Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co.

277 U.S. 245, 48 S. Ct. 474, 72 L. Ed. 868, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 686
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 14, 1928
Docket285
StatusPublished
Cited by115 cases

This text of 277 U.S. 245 (Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co., 277 U.S. 245, 48 S. Ct. 474, 72 L. Ed. 868, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 686 (1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Respondent brought this suit in the district court for western Michigan, to enjoin infringement of the Perkins Reissued Patent No. 13436. So much of the judgment for , the defendant, petitioner here, as held the product claims of the patent not infringed by respondent’s product, was .reversed by the éourt of. appeals for the sixth circuit. *247 Perkins Glue Co. v. Holland Furniture Co., 18 F. (2d) 387. The court of appeals dor the seventh circuit, Perkins Glue Co. v. Gould Manufacturing Co., 292 Fed. 596, and the court of appeals for the second circuit, Perkins Glue Co. v. Standard Furniture Co., 287 Fed. 109, had previously held the patent not infringed by the same product. 1 This Court granted certiorari. 275 U. S. 512.

The patent is entitled “A Patent for Starch Glue and a Method of Making It.” Perkins was the first to make successfully a starch glue suitable for wood veneering and similar. uses. Glue made' from animal substances, known as animal glue, has- long been, in common use as an adhesive and is especially adapted to use in wood veneering, in which thin sheets or layers of wood are fastened -together by the use of an adhesive bonding material. The characteristic’qualities of animal glue, making it peculiarly suitable for that use, are a low absorptiveness of water and a consequent high degree of fluidity, facilitating its application by mechanical means, high elasticity and great tensile strength. A high water content, characteristic of other adhesive preparations, delays drying, warps the wood and when dry leaves too little bonding material to secure the requisite strength. In practice animal glue is made suitably fluid for use in wood veneering by the addition of a critically small amount of water, three parts'by weight to one of glue.

Long before Perkins’ experiments, adhesive paste or mucilage made from starch was well known. The Gerard Patent (187jl, Belgian, No. 34869) and the - Domemann *248 Patent (1893, French, No. 232781) described a process of producing an adhesive or glue by dissolving starch in a solution of caustic alkali.- The suitability of starch as a glue base in this and other processes depends upon its water absorptive quality which varies with the starch.of different plants, and under varying conditions with the starch of the same plant. B.ecause of their high water absorption, glues produced from starch, before Perkins, were too viscous and hence required too large an admixture of water for use successfully as a wood veneering glue.' The controlling difficulty to be overcome in the development of a starch glue suitable for veneering was what may be called the normally large water absorptive quality, of starch, corresponding to the viscosity of the resultant glue, a reduction of the one effecting a reduction in the other.

It has long been known that -the viscosity or the water absorptive quality of starches may be reduced by chemical treatment known as degeneration in which changes in the arrangement of the' atoms in the starch molecules are effected by use of a catalyse agent. In 1906 Gerson & Sachse (German, No. 167275) patented a process for the preparation of a starch base for glue manufacture by degenerating starch by the use of oxidizing agents in the presence of an alkali. But the resultant glue from this and other processes was not suitable for use' in the woodworking trades. To make it sufficiently fluid for convenient use required too large an admixture of water, four parts or more to one of glue, so that the wood was warped and when dried the glue was not sufficiently tenacious to be used successfully • as a substitute in that manufacture for animal glue.

The Perkins patent described a process for making glue from starch and a resultant product “ as good as animal' glue,” “which will have the great practical advantage that it may be practically used for the same purposes as-the best animal glue.” The process consisted of two steps. *249 The basic material was a suitable raw starch, preferably starch made from the cassava root, and the first step was concerned with its conversion or degeneration so as to make a “ glue base with lower water absorptivity than ordinary untreated starch. This was to be accomplished by combining the basic raw material with oxidizing agents and subjecting them to heat. The method was that described in the Gerson & Sachse patent and was not new. The characteristic feature of this first step as described by Perkins was not the manner of degeneration but its degree. The degeneration of the raw cassava starch was to be carried to a point jugt short of its conversion into dextrine, a soluble starch, which, because of that property is of little value in glue manufacture. ' The patent in its re-issued form stated with precision the particular degree to which the water absorptive properties of. the starch might be reduced in the preparation of a suitable glue base and described with particularity tests (the “ 9 to 1 boil Up ” test and the 170° test) for ascertaining when that stage of degeneration had been reached.

The secqnd step in the. process consisted in the treatment of the glue base, as prepared by the first step, by the addition of three parts- or less of water by weight to one of the glue base and a specified percentage of cellulose solvent such as caustic potash. The process of preparing a starch glue by treating the glue base with a cellulose solvent was described by the Gerard and Dornemann patents and was not new, but more than three parts of water were used; hence the resultant glue was not suitable for veneering. The fundamental ideas of the Perkins process patent might be expressed in simple terms as follows: Glue made by dissolving ordinary starch in ah alkaline solution of three parts of water (the quantity to which the woodworking industry is accustomed) is too thick. Glue made , from over-degenerated starch is too weak. Between th'e extremes there is a range of degeneration within which the starch base,- when dissolved in *250 caustic potash, will produce glue of ample fluidity without loss of tensile strength or other qualities characteristic of animal glue.

The product claims, of which more will be said presently, were for the resultant glue, in substance for a starch glue having substantially the properties of animal glue.

The patent has thirty-eight claims, divisible into groups. One group covers the process of producing the degenerated starch glue base, the first step process, already described. One group embraces the glue base product produced by the first step process. Another group includes the process of dissolving the starch base, by the use of alkaline.solvents, the second process step; another, the combination of the two process steps and finally the group with which we are now concerned is based upon the ultimate product, the glue itself. Three of the claims embraced in this ultimate product group are the only ones now in suit, 28, 30 and 31. They are as follows:

28. A glue comprising cassava carbohydrate rendered semifluid by digestion and having substantially the properties of animal glue.

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Bluebook (online)
277 U.S. 245, 48 S. Ct. 474, 72 L. Ed. 868, 1928 U.S. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-furniture-co-v-perkins-glue-co-scotus-1928.