Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. v. Norton Co.

280 F. Supp. 674
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 29, 1968
DocketCiv. A. 37154
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 674 (Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. v. Norton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co. v. Norton Co., 280 F. Supp. 674 (N.D. Ohio 1968).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

GREEN, District Judge.

This is an action alleging infringement of United States Letters Patent No. 2,-958,593, hereinafter referred to as the Hoover patent. Claims one through eight, of a total of thirteen claims, are in issue herein. Plaintiff is the assignee of the inventors, Howard L. Hoover, Eugene J. Dupre and Walter J. Rankin, each of whom was in plaintiff’s employ at the time the patented product was developed.

The patent in suit covers an abrasive pad described in the specifications thereof as follows:

The present invention relates to non-woven fibrous abrasive articles of extremely open structure having an extremely high void volume (i. e. low density), which articles have a special utility in the floor maintenance trade, in hand scouring operations such as performed in domestic kitchens by homemakers, as well as in various industrial abrasive operations.

Claim One of the patent, which plaintiff states is typical of the claims in suit, is as follows:

1) An open low-density abrasive article comprising a uniform lofty open non-woven three dimensional web formed of many interlaced randomly extending flexible durable tough resilient organic fibers which have a diameter of from about 25 microns to about 250 microns, web fibers being firmly adhesively bonded together at points where they cross and contact one another to form a three-dimensionally integrated structure throughout said web and abrasive particles distributed within said web and firmly bonded to web fibers by a relatively hard rigid binder, interstices between adjacent fibers being open and substantially unfilled by adhesive binder or abrasive, there being defined throughout said article a tri-dimensionally extending network of intercommunicated voids constituting at least 75 percent of the volume of said article, said article being flexible and readily compressible, and upon release of pressure, capable of recovering substantially completely to its initial uncompressed form.

The commercial products manufactured by plaintiff under the patent bear the trade name “Scotch-Brite.” The defendant Norton’s 1 products are marketed under the “Bear-Tex” brand.

The patent in suit traces its origins back to an application Serial No. 641,714, filed February 20, 1957. That application, as filed, stated that:

This invention relates to non-woven fibrous abrasive articles. More particularly it relates to extremely porous resilient non-woven fibrous skeletal structures which contain abrasive grain.
#***«• *
The article of our invention comprises a non-woven 3-dimensional skeletal net *676 work of resilient fibrous members. Adhered to the individual fibrous members and randomly bonding them together are many small globules of adhesive or binder containing abrasive granules. A preferred embodiment of our invention is a rotary wheel-like fibrous abrasive device.

The patent specifications contained four examples of wheels manufactured in accordance with the claims of the application. Each of the said examples disclosed that the starting point of the product was a nylon web manufactured on a machine known as a “Rando-Webber,” the said machine being covered by patents to other persons.

The specifications stated that the ratio of total volume of solid material present to the total volume of voids, and the ratio which the solid components bore to each other, was of critical importance to the invention. The range of proper proportions was therein stated. In each of the four previously mentioned examples the applicants noted the extremely high range of void volume the product possessed.

In describing the components to be used in the product the specifications stated that untreated sisal, jute, glass, hemp, asbestos, steel wool, and cotton fibers have proved completely unsatisfactory for the purposes stated.

The original application contained nine claims, claims 10 and 11 being method claims. Claims 1 through 5 did not claim abrasive grain and read on the web structure itself. Claim 6 is representative of the product claims in which abrasive was claimed as a part thereof, and is as follows:

A strong flexible, resilient abrasive article comprising a non-woven skeletal structure of many fibrious members, said members having a length of from at least about % inch to not more than about 4 inches and a diameter from at least about 25 microns to not more than about 250 microns, a fiber- and mineral-adherent adhesive randomly bonding said members to each other and bonding abrasive grain thereto, said abrasive article containing from at least about 75% to not more than about 95% substantially uniformly distributed voids.

The initial application was rejected as unpatentable over the prior art. After two attempts to convince the patent examiner that the entire claimed invention was distinguishable over the prior art by reason of its disclosure of the high void volumes, the claims embracing abrasive as a component thereof were can-celled without prejudice to further presentation. Thereafter the remaining claims were finally rejected and the application abandoned.

On October 7, 1958, approximately six weeks before the abrasive claims were cancelled in application Serial No. 641,-714, a second application for patent was filed on behalf of the same inventors. After some controversy with the Patent Office this second application, Serial No. 777,167, was designated as a continuation-in-part of the earlier application. The specifications and claims of the second application were directed solely to abrasive pads with abrasive grain as a constituent thereof. The specifications of Serial No. 777,167 as originally filed are essentially the same as those of the patent in suit, although some additions were made thereto in a third application, Serial No. 1458, on which the patent issued.

The second application as originally filed contained seven claims. Claim 4, which was representative of the original claims, is as follows:

An open low-density rotary abrasive floor maintenance pad suitable for extremely effective use in floor scouring or polishing operations, in conjunction with rotary floor maintenance equipment, without leaving undesirable residue as it wears through use, capable thereafter of being readily cleaned by simple flushing with water and then wrung out and left overnight or for days or weeks, and of then being reused, said pad comprising a uniform *677

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 F. Supp. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-mining-and-manufacturing-co-v-norton-co-ohnd-1968.