Hall Laboratories, Inc. v. Economics Laboratory, Inc.

72 F. Supp. 683, 74 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 258, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2367
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMay 21, 1947
DocketCivil Action No. 722
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 72 F. Supp. 683 (Hall Laboratories, Inc. v. Economics Laboratory, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall Laboratories, Inc. v. Economics Laboratory, Inc., 72 F. Supp. 683, 74 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 258, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2367 (mnd 1947).

Opinion

DONOVAN, District Judge.

This is a suit for infringement of claim 28 of Hall Patent No. 19,719, hereinafter referred to as 719, and claim 10 of Hall Patent No. 2,035,652, hereinafter referred to as 652. Plaintiff seeks injunctive relief against defendant, together with an accounting.

Defendant denies that it committed acts of infringement, and alleges that said patents, and each of them, are invalid.

Patent 719 consists of a composition for softening hard water. Patent 652 is a dish-washing compound. Title to both patents [684]*684is in plaintiff by assignment, and the products of the claimed inventions have been ma.de available to the public under the trade names of “Calgon” for water-softening purposes, and “Calgonite” for dishwashing.

The two claims we are here concerned with read as follows:

719, Claim 28 — “A washing composition comprising an alkali-metal metaphosphate which is water soluble and capable of sequestering calcium in a but slightly ionized condition and a deflocciulative detergent capable of peptizing greases.”

652, Claim 10 — “A washing composition for cleansing greasy articles, containing an alkali-metal saponifying detergent and sodium hexametaphosphate, the alkali-metal saponifying detergent being in amount sufficient to produce in aqueous solution a highly alkaline solution having a pH value of at least 10.5, the sodium hexametaphos-phate being in amount sufficient to prevent the precipitation of calcium soap in the washing of greasy articles in such highly alkaline solution.”

The products of said claims will be referred to' as plaintiff’s compounds or compositions.

Said patents described methods of water softening and preventing the precipitation of calcium in the manner outlined in the above-quoted claims. It is conceded that hard water is caused almost entirely by the presence therein of calcium and calcium salts. Iron, silica, aluminum and like salts may also be present, and contribute to water hardness, but only in minor proportions.

. Plaintiff corporation, together with The Buromin Company and Calgon, Inc., are entirely owned by Hagan Corporation. The parent company was organized in 1918. Defendant company was organized in 1925. The Buromin Company was organized in 1931, and Calgon, Inc., was organized in 1934. It is undisputed that plaintiff and its related companies, i. e., Hagan Corporation, The Buromin Company, and Calgon, Inc., have been closely associated in the promotion and marketing of glassy phosphate material variously described as “Calgon,” ' “Hagan Phosphate” and “Buromin.” The first two are, identical. Plaintiff entered into a series of agreements with Chemische Fabrik Joh. Benckiser, of Germany, Swann Chemical Company, Victor Chemical Works, Albright and Wilson, Limited, Charlotte Chemical Laboratories, Monsanto Chemical Company, and Rumford Chemical Works, and thereby, in effect, controlled the products of the two patents here involved to such an extent that the only remaining source of supply of glassy phosphates was the Blockson Chemical Company:

John M. Hopwood, President of Hall Laboratories, Inc., testifying for plaintiff, provides a graphic visualization of the method of water-softening prior to the patenting of the methods here in suit, as follows :

“I became acquainted with water softening many years before by association with the Hagan Corporation. I was in charge of a number of mines and at nearly all of those mines we had to use softening plants. By a softening plant, I mean a plant that we precipitated the hardness by the introduction of lime and soda ash. Then we filtered off the precipitated sludge and used the clear water for treating our boilers. I also, of course, had the ordinary common knowledge that I believe all of us have with the packaged water softeners used up until that time. * * *”

As to the commercial water softening methods up to 1932:

“Distillation I would say was the fir-t, where you generate steam and then co~dense the steam to water, and then use that water as distilled water. Next would be the treatment of water with the different chemicals available for precipitating, so that you got now the hardness precipated. You do that with your own city water system, and you produce a water that is too alkaline to drink, so you acidify it and bring the pH to a point where it is harmless for drinking purposes.

“Then the zeolite system, base exchange system, which was invented, I believe, by Gans about' forty years ago. I was quite familiar with that.

“Then the next system that I am familiar with was discovered some forty years later, the system of Hall’s whereby the housewife could take a packaged product.for the first [685]*685time in her life and for the first time, I think, in the history of the world, take a packaged product, sprinkle a little of that product in water and produce any type of softening that she desired without a sign of sludge, or without increasing its alkalinity one iota.”

The Hall method leading to patents 719 and 652 came about, according to the testimony of Mr. Hopwood, when the patentee approached him with information that he had discovered a new use for Hagan Phosphate. Hall advised Hopwood that said phosphate could be used as a water softener, and proceeded to demonstrate his thesis by taking two flasks of Pittsburgh water (con-, sidered hard), pouring liquid Buromin (plaintiff’s glass product dissolved in said water) into one flask, and leaving the other flask “just at it was.” Into each flask Hall then- added the same amount of soap. The result was described by Mr. Hopwood as follows:

“The flask containing the metaphosphate when taken up just sudsed copiously. There was no precipitate in it. It was just a clear crystal water with several inches of soap suds on the top of it. The water that had not received the small quantity of liquid phosphate, Hagan Phosphate, just got milky and there was not a sign of any soap sud in it. * * * I could see, or I thought I could, a future for this material that was beyond anything that we had ever imagined as coming to us from our then established business. I could see the hundreds of thousands, the millions of packages of water softening products that were sold in every store in the United States, every drug store and every grocery store in the United States. * * * These packaged water softeners, consisting of trisodium phosphate by various names — calcium carbonate — by different names, and the different products like washing soda and things of that kind that were sold for softening water. * * *”

The patents here in suit were applied for and issued to Ralph E. Hall, and in due course were assigned to plaintiff. It may be not entirely accurate, but will contribute to simplicity, to say that the products of the patents arise out of a process of melting mixtures of sodium metaphosphate and sodium pyrophosphate, and then quickly cooling the molten matter thus obtained. The result is a glassy material, such as herein referred to as commercial Calgon. (See bottle 3, exhibit 7.)

In the words of the patentee, “the teaching of * * * [the] patent is the sequestering or tying up of the calcium in water soluble complex.” As a consequence, the precipitation of the calcium is hindered or repressed by addition of material which might normally make it insoluble. In other words, the calcium is held in solution in a manner not entirely clear or understandable.

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72 F. Supp. 683, 74 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 258, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-laboratories-inc-v-economics-laboratory-inc-mnd-1947.