Richardson Co. v. Hood Rubber Co.

16 F.2d 785, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1624
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 14, 1926
DocketNo. 2519
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 785 (Richardson Co. v. Hood Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson Co. v. Hood Rubber Co., 16 F.2d 785, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1624 (D. Mass. 1926).

Opinion

LOWELL, District Judge.

This was a bill in equity to restrain .the infringement of letters patent No. 1,156,122, granted October 12, 1915, to James C. Woodley, on an application which was filed in February, 1915, as a substitute for the original application of October 20, 1913. The patent is now owned jointly by the two plaintiffs.

The plaintiffs complain of the manufacture by the defendant of boxes for storage batteries to be used with automobiles. These boxes were first put on the market in 1923, the defendant and the plaintiff corporation each having devised a successful box at about the same time. When storage batteries were first used for automobiles, the boxes which held them were merely containers for the separate cells of the battery, each in its own box. Storage battery containers, as they were then called, were usually made of wood. Subsequently boxes were devised which held the separate cells of the battery in one container, without a box for each separate cell. The principal requisite of such a box is that the material of which it is composed shall not be subject to injury by the sulphuric acid of the battery cells. It must also be firm enough to stand sudden shocks and to retain its solidity at a temperature as high as 125° Fahrenheit. Rubber was used with success, but was found to be very expensive. After many experiments, a bituminous compound was devised, which consists of asphalt, asbestos, and a kind of cotton waste known as “cotton linters.” The battery boxes are made in a mold, while the composition is in a plastic state. This compound, when molded into boxes, becomes hard. It was found to have the requisite firmness, to be acid resistant, and to remain solid at 125° Fahrenheit. The infringement complained of is the manufacture by the defendant of boxes like this.

The patent in suit is for a “fibrous composition and process of manufacture.” It relates especially to the manufacture of roofing material. There are 24 claims, the first 16 of which are for the process, and the last 8 for the product. The claims in suit are numbered 3,11,12,13,15, 17,18,19, 20, and 22. Those relating to the product were not given much attention at the trial; the plaintiffs’ attack being directed especially to the infringement of the first five of those above enumerated, which cover the process of manufacture. These five claims read as follows:

, “3. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass, which consists in disintegrating a gummy mixture comprising a fibrous mass in intimate adhering contact with a gummy asphalt without destroying the fibrous condition of said mass, so as to produce a homogeneous fibrous gummy product, substantially as described.”
“21. The process of producing a sub[786]*786stantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass, which consists in bringing together fibrous material and a binder of gummy material in such proportions that the fibrous material comprises not more than 50 per cent, by weight of the total and the mixture is of a semisolid gummy consistency, and mechanically disintegrating the fibrous material while in intimate adhering contact with the binder, to produce a substantially homogeneous composition of substantially discrete interlaced fibers cemented together by the binder.
“12. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass, which consists in mixing fibrous material with a bituminous binder, consisting of asphalt in such proportion that the fibrous material comprises not more than 50 per cent, by weight of the total, and the mixture is of a semisolid gummy consistency, and then disintegrating the fibrous material while in intimate adhering contact with the binder to 'produce a substantially homogeneous fibrous composition of substantially discrete interlaced fibers cemented together by the binder.
“13. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass, which consists in mixing fibrous material with a closely adherent bituminous binder having greater extensibility than said fibrous material, and then extending said binder sufficiently to disintegrate the fibrous material.”
“15. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass, which consists in mixing fibrous material with a closely adherent bituminous binder having greater extensibility than said fibrous material, and repeatedly extending said binder to cause the fibers to be coated with the binder and to be distributed and interlaced throughout the binder.”

It was not denied by the defendant that a successful roofing material could be made under the patent, though its manufacture proved too expensive to be commercially profitable. It is not contended that the patent is absolutely void, and the first question to be decided in this case is as to its scope. If it should be narrowly interpreted, the defenses set up at the trial, of anticipation and prior public use, need not further be considered.

It may be remarked in passing that the specification is an example of a custom too prevalent in the framing of letters patent— of unnecessarily multiplying the claims. Sixteen of-'them relate to the process of manufacture. This number might well have been reduced to three. (Claims 1, 2, 4-10, and 16 refer to superficial coating of the fibrous material; 3, 11, and 12 deal especially with mixing; 13,. 14, and 15 call attention to the extensibility of the bituminous binder.)

The plaintiffs’ contention is thus stated in their brief:

“The manufacture from bituminous compounds of articles of commerce (ro'ofing materials, floor coverings, hard electrical insulating parts, such as terminal plates, socket plugs, etc., battery jars, and the like) was a highly developed one in 1915. The workers in that art understood how to select the ingredients for admixture with the bituminous binder for these different uses. Woodley’s addition to the art was a new method of distributing the fibrous constituent in the bituminous binder. It is directly applicable to the mixing of all the known mixtures of the prior art, with or without fillers, provided those mixtures contain a bituminous binder and a fibrous substance to be dispersed within that binder.
“To give a homely illustration, the situation was precisely the same as though some one should now invent or discover a new process for dispersing yeast in dough. Having been told how to make that new dispersion in a dough batch for white bread, for example, the cook would at once know how to make it in whole wheat bread or raisin bread, etc.”

In my opinion, this contention is not supported by a proper interpretation of the specification. The only fibrous composition whose manufacture is described is that of a roofing material. It is true that the specification contains the usual saving clause:

“I have described my product with particular reference to making roofing sheets in rolls, but it may be produced in the form of shingles, flat sheets, tiles, etc. Also, on account of the superior strength, insulating and wearing properties of my composition, I may employ it advantageously in other arts, as, for example, in making paving blocks, floor tiles, floor coverings, storage battery containers, pipes or conduits, electric insulating, etc. I may also, if desired, incorporate with my material coloring matter, or mineral or other filler.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 785, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-co-v-hood-rubber-co-mad-1926.