Steel Wheel Corp. v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co.

27 F.2d 427, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1331
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJune 14, 1928
DocketNo. 2008
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 427 (Steel Wheel Corp. v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steel Wheel Corp. v. B. F. Goodrich Rubber Co., 27 F.2d 427, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1331 (E.D. Mich. 1928).

Opinion

TUTTLE, District Judge.

This suit involves the Putnam patent, No. 1,537,879, for pneumatic-treaded vehicle wheel. The application for this patent was filed August 13, 1920. The patent was issued May 12, 1925.

Late in 1923 or early in 1924, the so-called “balloon” tire became generally adopted by the automobile industry, and practically all passenger automobiles now being manufactured are equipped with such tires. The plaintiff contends that the Putnam patent covers these “balloon” tires. An idea- of the scope contended for this patent by the plaintiff is found in the plaintiff’s bill of particulars in this ease, in which it is alleged that every one of the more than 50 different sizes and constructions of “balloon” tires, which the defendant was selling in April, [428]*4281927, at the time of the filing of the bill of complaint in this case, infringes claims 1 and 2 of the patent. These two claims are the only ones relied upon by the plaintiff, claim 3 having been withdrawn.

There is not the slightest .doubt in my mind as to the value of the “balloon” tire in the way of comfort, economy, and length of tire life. If we disregard the intermediate steps which have occurred and compare the wide, soft, easy-riding “balloon” tire of today, with the narrow, highly-inflated, hard-riding tire of yesterday — and by “yesterday” I mean a time far enough back to avoid all contentions and disputes, and all prior uses, prior publications, and prior patents in this record — we cannot fail to be impressed with the great practical importance of the advance that has been made. Had that advance been made in a single step, and as a result of a discovery disclosed in a patent, there could be little doubt of the presence of the inventive genius in that discovery, or of the validity of that patent.

However, the advance to the “balloon” tire has not been made in a single step, but step by step, as the industry has developed, and the Putnam patent here sued upon discloses no “discovery” whatever, but merely what was well known in the art, and ret peatedly published during more than a decade preceding Putnam’s application date.

The disclosure of the Putnam patent comes down to this: Increased comfort in riding can be obtained by the use of lower inflation pressures in the tires. Lower inflation pressures may be employed in tires for carrying a given load without shortening the life of the tires, if the cross-sectional diameter of the tires is increased and the side walls are so constructed as to permit the necessary flexion. If the use of lower inflation pressures is thus made possible, thinner side walls may be used, because less strength of the( side wall is required to hold air at low pressure than is required to hold air at high pressure; also, thinner side walls are less subject to destructive heat, as the result of flexing, than are thicker ones.

All of this was old in the art, and is disclosed in numerous of the prior publications and patents offered by the defendant. Any one who has ever driven an automobile knows that improved riding qualities are obtained by decreasing the inflation pressures in the tires. If this decease in inflation pressure is effected without increasing the width of the tire, it means that the fleering of the side walls of the tire will be increased, perhaps to a point where the life of the tire is materially reduced. On the other hand, if the width of the tire for a given load is materially increased, the inflation pressure may be materially reduced without, increasing the degree of flexing of the side wall of the tire, and therefore without shortening the tire life. This fact and the reasons underlying it have long been known. See, for example, the article entitled “Some Reasons for Large Tyres” at pages 894, 895, of the Automotor Journal of November 4, 1915.

In addition to setting forth these well-known principles, the Putnam patent suggests a degree of increase of tire width which is far beyond anything that has come into actual use up to the present time, and far beyond anything that is represented by the defendant’s alleged infringing tires.

One of the first to! make practical use of the advantages to be derived from relatively wide pneumatic tires or correspondingly reduced inflation pressures, was the Palmer Tyre, Limited, a British concern, whose product was known as the Palmer cord tyre. Beginning as early as 1998, the literature published by this company, and the trade journals in England and in America, described, in language which would be equally applicable to the present day “balloon” tire, the great improvement in riding qualities attained by the use of wide, soft, Palmer tires. Those tires were made for touring cars, according to. the literature and to the testimony which has been taken ip. this case, in sizes as large as 7 inches, which is substantially the same size as the so-called “balloon” tire now being used on our heaviest passenger cars. This Palmer literature is also full of references to the fact that the Palmer tire has thinner side walls than competing tires, and therefore is less subject to destructive heating as the result of the flexing of the tire walls.

I cannot discover one single thing in the Putnam patent that is not disclosed in these articles about the Palmer cord tyre. They certainly tell of the wide tire, the low air pressure, and the thiA side walls, and they emphasize the reason why thin side walls are desirable.

As against these Palmer publications, the plaintiff urges that ’the proofs show that the side walls of the Palmer tire, though relatively thin, were as a matter of fact, constructed in such a way that they did not stand up well under substantial flexing. The proofs are conflicting in this regard. But, irrespective of the aetual properties of the Palmer tire, the articles relating to that tire disclosed fully the kind of a. side wall that is [429]*429needed — just as fully as Putnam did in his patent — and came just as near telling the world how to build a tire with such a side wall as Putnam did. Indeed, Putnam tells us absolutely nothing about the actual construction of the tire. There is not even a suggestion in his patent as to the character of the fabric to be used, or as to the number of plies, or as to the amount or disposition of the rubber. No mention is made of breaker strips, or of flippers, or of chafing strips. Perhaps Putnam could safely leave matters of construction to the skill of the tire maker. Then the same can be said for the authors of the Palmer articles. Certainly the publications relative to the Palmer tire teach the tire maker fully as much about the construction. of a wide, soft, thin tire as does the Putnam patent.

The plaintiff urges that the Palmer publications are not as full a disclosure as the Putnam patent because, at the time of those publications, the tire-making art had not progressed to a point where the Palmer disclosure was sufficient to enable the tire maker to produce satisfactory tires having the properties described, whereas, at the time of Putnam’s identical disclosure, the tire art had progressed to such a point' that that disclosure was sufficient. A patent cannot be upheld on that theory.- The mere repetition of a prior published disclosure cannot form the basis of a valid patent, merely because the art has advanced to such a point that at the time the patent repeats the disclosure it becomes useful.

As I have said, I discover absolutely nothing in the Putnam patent that is not fully and clearly disclosed in the prior publications relative to the Palmer cord tyre.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 427, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steel-wheel-corp-v-b-f-goodrich-rubber-co-mied-1928.