General Bakelite Co. v. Nikolas

225 F. 539, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 12, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 225 F. 539 (General Bakelite Co. v. Nikolas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Bakelite Co. v. Nikolas, 225 F. 539, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280 (E.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

CHATFIEDD, District Judge.

[1] The present action charges infringement of three patents, Nos. 954,666, issued April 12, 1910, upon an application filed November 22, 1909; 1,018,385, issued February 20, 1912, upon an application filed March 14, 1911; and 1,037,719, issued September 3, 1912, upon an application also filed March 14, 1911. In each case Deo H. Baekeland is patentee and has conveyed the patent (as well as others procured by him and referred to in the testimony) to the plaintiff in this action.

The application for the first patent was made as a division of a prior application filed October 15, 1907, and upon which patent 942,809 was-granted, December 7, 1909.

The patentee is a citizen of the United States, born in Belgium and educated in various European countries. The testimony shows his-wide training and experience, as well .as the academic honors and scientific degrees obtained by him in Holland, Belgium, England, France, Germany and the United States. He has testified as an expert as well as patentee, and his qualifications are thus brought into consideration.

The testimony shows commercially successful accomplishments, as well as scientific investigation by the patentee in this country, and his appearance and testimony upon the witness stand have plainly shown mental capacity, scientific knowledge, and deductive ability which would accord with and be expected as the necessary foundation for such investigations and experimental operations as those involved in practicing or advancing the art and processes set forth in the patents as to which the present litigation has arisen.

The defendant is a practical manufacturer of varnishes in the city of Chicago, who disclaims knowledge of chemistry as a science, and who testified that, in the mixture and treatment of chemicals during the manufacture of varnish, he judged the reaction and formed all his conclusions from experience and appearances, without regard to the nature of the reaction taking place.

[541]*541The plaintiff alleges infringement by the sale upon the open market of certain varnishes known as bedstead filter or gold lacquer or satin A. P. laccuer, of which admitted samples have been produced by the defendant during the course of the trial.

At the outset of the case, considerable point was made of the issue of infringement, by reason of the fact that the sample produced by the plaintiii, and obtained from a store used by the defendant as an agency in Brooklyn, was claimed by the defendant to he different in appearance from anything manufactured by him. The sample was therefore disavowed by the defendant as his product. The difference in appearance was never satisfactorily explained, but the chemical analysis of the contents and the analyses of the samples produced by the defendant were such that no issue as to the actual resemblance of the defendant’s commercial product and the article described by the patents exists.

The defendant, however, contends that he does not do or use anything in the manufacture of his varnish which would be an infringement of the plaintiff’s patents, and, in fact, denies the use of materials which the plaintiff, from analysis of the product, contends must be employed by him. This issue will be discussed in connection with the patents of the prior art, and we will take up at once the patents in suit and tiie patentee’s work in connection therewith.

It appears from the record that the patentee was investigating the properties of what are known as condensation products of phenol (carbolic acid) and formaldehyde. He was seeking a commercial substitute for natural gum camphor, to be used in the manufacture of celluloid, and lids led him to investigation of the condensation products above referred to, which are frequently called resins, in that they form a gum of more or less natural resinous appearance, when washed or dried after removal from the solution remaining after the reaction by which they have been formed.

It will be seen, from examination of the prior art, that such condensation products were comparatively well known by the year 1907, when a commercial demand for certain substances, in the manufacture of varnishes or coatings for metallic surfaces like chandeliers or bedsteads, and for electric devices, like insulating tubes, made the production of the articles entering into their composition commercially profit-aD!i e.

The patentee tells us that as early as 1871 Prof. Baeyer and his pupils had described certain reactions between the phenols and the aldehydes. In the course of his investigations, he found a particular condensation product of phenol (generally in the form of carbolic acid) and formaldehyde, which resembled gum shellac. ’ At this time gum shellac was selling for 50 cents a pound, and the patentee took up the investigation of the gum in question. The production was not uniform either in quantity or quality, and sometimes the condensation resulted in a bulgy, spongy mass, with which nothing could be clone. After experiments enabled the patentee to produce substantially uniform results. He called the condensation product obtained “novolak,” and began to make it in large quantities. The color of the novolak varies from light to dark brown. It is soluble in alcohol, and is fusible. If dis[542]*542solved and used as a lacquer, it sets and dries like a vegetable gum varnish by evaporation of the solvent, but no change in the composition of the varnish coating takes place. Thus, like gum varnishj it can be re-dissolved or re-fused (that is, melted, not destroyed, by combustion), and turns red upon exposure to the air. Heating the product called novolak for several days did not change its quality of constant solubility, and the substance therefore would directly compete with the varnishes or lacquers made from a vegetable gum.

The patentee found that the soluble product was, in his opinion, that described in the De Taire (Belgian) patent 192,590, (French) 361,-539, and (British) 15,517 of 1905; and the Blumer patents, 12,880 of 1902 (British), 172,877 (German), and 6,823 of 1903 (British).

Sometimes, during the course of the reaction, a hard, insoluble substance resulted, which resisted all of the solvents that were tried thereon. Nothing but a destructive acid (like fuming nitric or sulphuric acid) seemed to have any effect, and the patentee, thinking that this product was of no practical value by itself, sought to find a method of effecting a synthesis of the substances entering into the condensation product and the fibers of soft wood. At this time he became acquainted with the work of a chemist named Kleeberg, who had produced a substance which he considered worthless and with which he could do nothing.

The Story patent (English) 8,875 of 1905, and the Tuft patent (United States) 735,278, of 1903, as well as Blumer and De Taire, all started with the same raw materials and obtained different products. But all these products fell into two classes: (1) The novolak or permanently soluble and fusible condensation products; or (2) the insoluble products, in which class one phase of the Story patent, the product found by Kleeberg and that of the patentee, seemed to belong.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Grant Paper Box Co. v. Russell Box Co.
154 F.2d 729 (First Circuit, 1946)
General Bakelite Co. v. General Insulate Co.
276 F. 166 (E.D. New York, 1921)
Schoellkopf v. City of Chicago
216 Ill. App. 52 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 F. 539, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-bakelite-co-v-nikolas-nyed-1915.