Northup v. Reish

200 F.2d 924, 96 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 78, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4456
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1953
Docket10613_1
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 200 F.2d 924 (Northup v. Reish) 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
Northup v. Reish, 200 F.2d 924, 96 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 78, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4456 (7th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

SWAIM, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment in which the defendant, George D. Reish, was found guilty of violating a relationship of confidence and trust which existed between him and the plaintiff, Harry R. Northup, as a result of which violation the defendants, George D. Reish and Reish Products, Inc., were unjustly enriched at the expense of the plaintiff. In this same action the plaintiff also alleged infringement of his.United States Letters Patent No. 2,466,859, dated April 12, 1949, entitled “Oven Liners.” The trial court dismissed the count based on the alleged patent infringement on the ground that there was no patentable invention in view of the prior state of the art and held that each of the three claims thereon was invalid. From this part of the judgment the plaintiff has not appealed.

Early in 1945 the plaintiff Northup realized the need for some easier method of taking care of boil-overs in the ovens of cooking stoves and of catching the drippings when food was being broiled in such stoves. He realized that a piece of material placed under the broiler or under the food being cooked in the oven would have to be of a material which would not be consumed or melted by the heat in the oven and that the liner would have to be comparatively inexpensive and easily disposable. Northup experimented with various materials and finally determined that a very thin sheet of aluminum foil, cut in a rectangular form and placed under the food being cooked or broiled, would serve the purpose. He first used a piece of smooth aluminum foil with the edges turned- over to form a hem.

At about this time, July 10, 1946, the Consumers Products Corporation published an advertisement in the South Bend Tribune in South Bend, Indiana, soliciting the opportunity to finance and develop ideas and patents for persons in need of such help. In response to this advertisement the plaintiff called on the Consumers Products Corporation and interviewed the defendant, George P. Reish, who was then an officer of that company. In the first interview the *925 plaintiff did not disclose his idea to Reish because, as he testified, “I did not want to divulge this thing until I was pretty well assured I would not be taken advantage of, because at this time we had no patent applied for on it; it really was not in merchantable form..” The plaintiff said Reish gave him such assurances and a short time later, in a subsequent conference with Reish and Mr. Fries, another officer of Consumers Products Corporation, he (Northup) told them of his idea and left with them samples of his oven liners which were embossed in a pebbled form which he had found tended to stiffen the liners and tended to hold more of the food juices which would boil over or drip down from, the food. The plaintiff says that at that time he told Reish and Fries, concerning such oven liners, the costs, consumer reaction and possible outlets, and discussed with them the possibility of Consumers Products Corporation manufacturing and financing the liners. The plaintiff also said, though, that at that conference they all agreed that in its then form the oven liner was not a merchantable item.

Shortly thereafter, in August 1946, Reish became ill and had no further contacts with Northup until May 1947. About September 18, 1946, Northup started marketing a pebbled form of embossed oven liners under his trade-mark, “Oven Maid.” A couple of months later the plaintiff changed to his present form of embossed liner, on which the embossing is of a rectangular type, which plaintiff has manufactured and sold continuously since November 1946. In the Fall of 1946 Reish resigned as President of Consumers Products Corporation. In November 1946, Consumers Products Corporation purchased some foil from Northup to sell as oven liners.

Reish’s next contact with Northup was on May 10, 1947, when he, Reish, purchased 48 dozen of the plaintiff’s oven liners for resale. Northup testified that shortly thereafter Reish wanted him to make oven liners for Reish; that Reish then just wanted Northup to supply him the oven liners which he (Reish) would then package and sell under his own trade-mark and trade name. Northup did not agree to this and, in October or November 1947, the Nu Pro-

ducts Company of Constantine, Michigan, started making oven liners for Reish Products, Inc., a corporation which Reish had formed. These oven liners were made on a machine which Nu Products Company built for the Reish corporation and of material which the Reish corporation furnished. Prior to the building of the machine Reish furnished Nu Products Company with a sample of the Northup oven liners which Reish had purchased from Northup. On September 1, 1949, the defendant, Reish Products, Inc., started to manufacture oven liners for itself, using a type of embossing which utilized its trademark, “Ovnap.” These liners were distributed by the defendant corporation under its own name, in packages which were distinctive and which could not be confused with the packages of oven liners being manufactured and sold by the plaintiff.

The trial court, in finding against the plaintiff as to the patent infringement found that:

“9. At least as early as 1932 printed publications had been issued which taught that a thin sheet of aluminum foil could be used in cooking in many different ways, and that it could be used to catch and retain juices escaping from food being cooked.
“10. All of the physical and structural properties of the oven liner defined in the claims of plaintiff’s patent, i. e., a sheet of flat metal foil having a melting point higher than that attained in cooking ovens, 1lie disposable character of such a sheet, the thickness of such a sheet less than .005 of an inch, the cutting of such a sheet in predetermined size and to rectangular shape, and the forming of embossments or shallow pockets or recesses over substantially the entire area of such a sheet to impart slight rigidity thereto, were known in the art for many years prior to 1946, and aluminum foil having such structural characteristics was sold and widely distributed for many uses and purposes for at least twenty years prior to the trial of this action.
“11. The claims of the plaintiff’s patent merely define a use analogous *926 to those known in the prior art and involve no substantial difference in structure from aluminum foil known in the prior art. (Our emphasis.)
“12. None of the claims of plaintiff’s patent defines an invention when considered in view of the prior state of the art.”

The trial court thus correctly found that the claims of the plaintiff’s patent described only another “analogous” manner or way of using embossed aluminum foil, a product which had long been known and manufactured, for catching and retaining juices escaping from food being cooked, and, therefore, held that none of the plaintiff’s claims defined an invention and that plaintiff’s patent was invalid.

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Bluebook (online)
200 F.2d 924, 96 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 78, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northup-v-reish-ca7-1953.