Ripple Sole Corp. v. American Biltrite Rubber Co.

192 F. Supp. 551, 129 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5996
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 30, 1961
DocketCiv. A. No. 58-405-F
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 192 F. Supp. 551 (Ripple Sole Corp. v. American Biltrite 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
Ripple Sole Corp. v. American Biltrite Rubber Co., 192 F. Supp. 551, 129 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5996 (D. Mass. 1961).

Opinion

FRANCIS J. W. FORD, District Judge.

This is an action for infringement of United States Patent No. 2,710,461, issued June 14, 1955, on the application of Nathan Hack, filed July 14, 1952, for resilient shoe soles. Plaintiff Ripple Sole Corporation is now owner of the patent. Defendant denies infringement and the validity of the patent.

The Hack sole is described in the three claims, all alleged to be infringed, as follows :

“1. A resilient shoe sole formed with a series of spaced parallel resilient projections extending transversely of said shoe sole and at right angles to the length thereof, said projections being inclined rearwardly, whereby weight thereon causes a straight forward movement of the sole as said projections yield under weight.
“2. A shoe sole having formed on its under side a series of downwardly and rearwardly inclined resilient projecting members extending transversely of said sole at right angles to its length, said members having tapering and rounded ends, whereby weight on the sole causes a downward and forward movement thereof.
“3. A shoe sole formed of resilient material with a series of rearwardly inclined projecting members extending transversely of said sole and inclined in parallel relationship from the top toward the rear, the lower ends of said members being rounded, and the sides of the members diverging upwardly to a rounded juncture with the body of said sole.”

The development of the sole was an outgrowth of Hack’s association with a research project seeking methods of improving paratrooper’s boots for the United States Army so as to cushion the shock of landing. Among other methods tried was one of fastening half round loops of resilient material to the soles of the boots. These loops were deformed when used in jumping tests and bent rearwardly. Hacks says that the gliding sensation experienced in walking in boots with the rearwardly bending loops gave him the idea of making a sole with rearwardly sloped resilient projections.

A commercial sole is manufactured by Beebe Rubber Company under license from plaintiff. It is a sole molded of rubber having a series of downwardly and rearwardly inclined projections or undulations placed at right angles to the length of the shoe. These projections are tapered to a rounded off edge which makes contact with the ground. These projections are spaced so that these rounded edges are about three quarters of an inch apart. The actual commercial product differs slightly from the construction shown in Fig. 1 of the patent in that it has a blank space of about an inch at the toe where the patent drawing shows a rib, and it has a heel pad which is longer than the other projections.

The Biltrite sole alleged to infringe has a series of ribs disposed in a chevron arrangement as viewed from the bottom of the sole, each rib coming to a sharp point at the V pointing toward the toe of the shoe. The cross section of each rib has a rear face nearly vertical, while the front face slopes downward and rearward, with the two faces meeting in a sharp rather than a rounded edge.

Plaintiff contends that the Hack sole embodies a novel mode of operation producing new and useful results. The theory of the operation of the sole is as follows. In normal walking the foot in each step is lifted from the floor or ground, moves forward, and then again meets the floor, touching first with the [553]*553heel, and then progressively with the rest of the sole. As each of the ribs in turn comes into contact with the floor, the rounded edge at the bottom remains fixed. Due to the resilience of the material and the rearward, downward slope of the rib, the rib pivots forward around the edge as a fulcrum, thus allowing the shoe and the foot to continue their forward motion. This action is described in the patent as a forward propulsion. The ribs are so spaced that one does not interfere with the other and the propulsive action is produced by each rib in turn as it touches the floor and the weight of the body is brought to bear on it.

Plaintiff contends that the Hack sole has the advantage over previous soles of providing a soft cushioning engagement with the floor, and a gradually increasing resistance to the forward momentum of the foot, thus avoiding the shock and fatigue caused by an abrupt checking of the forward movement of the foot. It also provides a controlled forward direction of the cushioning movement to minimize the lateral instability inherent in resilient soles. Moreover, it tends to increase the length of the step or stride without increasing the effort of walking. At times plaintiff has claimed that the length of the stride would be increased as much as six to eight inches.

Plaintiff, to demonstrate and prove the mode of operation and advantages of its sole, relied on certain demonstrations at the trial and on the testimony of one Morehouse, a collaborator of Hack in the development of the sole and owner of a substantial interest in the patent, as to the results of tests conducted by him at the laboratories of the University of Southern California in Los Angeles where he is a member of the faculty.

The chief demonstration at the trial was the so-called “rocking test.” In this a subject wearing shoes with Hack soles stood on a platform with his heels at a marked line, and then while standing in place shifted the weight of his body so as to rock forward on his toes and then back on his heels. With each rocking motion he moved forward a measurable fraction of an inch from the starting line. A test made with shoes with ordinary soles and heels showed practically no forward movement. A test with shoes having soles with transverse ribs inclined in a forward direction rather than in the rearward direction of the Hack soles showed a movement backward.

This test, of course, shows that, as might have been expected, the resilience of the sole material can be utilized to produce a forward propulsion. But this test shows nothing about how this forward propulsion operates, if at all, in actual walking to increase the length of one’s stride. As Morehouse testified, the forward momentum of the body, absent in these tests, is the chief factor determining length of stride. Moreover, acual walking demonstrations by defendant’s expert showed that a shoe equipped with a resilient heel pad and a normal sole can add about % of an inch to each stride.

Morehouse performed various laboratory experiments designed to measure the increase in stride produced by Hack soles. His earlier tests, made by measuring the distance between foot marks made on paper by a subject walking on it wearing shoes with different types of soles, showed that an ordinary flat sole gave a longer stride than any of the others tested, including the Hack sole. The test relied upon by plaintiff was one in which the subject walked on a treadmill moving at a constant speed. The motion of his right foot was photographed against a yardstick fixed in a stable position in front of the treadmill using a high speed camera operating at 180 frames a second. A small black patch had been placed on the subject’s ankle bone. The distance, measured along the yardstick between the extreme forward and rearward positions of the dot as shown in the series of photographs was taken as the length of the stride. On this basis, it was found that the average stride with the Hack sole was .89 inches longer than the average stride in a normal shoe with a flat sole and a rubber heel.

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Bluebook (online)
192 F. Supp. 551, 129 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 181, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5996, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ripple-sole-corp-v-american-biltrite-rubber-co-mad-1961.