McElrath v. Industrial Rayon Corp.

35 F. Supp. 198, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2501
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 30, 1940
DocketNo. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 F. Supp. 198 (McElrath v. Industrial Rayon Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McElrath v. Industrial Rayon Corp., 35 F. Supp. 198, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2501 (W.D. Va. 1940).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity based on alleged infringement of a patent and praying the customary remedies of injunction against further infringement and for accounting for profits heretofore made through such infringement. • The plaintiff is a resident of Roanoke, Virginia, while the defendants are the Industrial Rayon Corporation, a corporation of the State of Delaware, having its principal office at Cleveland, Ohio, and Industrial Rayon Corporation of Virginia, having its principal office at Covington, Vir[199]*199ginia, in this district. The last named corporation is a subsidiary of the first and the defendants are engaged in the business of manufacturing the fibrous material commonly known as rayon.

The patent in suit, No. 1,751,165, was granted to the plaintiff March 18, 1930, on an application filed November 9, 1927, and is designated in the patent as “Apparatus for Chemical Teratment of Fibrous Material”. Throughout this suit it is referred to as a “bleaching machine”, due to the fact that in the patent the description of its method and purpose of use relates to its use for the bleaching of material, and the alleged infringing machine is used for that purpose. The evidence in the case, with the exhibits introduced, has been voluminous and no attempt can be made to recount it in detail. But because the factual situation differs in marked respects from that encountered in most patent suits heard before this Court, and because certain facts involved in the obtaining of the patent and in the defenses to the suit are of importance, a somewhat extended outline- of the facts proven is necessary.

The scene of the alleged conception of the plaintiff's invention, as testified by him, was the plant of the Viscose Corporation of Virginia at Roanoke. This corporation is engaged in the manufacture of rayon yarn and is one of several subsidiaries of the Viscose Corporation of America, whose headquarters and principal plant are located at Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania. The Viscose Corporation of America is controlled by Courtaulds, Limited, an English concern operating rayon plants throughout Great Britain and possibly elsewhere. In the course of producing rayon yarn for the market it is customary, after the filament has been formed by the chemical processes adapted to that end and has been made into hanks or skeins, to subject these skeins to a bleaching and washing process. This is accomplished by subjecting the skeins to a succession of chemical baths or sprays, each consisting of a different solution. In the Viscose plant at Roanoke, these successive baths are described in order as sulphiding, sulphide washing, bleaching, acidulating and final washing. The same process essentially seems to be in practice in all rayon plants with possibly some variation in the chemical make up of the successive washes.

It appears that in 1914 an Englishman named Clayton had obtained a patent in the United States (No. 1,116,242) on an “Apparatus for Liquid Treatment of Hanks of Thread, etc.” Briefly and non-technically described, and omitting details of construction, this machine consisted of parallel rails spaced some five or six feet apart and elevated an appropriate distance above the floor upon which a succession of slender cylindrical rods were placed transversely with the ends of the rods supported by the parallel rails. The rods were removable and the skeins of yarn to be treated were hung on the rods (a number on each rod) before the rods were rested on the rails. Means were employed for moving the rods slowly along the rails during which movement the yarn was subjected to a continual spray, from above, of the appropriate chemical solution. Means were utilized for rotation of the rods as they moved through the machine, for reasons connected with effective spraying of all parts of the skeins. The operation of the machine was continuous in the sense that as it operated it was necessary only to continue placing the rods carrying the skeins in one end of the machine and, after their passage through the machine, remove them at the other end. Drip pans or tanks underneath caught the dripping chemicals.

While the 'Clayton machine was invented before the development of the rayon industry in America, it was well adapted for use in the rayon bleaching process. Prior to and during the year 1925, a number of these Clayton machines were in use for this purpose in the Viscose plant at Roanoke. As above noted, the bleaching process for rayon involves subjection of the yarn to five successive and different sprays; and it was the practice at the Viscose plant to align five of these machines in a row, end to end, with intervals between. In the first machine, the rayon was subjected to the first required spray and after the rods bearing the rayon had traversed this machine they were lifted off and placed on the second machine where the rayon received the second treatment; after passing through the second machine they were similarly placed on the third machine for the third treatment, and so on, until they had been subjected to each of the various sprays required. The yarn was then removed from the rods and placed in a hydro-extractor for drying. In this practice, each of the Clayton machines (or units) operated by its own motive po'wer and the removal of rayon from one machine to the next in order was accomplished by manual means; i. e., as the rods bearing the rayon skeins completed their movement through one machine they were lifted by [200]*200hand, carried across the short intervening space to the next unit, and placed in position for movement through that machine. In this manner the rayon passed through each of the five units. It is noted that in the Vicose plant it was customary to refer to a group of Clayton units (five) necessary to complete the bleaching process as a “machine”. That is, in factory parlance a bleaching “machine” was a group of five Clayton units, and there were several of these groups designated as “No. 1 machine, No. 2 machine”, etc.

History of the Patent and Nature of Its Claims

The plaintiff, McElrath, entered the employ of the Viscose Corporation at the Roanoke plant on November 19, 1925, as a draftsman in the engineering department. He continued in this employment for about 3% months, until March 4, 1926, on which latter date he was discharged for reasons the exact nature of which does not appear, but under circumstances which his superior describes as “strained”. According to plaintiff’s testimony, it was during this period of employment and immediately after it began that he conceived the invention on which he first filed application for a patent approximately two years later and which resulted in the patent in suit. To make clear the issues in the suit, it is necessary here to set forth the nature of this patent and of those claims of the patent of which infringement is alleged. As stated, the patent is designated “An Apparatus for Treatment of Fibrous Material”. The claims of the patent alleged to have been infringed by the defendants here are Nos. 10, 11, 12, 20, 21, 26 and 27, reading as follows:

“10. An apparatus comprising a plurality of alined spaced machines for subjecting fibrous material to the action of liquid, each machine having individual means for applying and collecting said liquid, and drainage space between successive machines, means for conveying said fibrous material from one machine to the other, comprising movable rails and supporting rods, said rails extending through the apparatus, including common means for operating said conveying means and said rods.”

“11.

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Related

W. F. & John Barnes Co. v. International Harvester Co.
51 F. Supp. 254 (N.D. Illinois, 1943)
McElrath v. Industrial Rayon Corp.
123 F.2d 627 (Fourth Circuit, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 F. Supp. 198, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 172, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelrath-v-industrial-rayon-corp-vawd-1940.