Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Shelby Poultry Co.

185 F. Supp. 7, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 114, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5053
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJuly 8, 1960
DocketCiv. No. 1182
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 185 F. Supp. 7 (Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Shelby Poultry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Honolulu Oil Corp. v. Shelby Poultry Co., 185 F. Supp. 7, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 114, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5053 (W.D.N.C. 1960).

Opinion

WARLICK, District Judge.

This is a patent suit in which the plaintiffs charge infringement. The defendants set up the defenses of invalidity, non-infringement, unfair competition, and alteration of original application specifications.

The plaintiff, Honolulu Oil Corporation is a Delaware corporation with its principal place of business in San Francisco, California. The plaintiff, Barker Poultry Equipment Company is an Iowa corporation with its main office in Ottumwa, in that State. Barker manufactures poultry processing equipment.

The defendant, Pickwick Company is an Iowa corporation with its principal office in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. It, like Barker, manufactures poultry processing equipment. The defendant, Shelby Poultry Company, is a partnership consisting of William L. Shaw and L. E. Needham, which is registered under the laws of North Carolina to do business under the assumed name of Shelby Poultry Company. It operates a relatively small poultry processing plant, in Shelby, North Carolina, having purchased from the defendant Pickwick Company one of its fowl defeathering machines shortly following their being placed on the market.

Honolulu Oil is the owner of the two patents in suit, having had them assigned to it on their purchase from Andrew J. Toti, the invent or thereof. Barker Poultry has an exclusive license under the two patents from Honolulu Oil. Patent number 2,754,539 issuing in July 1956, is a methods patent setting out a means for the defeathering of fowl. Patent number 2,805,443, which was issued in September 1957, is an apparatus patent following up the methods patent. Both patents are the outcome of a Patent Office requirement that the process claims be prosecuted separately from the machine claims as they were originally filed together in the application as is shown by File Wrapper 2,805,443.

Jurisdiction arises under the patent laws of the United States.

The initial complaint was filed on July 17, 1956 the same day that Patent Number 2,754,539 was issued, in which it was charged that Shelby's use of the defendant Pickwick’s machine constituted infringement, and the prayer for relief sought an injunction against such infringement.

In its answer the defendant Shelby Poultry Company sets up invalidity of the two patents and non-infringement as defenses thereto and prays that the action be dismissed.

Thereafter the defendant Pickwick Company filed its motion with the court to intervene as a defendant and on such being granted, in its answer alleged invalidity and non-infringement similar to the allegations made by its co-defendant, Shelby Poultry Company, and additionally set up a counterclaim charging unfair competition and sought to restrain it.

Subsequently plaintiffs filed a reply to the counterclaim of the Pickwick Company as the rules require, denying the allegations generally and seeking treble damages, all on account of the alleged willful nature of the defendant's infringement.

The plaintiffs later filed a supplemental complaint to bring into the action the apparatus patent number 2,805,443, which was granted to Honolulu Oil on September 10, 1957, more than one year [9]*9after the original complaint had been filed. In due time the defendants answered such supplemental complaint.

The casé then being at issue, was heard by the court without a jury.

Before finding the facts as is required by Rule 52, F.R.Civ.P., 28 U.S.C.A. and delving into the merits of this action, it would seem wise to consider the position of the poultry processing industry prior to the patents herein involved. To begin with the patents in suit relate to improvements in picking feathers from poultry.

Within the past twenty odd years the poultry industry has expanded phenomonally in that the commercial processing of chickens in the United States in 1959 was approximately nine billion pounds. This new commercial enterprise obviously brought about a very determined effort on the part of those engaged in such business, to devise some means by which defeathering of chickens could be mechanically done, since this feature appears to have been the bottleneck of the industry, for that from time immemorial poultry had been plucked by hand and hand-plucking obviously had many disadvantages, all of which had long been recognized in the art. It was slow and laborious, unsanitary, expensive, and obviously involved considerable loss from scuffing, barking, bruising, and breaking of the skin of the fowl.

Innumerable efforts had been made through the years to invent such a machine which would operate mechanically. Time after time some supposed inventor had undertaken to secure a patent on his theory, and many actually were awarded patent grants in this particular field. However, nothing of any particular value to the industry came about until George R. Hunt, on October 27, 1942, was granted a patent for a “feather picking apparatus for fowls and the like”; it being granted on his application filed on November 16, 1939. The method of this patent actually established the present commercial poultry industry, and its use by the industry had the force and effect of putting this new commercial venture on its road to success. From the start it proved successful and when it became obvious that it was meeting the demands of the industry in mechanically plucking feathers from fowl, it soon became the object of a persistent and determined effort by many to copy and infringe and otherwise imitate as is seemingly the rule in every grant of a successful patent.

The Hunt device as shown by the patent “is a hollow drum mounted in a frame, and driven by an electric motor. From the periphery of the drum extend a plurality of flexible fingers projecting at an angle of inclination of about 14 degrees. The fingers are arranged in spaced rows completely around the drum, each row being staggared with respect to the adjacent rows. Each finger has closely spaced screw-thread corrugations extending part way down the fingers from the outer end. In the preferred form the fingers have a tapered bore extending from the outer or free end almost as far as the corrugations extend. The specifications also stated that solid fingers would remove feathers but that the operation was speeded by the use of hollow fingers.” Hunt v. Armour & Co., 7 Cir., 185 F.2d 722-724.

This seemed to have answered the problem which confronted not only Hunt but everyone like him engaged in the undertaking of successfully finding a formula for defeathering poultry, and to devise some machine which would avoid the slow, tedious, and expensive process of picking fowl by hand. One learns that there are 8,000 feathers on a chicken, ranging from the large flight feathers on the wing and tail to the small cover feathers, down feathers and pin feathers, and that in plucking a chicken it is very desirable to remove all the feathers without breaking the skin, so that germs may not enter and spoil the flesh of the chicken. Bruising and discoloration of the flesh are likewise objects to be avoided.

This Hunt patent became a source of much litigation and in each contest heard before the courts was declarad valid. Judge Duffy of the 7th Circuit, in his opinion in the Hunt case heretofore cited above, sets out the various law suits [10]*10heard in the several Circuits, and in each one the validity of the patent was sustained and infringement thereof was found.

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Bluebook (online)
185 F. Supp. 7, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 114, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/honolulu-oil-corp-v-shelby-poultry-co-ncwd-1960.