Permutit Co. v. Village of Poynette

61 F. Supp. 305
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedJune 28, 1945
DocketNo. 333
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 F. Supp. 305 (Permutit Co. v. Village of Poynette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Permutit Co. v. Village of Poynette, 61 F. Supp. 305 (W.D. Wis. 1945).

Opinion

STONE, District Judge.

Plaintiff, a Delaware corporation, with its main office in New York City, New York, brought this action against the defendant, Village of Poynette, Wisconsin, alleging infringement of the claims of the four patents in suit: No. 1,954,405 of Dot-terweich; No. 1,903,957 of Clark; No. 1,931,968 of Sweeney & Qark; and No. 2,076,321 of Pick. The defendant contends that the claims in suit are invalid and bases that defense on prior art, non-compliance with R.S. § 4888, 35 U.S.C.A. § 33, and that some of the claims are mere functions. It also sets up a defense of non-infringement of said claims.

The Automatic Pump and Softener Corporation of Rockford, Illinois, sold to defendant and installed for it the municipal water softener here charged to infringe the patents in suit, and assumed the defense herein on behalf of the defendant, and is obligated by contract to save defendant harmless against all claims of infringement.

In October 1932 plaintiff’s predecessor, General Water Treatment Corporation, purchased the application for the Dotter-weich patent, with a number of other relatively unimportant Dotterweich patents, for $325,000. Plaintiff and its predecessor have sold more than eight thousand water softeners made under some of the claims of the Dotterweich patent in suit, although no structure in the form defined in the claims in suit or shown in the drawings of the Dotterweich patent was ever built or sold.

The patents in suit relate to the control mechanism for zeolite water softeners in which hardness is removed from water to soften it, and thus make it useful for household, municipal and industrial purposes. In such softeners, the hard water is passed through a granular insoluble bed, called “zeolite”, to remove the hardness elements, calcium and magnesium. After a period of use, the zeolite bed will no longer remove the hardness elements, and must be regenerated to restore the bed to its hardness-removing condition. This regenerating process consists of three steps:

(1) Backwashing; that is, flowing water in reverse direction through the zeolite bed to agitate it and to remove accumulated dirt;

(2) Brining; that is, flowing a brine solution through the zeolite to eliminate therefrom the hardness elements, calcium and magnesium, which have been taken up by the zeolite, and restore it substantially to its original condition;

(3) Rinsing; that is, flowing water through the bed of zeolite to remove excess and spent brine from it. After the regeneration the softener is again ready to perform its function of removing the hardness from the water and to deliver softened water to service.

Prior to January 1924, the date the application for the Dotterweich patent was [307]*307filed, most water softeners in use were operated by the manual manipulation of the control valves to direct the flow of water during the regenerating process of backwashing, brining, rinsing and return to softening.

Plaintiff contends that the Dotterweich patent in suit is directed to eliminating the manual operation of the softener, and to making its operation automatic; that it shows a system of valve control which actuates the operating valves in the system through its various cycles in the softening process; that the master control mechanism is operated by an electric motor, through the making and breaking of electric circuits, and when initiated by any means, whether by hand, by time clock, or by the condition of the water, the complete cycle of regenerating is carried out automatically.

Plaintiff contends that the Qark patent in suit discloses a softener in which the time for initiating regeneration is determined by detecting hardness in the treated water flowing to service and causing, by electrical means, the initiation of regeneration of the zeolite bed, in response to a certain degree of hardness in the treated water, the hardness of the water being determined by an automatic soap test, the electrical connections being so arranged that when the treated water fails to give a good soap test, regeneration is initiated, either automatically, by a time clock, or by a hand switch; that no one prior to Qark had utilized in a softener the principle of the old manual soap test to put the softener in condition for initiating by electrical means the regeneration process. (In the manual soap test used to detect hardness, the attendant puts a sample of the treated water in a bottle, adds a few drops of soap solution and shakes the bottle. If a lather forms, the water is soft.)

Plaintiff asserts that the Sweeney & Qark patent in suit relates to ,the regenerating cycle in a zeolite softener, and utilizes the principle of the soap test, disclosed in the Qark patent, combined with the action of a photoelectric cell responsive to the amount of light passing through the soap test unit to which treated water flowing from the softener is admitted. When the water from the softener is no longer’ effectively softened, the reaction of such water with the soap produces a cloudy precipitate in the soap test unit, which cuts down the amount of light passing through the unit to such an extent that an electrical switch is closed, thus conditioning the system for starting the regenerating cycle. Plaintiff alleges that Sweeney and Clark discovered that the opacity or cloudiness developed in water upon the addition of soap solution, if there is hardness present, may be utilized to cut down the illumination of a lamp shining through such cloudy water on a photoelectric cell sufficiently to effect a control over a valve operating motor for controlling the regenerating cycles of a water softener.

Plaintiff also contends that the Pick patent in suit does not pertain specifically to water softeners, but relates to “plural valve actuation and control” and is applicable to fluid flows of various kinds; that it discloses a valve system in which the valves for operating a zeolite water softener are remotely controlled and actuated hydraulically by means of a single multiport pilot valve. In the first position of the pilot valve, the softener valves are actuated for normal service of the softener. In other positions of the pilot valve, the softener valves are operated for reconditioning of the softener. The valves are operated by fluid pressure and are remotely controlled by the rotary multiport valve which, through its intermittent rotation, controls the several fluid valves through the steps of the regenerating process.

It appears from the evidence that on September 16, 1940, shortly after defendant contracted with the Automatic Pump and Softener Corporation for the installation of the water softener in question, plaintiff notified defendant of its alleged infringement of the patents in suit, and defendant sent a copy of such notice to the Automatic Pump and Softener Corporation; that the installation of the defendant’s softener was completed in January, 1941, with a manual initiation of the regenerating cycle. Some changes were made in the equipment after the original installation, but no changes were made in the manual initiation of the regenerating cycle. It has been in operation since its installation.

The Poynette softener consists of a zeolite softener tank, with a system of hydraulic and electrical controls over a motor drive used to operate the softener automatically through the successive steps of the regenerating cycle after the softener is once set in motion. It is automatic in every step except that to regenerate [308]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Application of Charles D. Prater and James Wei
415 F.2d 1393 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1969)
Permutit Co. v. Village of Poynette, Wisconsin
158 F.2d 799 (Seventh Circuit, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 F. Supp. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/permutit-co-v-village-of-poynette-wiwd-1945.