Procter & Gamble Co. v. Berlin Mills Co.

256 F. 23, 167 C.C.A. 295, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1175
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1918
DocketNo. 10
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 256 F. 23 (Procter & Gamble Co. v. Berlin Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Procter & Gamble Co. v. Berlin Mills Co., 256 F. 23, 167 C.C.A. 295, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1175 (2d Cir. 1918).

Opinions

HOUGH, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). 1. The patent declares that—

“This invention is a food product consisting of a vegetable oil, preferably cotton seed oil, partially hydrogenized and hardened to a homogeneous white or yellowish seini-solid, closely simulating lard.”

This is a description of a visible, tangible thing which Eor some years has been manufactured and sold by plaintiff, as to which there is no evidence that anybody else ever made it before, or that if this product is entitled to patent protection there is any closely related prior art.

Invention is denied, first, on the ground once taken by an examiner in the office, namely, that “if the problem of simulating lard from cotton seed oil were presented to an oil chemist, an incomplete hydrogenation of the cotton seed oil would at once suggest itself to him as a solution of the problem”; that is, (a) the matter is said to be so obvious as not to rise to the dignity of invention.

Another objection is that hydrogenation of vegetable oils was not new, and the discovery long prior to this application of catalysts not belonging to the “royal” group of metals had paved the way to effective and comparatively inexpensive hydrogenation. Patent to Nor-mano, British, No. 1,515 of 1903. Prior to Burchenal’s effective date it is admitted that the hydrogenic saturation of oil by catalytic means had been practiced at least in well-known laboratories, and a hard fat produced, solid at ordinary temperatures and showing on analysis a very large percentage of stearic or palmitic acid. It is obvious that if one starts with (e. g.) cotton seed oil, which is liquid at ordinary temperatures, because it has too little solid fat in it, and by chemical means so changes the molecular composition or arrangement of the substance as to increase the ratio of solid fat (i. e., unites enough hydrogen with linolin and olein to produce stearin), and thus produces the hard fat commonly known as stearin, there must have been a time during the development of the process when the union of hydrogen had only progressed far enough to convert the liquid into a semi-solid.

Therefore it is said (b) that no man is entitled to a patent upon the thing or product which has always been produced when the process of making another thing or product was (say) half done.

The third objection to invention is substantially this: The merit or value of what Burchenal claims, and what this plaintiff makes and sells, is that it looks like lard, acts like lard, and can be used for the. purposes of lard without offending the conservatism of chefs, housewives, and maidservants. But before Burchenal many imitalion lards were made by mechanically mixing hard animal fats and cotton seed oil in varying proportions, and some of líjese mixtures show on analysis substantially the same chemical characteristics as are shown by BurchcnaPs chemically' produced “homogeneous semi-solid.” Therefore, it is said that to make the same thing as had been made by earlier lard imitators, but in a different way, cannot warrant a patent upon the resulting thing or product, whatever may be trite in respect of the process by which that product is reached. This is as much as to say (c) that the Burchenal article when completed and [26]*26ready for use must be old, because other men had earlier arrived at the same chemical result by other paths.

[1] Objection (a) raises the question of fact encountered in a large proportion of patent causes, and concerning which discussion is of small value if the record discloses no one who ever tried to do the same thing in the same way. When novelty in that sense appears the question really is one of measuring foresight by hindsight. The problem seems easy now, but, when the object reached was desirable, useful, and apt for commercial success, the bald fact that nobody ever did it before is persuasive, though not conclusive, evidence of some invention. Burchenal’s imitation lard has these attributes, and we consider it a sufficient answer, to the statement that any oil chemist could have done the thing, to note that no oil chemist did do it during the more than score of years prior to Burchenal’s application, when cotton seed oil (especially) as an abundant American product was endeavoring to supplant lard in the American market.

The next objection to invention (b) really denies the possibility of invention ever residing in noting or discovering a use for something which if not a by-product, may be termed a half-product or unfinished product of an existing method of procedure. Without resorting to the extreme doctrine of Potts v. Creager, 155 U. S. 597, 15 Sup. Ct. 194, 39 L. Ed. 275, it seems to us that the question presented by this record depends upon whether the.thing produced by partial hydrogenation is a different thing from that which existed before hydrogenation began and that which would exist when it ended. The change introduced by catalytic introduction of hydrogen is chemical; the analysis of the cotton seed oil at divers stages of the process of manufacture differs. To be sure, the difference is only in the union of additional atoms of hydrogen with the unsaturated fats (linolin and olein); but if this molecular and chemical change induces a resulting change in appearance, in utility, and in texture, it may well be called, when lardlike, a thing different from what it was as oil, and equally different from what it would be at the point of saturation.

The patent law does not speak in terms of science, though scientific evidence is necessary for the application of its rules. The chemical composition of steam, water, and ice is the same, but they are different things; and in the same common-sense way oil, lard, and stearin are different things, although (with some chemical latitude) the oil may be said ultimately to become stearin, and to pass through the lard stage on the way.

For substantially the same reasons we think there is nothing in the last (c) objection to invention. It may be assumed as true that by the mixture of cotton seed oil and animal stearin a substance can be produced which for practical purposes is the same thing as Burchenal’s chemically changed cotton seed oil; but one is a mixture and the other is not, and assuming the difference to be unimportant from the standpoint of either chemist or cook, it is a vital difference from that of the law.

We are therefore of opinion that there was invention in Burchenal’s disclosure. Product patents may be justly subjected to critical scru[27]*27tiny, but these claims are far within the border line adverted to in Fonseca v. Suarez, 232 Fed. 155, 146 C. C. A. 347; and just as the conversion of an abandoned machine into an operative and successful one by the introduction of new, but simple, features constitutes invention (United Shirt Co. v. Beattie, 149 Fed. 736, 79 C. C. A. 442), so we think that seizing upon thing A, which had been thing B, and was to become thing C, and utilizing the half-made, but different, product, amounted to an invention which is duly set forth in this application.

[2-5] 2. The finding below, that Burchenal was not the inventor of whatever invention is revealed, is really a declaration that one Kayzer did the inventing, and Burchenal for some inexplicable reason appropriated it. This is an affirmative defense, and must be sustained by a fair preponderance of credible evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
256 F. 23, 167 C.C.A. 295, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/procter-gamble-co-v-berlin-mills-co-ca2-1918.