Lee Dyeing Company of North Carolina, Inc., and Cross-Appellee v. Webco Dyers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant

283 F.2d 671, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 391, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3348
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 10, 1960
Docket8103
StatusPublished

This text of 283 F.2d 671 (Lee Dyeing Company of North Carolina, Inc., and Cross-Appellee v. Webco Dyers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Dyeing Company of North Carolina, Inc., and Cross-Appellee v. Webco Dyers, Inc., and Cross-Appellant, 283 F.2d 671, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 391, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3348 (4th Cir. 1960).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This suit for patent infringement is based on United States Letters Patent No. 2,591,861 issued April 8, 1952, to Lee Dyeing Company of New York, the assignee of Karl E. Pannaci, the inventor, and now owned through assignment by Lee Dyeing Company of North Carolina, the plaintiff in this ease. The defendant is Webco Dyers, Inc., a North Carolina corporation, which was formed in 1957 in order to finish goods manufactured by Webco Mills, Inc.

The patent covers an apparatus and a method for the continuous heat setting of stretchable knitted fabrics composed of thermoplastic material such as nylon. Claims 1 to 5 relating to method and claim 9 relating to the apparatus are the claims in suit. The gist of the invention is contained in the italicized concluding clause of claim 1, which is as follows:

“1. The method of continuously setting an elongated, knitted fabric formed of a thermoplastic material, such as nylon, and having transversely-extending courses therein, which comprises securing the longitudinally-extending, marginal edges of said fabric in relatively fixed, parallel-disposed relation at closely spaced points thereof with the ends of each course substantially directly opposite each other; continuously moving said fabric in a longitudinal direction; heating said moving fabric to a temperature at least equal to its stabilizing point as it passes through a zone of limited extent longitudinally of said fabric; and maintaining said transversely-extending courses, while moving through the zone of heating, in approximately the same relative position as before entering said zone, by applying tension in the direction of movement of said fabric in zones thereof intermediate said marginal edges.” [Emphasis supplied.]

Warp knit fabric is manufactured on knitting machines and the raw product, or greige goods as it is called, must then be finished by subjecting it to certain wet processing steps such as scouring, bleaching, dyeing, and extracting to remove excess moisture. Then the material is subjected to heat setting so as to stabilize it in its final dimensions. Heat setting is essential since it stabilizes the material so that it can be temporarily distorted by washing or stretching and yet returned to its heat set condition and remain stabilized. Thermoplastics have the faculty of returning to their heat set condition when the finishing process is properly performed.

In order to finish the goods they are first subjected to the processing steps and later to heat setting. The fabric comes from the knitting machines in elongated strips which are then scoured, bleached, dyed or otherwise treated. It is then dried and heat set in a tenter frame, a device which is quite old in the art. The tenter is a machine or frame *673 fitted with movable parallel chains along the sides of the frame on which are mounted tenter hooks or pins which engage the selvages of the fabric as it moves continuously through the frame. The purpose is to maintain a constant tension of the fabric so that it retains the desired width as it is advanced forwardly through the apparatus and is set even and square when it emerges. It is easy to maintain the proper tension on the edges of the fabric since they are attached to the tenter pins so as to prevent the shrinkage of the material, but it is difficult to prevent shrinkage in the center of the strip as it is drawn through the frame. Customarily the strips are 10-feet or 12-feet wide and the tension of the material in the center, of the strip is much less than it is at the edges. Hence shrinkage occurs in the center portion and the fabric will not lie flat when it is spread out to be cut to a pattern. This creates what is known in the trade as the “lay-up” problem. It has long been encountered in finishing knitted and woven fabrics and it was intensified with the advent of thermoplastic yarns which shrink more readily than natural fibres.

The inventor solved the problem very simply. He states in his patent that his principal object is to provide a means and method whereby the longitudinally extending marginal edges of the knitted fabric and the portions between the edges are set to a uniform length throughout the width of the fabric; and that he accomplishes this effect by mounting a pair of rotating rolls at the point that the fabric passes out of the heating chamber and drawing the fabric through the pinch of the rolls under tension. The rolls are shorter than the width of the fabric and the speed of the rolls is adjusted to the speed of the rate of travel of the fabric on the chains. Since the shorter rolls exercise a pull only on the central portions of the fabric the shrinkage of this part is overcome and the length of the strip measured along the center equals the length of the strip measured along the marginal edges. Lee Dyeing Company of New York introduced the patented apparatus in its finishing process in its plant and found it so successful that it formed the plaintiff North Carolina corporation and other subsidiaries in New York and Canada which have likewise attained substantial success in using the method and apparatus disclosed in the patent.

Webeo Dyers, Inc., the defendant, was formed as a subsidiary to Webeo Mills, Inc., which had formerly been a customer of the plaintiff company. It was formed to finish the warp knit fabrics manufactured by Webeo Mills and began operations in July, 1957. It also experienced difficulty in avoiding shrinkage in the finishing operations and sought the advice of other operators including the plaintiff and in October, 1957, was furnished a copy of the patent and offered a license thereunder; but it refused the license stating that it was not practicable to mount the Pannaei device in its equipment and that it had been able to get pretty uniform results by building up the central part of the take-off rolls, thus accomplishing the same tensioning that Karl (Pannaei) describes in his patent. It added that no doubt Karl’s device does a better job.

The defendant was referring in these communications to a secondhand machine purchased by it from the liquidators of E. E. Meinig Company which had used the machine for forty years. During this period Meinig had operated the machine off and on with built up take-off rolls, depending upon the kind of fabric that was being manufactured. After it was acquired by the defendant it was operated in substantially the same way as it had been operating at the Meinig plant. The rolls were of light weight aluminum 5 inches in diameter and 12 feet long across the width of the tenter frame and were covered with fabric or tape. They were located just above the tenter frame adjacent to the fabric take-off point. When the machine was acquired by the defendant the upper roll was of even diameter throughout while the lower roll was built up with gummed tape in its center intermediate the ends. The defendant *674 changed the wrapping, experimentally, from time to time to improve the output and at times increased the build up of the center portion of the bottom roll.

The communications between the parties led to the institution of the pending suit on April 25, 1958. At or about this time defendant had noticed that there was some slippage of the material as it passed through the rolls of its machine and after taking further advice it substituted heavier steel rolls of the same dimension in place of the aluminum rolls. This was done in May, 1958.

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283 F.2d 671, 127 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 391, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 3348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-dyeing-company-of-north-carolina-inc-and-cross-appellee-v-webco-ca4-1960.