Parmelee Pharmaceutical Co. v. Zink

188 F. Supp. 821, 126 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 467, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedMarch 1, 1960
DocketNo. 11114
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 F. Supp. 821 (Parmelee Pharmaceutical Co. v. Zink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parmelee Pharmaceutical Co. v. Zink, 188 F. Supp. 821, 126 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 467, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907 (W.D. Mo. 1960).

Opinion

RIDGE, Chief Judge.

Plaintiffs claim infringement of Letters Patent 2,478,182, relating to sodium chloride tablets, which was allowed by the Patent Office on August 9, 1949, upon application dated January 16, 1945, filed by plaintiff William V. Consolazio. As allowed, the patent contains this single claim, viz.:

“An internally reinforced sodium chloride tablet comprising compressed granules of sodium chloride; and an internally disposed cellular stroma of a thin, permeable, dialyz-ing film of a materia] selected from the group consisting of cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate, the cells of said stroma containing said granules of sodium chloride, whereby the sodium chloride is rendered slowly available when the tablet reaches the gastro-intestinal tract, the solution time of the sodium chloride in said tablet in the gastro-intestinal fluids being from 60 to 80 minutes for a ten grain tablet.”

Plaintiff Parmelee Pharmaceutical Company is the exclusive licensee of Con-solazio for the remaining life of the Letters Patent, to make, sell and use tablets covered by the above claim.

Plaintiffs charge that defendant, Lawrence C. Zink, doing business as Zink Safety Equipment Company, has been and still is infringing the above Letters Patent within the territorial jurisdiction of this Court, by selling an impregnated sodium chloride tablet under the trade name “Fairway Crystals.” Standard Safety Equipment Company, of Palatine, Illinois, manufactured and sold to defendant, Zink, the accused impregnated salt tablets. Hence, Standard Safety Equipment Company, of Palatine, Illinois, is controlling and bearing the cost of defense to this action.

Consolazio’s broad contention is that his invention, as defined in the above claim, relates generally to provide a salt tablet impregnated with any material capable of permitting slow controlled release of the salt within the gastro-intes-tinal tract during a specified optimum period, so as to supply the required amount of sodium chloride to a person’s system while maintaining the concentration of the salt throughout the dissolution time thereof below the level at which the salt would cause adverse reactions to the user [823]*823of the tablet. The evidence is to the effect that the patented impregnated tablet •commences to release salt immediately upon ingestion of the tablet; thereafter, a slow controlled release of the salt from the patented tablet occurs, regardless of the area of the gastro-intestinal tract in which the tablet is disposed at any time interval during the approximately 60 to -80 minutes’ period required for complete dissolution of the salt. Thus, the gist •of the invention resides in a salt tablet structure that is effective in delaying or in slowing down the rate of dissolution of ■ salt; a structure that is effective in controlling the rate of distribution, such that the completion of solution is not reached until one hour or a little more; a structure whose essential physical feature is a thin, permeable, dialyzing film covering the surface of the salt grain. The nov- • elty of the patent in suit is that cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate used as a film substance in the particular way, will function in the particular way, as stated in the claim of the patent.

The defense here made is non-infringement, premised on the ground that the claim of the patent, specifying impregnating material consisting of “cellulose acetate” or “cellulose nitrate”, is not entitled to any range of equivalency beyond those named materials, so that the accused salt tablets which the evidence shows do not contain either of these materials but use shellac as an impregnating .■substance, could not and do not infringe the patent claimed. Invalidity of the above Letters Patent by reason of being anticipated by the prior art; and lack of novelty of invention, in that the patent does not disclose an advance over the state of the prior art, but involves, at most, expected routine endeavors of one working in the filed, are also defensively .asserted.

In light of the evidence adduced, we .shall first consider the issue of infringement, as it is thereby established that the single claim of the patent in suit makes call for a “product” limited to a .sodium chloride tablet with an impregnating film material “selected from the group consisting of cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate,” (emphasis added) and defendant’s accused tablet admittedly does not contain either cellulose, acetate or cellulose nitrate as an impregnating material. Plaintiffs’ proof is that the impregnating substance of the accused tablets is “shellac”. Defendant did not make any proof of the impregnating agency used by Standard in the manufacture of the accused tablet, but it did, at direction of the Court at pre-trial conference, file with the Clerk a sealed statement of its impregnating material, which the Court did not require to be revealed in light of the proof made by plaintiff, and the defense here made, to the effect that the claim of the patent in suit is so limited, specifically to cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate, as to not be entitled to any range of equivalents. In light of the record thus made, if a negative answer is given to defendant’s contention that the claim in suit is not entitled to any range of equivalents, infringement would be here present, regardless of the material actually used by Standard as an im-pregnator in the manufacture of the accused tablets, provided the subject matter of the patent in suit should be found to define a patentable invention.

The single claim of the patent in suit was granted to patentee only after a lengthy prosecution in the Patent Office. Four rejections, covering in all, 26 claims made by the patentee, and five amendments thereto, were considered by the Patent Office. As originally filed, the application for patentability was titled, “Tablets and method of making same.” Eleven claims were made in that application, seven claimed a product, “salt tablet,” and four a method of preparing the claimed tablets. That original application covered not only “salt” but “other active materials.” In that application it was stated: “The impregnating or coating agencies which have been found to be most effective are cellulose derivatives, and, in particular, cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate.” F.W., p. 3. All said claims were rejected by the Examiner for the Patent Office on the ground that [824]*824the claims were “lacking in invention over the prior art” cited; as being “too broad”; and some were rejected as “being for the obvious process for one skilled in the art.” All the claims were related to two species, “cellulose nitrate and to cellulose acetate.” Those “generic claims (were) rejected as unpatentable” and Consolazio was required to make an “election of a single species” for his claim to a patent. He thereafter designated “cellulose acetate.” In the final claim he elected “a material selected from the group consisting of cellulose acetate and cellulose nitrate.” Paper No. 2, Apr. 21, 1945.

After the first rejection of his claims by the Patent Oifice, Consolazio cancelled all the original claims and substituted eleven new claims. The following claim is typical of those then submitted:

“16.

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188 F. Supp. 821, 126 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 467, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parmelee-pharmaceutical-co-v-zink-mowd-1960.