Minnesota Min. & Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Tape Corp.

168 F.2d 7, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 495, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4064
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 6, 1948
DocketNo. 9467
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 F.2d 7 (Minnesota Min. & Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Tape Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Min. & Mfg. Co. v. Industrial Tape Corp., 168 F.2d 7, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 495, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4064 (7th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

MAJOR, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint in a suit for patent infringement. The order of dismissal followed the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, in which it was found that the claims in suit were invalid because anticipated by certain prior art patents and publications, and that no patentable invention was shown in view of the prior art.

The patent in suit No. 2,221,213, entitled “Tape Dispenser,” issued November 12, 1940, to John A. Borden (referred to as the Borden device) and later assigned to plaintiff, relates to a device used in dispensing pressure-sensitive adhesive tape such as the “Scotch” cellulose tape made and sold by the plaintiff, and similar tape made and sold by the defendant under the name “Texcel.” The patent contains five claims, but only claims 3 and 5 are relied upon.

A tape dispenser such as disclosed by Borden is a device on which the tape is mounted, drawn off in desired sized pieces and severed for use. Among the various types of tape on the market are glassine tape, which has a paper backing treated to make it transparent, and paper packaging tape. Both of these tapes have gummed adhesives which require wetting to make them stick. Also, there are pressure-sensitive adhesive tapes, of which there is one type having a cloth backing as, for example, surgeon’s zinc oxide tape or plaster, another, a fibrous backing such as paper, and still another, a transparent non-fibrous backing such as cellulose. Gummed paper packaging tape has been on the market since as early as 1900, and gummed glassine tape since as early as 1915. Surgeon’s zinc oxide pressure-sensitive adhesive tape has been on the market since as early as 1880, and paper backed pressure-sensitive adhesive tape since as early as 1928. Transparent non-fibrous film backed pressure-sensitive adhesive tape first appeared on the market in late 1930, when it was sold by plaintiff under the trade-name “Scotch” cellulose tape. All of these various kinds of tape have been mounted on dispensers of one type or another prior to the tape dispenser device of the patent in suit.

While the patent by its title and specification relates broadly to adhesive tapes of all sorts, it is directed particularly to a device for holding and dispensing pressure-sensitive adhesive tape, such, for example, as the ordinary surgeon’s tape, and such types as are disclosed in United States Patent No. 1,760,820 (directed to a paper backed pressure-sensitive adhesive tape), issued to Richard G. Drew, and other types wherein the adhesive coating is of a normally tacky pressure-sensitive nature. In fact, the claims in suit aire so limited.

Claim 5, the broader of the two claims in suit, reads as follows:

“A device suitable for dispensing tape coated with a pressure-sensitive adhesive, comprising
“(A) means for supporting a roll of said pressure-sensitive adhesive tape and
“(B) a severing edge to which said tape will lightly and detachably adhere by reason of its pressure-sensitive coating when brought into contact with said severing edge,
“(C) said severing edge being separated by free space from the position normally occupied by the periphery of said roll between said supporting means and said severing edge, in a manner permitting a portion of the tape extending from said roll to said edge to be grasped for the detachment from said edge for the withdrawal of a portion of said tape from said roll thereof.”

Claim 3, the other claim in suit, has an additional element not required by claim 5, that is, “a surface positioned between said roll supporting means and said severing edge to which said tape will lightly and detachably adhere * *

[9]*9There were before the lower court and here numerous prior art patents, publications and uses, from which the court found and concluded that there was no patentable invention disclosed in the claims in suit. The court found and concluded that the claims were invalid in view of the disclosures of the prior art and that they were completely anticipated by certain of such disclosures. Plaintiff argues that the findings of the District Court are ultimate conclusions based on undisputed evidence, and that little, if any, importance should be attached to Rule 52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A. following section 723c. Numerous cases are cited in support of this contention, which we think need not be discussed or referred to for the reason that the court’s findings are not predicated upon undisputed evidence as we read the record. For instance, there is the testimony of defendant’s expert that such differences in design as did exist between Borden’s device and the prior art were not substantial and that they involved no difference in mechanical principle. Necessarily the plaintiff must and does take issue with this expert testimony, although the court below evidently regarded it as important in evaluating Borden’s device in the light of the disclosures of the prior art. Moreover, the conclusion which we have reached, as subsequently shown, makes it of little importance as to how much weight we should give to the findings of the court below.

That court found that the claims in suit did not amount to patentable invention in view of the McCarthy dispenser, an unpatentable device made and sold by the plaintiff for some three and one-half years before the Borden device is said to have been invented. The court also found that a dispenser of the Francis Sales Company, illustrated in the Office Appliance Magazine published in September, 1908, disclosed all the elements of both claims sued upon and was a complete anticipation; that patent No. 1,687,031, issued to J. J. Moore in 1928, was a complete anticipation; that the Johnson & Johnson machine, long employed by the defendant, if not a complete anticipation, leaves no room for patentability; that patent No. 1,608,344, on a dental floss dispenser, issued in 1926, leaves no room for patentability, and that the Shuman patent No. 1,016,966, issued in 1912, together with other prior art patents, contain all the elements of both the claims in suit.

We are of the view that no useful purpose could be served in discussing or analyzing all of this prior art upon which the court predicated its findings and conclusion that the patent was invalid. It is sufficient and we are required to affirm the order appealed from if the claims in suit are ¡anticipated by any one of the prior art patents, publications or devices, or if they fail to disclose a patentable invention in view of such art.

Neither do we see any occasion to enter into a discussion of the sometimes dubious distinction between the invalidation of a patent by anticipation and by lack of novelty or patentable invention in view of the prior art. While the court below made numerous findings of anticipation, it also found the patent invalid in view of the prior art.

In our view, the devices manufactured and sold by the plaintiff prior to the time of the invention in suit, referred to as the McCarthy dispenser (plaintiff’s exhibit 11) and the Clark dispenser (plaintiff’s exhibit 12), are the most pertinent prior art. While it may be conceded that the patent in suit represented some improvement over these prior devices, we are in accord with the lower court that such improvement did not amount to patentable invention.

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168 F.2d 7, 77 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 495, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 4064, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-min-mfg-co-v-industrial-tape-corp-ca7-1948.