M & R Dietetic Laboratories, Inc. v. Dean Milk Co.

203 F. Supp. 130, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 496, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3601
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 21, 1961
DocketNo. 55 C 330
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 203 F. Supp. 130 (M & R Dietetic Laboratories, Inc. v. Dean Milk Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M & R Dietetic Laboratories, Inc. v. Dean Milk Co., 203 F. Supp. 130, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 496, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3601 (N.D. Ill. 1961).

Opinion

ROBSON, District Judge.

This suit involves Patent No. 2,503,-866, issued April 11, 1950, on an application filed November 2, 1946.1 The patent concerns a “preparation of a stabilized cream product,” a dried cream2 product usable directly in hot coffee.

A study of the evidence and legal precedent impels the Court to conclude that the process and product claims, claims 1-3 and 15-25 of the patent, are valid when limited to the precise ion exchange process disclosed therein, and the product of that process, is valid when conforming to the specified chemical pro[132]*132portions. The Court is further of the opinion that claims 26 and 27 are invalid.

The patented product allegedly obviates the theretofore objectionable characteristic of “feathering” on use in coffee, of the dried product, (or on its being reconstituted into a liquid), and retaining good flavor and low salt characteristics. Feathering is an objectionable scum caused by the reaction of the dried cream powder to the heat and acid of coffee. Defendant’s product is a dried blend of rich cream and acid-curd sodium caseinate 3 to which lactose and disodium phosphate have been added before drying.

The essence of the plaintiff’s invention is its claimed revelation of the need for reduction, within specified critical limits, of the amount of calcium in the product, coupled with the establishment of the precise permissible ratios of calcium to phosphorus, in order to prevent feathering. All the process claims here in issue achieve the desired result by the ion exchange method.4 Its product, claims 26 and 27, broadly delineating the chemical proportions, are not limited to the ion exchange process.

The patent in suit discloses a reduction of the normal amount of calcium in the milk product by an ion exchange process by the filtering of the milk through a sodium material, with the resultant effect of the sodium passing to the milk in the exchange and the calcium passing to a filtering bed. A second step is then taught by the patent whereby the resultant milk is again treated by an ion exchange using a hydrogen cycle which restores the pH 5 of the product. This is important because if the strong salt taste were permitted to remain in the product it would dampen the bouquet of the coffee flavor. After relating the purpose of the invention,6 the patent goes [133]*133on to recite that stabilization of the cream protein could be accomplished by converting the casein to a soluble caseinate, but the chemicals used in accomplishing this remain in the dried cream in the form of salts which dampen the coffee bouquet.

Claim 1 covers a process for producing a “milk material” and claims 2 and 3 a process for producing a dry cream prod[134]*134uct, treating fluid milk, skim or like milk products having a “substantially normal calcium and phosphorus content and a pH of about 6.5-6.8 with a cation exchange material operating in the sodium cycle, until the calcium content of the product is approximately 20 to 70% of normal and there is secured in the product a calcium to phosphorus ratio of about 0.15 to 0.75, thereby raising the pH of the product, and treating the resulting product with a cation exchange material operating in the hydrogen cycle until the pH of the original milk product is substantially restored.” Claims 2 and 3 also provide for “condensing the treated product, adding an amount of butterfat or butterfat-containing material to the condensed treated product sufficient to give the desired fat content in the dried cream but not to increase the calcium to phosphorus ratio beyond the range of about 0.25 to 0.90, homogenizing the mixture and drying it.”

A summary of claims 15 to 21 is as follows : (The parentheses indicate parallel varying phrases of the respective claims.)

[135]*135The product claims 23 to 25 (resulting from the cation exchange process) in essence cover either a dry cream product, comprising a homogeneous mixture of butterfat and cation-exchanged milk solids not fat (or condensed fluid), having a content of calcium approximately either 20 to 70% of normal or 20 to 45% of normal, and having a calcium to phosphorus ratio ranging from either about 0.25 to 0.90 or 0.25 to 0.55.

Claim 26 reads:

“A dry cream product comprising a homogeneous mixture of butterfat and milk solids not fat having a content of calcium approximately 20 to 70% of normal and having a calcium to phosphorus ratio ranging from about 0.25 to 0.90.”

Claim 27 is very similar but with different proportions stated, thus:

“A dry cream product comprising a homogeneous mixture of butterfat and milk solids not fat having a content of calcium approximately 20 to 45% of normal and having a calcium to phosphorus ratio ranging from about 0.25 to 0.55.”

It is the plaintiff’s position that the invention of the patent was long sought for and especially needed with the development of coffee machines; that the prior art had recognized the problem of feathering, and even of the condition of high calcium content as causative thereof, but had not made the indispensable determination of the critical permissible limits of calcium, and the precise permissible limits, and the importance of the ratio of calcium to phosphorus. The tremendous commerical success is also cited as indicative of the inventive char-' aeter of the patent.

Plaintiff claims that it has achieved a valid patentable combination with an altogether new and useful result,7 of which there could be no anticipation unless all elements of the invention be found in a single patent, doing substantially the same work.8 It states that neither Brit-' ish Burgess patent No. 542,846 (hereinafter referred to as Burgess), nor any other patent anticipates because to' be anticipatory the teachings of the patent must be found within the four corners of the prior patent,® and expert testimony may not be utilized to reconstruct a reference.9 10

Plaintiff denies any disclaimer by its patent of a product made by acid-curd sodium caseinate, in that the statement in the patent upon which defendant’s contention is predicated originated from abandoned experiments which did not relate to the criticality of the Ca^P ratio, or reduction of calcium. It was a particular dried cream product high in salt content that was disclaimed as not within the patent. In fact, defendant is asserted to have followed the teachings of the patent by reducing salt content by careful washing, and it increased the phosphorus content lost in washing by adding disodium phosphate.

Defendant relies on the prior disclosures in U. S. patents No. 2,011,558 to Berlatsky; No. 800,255 to Wood; Nos. 2,045,097 and 2,225,506 to Otting, and British Burgess patent No. 542,846, as well as certain publications.11

Defendant states its product is an artificial blend of cream, acid-curd sodi[136]*136um caseinate, and lactose, with disodium phosphate added.

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Bluebook (online)
203 F. Supp. 130, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 496, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-r-dietetic-laboratories-inc-v-dean-milk-co-ilnd-1961.