Sprout, Waldron & Co. v. Bauer Bros. Co.

26 F. Supp. 162, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 86, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1386
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 4, 1938
Docket365
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 162 (Sprout, Waldron & Co. v. Bauer Bros. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sprout, Waldron & Co. v. Bauer Bros. Co., 26 F. Supp. 162, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 86, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1386 (S.D. Ohio 1938).

Opinion

NEVIN, District Judge.

This is a patent suit brought in the usual form. Plaintiff filed its bill of complaint in this court on September 24, 1934, alleging infringement by defendant of Manson patent No. 1,399,976, issued December 13, 1921. Plaintiff is the owner of the Manson patent having acquired title thereto by assignment. It prays for an injunction and an accounting.

In its answer, filed November 17, 1934, defendant denies infringement and alleges invalidity of the patent. It denies that the alleged inventions purported to be described in the letters patent are of any value or utility and denies that plaintiff has manufactured or sold any apparatus adapted for use in carrying out any process alleged to be covered by said letters patent. It denies that it has derived or will derive and receive any gains or profits from any alleged infringement, and alleges that all of the substantial and material parts of the alleged inventions of the letters patent were fully described and shown in certain letters patent set forth in the answer for more than two years prior to the application for the letters patent in suit.

Defendant further avers that in the prosecution of his application for the patent sued on Manson gave constructions to the claims of the patent that prevent plaintiff from applying the same to any structure made, used or sold by the defendant herein; that the claims of the patent are vague and that the process and apparatus described are inoperative to perform any useful function, and that they “are, therefore, void”.

The Manson Patent.

Manson patent No. 1,399,976 in suit is for “Method of Manufacturing Fiber Products”. It is for a process or method of manufacturing a fiber product such as wood pulp. The process generally is of such character as to produce a wood pulp suitable particularly for the manufacture of fiber-board or “wall-board”. Munson, the patentee, is a resident of Canada. He claims, in his patent, to have invented certain new and useful improvements in methods of manufacturing fiber products, stating, inter alia, that “This invention relates to improvements in methods of manufacturing fiber products, and it consists of a method of making uncooked or chemically untreated, loose, relatively long fibers from raw wood, together with a certain proportion of short fibers, such fibers being adapted to felt or mat together under pressure to form pulp articles or sheets. The process is designed to make use of what is now generally considered a waste material, namely, saw mill waste comprising slabs, edgings, short butting blocks, slats, burner refuse, sawdust, bark and shavings * * * “In carrying out the process the saw mill waste is first chipped; it is then fed with water between the grinding surfaces of spaced grinding elements set a short distance apart and having relative movement to each other, being passed between such surfaces for a sufficient length of time to reduce it to a flexible, feltable fibrous material directly adaptable for the manufacture of pulp board * * * “In practising the process I first comminute the raw wood by the use of an ordinary chipper to which it is fed by gravity and which produces chips of a size from five-eighths to three-quarters of an inch with the grain, and one-eighth to one-quarter of an inch across the grain. The wood is preferably in the form of saw mill waste including slabs, edgings, short butting blocks, slats, burner refuse, sawdust, bark and shavings. No water is added to the wood, as it ordinarily will be found to contain from forty-five to sixty per cent, of water, but this may be as low as twenty-five per cent, if the material has been standing some time. The raw wood so comminuted is then passed between tapering grinding surfaces having but a narrow clearance between them, the clearance however being sufficiently wide to accommodate a plurality of fibers side by side. * * * From which it results that relatively long fiber bundles are produced, many of the fibers coming through in bundles with their ends free to interlock with other fibers when pressed. The grinding surfaces between which the comminuted wood is passed are not, in the present invention really the *164 comminuting means, their roughened surfaces being used more for the purposes of friction, to cause positive movement of the fibers. More reliance is placed on the mutual rubbing action of the wood particles on each other for producing the lateral separation of the fibrous elements from each other. * * * ”

“In a way, my operation is more what may be termed a rolling separation of the fibers than a true grinding action. The purpose of -adding the water to the mixture before passing into the grinder is to keep down the temperature and at the same time to make the mass fluid enough so that it will feed through the grinders. The wood is not steamed, soaked in water, treated with chemicals or otherwise chemically prepared in any way prior to my fiber making operation, it is raw wood which I use', wood which has not been changed otherwise than by the necessary comminution.”

There was a great deal of argument throughout the case and in the briefs of counsel as to • just what is meant in the patent .by the term “raw” wood. This is dwelt on and emphasized because of the fact that Manson states in his patent (as above set forth), page 1, beginning on line 70, “No water is added to the wood, as it ordinarily will be found to contain from forty-five to sixty per cent, of water, but this may be as low as twenty-five per cent, if the material has been standing some time”. Whereas, on p. 2, beginning on line 13, he says “The wood is not steamed, soaked in water, treated with chemicals or otherwise chemically prepared in any way prior to my fiber making operation, it is raw wood which I use, wood which has not been changed otherwise than by the necessary comminution”.

From a reading of the whole text it seems apparent, however, that the Manson process was designed (as stated in the patent) to make use of what is generally considered as waste material from the saw mill which (as also stated in the patent) “ordinarily will be found to contain from forty-five to sixty per cent, of water”— which' is water-soaked wood (see testimony of defendant’s witness engineer Marldey, Rec. p. 349) — and that this is the “raw” wood referred to on page 2 in line 16 of the patent and in the claims, such wood being “raw” wood as distinguished from wood that is “steamed, soaked in water, treated with chemicals or otherwise chemically prepared” prior to the fiber making operation. In other words, no additional operation by way of steaming or soaking in water or treating chemically is necessary under the process of the Manson patent. The waste material is taken as it is found to be with whatever water it contains which may be from forty-five to sixty per cent, or “as low as twenty-five per cent, if the material has been standing for some time.”

It is unnecessary, however, to further discuss the contentions of the respective parties in this regard for the reason that Manson’s invention resides not in the material operated upon but in the “manner” of operation.

Validity.

The claims in suit are claims 1, 4 and 5, which relate to the underlying process of manufacturing wood pulp and claims 2 and 6 which relate to the extension of this , process to the added steps for manufacturing wall board from this pulp.

Claims 1, 2 and 4, respectively, read as follows:

“1.

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Related

Mueller v. Campbell
68 F. Supp. 475 (S.D. Ohio, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 162, 41 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 86, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sprout-waldron-co-v-bauer-bros-co-ohsd-1938.