Interstate Bakeries v. General Baking Co.

84 F. Supp. 92, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 566, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3080
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedOctober 6, 1948
DocketNo. 2913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 84 F. Supp. 92 (Interstate Bakeries v. General Baking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Interstate Bakeries v. General Baking Co., 84 F. Supp. 92, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 566, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3080 (D. Kan. 1948).

Opinion

MELLOTT, District Judge.

Plaintiff seeks a permanent injunction against the making, use, sale or lease by the defendant of a device 'alleged to infringe two patents owned by it for automatic machines designed for the production of cinnamon rolls and other bakery sweet goods. An alleged infringing machine was used by the defendant in this district, at and prior to the filing of the complaint, and this court has jurisdiction. Money damages are not sought.

The record is quite voluminous. Learned counsel for both sides, however, have been very helpful to the court: first, in admitting many of the basic facts; second, in making intelligent use of the Rules of Civil Procedure; and finally, in filing well-prepared briefs. It is a matter of regret by the court that the pressure of other work has resulted in some delay in getting the case decided.

As may be gleaned 'from an examination of the findings hereinafter set out, the case, after being fully tried, briefed and submitted, was reopened for the purpose of receiving additional evidence. Inasmuch as the evidence so received, under the pleadings as amended, pertains to issues not discussed in the first briefs, additional briefs and suggested findings of fact were filed. The court has followed the same plan in [94]*94the preparation of its. findings, sacrificing, to some extent, chronology and continuity, and will do likewise in its opinion. From the whole record the court makes the following :

Findings of Fact.

1. Plaintiff is a Delaware corporation and defendant is a New York corporation. Both parties have 'bakery plants in 'several of the principal cities in the United States. The defendant has a regular and established place of business at Hutchinson, Kansas.

2. The defendant, at its bakery plant in Hutchinson, Kansas, makes cinnamon rolls and other baker sweet goods, in the production of which it has used, prior to the institution of this suit and within six years next preceding, and at the time of the trial was still using, an automatic machine with an oblique roller which, it is charged by the plaintiff, infringes its patents. The defendant has similar machines at other of its plants, namely, one each 'at Toledo, Ohio; Buffalo, New York and Worcester, Massachusetts. Defendant had notice of the patents in suit prior to the bringing of the suit and was offered a license under them for its own use; but the offer was re-j ected.

3. Plaintiff is the owner of Fonken Reissue Patent 22,399, granted December 7, 1943, upon application for reissue filed August 22, 1942, (the original patent being 2,217,896, issued October 15, 1940, on application filed November 10, 1939), and Cohen, et al. (hereinafter Cohen) patent No-. 2,383,-774, issued August 28, 1945, on application filed December 13, 1943, (as a division of application filed February 6, 1942, upon which patent 2,352,617, dated July 4, 1944 was issued). Quik-Seal Inc. sought and obtained a license from plaintiff to manufacture and sell machines under the Fonken Patent. (Pl.Ex. 70, Deft.Ex. I, J and K, Tr. 149)-1

4. Plaintiff, which is seeking an injunction but not money damages, relies for its charge of infringement upon Claims 7, 11, 13 and 14 of the Fonken reissue patent and upon Claim 7 of the Cohen Patent, which claims wil'l be hereinafter set out.

5. The original Fonken Patent shows a machine having an endless conveyor belt carrying a dough strip 'from sheeter rollers and a pair of oblique driven rollers, of which the first roller coils the dough strip and moves it around and beyond the distal end of the roller, the second roller changing the direction of the elongated coiled dough strip and moving it obliquely to the mid-portion of the conveyor. During the movement of the dough, water, edible oil and a sprinkling of cinnamon and sugar are applied mechanically. The coiled cylinder of dough moves forward on the conveyor and is severed into relatively short sections for baking. Under the Fonken Patent, all of the claims center around and are limited to a pair of oblique rollers or the equivalent 'thereof. (Pl.Ex. 61 and Deft.Ex. I).

6. Neither the original Fonken Patent nor the Reissue specifies the angle at which the first oblique .roller is to be set or any means for varying the angle. The angle indicated on the drawings was approximately 64 or 65 degrees (compared with a transverse line at right angles to the movement of the conveyor). The Reissue added two new claims, 13 and 14, which were not in the original patent. Therein it is stated that the roller extends “substantially more nearly in the direction of movement of the conveyor than in a direction ait right angles to said movement.” (Pl.Ex. 70 and Deft. Ex. I, Tr. 57).

7. The hand method of making cinnamon rolls and other “sweet goods” consists primarily of taking a gob of dough, placing it on a work bench, stretching it out by the use of a rolling pin to a thin strip, brushing edible oil on it by the use of a brush, sprinkling a mixture of cinnamon and sugar and coiling it up by hand into a cylinder of dough, after which it is then cut by hand with a knife, scraper or squirrel-cage cutter. (Tr. 19, 160, 167, 226, 232). It is [95]*95still being used in most of the bakeries of the United States. One reason the hand method has been continued in the making o.f “sweet goods” is because bakers have remained conscious of the fact that yeast-raised dough is continuously undergoing fermentation and, being a relatively fluid substance, has not been thought to be susceptible of being worked into rolled form by machines because of the undesirable punishment it would receive in such a process. It has been axiomatic in the trade that such dough should be handled as lightly and as little as possible. (Tr. 171).

8. Machines embodying the Fonken Patents have been, and, at the time of trial, were being, used successfully by plaintiff in at least nine of its bakery plants, these plants collectively producing, at the time of trial, between $3,000,000 and $4,000,000 worth of sweet goods per year. Tn addition, plaintiff’s licensee, Quik-Seal, Inc., has sold machines made under the license to other bakeries to a value of approximately one half million dollars during the two-year period preceding the trial. Plaintiff’s licensee, Quik-Seal, Inc., is prepared to meet the demand of the trade for such machines. (Tr. 148-158).

9. Plaintiff acquired the original Fonken patent from Fonken by mesne assignment from Fish Oven & Equipment Co., of Beloit, Wisconsin, and plaintiff, upon its acquisition, filed an application for Reissue signed by the inventor, Fonken, on the ground that the claims of the original patent were unduly limited, said original patent in addition to the oblique coiling roller having shown a second oblique roller extending in the opposite direction to the first oblique roller for shifting the coiled dough strip back to the mid-portion of the conveyor preliminary to cutting, and the original claims having been limited to either such a second oblique roller or to equivalent means for changing the direction of the coiled dough strip after coiling. The reissue application asked for a claim which was not limited to the second oblique roller or equivalent means for shifting the position of the coiled dough strip1 after coiling. (Tr. 230, 239, Fl.Ex. 68, 69 and 70).

10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 F. Supp. 92, 80 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 566, 1948 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/interstate-bakeries-v-general-baking-co-ksd-1948.