Penick & Ford, Ltd. v. Corn Products Refining Co.

52 F.2d 668, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1673
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 16, 1931
DocketNo. 6503
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 668 (Penick & Ford, Ltd. v. Corn Products Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penick & Ford, Ltd. v. Corn Products Refining Co., 52 F.2d 668, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1673 (N.D. Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Findings of Fact.

LINDLEY, District Judge.

(1) That for several decades prior to 1924 it was the general practice in American factories for manufacturing starch from corn to permit the gluten overflow water and substantially all of the starch wash water to run into the sewer, thus involving heavy losses and polluting the streams.

(2) That plaintiff and its-, predecessor at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for years prior to 1924 manufactured cornstarch and followed said practice.

[669]*669(3) That defendant operates various cornstarch factories and produces about 50 per cent, of the cornstarch manufactured in America, and that it followed that practice prior to 1925, with the following exceptions:

(a) For a period of a week or ten days in February-Mareh, 1911, an attempt was made at defendant’s Argo plant to return a portion of the gluten water to the steeps and another portion to the separating system, which experiment resulted in failure. The starch was so affected as to render it unmarketable and unusable. The Argo' plant was at that time equipped with re-tables, but it does not appear that any attempt was made to purify the starch by making use of such re-tables or filters. The starch on the tables in the Argo experiment was polluted by a high percentage of undesirable solubles contained in the gluten water which remained in the starch; and in the Argo experiment fresh water was not employed to wash the starch free from solubles, and, serving as make-up water, to carry the solubles back into the separating system.

(b) Generally, during the period of 1910-1912, it was not the practice at Argo to reuse gluten water in the steeps and wet starch house; but, while the evidence is conflicting on this point, it is possible that some gluten water was so reused, the remainder being allowed to run to the sewer, thus affording an avenue for escape of solubles. Assuming that a portion of the gluten water was returned and reused in the period of 1910-1912, it was only because of water shortage, and without attaining the benefits of a “bottled-up” system as understood in the present litigation. If defendant made any such desultory use of gluten overflow water, it failed to employ fresh water to wash the starch and carry the solubles therefrom back into the separating system; and if any use was made of the feature of returning some gluten water to the steeps in the period of 1910-1912 such feature, if used at all, was abandoned some time during that period.

(c) During a period commencing in 1912 or 1913 and continuing into the year 1926, it was the practice at the Argo plant to reuse, in the wet starch house, only a very small percentage of the water from the second tables (re-tables) probably about 2 gallons per bushel of corn ground out of 30 gallons required; and during the period from 1912, or 1913, into the year 1926, it was the practice to allow the gluten overflow water from the first table gluten settlers and a large part of the water from the starch settlers to run into the sewer.

(4) That for a period extending from 1908 to 1925, defendant was seriously concerned with the problem of sewage disposal and made efforts to reduce to a minimum its losses to the sewers; that during the period of 1919-1925 defendant studied the problem intensively, and collaborated with the Sanitary District of Chicago in trying to determine the best type of sewage disposal plant to be employed for taking care of wastes from defendant’s cornstarch factories; and that satisfactory treatment of the sewage would have required enormous disposal plants, costing vast sums of money.

(5) Defendant has, for very many years, employed a large force of executives, superintendents, chemists, and engineers familiar with the manufacture of cornstarch, and, notwithstanding the apparent need for bottling up its factories, defendant’s experts failed to bottle up defendant’s plants until after plaintiff’s plant was bottled up and in operation in accordance with the Widmer process.

(6) A. W. H. Lenders, a veteran in the cornstarch industry, was superintendent of the Argo plant in the period of 1910-1912. Of an inventive turn of mind, he has procured some twenty patents relating to the industry; the attempt to bottle up the Argo plant in 1911 was made under his instructions; McCoy, an experienced wet starch house foreman, was present during the experiment, knew that that attempt resulted in failure, but failed to produce a solution of the problem, and defendant’s cornstarch factories continued to operate with large yearly losses until a time subsequent to the placing in operation of the bottled-up system in plaintiffs plant.

(7) In the period of July-August, 1924, John M. Widmer conceived a process for enabling cornstarch factories to be bottled up. His concept involved a combination of the following steps (Widmer patent):

(a) Return of all the gluten water to the process — about one-third to the steeps and about two-thirds to the wet starch system.

(b) Withdrawal of a relatively small stream of steep water, and concentration thereof, this water containing the solubles which were in the gluten water and additional solubles dissolved from the com in the steeps.

(e) Purifying the starch by washing it with fresh water, and employing the starch [670]*670wash water, serving as make-up water, as a means for carrying the solubles from the starch baek into the separating system — the whole process being of such a character as to maintain.a proper water-balance and a proper solubles-balance, the avenue for escape and recovery of solubles being such as to maintain the solubles concentration in the wet starch system within workable limits, and this being accomplished by supplementing such withdrawal of solubles from the system as occurs /through the avenues of withdrawal of the gluten, the coarse slop, the fine slop, and the germ, by the withdrawal and concentration of a stream of water from the steeps which is, relatively small as compared with the volume of gluten wat.er and starch wash water which formerly went to the sewer.

(8) The purpose of the Widmer process was the recovery of all wastes and the prevention' of stream pollution, which is accomplished in a complete and satisfactory manner by’ the combination of steps set forth.

(9) In addition to the novel combination of steps set forth in (7), the inyentor recognized the fact that gluten overflow water and starch filtrate, which would constitute practically the whole source of supply of water for the wet starch system under the new process,..are infested with micro-organisms; and that inasmuch as the source of water supply woulcf be a tainted source, sterilization, in the sense of holding in check the micro-organisms sufficiently to permit the use of the tainted waters, must be practiced. Dr. Widmer determined, inasmuch as heat from the evaporators was available at the plant, to make use of that heat as a sterilizing agent applied to the gluten, water; and he further made use of the starch wash water as a vehicle for carrying fresh sulphurous acid in the separating system. The steam from the evaporators was capable of heating the gluten water to high temperature, and if use were to be made of the heat from the evaporators, it was desirable to make such use before the gluten water was distributed to the separating system.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 668, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penick-ford-ltd-v-corn-products-refining-co-ilnd-1931.