Rembert Roller Compress Co. v. American Cotton Co.

129 F. 355, 64 C.C.A. 25, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4058
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 29, 1904
DocketNo. 1,289
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 F. 355 (Rembert Roller Compress Co. v. American Cotton Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rembert Roller Compress Co. v. American Cotton Co., 129 F. 355, 64 C.C.A. 25, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4058 (5th Cir. 1904).

Opinion

After stating the case' as above, the opinion of the court was delivered by

NEWMAN, District Judge.

The first inquiry in this case is: Did Henry Rembert make a patentable discovery and one having utility ? The claim is that he discovered [359]*359that the resiliency, or tendency in cotton to expand, could, by compression to a point just short of injuring the fiber, be arrested or suspended for a sufficient length of time for it to be folded or lapped into a bale, so that the only thing left to be done would be by slight compression to expel the air from between the laps or layers, and apply the fastenings, making in this way a bale of sufficient density to be a standard commercial bale for shipment to distant points by rail or water. The density required by the various cotton exchanges is not less than 22^ pounds per cubic foot. The additional advantage claimed is that this result is obtained by one continuous operation at the point of ginning. The practicable method of utilizing this alleged discovery was by passing the cotton between two rollers, so as to form a bat to be lapped into a bale. Unless it is true that cotton will remain in this compressed condition after passing between the rollers a sufficient length of time to carry' out the remainder of the process — that is, to lap into a bale, exclude the air, and tie- — there is no merit in the complainant’s claim.

The file wrapper proof in this case shows that Rembert’s original specifications and claims were unsatisfactory, notwithstanding amendments thereto, and were rejected by the Patent Office. The application was again amended and renewed, and was finally granted with the claims which have been set out above. The amendment to Rembert’s specifications, so far as important, which finally caused the granting of the letters patent, was as follows:

“A marked distinction between my method of producing a bale of compressed cotton and those which preceded it lies in the fact that I effect the compression progressively; that is to say,'by compressing a small portion or unit of the mass at a time, and thereafter accumulating these compressed units, instead of effecting the compression of the entire mass at one operation, as heretofore practiced. The expressions ‘compression’ and ‘compressed cotton,’ as used in the present specification and claims, refer to that extreme compression, such as is effected by the so-called ‘compresses’ of the present day, and which, falling just short of the crushing of the individual fibers, so solidifies or condenses the mass that the elastic or expansive tendency is for the time being suspended.”

There was also an amendment, in connection with the foregoing, in reference to the apparatus accompanying the application, as follows:

“While I have illustrated and described herein that form of apparatus which I consider best adapted for carrying out my process under certain conditions, it is to be distinctly understood that this apparatus is not the essence of the present invention, and that the method herein claimed may, be carried into effect by various other mechanisms, which will readily suggest themselves to the skilled mechanic as equivalents of the one herein shown and described.”

In the remarks accompanying the applicant’s last amendment was the following:

“It is now well recognized in the art that by compressing cotton to a point just short of crushing the fiber is'to cause it to cohere for a short space of time, so that, although relieved of pressure, it will for the time being retain its solidified and condensed condition. Applicant’s results are attained by taking advantage of this fact”

So that we thus reach Rembert’s precise discovery, as shown by this file wrapper proof; that is, the utilization, as he says, of a law of na[360]*360ture, the suspension of the elasticity or tendency in cotton to expand for a brief interval after being relieved from heavy pressure.

The rejection of Rembert’s original claim by the Patent Office was on several grounds. One of those was Clemens’ patent, No. 7,612, September 3, 1850. The Clemens patent, which caused the first rejection of Rembert’s application, will be gathered from a part of the specifications, as follows:

“Cotton and other substances above enumerated have always heretofore been packed and pressed by pressure applied by a platen or follower directly to the whole mass. This of necessity requires great power, and, if the substance or substances be matted and in uneven lumps, the whole mass cannot be well condensed. By my invention I am enabled to condense the mass into a much smaller compass, and by much less power than heretofore, while at the same time the substance or substances can be unpacked to more advantage for the purpose of manufacture, particularly when applied to cotton. The first part of my invention consists in packing the substances above enumerated and all others of a like character in a series of successive layers or strata, by the action of a roller or rollers, or cylinders, or curved or beveled faces on the surface thereof, the pressure being in succession applied to one or more of such layers or strata, whereby the substance or substances to be pressed and packed are more evenly distributed, and therefore in a condition to be Condensed into a more compact mass and with less power, for the reason that the power is divided and applied by the surface of the roller or rollers or cylinders, or their equivalents, to a small portion of the surface of each layer or layers, instead of to the whole mass at once. The second part of my invention, which relates to the means for applying the first part of my invention, consists in combining with rollers or cylinders, or their equivalents for laying and compressing in successive layers or strata, a bed which shall recede from the surface of the rollers or cylinders as the layers or strata accumulate, and which either traversed back and forth under them, or over which they traverse from end to end to distribute the layers or strata. The third part of my invention consists in combining with a press for packing and pressing substances in successive layers or strata, by means of rollers or cylinders, or their equivalents, a lapping machine for laying or forming the fibrous substance or substances to be packed into a lap or laps, preparatory to the operation of laying and pressing. The fourth part of my invention consists in combining with each of the laying and compressing rollers, or their equivalents, a series of rollers, or their equivalents, for retaining the layers in their compressed state as the bed traverses under them.”

Clemens’ administrator, Chetlain, obtained a patent in 1876 (No. 187,-814) for an improvement in cotton presses. A brief statement from the specifications will show what his patent embraced:

“Cotton, which in a loose state is very bulky, should be compressed in small quantities in order to condense it as much as possible, and to obtain the maximum density each increment to the volume of the cotton should be compressed at the time it is added to the bale. This improved cotton press packs the cotton in this manner, and at the same time in such a way that it can afterward be used from the bale to the best advantage. The cotton, as it comes from the gin, is formed into a continuous sheet, which is pressed and laid under pressure in folds doubled one upon the other. The bale is thus formed of continuous parallel layers of cotton greatly condensed.”

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Bluebook (online)
129 F. 355, 64 C.C.A. 25, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rembert-roller-compress-co-v-american-cotton-co-ca5-1904.