Oliver v. Lockport Mills, Inc.

6 Misc. 2d 356, 163 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1572
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 17, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 Misc. 2d 356 (Oliver v. Lockport Mills, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Lockport Mills, Inc., 6 Misc. 2d 356, 163 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1572 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

Philip Halpern, J.

In this suit in equity, the plaintiff seeks a judgment rescinding the assignment of certain patents to the defendant.

The plaintiff entered the employ of the defendant as a chemist in 1931. He had been educated at the University of Manchester where he had specialized in the chemistry of cellulose products; thereafter, he had had experience in that field in the employ of various wood pulp and paper manufacturing [357]*357companies. The defendant was engaged in the manufacture of cotton batting and other products made of both bleached and unbleached cotton fibers. The plaintiff was first employed by the defendant for a period of one week. Mr. Rogers, the then president of the defendant, informed the plaintiff that there had been trouble in the bleaching department of the defendant’s plant and that he wished to have the plaintiff examine the procedures then in use and to make suggestions or recommendations for their improvement. The plaintiff found that there had been some laxity in the observance of prescribed procedures and he made recommendations for the correction of the situation. His employment was then continued for an indefinite period upon the understanding that he would serve as the chemist of the company and that he would try to improve the processes used in the bleaching department.

The plaintiff’s work as the company’s chemist was of various kinds. He occasionally checked the operations of the bleaching plant, as he had done during the first trial week of his employment, but generally, routine checks of the strength and quality of the chemical solutions in use were left to other employees of the defendant; the plaintiff was called in only when trouble developed and an analysis or modification of the chemical solutions was required. The plaintiff was also asked from time to time to test or analyze various chemical products available upon the market to determine their suitability or usefulness for the defendant’s manufacturing operations. This work did not involve the use of the plaintiff’s inventive faculties but other work, undertaken by him in the performance of his duties, obviously did. He was the only chemist in the employ of the company and, in that capacity, he was repeatedly called upon to study problems arising in the plant and to undertake experiments to discover new processes or to improve the old processes in order to solve the problems. About one year after the commencement of the plaintiff’s employment, a laboratory was built for his use and the plaintiff was supplied with the books and equipment which he requested.

Early in the period of his employment, the plaintiff was asked to look into the problem of the flameproofing of bleached cotton fibers. The defendant had been using a process known as the White process which consisted of immersing the cotton in a solution of ammonium sulphate, ammonium phosphate and borax. This process was unsatisfactory because the finished product showed a tendency to turn yellow. The plaintiff was asked to try to improve the process so as to avoid this objectionable effect. The plaintiff addressed himself to the problem [358]*358and experimented with various solutions. He first experimented with adjustments in the White formula, and reported some improvement in the results obtained, on October 15, 1932. Thereafter, after extensive reading on the subject, he found an article in the Journal of the Society of the Chemical Industry, published in England, referring to the fact that an English chemist had used borax and boric acid to fireproof cloth. The plaintiff decided to try this for the flameproofing of the bleached cotton fibers. He eliminated the ammonium sulphate and the ammonium phosphate from the solution, leaving only the borax, and he added boric acid in accordance with the suggestion made in the English journal. After further experimentation, he found that a solution of borax and boric acid in proper proportions produced the desired result, free from the objectionable effects of the White process. The plaintiff submitted to Mr. Rogers a written report on the subject, dated September 25, 1933, which was headed ‘ ‘ Research on the Fireproofing of Cellulose Fibre ”. The opening paragraph of the report read: “ The object of the research was to improve the method of fireproofing as used in the plant of the Loekport Cotton Batting Co.” The process developed by the plaintiff was immediately adopted by the company for the commercial production of flameproofed bleached cotton and has been used by it ever since.

After the process had been in use for some time, the plaintiff advised Mr. Rogers and other officers of the company that he believed that the process was a patentable one and he suggested that a patent ought to be obtained “to protect ourselves By that expression, the plaintiff presumably meant that a patent was desirable in order to protect the company against the use of the process by competitors (cf. Marshall v. Colgate-Palmolive-Peet Co., 76 F. Supp. 378, 389, affd. 175 F. 2d 215). At Mr. Rogers’ request, the plaintiff wrote up the process in 1935 as the basis for an application for a patent; Mr. Rogers retained a patent attorney in New York City to prosecute the application. The application was made in the name of the plaintiff as the inventor but the plaintiff simultaneously executed an assignment to the defendant of any patent which might be issued upon the application. The patent was issued to the defendant as assignee several years later.

The plaintiff was absent from the plant for about a year and one half during the years 1938 and 1939 because of illness. He returned in January 1940, and resumed his duties as company chemist. Mr. Thomas D. Cole was then the general manager of the company and he succeeded Mr. Rogers as president upon the latter’s death in 1942. On numerous occasions [359]*359after kis return, the plaintiff was asked by executives of the company to find or develop a process to solve problems of a chemical nature which had arisen in the course of the company’s operations. For many of these problems, he was, unable to find a solution; for some, he found solutions which were recognized to be nonpatentable;, for others, he found solutions which he believed to be patentable and for which patent application were made, all of which were concurrently assigned to the defendant. Many of the patent applications were rejected or abandoned, but in three instances the applications were granted, and the, patents issued thereon represent the remaining patents in controversy in this action.

The company had been having trouble because of the high calcium content of the water available in Lockport. This had the effect of making the cotton fibers brittle and fragile. The defendant’s production manager discussed this with the plaintiff and asked him to. do what he could to find a method of softening the water. While the plaintiff was working- on the problem, a salesman called at the plant to sell a boiler compound designed to remove boiler scale. He was sent to the plaintiff by the defendant’s production manager and, after looking into the nature of the compound, the plaintiff conceived the idea of using it to soften the water used in the bleaching process. After experimenting and finding that the bleaching process was improved by the addition of the. compound, the plaintiff reported this to Mr. Cole by a letter dated February 26, 1941.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Misc. 2d 356, 163 N.Y.S.2d 317, 1956 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-lockport-mills-inc-nysupct-1956.