International Burr Corporation v. Wood Grinding Service

34 F.2d 905, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 434, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 22, 1929
Docket203
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 905 (International Burr Corporation v. Wood Grinding Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Burr Corporation v. Wood Grinding Service, 34 F.2d 905, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 434, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332 (2d Cir. 1929).

Opinion

SWAN, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The process patent illustrates and describes an apparatus for grinding logs into pulp. The specifications explain that the inventor’s object is to obtain pulp which shall have longer, stronger, and more uniform fibers than have been secured by former grinding processes, and that this object is to be attained by making suitable grooves or depressions- in the face of the grindstone, in which abraded fibers will lodge and thus obtain protection from further grinding against the undersurface of the logs as the stone moves on. Between these grooves is the grinding surface of the stone, which “is roughened in the usual manner,”

The claims are four in number, the first being addressed to the process and the others to the apparatus. It will suffice to quote claim 1:

“1. The process of reducing wood to pulp, which consists in subjecting the wood to successive abrasive actions in direction substantially perpendicular to the length of the fiber, whereby the fibers are separated out from the wood, and protecting said fibers that have been separated by preceding abrasive actions from being broken and injured during succeeding abrasive actions, and then removing said separated fibers.”

Coneededly, the sole element of novelty in this process, or in the apparatus by which it is applied, is the idea of protecting the fibers by means of grooves or pockets in the face of the grindstone. Plaintiff’s expert Williams testified that, “if you eliminate the grooves c, you have a stone dressed according to the old practice.”

With respect to the dimensions of these grooves, the specifications contain the following (page 2, lines 50-70):

“I have shown the.grooves c of triangular shape and disposed in a straight line across the surface of the stone, and parallel with its axis, I prefer to make the grooves one-eighth of an inch deep and one-eighth of an inch wide at their mouths, and to dispose them around the surface of the stone about three-quarters of an inch apart, measuring from center to center of the grooves. * * * But without departing from my invention the shape and dimensions of the grooves, the distance between them and the direction in which they extend across the stone may, of course, be varied.”

So far as this record shows, neither plaintiff nor any one else has ever successfully applied this preferred form of marking to a pulp stone. The circular of the Hall Process Corporation (Defendant’s Exhibit B) shows a spiral burr, designated as style No. 126A, with teeth three-quarters of an inch apart. Walker testifies that such a burr was used in 1915, when he .was with the Fitzdale Paper Company, in an attempt to demonstrate the so-called Hall process for grinding pulp; that the demonstration was made by Edward Hall and two others from the Hall Process Corporation, and was admittedly unsuccessful. Walker further says that in 1918 he disclosed to Mr. Sherman, of the Hall Process Corporation, the method which he had employed at Fitzdale, namely, a four to the inch straight-cut burr, making grooves not more than one thirty-second of an inch deep and a 12 or 14 point diamond burr to sharpen the ridges between the grooves. In return Walker received 100 shares of stock in the Hall Process Corporation, whose name was then changed to Hall, Ward & Walker, and Walker became a demonstrator for the company. He never demonstrated anything but the shallow marking during the year he was connected with the plaintiff corporation under its former name.

There is no contradiction of Walker’s testimony. Grinding with a stone thus marked apparently came to be known as the Hall process. It is clear that the inventor’s preferred form of operation, in which the stone is dressed with grooves one-eighth of an inch deep and three-fourths of an inch apart, has never been adopted in commercial practice. The accepted practice of dressing stones in the manner which plaintiff claims as the Hall process is to make grooves about one thirty-second of an inch deep, spaced not less than four to the inch, and to sharpen the ribs between them with a fine diamond burr.

The plaintiff, relying upon Hildreth v. Mastoras, 257 U. S. 27, 34, 42 S. Ct. 20, 66 L. Ed. 112, argues that a patentee is entitled to profit by experience, and to modify his preference, so long as he holds to his prinei *907 pie, and that the Hall process patent taught the principle of collecting and protecting the abraded fibers in depressed grooves, even though the inventor had a mistaken conception of the proper dimensions of such grooves for the most perfect operation of his invention. Hence plaintiff contends that the accepted practice is within its patented process, while the defendant asserts that the patented process has never been practiced by any one.

Assuming that the patent may be construed to cover the accepted practice as above described, we are brought to a consideration of the prior art. But here we are met by plaintiff’s objection that the validity of the patents cannot be' questioned because the defendant is estopped by its license. Such estoppel, however, does not extend beyond the term of the license. Tibbe & Son Mfg. Co. v. Heineken, 37 F. 686 (C. C. S. D. N. Y.); Bituminous Products Co. v. Headley Good Roads Co., 2 F.(2d) 83, 86 (D. C. Del.); Eskimo Pie Corp. v. Nat. Ice Cream Co., 20 F.(2d) 1003, 1005 (D. C. W. D. Ky.); Tate v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 229 F. 141 (C. C. A. 4). This came to an end June 8, 1922.

As to any infringement or threatened infringement thereafter, the former licensee may avail of the same defenses as a stranger. The permanent injunction which was granted rests upon the threat of a continuing infringement, and the defendant was entitled to plead invalidity against the claim for injunctive relief. See Eskimo Pie Corp. v. Nat. Ice Cream Co., supra. As to the effect of estoppel upon the claim for damages, more will be said later.

Validity of the patent is attacked on the ground that the patent scheme, if construed to cover the accepted practice of shallow grooves, does not protect against regrinding, and that such protection would, indeed, be undesirable. The testimony is somewhat conflicting on this subject. Walker testified that the shallow grooves do not in fact furnish protection, and that regrinding the fiber beneath succeeding logs is essential, and, if not done on the stone, must be done with other refining instruments. Potter, who has spent his life in pulp making, also asserts that “regrinding is a benefit to the stoek.” Sheffield says that the purpose of the grooves is to carry water to prevent the grinding surface from overheating. Defendant’s witness Thickens, however, testified that shallow grooves do prevent regrinding. It would seem that any groove deeper than the marks which constitute the biting surface of the stone must necessarily afford some protection, because some fibers will gather in it and will be protected, so far as they are below the surface.

But we need not decide these disputed questions of fact. Hall’s invention, if he made one, was in supplying a new process and apparatus which produced better pulp, whether the reason for this result was because the grooves protected the fiber from regrinding or because they carried water, or because they had some other advantageous, but unexplained, effect.

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 905, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 434, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-burr-corporation-v-wood-grinding-service-ca2-1929.