Guardian Trust Co. v. Downingtown Mfg. Co.

29 F.2d 887, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2839
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1928
DocketNos. 3838, 3839
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 887 (Guardian Trust Co. v. Downingtown 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
Guardian Trust Co. v. Downingtown Mfg. Co., 29 F.2d 887, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2839 (3d Cir. 1928).

Opinions

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

This was a suit brought by the Guardian Trust Company, trustee, and the Paper & Textile Machinery Company, against the Downingtown Manufacturing'Company, defendant, for the infringement of United States letters patent No. 1,025,822, for improvements in paper-making machines, issued to William EL Mills-paugh on May 7, 1912. The plaintiffs own the patent and charge that the defendant infringes it by the manufacture and sale of suction couch rolls with the knowledge and intent that they were to be used in machines embodying the invention of claims 2, 3, and 5 of the patent.

The trial court held that the patent was valid and infringed by the defendant in the installation of its suetion rolls in a so-called “St. Regis” machine; but that it was not infringed by installations in which Nash rotary pumps were used. The plaintiffs appealed from so much of the decree as holds that the use of the defendant’s rolls with Nash rotary pumps does not infringe, and the defendant appealed from so much as holds the patent valid and infringed by the use of its rolls in a St. Regis machine.

The invention relates to improvements in Fourdrinier paper-making machines. This improves the machine, plaintiffs say, in operation and in the quantity and quality of its products.

For many years in the paper-making industry, the wet pulp web, after it had been laid on the conveyor, called the making-wire and drained by the successive actions of gravity, table rolls, and flat suction boxes, was subjected to the wringing or squeezing action of a pair of large eoaeting rolls, known as the top and bottom couch rolls, in order to press sufficient water out of the web or sheet and reduce it to the necessary firmness and dryness to enable it to be removed from the making-wire and undergo the usual, subsequent pressing, drying, and calendering operations. This method of making the paper sheet was troublesome and slow, and left it in such condition as often to be damaged and broken when being run through the presses and dryers. No substitute was known, it is contended, for this risky and troublesome operation until Millspaugh “discovered that by including in the region of the couch roll a continuous draft through the sheet of a constant, large volume of air, by employment of a continuously positive-acting high vacuum, he could do away with the top couch roll altogether, and eliminate from the sheet the moisture that previously had to be mechanically expressed, with as effective and far more advantageous results than had ever before been attained.”

.The three claims in issue describe and claim in varying language a new combination in the Fourdrinier machine of a suction roll with a positive rotary vaeuum pump which removes moisture from the wet paper web while on -the making-wire, by forcing large quantities of air uniformly through it in the region of the couch roll. The plaintiffs describe the results of the invention as follows: “This invention transformed the Fourdrinier. The new moisture-removing operation, applied in the place of the former expressing operation, obtained an improved drying and consolidating effect, enabling the paper to be made not only without shock or stress in the wet sheet, but also in a highly satisfactory state of such uniform firmness and sufficiently low and uniform moisture content as to be better receptive to the ensuing pressing and drying operations and better adapted to be safely handled off the wire and passed through the pressers and dryers, at the usual fast Fourdrinier speeds, or faster speeds. Thus the invention enabled paper to be made successfully, without the hazards accompanying the use of the old eompressively acting couch rolls, at the normal or increased operating speeds. It was the first to accomplish any such result. It was the first machine ever known to the art by which the paper could he made without mechanical compression on the making-wire, at the then usual fast or even faster speeds, as a properly made wet paper sheet in condition to be removed from the wire and to withstand the normal pressing and drying operations at those speeds.”

While the web or sheet was running along the making-wire, mueh of the water, as above1 stated, was immediately drained off by gravity through the meshes of the wire. As the wire, carrying the solution of water and fiber, ran forward, Over the supporting table rolls, gravity continued to take water out of the sheet, but as more of the water was drained [889]*889off and the solution became thicker, and the pulp particles adhered more closely together, the action of gravity alone was not sufficient to overcome capillary attraction and remove more water, and so some other agency was required. This was found in the compressive action of the top and botton couch rolls. These, however, were unsatisfactory because their heavy pressure frequently injured the web. Thereafter the top roll was eliminated, and reciprocating pumps attached to a group of flat suction boxes were used to draw a current of air through the web.

Marble D. Keeney, of Antioch, Cal., patented a suction box for paper machines in 1897 (No. 581,733). These boxes or rolls were placed on the market, and Curtis & Bro., of Newark, Del., purchased one in 1902. This took the place of the lower couch roll. It was used in connection with a Dean reciprocating pump. As a consequence the top couch roll was removed, and this suction roll and pump were used without the upper couch roll for eight years, and so successful was this in extracting water and moisture from the web that the web was self-sustaining and passed over the gap between the making-wire and the felt screen or receiver without support. The testimony clearly establishes that Curtis secured Millspaugh’s “desired result.” When the old Dean pump was worn out and had to be renewed, they substituted a Con-nersville rotary pump for it; but this produced no change in the mode of operation, the grades of paper made, or construction of machine used.

Claim 5 is the most specific. It has two pieces of mechanism, the revolving suction roll and a positive rotary pump.

But both of these were old. The patent No. 895,238 issued to Millspaugh August 4, 1908, was for “new and useful Improvements in Suction Rolls for Paper-Machines.” He adopted the suction roll of that patent for use in the patent in suit. On page 2 at line 104 he said: “I prefer at present the construction of suction-roll shown and described in my U. S. Patent No. 895,283, dated August 4, 1908, though I do not limit myself thereto.” The suction roll is also shown in other patents. In the patent No. 426,089, issued to Young and Davis, August 22, 1890, a suction roll mounted at the delivery end of the making-wire on a Fourdrinier machine is disclosed. The patentee stated that the object of the improvement was “to lessen the wear of the wire and produce a suction device that will effectually remove moisture from the pulp while upon said wire.” The British patent, No. 15,669 (1887), issued to Black, also disclosed a suction roll mounted at the delivery end of the making-wire. These rolls were not commercially successful, but Mills-paugh said this was due to imperfections in mechanical construction and operation which he proposed to remedy in his first patent.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 887, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2839, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardian-trust-co-v-downingtown-mfg-co-ca3-1928.