International Latex Corp. v. Warner Bros.

169 F. Supp. 755, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 149, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3876
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 13, 1959
DocketCiv. No. 5151
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 169 F. Supp. 755 (International Latex Corp. v. Warner Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Latex Corp. v. Warner Bros., 169 F. Supp. 755, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 149, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3876 (D. Conn. 1959).

Opinion

ANDERSON, District Judge.

Findings of Fact.

1. On October 17, 1944 U. S. Patent No. 2,360,736 was issued to Abraham N. Spanel on an application filed June 26, 1940. Spanel assigned the patent to the plaintiff, which in this action is suing the defendant for infringement.

2. The plaintiff, the owner of the patent and of all rights of recovery for any infringement, is a Delaware corporation having its principal place of business in Dover.

3. The defendant is a Connecticut corporation having its principal place of business in Bridgeport.

4. The subject of the patent is the “seamless dipped latex girdle”; and the issues of validity and infringement concern Claims 1, 2, 3 and 6, each of which describes a preferred form of a one-piece integral girdle made of deposited latex. These claims are:

“1. An integral one-piece supporting girdle formed of deposited latex sheet material of a strength and shape throughout to apply constrictive force to the flesh around the lower torso of the wearer, the external surfaces of said sheet material being smooth and the inside surfaces thereof being of a slightly roughened matted character for contact with the skin of the wearer.
“2. An integral one-piece supporting girdle formed of deposited latex sheet material of a strength and shape throughout to apply constrictive force to the flesh around the lower torso of the wearer, the internal surfaces of said sheet material being of a matted character and such as to provide in contact with the skin an interconnected cellular formation.
“3. As an article of manufacture, a one-piece deposited latex supporting girdle formed of constricting walls, comprising a constricting front portion and a constricting back portion each formed as normally flat areas the sides of which substantial[757]*757ly conform to the outlines of the lower female torso as viewed from the front or back, and narrow areas extending along each side of the girdle, said latter areas being formed with a smoothly curved outwardly convex substantially uniform cross section and serving to integrally join the corresponding sides of said front and back portions and smoothly merging therewith, a readily stretchable narrow crotch area of the deposited latex, extending as a continuous and integral connection between the lower central regions of said ffont and back portions, the edges of the front of said crotch area extending upwardly and gradually outwardly to merge with and form the lower edges of the middle front portion of the girdle from whence said edges continue outwardly and downwardly to the region of said side areas of the girdle, thereby forming curvilinear cut-out areas at each side of the lower middle front portion, the upper margins of said cut-out areas substantially conforming with the line of juncture of the upper thighs and body of the wearer and said cut-out areas also increasing the effective length of said stretchable crotch area, said crotch area also being shaped and of a length to extend down substantially below the lower margin of the back portion when the girdle is in flat position.”
“6 An integral one-piece supporting girdle formed of deposited latex of a strength and shape throughout to apply generally uniform constrictive force to the flesh around the lower torso of the wearer, the front and back areas being formed with ‘pin-point’ perforations distributed thereover, and the inside surfaces of the latex being of a slightly roughened matted character.”

5. Latex is a milky fluid, other than sap, procured by tapping a tree, hevea brasiliensis, grown largely in Africa and in the Far East.

6. Rubber as used commercially in manufactured articles in this country prior to 1920 was made from masticating (usually by milling) crude rubber stock, into which was mixed certain compounding ingredients. Crude rubber was derived in turn from latex by diluting the latex, coagulating it with acid and then pressing, masticating, washing and drying the spongy coagulum. These processes are still in use today.

7. Crude rubber may be intensely masticated and dissolved in a hydrocarbon to produce a solution which may, among other uses, be used to produce dipped rubber goods.

8. About 1920, improvements in preservation and transportation techniques made latex, as distinguished from crude rubber, available in commercial quantities in this country.

9. For this purpose the milky latex gathered at the tree is treated with preservatives, usually ammonia, a stabilizing chemical is added and* thereafter, it is to some degree concentrated. After adding compounding ingredients for curing and coloring and acceleration and after deaeration, the latex may be used directly for making articles by dipping.

10. In dipping, a form or mold in the shape of the object to be produced is lowered into a tank containing the liquid latex. Upon drying, the solution deposits a film of latex on the form about .003 to .005 inches thick. By repeated dipping the film may be built up to the desired thickness.

11. By this process many articles such as gloves, nipples, tobacco pouches, balloons, rubbers and sheeting are made. Latex thread is also produced from liquid latex.

12. Articles made from latex dipping are superior to articles made from crude rubber or a crude rubber solution. The steps preliminary to dipping and the dipping are simpler and less complicated and the resulting products have a [758]*758higher tensile strength and do not tear as easily; they also last longer.

13. For centuries women have used constricting garments of various kinds to control and shape their figures. During the first two decades of this century the garments most generally used for this purpose were corsets produced in many shapes and varieties but which generally confined the body' of the wearer from just below the bust to below the hips. Such garments» were made for the most part of fabric, made rigid by steel or bone stays, and were typically hooked or laced, or both.

14. A girdle is a woman’s close-fitting undergarment, either lightly boned or boneless and partly or wholly of elastic fabric, extending from just below the waist to below the hips. A girdle with a crotch piece is known in the industry and commercially as a “panty girdle”.

15. From 1920 to the present time the corset and girdle industry has been aware of a continuing demand on the part of women for simpler, less restrictive and mofe comfortable garments which would provide the desired constriction and control of the female form to achieve the contour of figure commonly accepted at the time as desirable.

16. Prior to 1950 in this highly competitive industry, efforts were made to meet this demand by making corsets and girdles of various combinations of fab-brics and rubber or latex sheeting, and most acceptably, by making girdles from material woven from latex filaments wound with fabric thread. In the 1930’s this product became and is still known as the “two-way stretch girdle”.

17. Although for at least ten years prior to Spanel’s application for the patent in suit on June 26, 1940, the resources of the latex art were sufficient to produce a seamless dipped latex girdle, no one else within that period had conceived of a seamless dipped latex girdle. The closest prior use -of latex in the girdle industry is disclosed by the patent issued to Young and Hemm, No. 1,923,-524 (1933).

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Bluebook (online)
169 F. Supp. 755, 120 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 149, 1959 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-latex-corp-v-warner-bros-ctd-1959.