General Tire & Rubber Co. v. Fisk Rubber Corp.

104 F.2d 740
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 28, 1939
Docket7928
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 F.2d 740 (General Tire & Rubber Co. v. Fisk Rubber Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Tire & Rubber Co. v. Fisk Rubber Corp., 104 F.2d 740 (6th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

HICKS, Circuit Judge.

The Fisk Rubber Corporation, appel-lee, sued The General Tire and Rubber Company, appellant, for infringement of designated claims of nine different patents of which appellee was the assignee-owner. The case was referred to a Master who found certain claims of three of the patents to be valid and infringed, namely, Nos. 1 to 10, inclusive, and No. 14 of Patent No. 1,742,777 issued January 7, 1930, to Midgley; No. 4 of Patent No. 1,723,501 issued August 6, 1929 to Castri-cum, and Nos. 3 and 4 of Patent No. 1,541,396 issued June 9, 1925 to Rossbach. He found the claims sued on in the remaining six patents either invalid or un-infringed. The court confirmed the Master’s report and entered the usual decree for an injunction and an accounting. Ap-pellee having during the suit filed disclaimers as to certain of the claims sued on, was allowed to recover only one-half of its costs. Appellant, in accordance with Equity Rule 67, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723, was taxed $5.00 for each of its overruled exceptions to the Master’s report.

Appellant’s assignments of error raise: As to the Midgley patent, the defenses of anticipation, indefiniteness in the claims, non-invention, non-infringement, double patenting, and, in addition, the defense that Claims 1 to 9 thereof for a method were functional and hence invalid as involving nothing more than the operation of the machine; its defense of non-invention as to Castricum; and its defenses of non-invention and non-fringement as to Ross-bach, and that the Rossbach claims were functional. In addition, it complained of the ruling that the disclaimer of Claim 15 as to Midgley did not affect the validity of the other claims in issue and it objected to being taxed with half the costs since it prevailed on six of the patents in suit and since appellee filed disclaimers in three of the patents after the commencement of the suit.

The three patents here involved are in the tire building art. They relate to improved methods or apparatus for calendering sheets of rubber and cords into a single unvulcanized sheet in which the rubber entirely surrounds the parallel cords arranged in its central plane, and known in the industry as cord tire fabric. The product is'a smooth rubber sheet, disclosing at its ends the embedded cords.

According to Midgley, a tire needs “the cords for strength and the rubber for protection to the cords and for resiliency in use.” Other materials than cords had been used for strength, including woven fabric and an arrangement of cords held together by an occasional weak-weft thread. Generally speaking, fabric and weak-weft cords had two disadvantages: One structural, in that the threads and cords tended to chafe and wear out where they crossed, when built up into layers in a tire; and the other, in the matter of cost, since both materials needed a preliminary processing (the weaving) in another type of factory. But unwoven cords resisted efforts to embed them easily and securely in rubber. Rubber and cords (or rubber and fabric for that matter) have no natural affinity. With fabrics and weak-weft cords it was possible to grind the rubber in by “frictioning,” that is, by operating the calender rolls at different speeds. Even when the calenders were operated at the same speed (skimming) unwoven cords tended to be distorted and to “float” around in the rubber under the pressure, and the product had to be scrapped. It was possible to pretreat the cords by dipping them into a solution of gasoline or other rubber solvent, to impregnate them with rubber and render them more adhesive. But this process called for special apparatus, took time and created a distinct fire hazard. Even so, it was used by at least one major tire company.

*742 Midgley No. 1,742,777

Midgley claimed to meet the difficulty of adhesion by heating the cords prior to running them through the calender to a degree rendering “momentary contact with the workman’s hand uncomfortable but not hot enough to make a burning contact.” The heat was a substitute for the solvents and for the evils of “friction-ing.” He claimed to meet the difficulty of disarrangement under the pressure of the calender, by spacing and “equalizing” the tension of the heated cords' and feeding them thus arranged by means of a roller in contact or near contact therewith, against the sheet of unvulcanized rubber on one of the calender rolls, in advance of the bight. He claimed that the pressure of the roller and the tensioning caused gradual embedment of the cords into the sheet as the roll moved toward the bight and that they thereby became fixed therein so as to resist displacement under the ensuing pressure.

The calender used by Midgley consisted of four rolls arranged one above the other in perpendicular alignment, and lettered A, B, C and D from top to bottom. These rolls were arranged in adjustable vertical guides, so that the space between them could be independently varied to suit operating demands, A being adjustable with reference to B, and D with reference to C, for governing the thickness of the rubber sheets. In addition, B was adjustable with reference to C, for controlling the pressure on the cords and the rubber in the B-C bight.

In forming a composite sheet of rubber and cord, the unvulcanized rubber is fed in banks to the bights between A and B, and C and D, respectively, and is sheeted out between them, an overlapping arrangement at the end of the rolls limiting the width of the sheets. These sheets then follow around rolls B and C to the B-C bight, the cords, as we have said, meanwhile having been fed into contact with the sheet on roll B prior to entering the B-C bight. Rolls B and C operate at the same speed, but rolls A and B are operated at slightly different speeds in their respective pairings, the better to work the rubber into sheet form.

The sheet produced was fifty inches wide and the cords ran over twenty to the inch. These thousand and more cords had to be accurately spaced and controlled at the time of application to calender roll B to produce the parallel alignment and proper tension for periect fabric. There was a sketchy description of the tension-ing arrangement in the patent. From the creel, the cords were led through guides, over stretching rolls, over and under the tension equalizing rolls, then through an expanding comb and another guide roll to the heating rolls. The latter were hollow and four in number and when size 10 cords, twenty-three to the inch, were laid across them at normal calender speed, sufficient heat was imparted to them for the purpose of the patent, if the steam pressure in the four rolls was approximately fifty pounds.

From the heating rolls, the cords were separated, one set being fed to grooved roll 24 in the drawings, and the alternate cords to grooved roll 25. The grooves on 24 are in line with alternate grooves on roll 62, which introduces the cords to the rubber sheet on calender roll B, and the grooves on 25 are spaced to line up with the intermediate grooves on 62. This separation “insures against one cord being in a position to crowd or ride over an adjacent cord either just before or. as the cord meets the rubber sheet.” This is particularly true where the cords are, as here, as close as twenty-three to the inch, and, as was testified, running 40 to 50 yards per minute.

All three of these rolls', 24, 25 and 62, are mounted on a movable guide which may be adjusted to bring roll 62 with its very shallow grooves, with depth less than the thickness of the cords, against the rubber sheet on B.

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104 F.2d 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-tire-rubber-co-v-fisk-rubber-corp-ca6-1939.