Floridin Co. v. Attapulgus Clay Co.

35 F. Supp. 810, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 332, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2376
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedNovember 19, 1940
DocketNo. 1247
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 35 F. Supp. 810 (Floridin Co. v. Attapulgus Clay Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Floridin Co. v. Attapulgus Clay Co., 35 F. Supp. 810, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 332, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2376 (D. Del. 1940).

Opinion

NIELDS, District Judge.

This is a patent infringement suit brought by Floridin Company, plaintiff, a Delaware Corporation, against Attapulgus Clay Company and Attapulgus Clay Sales Corporation, defendants, Delaware corporations. Plaintiff charges defendants with infringement of United States Patent No. 2,079,854 for “Process for Treating Naturally Active Earth and Product Thereof” issued May 11, 1937, to Frank W. K. Hartshorne, assignor to Floridin Company, on application filed August 27, 1936. Upon plaintiff^ motion the bill of complaint was dismissed as to Attapulgus Clay Sales Corporation, the second defendant. The defenses are invalidity and noninfringement.

[811]*811Plaintiff has an office in Warren, Pennsylvania. It operates mines in Northwest Florida, near Quincy. Since 1910 it has processed fuller’s earth and sold the earth primarily for decolorizing mineral oil. Defendant has an office in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It owns mines at Attapulgus, Georgia, about twenty miles from plaintiff’s plant. Since 1920 it has processed fuller’s earth at the mines.

Fuller’s earth is used to adsorb excess moisture as well as to decolorize oil. Oil as it comes from the ground is very dark. In refining oil it is necessary to remove some of this color and improve its appearance and its physical properties. Plaintiff and defendant compete in the processing and sale of fuller’s earth for decolorizing oil. The name “fuller’s earth” is derived from its first use which was to remove grease from woolen cloth in the process of “fulling” or shrinking. It is no longer used for this purpose in the United States, where approximately 98% of all fuller’s earth is sold for decolorizing oil.

Prior to the use of the process alleged to be covered by the patent in suit the preparation of fuller’s earth was a process of removing excess moisture and reducing the earth to the most effective size for decolorizing purposes. After the fuller’s earth was mined ft was permitted to dry for a few days and then crushed to lumps of less than one inch in size. Thereafter it was dried in a rotary kiln to reduce the moisture. It was further reduced by grinding rolls and screened to the required size. The value of fuller’s earth depends upon its decolorizing efficiency. This in turn is determined by the volume of oil a given quantity of 'fuller’s earth will decolorize to a given color value.

The essence of both plaintiff’s and defendant’s process is the use of extrusion. Plaintiff began extruding fuller’s earth as a feature of its process before defendant. It started this feature to improve the adsorptive efficiency of fuller’s earth before the issuance of the patent in suit which occurred in May, 1937. In the summer of 1936 defendant found that the fuller’s earth sold by plaintiff, its principal competitor, possessed increased adsorptive efficiency. It was curious how this increase was obtained.

Defendant learned that plaintiff had an extrusion machine at its plant and assumed that plaintiff obtained its improved result by passing the earth through such a machine. Defendant verified this assumption by tests upon available meat grinder extrusion machines. It found the adsorptive efficiency of fuller’s earth could be improved substantially by passing it through such machines. This result was obtained from extrusion machines which were manufactured by others than the manufacturer of plaintiff’s machine and before defendant knew who that manufacturer was.

As a result, defendant decided it would like to use such a machine in the treatment of its fuller’s earth if the patent situation permitted. A patent search followed. The Hartshorne patent had not then issued so defendant’s patent search did not disclose that plaintiff had any patent rights. However, defendant found Ikeda United States patent No. 1,630,660 which had issued about ten years earlier in May, 1927. Ikeda patent disclosed the earth extrusion process which defendant desired to use. Defendant immediately negotiated for its purchase and acquired it. Defendant then ordered the extrusion machine used in its process from an extrusion machine manufacturer other than the one from whom plaintiff obtained its machine. In fact defendant’s machine is of a different type from plaintiff’s. It is a double-screw, not a single-screw, machine. All this occurred before the issuance of the Hartshorne patent which plaintiff asserts is infringed by defendant’s use of its extrusion machine.

Patent in Suit.-

The Hartshorne patent in suit has to do with a single step in the preparation of fuller’s earth for use as an adsorptive agent. This step consists in extruding moistened fuller’s earth through holes in a die plate. More simply stated, the step consists in running properly moistened fuller’s earth through a machine of the same general type as an ordinary kitchen meat grinder. The purpose and result of this step is to increase the adsorptive efficiency of the earth. The remainder of the process described in the Hartshorne patent follows standard practice long used in the preparation of fuller’s earth for use as an adsorptive agent.

To insure that the extrusion will impart to the earth “appreciable” improvement in efficiency “of the order of 10% or higher”, the Hartshorne patent teaches that the size of the holes in the die plate should be one-eighth to five-eighths of an inch [812]*812in diameter and that “the plasticity or fluidity of the mass” should result from a “free moisture content * * * of from 45 to 55%”. Translated into terms of pressure on the die plate, Hartshorne says that this condition will give a minimum die plate pressure of 100 pounds per square inch, and that this is sufficient. He also says that he has “not found any maximum pressures which are harmful”. There is nothing critical or unusual in the fact that the die plate pressure existing in the extrusion described by Hartshorne is in excess of 100 pounds per square inch. It would be unusual if it were less than that.

Why the grinding of earth in a meat grinder increases its adsorptive efficiency is still in the realm of theory. It seems clear, as Hartshorne says, that the operation effects “a change in the physical structure” of the fuller’s earth and that this change involves an increase in the porosity of the earth and makes accessible to the fluid treated a larger area of internal surface. Adsorption being a surface phenomenon, the greater the total surface area accessible to the fluid being treated, the greater will be the adsorptive capacity of the earth.

Hartshorne claims, relied upon by plaintiff as typical, are claims 3, 6, 8, 10, 11 and 16. Claims 6 and 10 are illustrative:

“6. As a new article of manufacture, fuller’s earth in granular-like form which, containing a suitable portion of its natural combined moisture, has been subjected to extrusion while under a pressure on the material sufficient to increase its adsorptive capacity from 10% to 40% as compared to the same earth which has not been extruded.”

*****

“10. The improved process of treating a naturally active earthy decolorizer, such as fuller’s earth, which consists in subjecting the same in plastic form and while retaining combined moisture in excess of 2% to flow under pressure in excess of 100 pounds per square inch whereby to increase its adsorptive capacity in excess of 10% as compared to the same earth which has not been subjected to pressure.”

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Bluebook (online)
35 F. Supp. 810, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 332, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/floridin-co-v-attapulgus-clay-co-ded-1940.