Matheson v. Campbell

69 F. 597, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3141
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 27, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 F. 597 (Matheson v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matheson v. Campbell, 69 F. 597, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3141 (circtsdny 1895).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, District Judge.

Final hearing on bill for injunction and accounting. Complainant alleges infringement of patent No. 345,901, for naphthol-black color compound, granted July 20, 1886, to Meinhard Hoffmann and Arthur Weinberg, and assigned to complainant July 10, 1888.

A preliminary question suggested by defendant is whether an assignment which purports to have been executed before the consul general of the United States of Frankfort-on-the-Main, Germany, is sufficiently proved by the signature of said consul general and the United States consulate general seal. I think this proof is sufficient, under the statutes of the United States and of the state of New York. Rev. St. U. S. § 1750; Pharmical Ass’n v. Tilden, 14 Fed. 740; Houghton v. Jones, 1 Wall. 702.

[600]*600The recoid herein discloses a series of complicated questions of chemical compositions, processes, and analyses, involved in the application of the general law of patents to the claimed chemical product. The elaborate and exhaustive brief of counsel for defendant forcibly presents an array of defenses supported by the testimony of an able expert, and by the results of skillful cross-examination. The determination of the issues raised has been found the more difficult by reason Of the mass of expert testimony concerning chemical characteristics and laboratory processes, which the court cannot verify by inspection or experiment, and by the uncertainty as to how far these matters would be understood by one skilled in the art. A brief preliminary statement of the character of the subject-matter of the controversy, apart from its most technical chemical features, will be helpful in studying the development of the case. It has further seemed more desirable, even at the expense of some repetition, to present and dispose of only a single question at a time.

The patent is for a new coal-tar coloring product, called “naphtliol black.” It is described as a black color, is called a black dye, and is used for dyeing dark shades, commonly called “black.” As a matter of fact, there is no such thing as an absolute or actual black dye. The artificial coal-tar colors employed in dyeing black, either alone, or in admixture with other colors, generally dye dark blue shades, which have the appearance of black, and which, when sufficiently concentrated, are commercially known as “black colors.” In view of these facts, the patentees claim: “As a new product, the herein-described dyestuff or coloring matter, of a black color and capable of dyeing shades of dark blue, as set forth.” The word “black” wil1 be used herein in its popular meaning, as applied generally to colors. In this sense, the patent in suit was the first printed publication which described a process by which a black dye could be obtained from coal tar, and claimed the resulting product. Prior to its discovery, logwood had been generally used, in admixture with yellow, to dye a black color. It has a great advantage over logwood, in that it produces a beautiful blade on the fiber to be dyed, without the use of mordants. It has been extensively adoplied in the industries in place of logwood, and its sales have continuously increased. Its utility is not disputed. The patent was the first disclosure of a new, important, and highly meritorious discovery.

Before proceeding to a consideration of the specification, the general character of the chemical processes involved will be briefly stated: Certain aniline colors derived from coal far are known as “azo compounds”; the word “azo,” derived from “azote,” or “nitrogen,” being used tO' show that these compounds contained nitrogen in the form of nitrous or nitric acid. Among the chemical processes used in the creation or development of coal-tar colors is that of azetization. To azoiize such a color is to treat it with nitrogen. To diazotize is to unite two nitrogen atoms to a hydrocarbon radical, and to form a diazo compound. A repetition of the process, or rediazotization, forms a diazo compound. The general [601]*601formula, “R (SO H)x—N-N—C10 He NIB (a),” includes the sulphoaeids of any radical,—a group comprising a great number and variety of colors.

The foregoing general statement is not derived' from the record or briefs, but is inserted merely as an aid in understanding the terms used and processes described.

The patent in suit contains several errors. The product claimed therein cannot be produced by following strictly the process as described. “Nitrate” is used in the place of “nitrite.” The speeiic description of a second diazotization is omitted. One of the reducing tests is ambiguously stated. It is only by following a process in which the first two errors a.re corrected that a black dye can be produced. The specification of the patent in suit is as follows:

“Wo take one of the compounds corresponding to the general formula, 11 (S03 H)x—N-N—Oto H6 NH2 (a), obtained by the reaction of diazo-sulplionie acids upon alplia-uaphthylamine, and convert it into tiie diazo-azo compound with tiie necessary quantity of nitrous acid. This diazo-azo compound is then allowed to react upon naphtliol or naphtliol sulplionic acids in an alkaline solution. As an example, we shall describe tiie process of carrying out the manufacturo of the dark-blue azo coloring matter, which we call ‘naphtliol black.’ We dissolve thirty-five kilograms naplithylamine disulplionate of sodium in three hundred liters of water acidulated with thirty kilograms of muriatic acid, twenty-one degrees Baume, and diazotize by addition of seven kilograms of nitrate of sodium in aqueous solution at a low temperature. Thereupon eighteen kilograms of clilorbydrate of alpha-naplithylamine dissolved in five hundred liters of water are poured into the above mixture while constantly stirring. Tiie diazo-azo compound thus formed is allowed to act upon a solution of thirty-six kilograms of beta-naphthol-alplia-disulphonale of sodium (salt 11) kept alkaline by addition of twenty kilograms ammonia of twenty per coni. Tiie immediately formed coloring matter separates completely by addition of common salt. It is then filtered, and is (delivered to tiie trade as a black paste, or in solid form. Naphtliol black produces on the filler in an acidulated hath dark-blue shades. It is very soluble in water, insoluble in spirit, and dissolve's in strong sulphuric acid with green color. Reducing agents destroy the color-forming alplia-naphthylamine besides other products.”

The specification first states the class of coloiing matters to which the invention relates, discloses the general character of the discovery, and describes generally the nature of the chemical operations upon a class of products or colors included under a broad general formula. Then follows a, specific description of the process employed in treating one of these products, naphthyl, in order to obtain the patented color. There is considerable controversy over these two descriptions, and it will be important to keep them distinct. They will therefore be hereafter referred to as the “general description” and “special process,” respectively.

The patent relates to a method for manufacturing coloring matters belonging to the azo group. The formula of said general description covers from 300 to 500 products. Dr. Schweitzer, the chief expert for complainant, declares that the effect of the directions for treating any one of the compounds, corresponding to the general formula, R (SO» H)x—N-N—Cío He NH2 (a), was to say, if you treat any sulpho acid of any radical according to the directions in this specification, you will get a color producing black. He then adds:

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Bluebook (online)
69 F. 597, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matheson-v-campbell-circtsdny-1895.