Mount Hope Finishing Co. v. Seneca Textile Corp.

39 F. Supp. 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 568, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 21, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 39 F. Supp. 994 (Mount Hope Finishing Co. v. Seneca Textile Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mount Hope Finishing Co. v. Seneca Textile Corp., 39 F. Supp. 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 568, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106 (S.D.N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

GODDARD, District Judge.

This is a suit by Mount Hope Finishing Company, assignee of the Robertson and Staples patent 2,110,118 issued March 1, 1938, against the Seneca Textile Corporation charging both direct and contributory infringement. The patent concerns the finishing of textile fabrics, particularly the finishing of dotted marquisettes.

The claims in suit are 7 to 13 inclusive covering the finishing method and apparatus, and claims 14 and 15 covering the fabric or product.

A dotted marquisette fabric is an open-mesh fabric like mosquito netting, having a distinctive weave known as a leno weave with dots upon it. The open-mesh ground of the fabric is woven of small fine tightly twisted threads. The dots on dotted marquisette are made by interweaving relatively large rovings with the ground threads at the time the fabric is woven in the loom. The rovings are interwoven with a plurality of the ground threads at spaced intervals and are then sheared or clipped in a clipping machine to leave free the ends extending in both directions from the interwoven portion. This dotted marquisette fabric is chiefly used for window curtains for with its mosquito netting like construction it lets the light through and one may see through it. It has come into vogue in recent years and now has a large sale.

The defendant, Seneca Textile Corporation (later referred to as Seneca), has its dotted marquisette fabric finished for it by its wholly-owned subsidiary, Arkwright Corporation, a Massachusetts corporation, and sells the finished fabric.

The plaintiff, Mount Hope Finishing Company (later referred to as Mount Hope), charges that the Seneca is a direct infringer of the product claims of the patent through its sale of the finished fabric. Mount Hope further contends that Seneca is a contributory infringer of the method and apparatus claims, of which Arkwright Corporation is a direct infringer through its knowledge of and participation in such direct infringement. Mount Hope also contends that Seneca is a direct infringer of the process and apparatus claims through its domination and control and conduct of business of its subsidiary, Arkwright Corporation, as a department of its own business.

Seneca’s defense is that the patent is invalid and that it is guilty of neither direct nor contributory infringement.

Dotted marquisette fabric has been known for many years. However, in Í934 the old-fashioned candlewick bed spread began to come more and more into vogue as manufacturers learned to manufacture them by machinery and so reducing the cost of making them that they became available in larger quantities than was possible when the dots were sewed in by hand. Prior to that time a dotted marquisette fabric was finished by subjecting it to preliminary processes of mercerization, bleaching, etc., and then starching or sizing by running the fabric through a mangle in which both the fabric ground and the dots were more or less saturated with the starch solution so that after drying the sized dots were stiller than desired and somewhat matted. Most of the dotted marquisettes finished in this way had short clipped dots with the rovings clipped fairly close to the interwoven portion.

Two qualities are particularly desired in dotted marquisettes. One is that the dots shall be fluffy; the other that the ground fabric shall be sized or stiffened with starch so as to hang properly and not be raggy. Mount Hope’s treatment or finishing consists of blowing air against the dots so as to separate the roving ends of the dot to make them fluffy, and then, according to the patent, applying sizing material “to the back of the fabric so as not to reach the raised fibers of the dot”. As the fabric travels to the tenter frame with the dotted side of the fabric facing downwards, it passes over a narrow air slot which extends transversely and beneath the fabric subjecting it to compressed air at an acute angle to the direction of travel of the fabric and which blows against the dots separating the roving ends or loose ends of the yarn and fluffing up the dots.

“The fabric then passes to the tenter frame (Fig. 3) but before entering the frame is subjected to a sizing action, the size, however, being applied to the back of the fabric so as not to reach the raised fibers of the dots or affect the fluffed up appearance thereof. The size may be applied in any well known manner, but herein a transverse series of size delivery nozzles is employed to apply starch or other suitable size fed from any desired source, each nozzle being arranged in conjunction with an immediately adjacent aspirating air delivery nozzle, supplied with compressed air from any suitable source, to deliver against the back of the fabric a finely atomized spray of sizing”. Patent p. 3, col. 1, line 73 et seq.

[996]*996The useo of compressed air for fluffing up fibers or nap is not new. Compressed air issuing through thin siot to raise and fluff the nap on velour hats has been used by the Stetson -Hat Company since 1911. Steam under pressure has been used by the Mohawk Carpet Company to fluff up the nap on Axminister rugs since 1931, where the same sequence of fluffiing, sizing and drying is employed.

British Patent No. 19,798 of 1889 in which the use of steam or air under pressure is projected “at a suitable angle” through a narrow slot against the face of the fabric to raise and dry it. Some of the claims in'suit call for the use of air and some for gas, indicating that air and steam are treated as equivalents.

Mallory 1,052,934 of 1913 relates to a nap blowing attachment for clipping machines, which the patentee says is adapted for clip>ping machines generally and especially adapted to use upon hat clipping machines. It describes a blower which blows thin sheets of air under pressure against the nap to raise it; it also has a shield or bar, functionally similar to the bar used in the patent at issue to prevent the fabric from being bulged out by the force of the air against it.

Sizing on the back only of a fabric has been quite common for many years. Mount Hope, Arkwright and the Bradford Dyeing Association all used standard atomizing devices for spraying the sizing on to the dotted marquisette.

British patent 2573 of .1891, relates to “Improvements in Dressing or Stiffening Lace or Other Fabric”, and the sizing is applied to the back of the lace or fabric with a roller which bears but lightly upon the fabric so that the dressing will not be pressed through the face of the fabric.

Goodall patent 209,805 of 1878 describes the application of sizing to the under side of plush on napped fabrics.

In the summer of 1934 the Royal Curtain Company employed the Bradford Dyeing Association to finish a marquisette with large billowy dots having large rovings and long shear. The Bradford Company did not puff up the dots with air but it did spray sizing on the back of the fabric directing the spray at an angle and “the force of the spraying being applied at an angle did not drive it through the cloth as much as it would have if it were directed towards the cloth”. Between 50,000 and 100,000 yards of this material was finished and sold under the name “Royalwick” and curtains made of it were exhibited at the curtain material shows held in New York and in Chicago in July and August of that year.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F. Supp. 994, 50 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 568, 1941 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-hope-finishing-co-v-seneca-textile-corp-nysd-1941.