Kester Solder Co. v. Berry Solder Co.

14 F. Supp. 863, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1401
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 27, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 F. Supp. 863 (Kester Solder Co. v. Berry Solder Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kester Solder Co. v. Berry Solder Co., 14 F. Supp. 863, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1401 (S.D.N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

SYMES, District Judge.

In this suit the Kester Solder Company charges the defendants with infringement of the Perry C. Ripley patent, No. 1724680, filed February 4, 1927, and granted August 13, 1929, relating to improvements in rosin core solder. It further alleges that the defendant Arthur S. Berry was a defendant in a prior suit brought by the plaintiff against Silva Wares Company, Inc., and others in this District, in which the said Ripley patent, No. 1724680 was by a decree entered therein October 30, 1931, adjudicated valid and infringed by other corporate defendants named in said suit. Kester Solder Co. v. Silva Wares Co., 53 F.(2d) 480, 482.

The joint answer of the three defendants denies the alleged infringement, denies the validity of the patent, and asserts that every substantial and material part thereof had been patented or described in printed publications prior to Ripley’s alleged discovery and more than two years prior to his application. It sets up a long list of prior patented art and publications, the number of which was before trial reduced by stipulation to nine, on which the defendants relied at the trial.

Solder tubes or soldering wire are comparatively small hollow flexible wires of soldering material filled with a suitable flux core; hence when heat is applied to the solder strand the melting of the solder liberates the contained flux in proper proportions upon the surfaces that the solder is to adhere to. To insure a perfect union between the surfaces that are to be joined together they must be first cleaned of rust or other foreign material. For this purpose, various types of fluxes are employed, of which rosin is the most satisfactory. It has been found more convenient to inclose the flux as a core in predetermined proportions in the soldering wire in the manner described in this patent.

The patent admits that self-fluxing solders are old and specifically that the well-known rosin-cored solders, in which the rosin is introduced into tubular solder in a pure and unmixed state, are also old in the art.

The improvement Ripl'ey claims for his patent is: Soldering wire with a rosin flux core in permanent plastic form, as distinguished from the dry-powdered-like form of the ordinary rosin-cored solder. Prior to Ripley, it seems in order to facili[864]*864tate its introduction within the restraining wall of the solder tube, the rosin was first converted from a solid state to that of molten fluidity by the application of heat. Ripley contends that after its introduction within the solder tube it cooled, became a solid and fractured, due to contraction; that in the subsequent operations necessary to prepare the solder wire for market, such as reeling, spooling, etc., the column of rosin, being brittle, pulverized; that the contraction creates a vacuum in the tube, draws air and moisture into the pulverized rosin column, causing decomposition, which it is alleged defeats the object of a cored solder.

Ripley’s objective is a rosin core that will not deteriorate over a relatively long period of time. He claims this is accomplished by the use of a rosin core, substantially plastic; that a plastic core will resist the expansion and contraction, will yield to stresses such as the bending, flattening, etc., of the solder tube, and at the same time maintain its homogeneous character; that by fully filling the core and sealing the ends, the penetration of air and other destructive elements is prevented.

He names several agents as suitable plasticisers or solvents, of which turpentine is the most practical, being relatively less volatile at soldering temperatures and a nonconductor of electricity. The amount to be employed varies, according to the patent, within a 2 per cent, to 50 per cent, range of turpentine by weight, depending somewhat upon the grade of rosin used. The walls of the solder tube prevent the solvent from evaporating, so the plasticity of the core is substantially permanent, regardless of changes of temperature.

The crux of the six claims is: A substantially permanently plastic core of rosin, completely filling the hollow solder wire, sealing the interior thereof against the ingress of air and moisture.

In the prior suit referred to, the court held that “Ripley’s idea of'a rosin core solder wherein the rosin would be kept permanently plastic represented an advance over such prior art and involved invention on his part.”

This was based upon a finding by the court that plastic rosin had never been used before in soldering, even separately from the solder, although the court observed that Lamb No. 153090, as far back as 1874, mixed rosin with a solvent such as turpentine, using enough to make the product a fluid, which, of course, is unsuitable for use as a core in solder wire. Also that the French patent to Bertou recommends a metallic paste core. The court also stated that the testimony offered in support of anticipation by prior use was unsatisfactory, consisting solely of uncorroborated oral statements, and therefore did not meet the requirement of “clear and satisfactory evidence of prior use.” Citing Eibel Process Co. v. Minnesota, etc., Co., 261 U.S. 45, 43 S.Ct. 322, 67 L.Ed. 523; The Barbed Wire Patent Case, 143 U.S. 275, 12 S.Ct. 443, 36 L.Ed. 154.

It is stipulated in' the case at bar that the prior art patents and publications cited in the other suit were those cited in the patent office against Ripley, and that none of those here pleaded and relied on were called to the attention of the patent office against Ripley or used by the defendants in the prior suit.

Furthermore, the plaintiff seems to acquiesce in the statement that in the former suit there was no showing made that plasticised rosin as such was known or used, Ripley admitting that in the former suit he testified that as far as he knew it was not known to the art that rosin could be plasticised by the addition of turpentine or other solvents. That the defendants infringed if the patent in suit is valid is on this record too clear to require argtíment. So the only issue made is whether plasticised rosin as a flux in tubular solder, or otherwise, was old and known to the art at the time of Ripley’s alleged invention—a question not heretofore litigated.

Ripley’s definition of the term “plastic” is necessarily wide. He uses it to distinguish his core from the “powder-like” nature of the rosin previously used. It requires that there be mixed with the rosin a sufficient amount of solvent such as turpentine, to form a substantially continuous and homogeneous plastic niass within the confines of the tube, not affected by the usual manufacturing and handling operations. Flis exhibits show a core sufficiently plastic to seal the open ends and prevent the ingress of air. The patent says this can be accomplished within a range of 2 per cent, to 50 per cent, of turpentine by weight, and there is evidence that it may go as high as 20 per cent, before the mixture would flow. In its product plaintiff uses 11 per cent, of turpentine. The patent states the obvious fact that a plastic core cannot fracture and “the ends of [865]*865the column effectively seal the entire tube.” The rosm is, of course, the active fluxing agent.

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Related

George P. Converse & Co. v. Thomas J. Lipton, Inc.
149 F. Supp. 105 (D. New Jersey, 1957)
Kester Solder Co. v. Berry Solder Co.
88 F.2d 1012 (Second Circuit, 1937)

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. Supp. 863, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kester-solder-co-v-berry-solder-co-nysd-1936.