank of indeterminate length composed of an elongated sheet of flexible water-p,roof material, having transverse slots between its edges, the ends of the slots being between the edges of the sheet so that said edges are continuous, said blank being adapted to be converted into two operative shingle strips of either the full length of the blank or of lesser length by severing it lengthwise between the ends of the slots.”

The District Court concluded that Over-, bury’s original disclosure, as shown in the specifications and claims, was broader than in the patent as issued, and that the patent as issued was for a shingle strip blank possessing no utility within itself, except as it might be altered to form something not covered by the patent, because, before the blank could be used, it would have to be severed lengthwise midway between the ends of the slots. Under those circumstances, the patent was held void for want of utility. It is true that the sheet or blank of the Overbury patent is not susceptible of use in the form in which it is produced. In claim 1, however, the concluding clause is: “ * * * Said blank being adapted to be converted into two operative shingle strips by severing it lengthwise between the ends of the slots.” And in claim 2 the concluding [721]*721clause is: “ * * * Said blank being adapted to be converted into two operative shingle strips of either the full length of the blank or of lesser length by severing it lengthwise between the ends of the slots.” As a blank, without being cut through the slots in order to obtain the effect of shingle formation, it was undoubtedly of no practical use.

While Overhury’s claims are for the blank with the transverse slots adapted to ho slit, and while, before slitting, the blank was not in a condition for practical use, it was an article of manufacture which Overbury contemplated that builders or wholesalers or retailers might buy, and they or the user, by slitting it longitudinally through the slots, would have two lengths of simulated shingle roofing. Utility in a patent does not require that the product, in itself and apart from any application of commonly known means, be in a condition for practical use. True, the patentee is -bound to disclose a mode in which his invention may bo rendered practically useful, but it may be one of many modes, and it may necessarily involve the use of other known devices which may be required in order to effect the useful result. Wheeler v. Clipper Mower, etc., Co., 29 Fed. Cas. 881, No. 17,493. The claims disclose a mode in which the blank may he put to practical use.

There is persuasive evidence in the ease of the commercial success of the patented device which is strong evidence in itself of utility. Additional evidence'of its utility is in the fact that the defendant has used the invention. Sandy MacGregor Co. v. Vaco Grip Co. (C. C. A.) 2 F.(2d) 655. The defendant contends, however, that it has not infringed, because the sheet delivered to its machine is of a width equal to four shingle strips instead of two as defined in the patent in suit; that no blank is produced which is adapted to he converted into shingle strip's; and that it cuts the web transversely to make short strips which may be stacked. It adopts the same arrangement of slots shown in the drawings of the Overbury patent, and in the plaintiffs manufacture under the patent, and uses the blank in multiple form, placing three rows of slots in the length of the fabric. The center slot is toward the length of the exposed part of the shingle. To the right and left of this are smaller slots exactly the length of the exposed part of the shingle.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 719, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 36, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flintkote-co-v-national-asbestos-mfg-co-ca3-1931.