J. E. Baker Co. v. Kennedy Refractories Co.

244 F. 812, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1084
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 29, 1917
DocketNo. 1613
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 F. 812 (J. E. Baker Co. v. Kennedy Refractories Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. E. Baker Co. v. Kennedy Refractories Co., 244 F. 812, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1084 (E.D. Pa. 1917).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

Aside from any purely legal view of this controversy what has been called “the human-side view” is Janus-faced. The plaintiff advances, as he is justified in doing, this strong claim of merit that at a very critical stage in the experience of the steel industry, which is now of such overwhelming importance to our country and through it to the cause of humanity throughout the world, he came forward with a substitute for Austrian magnesite, the want of which would have crippled, if not paralyzed, that branch of the steel industry which has heretofore been dependent upon it for refractory materials. The benefit thus conferred upon mankind is -so impressive in its mere statement that upon its importance we need not enlarge. The defendant, on the other hand, asserts, as it also has justification in doing, that the plaintiff cannot be given the exclusive property rights for which he asks without doing violence to principles of law the disregard of which has the most far-reaching conse-sequences. Thus stand the general considerations which bear upon this controversy.

The question of the strict legal rights of the plaintiff is open to the application of arguments of almost equal weight. The right is claimed under letters patent No. 1,063,102 issued May 27, 1913. This is a product patent. The exclusive right of the plaintiff to the process, also claimed as an invention, by which this product is produced, is not here in controversy. The questions to be answered may be formulated as involving the inquiry whether this product is merely the result of a natural process, or whether it he a thing manufactured, and whether the product secured by the defendant, if it be a manufactured product, is the same as the product patented by the plaintiff. The shorter the path is made which leads the mind to a judgment upon either of the propositions advanced in the answer to these questions, the greater the satisfaction with which the mind rests upon the conclusion, whatever it is. There is either little room for discussion between the questions and their answers, or the questions are made so broad and the material for discussion, if it is all admitted, is so abundant that the discussion becomes interminable. The reasons which lead one to a conclusion may be stated in such small compass as that we have barely, if anything, more than a statement of the conclusions reached. A statement of all the considerations which enter into a discussion of the correctness of the conclusions thus reached is almost unending. Reduced to its simplest statement, what the plaintiff came upon (and thus in consequence in the true etymological sense invented) was that dolomite, after being burned in an ordinary cupola and then reburned in a rotary kiln, made a practically good substitute for Austrian magne-site for certain refractory uses. The inventor himself thus defines his contribution to the’ art. He had been burning dolomite in a cupola and selling it for its then limited uses. He tried to expand the field of its usefulness by using a rotary kiln. The experiment was a failure in the sense that he had no appreciably better result. The thought which proved to he a very happy one for him and for the steel industry, occurred to him to reburn the dolomite in the rotary kiln after it came from the cupola. The result was most satisfactory and gratify[814]*814ing. Here, beyond doubt, we had invention and a most valuable result. A most, useful art had been jnost helpfully, as well as most opportunely, promoted, and to the inventor of this process of making this new product (if it be a product), or in any event of producing this new result, justly belongs all the encouragement which the law in the exercise of the most liberal policy, consistent with its being a wise policy can bestow.

The line of distinction which must be drawn is one such that, short of mere trade terminology, our language does not supply us with words or phrases by which to denominate the things which lie on either side of this line except words of broad generalization. The expressions “raw” dolomite, “roasted” dolomite, “burned” rock, “double burned,” and the like suggest, rather than convey, to our minds the thought with which the defendant seeks to impress us. Expressions, on the other hand, which in like manner bring up the thought of a new material, an article of manufacture, a product in the production sense of something produced or created, are employed by the plaintiff. The choice of expression is crystallized in the word “magdolite” as the name by which this new material is designated. We do not see that anything is gained by the use of a baptismal name beyond getting the mind into an habitual attitude toward the subject. Habitually speaking of dolomite which has been subjected to a heating process as “magdolite” tends to create and to deepen the impression that the resulting thing differs from roasted dolomite. There is, in the act of christening, the implication of a new material. Why otherwise give it a name? Such a name is, however, but the guinea stamp, and does not change or affect in any way the thing stamped except the change which is wrought by the fact that the thing has been thus stamped.

The argument addressed to us by counsel has shaken, but has not altered, the conviction that this patentee discovered no more than what he describes his discovery to have been. He found that cupola burned dolomite which had certain limited uses as a substitute for magnesite if re-roasted and thereby more thoroughly burned became a fuller and for all practical purposes á full substitute. He further found that the use of a rotary kiln in the second burning produced satisfactory results. The conviction which lingers in the mind, if it does not remain wholly unshaken, is that to give the discoverer of this result a-product patent is to grant him an exclusive proprietary right to the mere result of the operation of natural causes. The legislator who was framing a patent law might be well asked to weigh the consideration that such a discovery was new, and that the fruit of it had the highest value and utility, and that a real contribution had been made to the possessions of mankind, and that the contributor should be rewarded. The man who discovers that and how any natural product may be artificially made has made a like contribution. The distinction between process and result is clear. The grant of an exclusive proprietary right to the one and its denial to the other involves no inconsistency of attitude or treatment, because the fact remains that, although the process is new, the result is old.

[815]*815We confess to a feeling of hesitation in stating adherence to the conclusion indicated. This is due to several considerations, each of which has its influence upon the mind. One is the experience of this patent in the Patent Office as disclosed by the file wrapper. Another is the argument addressed to us by counsel for plaintiff. The least which can be said of it is that it stops, if it does there stop, only just short of convincing power. Still another is the seeming reluctance of the able and experienced counsel for defendant to plant the defense upon this finding, or at least the seeming preference to rest it upon the finding next considered. When one is confronted with the fact that there is a concurrence in the conclusions reached by highly trained and ripened judgments which differs from the conclusion to which your own mind inclines, the correctness of your own conclusion may well be doubted, and it cannot be put forward except with reluctant hesitation.

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Related

J. E. Baker Co. v. Kennedy Refractories Co.
253 F. 739 (Third Circuit, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 F. 812, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1084, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-e-baker-co-v-kennedy-refractories-co-paed-1917.