Lorenz v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co.

34 F. Supp. 315, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2802
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedAugust 23, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 F. Supp. 315 (Lorenz v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lorenz v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co., 34 F. Supp. 315, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2802 (D.N.J. 1940).

Opinion

CLARK, District Judge.

This litigation has been both protracted and embarrassing. In fact, the characteristics have interacted. The difficulty has arisen from circumstances perhaps more common to patent than other law suits (cf. the genus inventor) but still unusual and, as we think, trying. One of the plaintiffs (Lorenz) is an elderly chemist, very little of whose professional life has been devoted to the art of his claimed and now contested patent. The other (Wilson) was (for he died recently) at one time an examiner in the Patent Office and later became a patent attorney. He appeared both as party and counsel since he held a 40% interest in the patent in suit. Because of his death we withhold comment on this and certain aspects of his appearance here. This attorney-plaintiff is not the only person who has invested in this invention. A chemist in the Bureau of Combustibles in Jersey City and a county engineer on Long Island also belong to the syndicate. Furthermore the abortive proceedings for settlement leave us with the impression that some of the alleged inventor’s original 27% has now come into the hands of the various attorneys (except the solicitor, Mr. Maxson) who have followed one another in rather bewildering succession.

The history of the patent in the Office is even more protracted than the proceedings in this court. Dr. Lorenz, the alleged inventor, gave this account of his own conception:

“A. 1 first conceived this invention before July, 1913, at which time I had a consulting laboratory at 108 Wall Street, New York City.

“Q. How do you fix that .date? A. I fix that date because my first wife died on June 13th, 1913, and after the funeral at Springfield, Ohio, on my way back to New York, I was thinking along different inventive lines, and the thought struck me of the application of a vacuum, in the manufacture of soap and glycerine, and when I came back, shortly after, I mentioned my idea to two friends of mine * * In the matter of the Interference of Henry W. F. Lorenz v. Martin Hill Ittner, No. .69,937, filed April 14, 1936, p. 8 (italics ours).

He apparently put this conception into practice in one experiment for the production of a trivial quantity of soap. Severn years later and after being introduced to a military man reputed to have access to the defendant soap company, the learned doctor filed an application in the Patent Office on January 24, 1920. A week later, the general, the chemist from the Bureau of Combustibles of Jersey City, and Dr. Lorenz, visited the chief chemist (Dr. Ittner) of the soap company. The circumstances-of this interview are exploited in unusual detail in the testimony offered by Dr. Lorenz in the interference hearings. They include some proof that Dr. Lorenz’s application was shown to Dr. Ittner. A few weeks later, the latter expressed, his lack o? enthusiasm for the Lorenz process. This same lack of enthusiasm seems to have finally infected the Patent Office and the co-owners of the application. The Office doubted (and when the Office doubts !) any invention over the prior art and the backers correspondingly doubted any potential profits. After eight more years, Dr. Lorenz’s application was abandoned on May 28, 1928. In the interference proceedings he gave a somewhat, as we think, ex post facto account of this abandonment.. It involves a contradiction of the famous line that adorns the eaves of many post offices.

Whatever the reason for these dying of embers, they were fanned into flame by the issuance to Dr. Ittner of a patent (No. 1,918,603, July 18, 1933) for a soap making process. This patent issued 18 months after the application therefor. On November 8, 1934, through the attorney-owner Dr. Lorenz filed an application in the Patent Office asserting that the subject matter of patent No. 1,918,603 had been disclosed by him to Ittner in 1920. The Patent Office declared an interference and 729 printed pages of testimony were taken before a primary examiner. These proceedings closed on March 16, 1936, and on May 19, 1936, the aforesaid examiner handed down a 9 page typewritten memorandum decision. This opinion, of which more hereafter, gave the losing side 20 days in which to appeal to the reviewing body in the Patent Office. This right of appeal turned out something of a snare and delusion. The [317]*317attorney of record was the “house” patent attorney of the mother soap company in Wisconsin. The active participants in the litigation were the firm of patent attorneys now appearing before us. They represent the subsidiary or New Jersey branch of the soap business whose plant at Jersey City is the locus in quo of the events described. The names of these attorneys and their address appeared on all the papers and a member of that firm had appeared personally in the proceeding and was well-known to the examiner. Despite this fact, the latter saw fit to confine the “distribution”, as they say in army orders, of his words to one copy to the Wisconsin house attorney. That gentleman being quite unconscious of the narrowness of the field of fire did nothing about it and it was not until four days after the 20 days that the defendant’s “active” counsel learned of the blow. It is no wonder that they felt aggrieved and made strenuous efforts to obtain a relaxation of the 20 day limitation. The Patent Office nevertheless stood by the letter of their rules and issued to Lorenz a patent (No. 2,084,446, June 22, 1937) whose claims are a copy of the one they had already issued to Ittner. In so doing they did not attempt to deny their power to give this litigant, as they had to others, his full “day” in the Patent Office.

This brings us, then, to a critical examination of the examiner’s decision. We are quite familiar with the rule of Morgan v. Daniels, 153 U.S. 120, 14 S.Ct. 772, 38 L.Ed. 657. We have had official occasion to refer to it. In fact at first blush of this very case, we spoke of our reliance thereon. Any thoughtful and impartial scrutiny of the examiner’s views quite definitely changes all that. We are sure that the gentleman was trying to conscientiously perform his important function. We are equally sure, however, that he fell into such error that no cloak of administrative omnipotence is sufficient to uphold him.

Our examination of the matter must, of course, be made in the light of the art, the industry, and the prior art. The industry is the very ancient and civilizing one of soap making. The record contains some extremely technical articles and testimony as to its processes. Dr. Lorenz also includes some discussion in his long dispute with the Patent Office. The court availed itself of two standard text books, Brannt, The Soap Maker’s Hand Book; Hurst, Soaps. What we know as soap is in chemistry the potassium salts of the fatty acids. These salts are the result of the treatment of animal and vegetable fats with lye (the alkaline carbonates, soda or potash, combined with quick lime or caustic alkalies dissolved in water). Brannt, above cited, pp. 8 et seq. The chemical process has been described:

“If these equations are studied they will be found to run on common lines, and further they show an exchange of constituents between the products which take part in the reaction; the acid portion of the fat combines with the basic metal of the alkali to form the soap, while the basic constituent of the fat, the glyceryl, C3H5, takes the hydroxyl, HO, of the alkali to form glycerin, or, as the chemist prefers to term it, glycerol, which is thus set free.” Ilurst, above cited, p. 281.

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Related

Lorenz v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co.
167 F.2d 423 (Third Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
34 F. Supp. 315, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lorenz-v-colgate-palmolive-peet-co-njd-1940.