Scientific Tablet Co. v. Ossege

31 F. Supp. 361, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3598
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedFebruary 26, 1940
DocketNo. 1600
StatusPublished

This text of 31 F. Supp. 361 (Scientific Tablet Co. v. Ossege) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scientific Tablet Co. v. Ossege, 31 F. Supp. 361, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3598 (N.D. Ohio 1940).

Opinion

KLOEB, District Judge.

Plaintiff claims infringement of United States Patent No. 1,887,073, involving a method of flavoring in canning, preserving and .bottling operations and asks an injunction, accounting of profits and damages and costs.

Defendant denies the validity of the patent and denies that plaintiff was the original, first or sole inventor of a method of flavoring in canning. »

Plaintiff claims that its assignor, Suppiger, has devised a new process for use in Jhe commercial canning industry and for use particularly in the commercial canning of tomatoes, whereby the method of salting the tomatoes is improved. It claims that about the year 1914 certain commercial canners of tomatoes began the practice of adding salt to each can for the purpose of flavoring and making the product more palatable; that theretofore commercial canners had not engaged in the practice of salting their product but had allowed this duty to be performed at a time and to suit the taste of each individual housewife; that following 1914 and up to about the year 1926 many canners salted their product through the use of bulk salt applied by a worker with a spoon to each can as it passed along the conveyor, and after the can had been ' filled with tomatoes; that some canners followed a method of salting by the use of brine, but that in either event, after the salt had been applied to the product in the can and the can had passed along the conveyor to the plunger for the level-ling off process, that some of the product was spilled from the top of the can which, contained the greatest salt content, and' as a result there was no uniformity of salting and, incidentally, the adjacent machinery would become corroded through contact with the salt brine.

The witness Sells testifies that he first came in contact with salting in the commercial canning of tomatoes in the year 1914 (rec. p. 56). The witness Scott testifies that he first came in contact with-salting in 1914 or 1915 (rec. p. 78), and that in scattered instances he came in contact with salting- in the canning industry until 1923 or 1924. The witness Rathforn testifies that he began salting in 1923 or 1924 (rec. p. 19). Plaintiff contends that-its assignor devised a new method of salting through the use of a salt tablet of predetermined weight and quantity in the year 1926; that thereafter and until the present-time there has been substantial commercial success in the marketing of salt tablets for commercial canning. The record substantiates this latter contention.

It appears that Suppiger, in the year 1927, filed his application, Serial Number 205,892, in the United States Patent Office’ for a patent on an apparatus for dispensing, flavoring materials and particularly designed at avoiding hand-dropping of salt-pellets in the commercial canning industry (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 6); that in the year 1926 he filed his application No. 145,-706 for a patent claiming improvement in' flavoring tablets, which application was finally rejected by the United States Patent Office (Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 5); that, in 1931-he filed his application No. 506,-079, on which the patent in suit, No. 1,-887,073, issued, and in the application, which was for “improvement in methods of flavoring in canning, preserving and bottling operations,” he stated that it was “a continuation in part of my prior application Serial No. 145,706, filed November 1, 1926, for flavoring tablets, and a continuation in part of my application Serial No. 205,892 filed July 15, 1927, for apparatuses for a method of dispensing; flavoring materials” (see page 21 of file wrapper, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 7). It ap~ [362]*362pears that in the prosecution of application No. 145,706 through the Patent Office, that the application was finally rejected by the primary examiner and also by the Board of Appeals of the Patent Office ; that the applicant then appealed to the Court of Customs and Patent Appeals which court affirmed the Patent Office in its final rejection of said application, Pat. App., 44 F.2d 426 (1930). The application was then abandoned and later application No. 506,-079 covering the patent in suit was filed. After frequent redrafting of the claims under this application, the patent was • issued covering a substituted claim (p. 25) and claims 28 and 29 (p. 26) which then became the claims numbered 1, 2 and 3 as found in the patent. The patent was issued after considerable difficulty was encountered, after the claims were amended to their present form, and, it appears, after an oral interview.

As beneficial results of this new process claimed under this patent, plaintiff contends that it produces uniform flavoring and effects a clean, accurate, economical and convenient method of salting commercially canned products and especially tomatoes.

The question here is whether plaintiff’s assignor has devised a new process that rises to the dignity of a useful art.

“An art in the sense of the patent law is synonymous with a process or a method when used to produce a useful result. An art may be either a force applied, a mode of application, or the specific, treatment of a specific object, and the art. must produce physical effects.” Walker on Patents, Deller's Edition, vol. 1, p. 38, italics added, citing Kirchberger v. American Acetylene Co., C.C.N.D.N.Y. 1903, 124 F. 764-,

“A patentable process is a method of treatment of certain materials to produce' a particular result or product.” Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co., 1928, 277 U.S. 245, 255, 48 S.Ct. 474, 475, 72 L.Ed. 868, 872. Cited in Walker on Patents, supra, p. 38.

“If the process,- when distinguished from the means of performing it, is new, useful, and intellectually. rises to the dignity of invention, it is patentable — if it falls within the meaning of the word .‘art’ as used in the statute.” Buffalo Forge Co. v. City of Buffalo, 2 Cir., 1918, 255 F. 83, 86, 87. Cited in Walker on Patents, supra, p. 50. The plaintiff relies here, as Suppiger relied considerably in the ■ presentation of his case before the United States Patent Office, on the case of United States Mitis Co. v. .Midvale Steel Co., C.C.E.D. Pa.1904, 135 F. 103.

That case involved the Wittenstrom patent, No. 333,373, for a process for making wrought iron and steel castings consisting 'of the addition of a small quantity of aluminum to the iron or steel after it had been fully melted and just as it was about to be poured into the mold, the effect being to render the casting more solid and free from cavities and without injury to its quality, the result permitting the production of castings of wrought iron or mild steel, “of which there were 'none at the time Wittenstrom brought forward his° invention.” 135 F. at page 105.

At page 106 of 135 F., I find this statement by the Court: “In thus making possible that which was not so before, there can be little question that the inventor rendered a material service to, and made an important advance upon, the' existing art.”

And at page 107 of 135 F.: “But the fact is that, whatever had been the case with steel, wrought-iron castings had __ not been made up to the time of the invention. And if Mr. Ostberg, at whose works in Sweden the experiments were made which brought about the discovery of the process, is to be believed, the metallurgical world was astonished at the result * * *.

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Related

Corning v. Burden
56 U.S. 252 (Supreme Court, 1854)
Holland Furniture Co. v. Perkins Glue Co.
277 U.S. 245 (Supreme Court, 1928)
In re Suppiger
44 F.2d 426 (Customs and Patent Appeals, 1930)
Barber-Coleman Co. v. A. G. Redmond Co.
94 F.2d 717 (Sixth Circuit, 1938)
Kirchberger v. American Acetylene Burner Co.
124 F. 764 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York, 1903)
Buffalo Forge Co. v. City of Buffalo
255 F. 83 (Second Circuit, 1918)
United States Mitis Co. v. Midvale Steel Co.
135 F. 103 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
31 F. Supp. 361, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 675, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scientific-tablet-co-v-ossege-ohnd-1940.