Owens v. American Stereographic Corp.

116 F. Supp. 406, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 157, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2234
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 30, 1953
StatusPublished

This text of 116 F. Supp. 406 (Owens v. American Stereographic 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
Owens v. American Stereographic Corp., 116 F. Supp. 406, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 157, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2234 (S.D.N.Y. 1953).

Opinion

CONGER, District Judge.

This is a motion for a preliminary injunction restraining the defendants fro nr making and distributing three-dimensional comic books or magazines produced by a certain “3-D Illustereo” process upon the ground that said process infringes. United States Letters Patent No. 2,057,-051 issued to plaintiff Owens on October-13, 1936.

The plaintiff Gaines is the assignee off the Owens patent and is president of the-various corporate plaintiffs.

The defendant American Stereographic Corporation is the owner of the Illustereo process, the defendants Leonard, H. Maurer, Norman Maurer and Joseph. Kubert are officers of said corporation,, the defendant St. John is the owner of' the St. John Publishing Company, which has used the Illustereo process in the-production of comic books, the defendant American News Company is the distributor of magazines and comic books including those of St. John Publishing Company. The defendant Lionel Corporation is a New York corporation and is joined, because its advertisement appearing in. a publication of the St. John Publishing-Company employed the Illustereo process^

[407]*407The plaintiffs have filed various exhibits as well as a number of affidavits in support of their motion.

According to the affidavit of the plaintiff Gaines, the corporate plaintiffs are well known publishers of comic books and he is well acquainted with the efforts involved in the production and knowledge of stereoscopy and the aspects of its production through the medium of photography; he is the assignee of the Owens patent and has made a study of it. He sets forth his analysis of the. patent which is entitled “Methods of Drawing and Photographing Stereoscopic Pictures in Relief”; the first two paragraphs of the patent set forth the nature of the invention and its purposes as follows:

“This invention relates to improved stereoscopic pictures intended for amusement, educational and advertising purposes having objects displayed in sharp relief in the foreground and background, and aims to produce such pictures by combining drawings or photographs of different subjects or views in a simple, rapid and inexpensive manner readily adapted to the existing types of ■cameras and picture making devices.
“Further aims and objects of the invention appear in connection with the following description of a preferred mode of production and use, illustrated in the accompanying ■drawings, the subject chosen for illustration being a newspaper drawing depicting a popular character of serial adventure stories as utilized for giving publicity to a well-known nationally advertised product.”

"The Owens patent technique embraces according to Gaines the following production steps:

“(a) analyzing the drawing and breaking it down into the desired number of planes;
“(b) copying each plane, either by .hand or photographically, on to a .separate sheet or transparent cell (acetate, celluloid or the like) or a ■ combination thereof, and, in the case of transparent cells, opaquing the areas covered with white where and if desired;
“(c) superimposing the sheets and/or cells in register to simulate the original drawing and then copying photographically;
“(d) shifting the sheets and/or cells laterally with reference to the background so that each sheet or cell is shifted slightly more in reference to the preceding one, which shift distances may be varied in amounts and in proportion to each other, and then copying the composite result photographically;
“(e) the photographic copies produced or obtained through steps (c) and (d) above described are then reproduced for visual observation.
“Reproduction for visual observation is achieved in the following manner: plates are made from each of the two photographic copies referred to in the process outlined above; one being usually inked in red and the other in green, and a printing is then made with the impression of each plate superimposed. When viewed through color filters of the same two colors that the said plates were respectively inked in, a three dimensional effect is obtained through the application of well-known and, concededly, not now patentable principles of ‘stereo-analyglyph’ viewing.”

He reminds the Court of the “3-D” craze and the profits to be reaped, and he describes the efforts of the defendants in marketing the “World’s First Three Dimension Comics” under a so-called secret “illustereo” process for which patent application is pending; he further describes his negotiations with defendant for a license to employ the process in his own publications and his refusal to accept the same because of the conditions imposed therein; he charges that the defendants actually never had intention of licensing anyone other than St. John Publishing Company and that defendants are out to corner the market in 3-D [408]*408comic books; he cites an announcement in a trade magazine by one of the defendants and inventors, Kubert, to, the effect that there will be an immediate but short-lived market for 3-D comics and “then it will be all over”; the announcement also refers to the problem of acquiring glasses for the comic books because of the limited supply of acetate in New York; this points up the difficulty because it takes Gaines’ companies several months to produce a 3-D comic book.

Mr. Gaines’ affidavit further goes on to relate his discovery, during the course of the license negotiations, of Owens’ patent; that he became absolutely convinced the defendants were employing the Owens process; and he is equally convinced the defendants infringe the Owens patent since the “naked eye tells the story”; he studied defendants’ work and can’t think of any method other than Owens’ that might have accomplished the result.

Mr. Gaines’ affidavit winds up by “challenging” defendants to admit or deny the use of certain practices in their production and pleads the necessity of the relief sought,, because of the defendants continuing publication despite full notice of plaintiffs’ rights, the limited (in time) market, the limited source of supplies created by defendants’ activities and the fact that the Owens patent expires October 13, 1953.

The affidavit of plaintiff Owens recites, among other things, his invention, his belief that defendants infringe, his failure ever successfully to promote the patent, or to receive one penny from it, his experience as an inventor, his introduction to the defendants’ claimed infringing production, the receipt of a visit from plaintiff Gaines and subsequent conversations with the latter after which he assigned his patent to Gaines, his notification to defendants of infringement and various replies. He has no doubt that defendants use his technique in their productions, for the same reasons Gaines gives.

One Feldstein, a commercial artist and employee of the plaintiff corporations, also expresses the opinion that “only one of the methods invented, taught and detailed in the Owens patent could have been used in the production of that (‘Mighty Mouse’) comic book * *

Similar opinions are expressed by certain persons named Geis and East, apparently strangers to this controversy, who have had experience in stereoscopy.

Further, one George Hanlin files an affidavit in support of the application.

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Bluebook (online)
116 F. Supp. 406, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 157, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-american-stereographic-corp-nysd-1953.