Theroz Co. v. United States Industrial Chemical Co.

14 F.2d 629, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1382
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedSeptember 7, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 629 (Theroz Co. v. United States Industrial Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Theroz Co. v. United States Industrial Chemical Co., 14 F.2d 629, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1382 (D. Md. 1926).

Opinion

SOPER, District Judge.

The Theroz Company brings this suit against United States Industrial Chemical Company,’ Incorporated, and Stemo Corporation, charging infringement of certain patents, and praying an injunction and an accounting for profits. The patents in suit are those to Jacob Sehaub, No. 1,262,267, issued April 9,1918, on application filed July 17, 1917; Jacob Sehaub, No. 1,262,268, issued April 9,1918, on application filed October 4, 1917; and Howard Brigham, No. 1,313,876, issued August 26,1919, on application filed February 23, 1918. They will be called for convenience the first Sehaub, the second Sehaub, and the Brigham patent. Each relates to a composition of matter or product called solid alcohol, and to a process *630 for its manufacture. The plaintiff’s article is known and sold as Theroz Fuel, while the article alleged to infringe the patents is manufactured by United States Industrial Chemical Company and marketed by Sterno Corporation under the name of Sterno Canned Heat.

Solidified or solid alcohol, so called, for use as fuel, has been known commercially for a considerable period. The combustible liquid is not in fact solidified, but is inclosed in the pores or cavities of a solid substance which serves as a supporting sponge or framework. Prior to 1900, the framework of the commercial article consisted generally of a spongy soap holding a certain amount of liquid in its pores, and retaining it if kept in air-tight boxes. Such a product was extensively marketed by the Sterno Corporation between 1914 and 1920, as will appear from the opinion of Judge Mayer in S. Sternau & Co., Inc., v. George Borgfeldt & Co. (D. C.) 254 F. 582. But the soap product was subject to certain defects. Denayrouze pointed out in the specification of his British patent No. 17,687 of 1900, for the “manufacture of solidified earburetted spirits for heating or lighting purposes,” that there were three objections to the soap product: (1) During combustion, the soap melts and the alcohol spreads at the bottom of the burning piece and often produces extended flames which may become disagreeable and dangerous; (2) after combustion of the compound, there is an abundant and objectionable residue; (3) after a time dessication of the compound takes place, causing loss of weight and reduction of combustibility. Denayrouze overcame these objections by inclosing the liquid in a fine net work of nitrocellulose or pyroxylin, and this substitution of a combustible for an incombustible but fusible substance formed a solid alcohol which burned without fusing and without substantial residue. For this purpose, nitrocellulose was dissolved in a mixture of ether and alcohol, and the mixture was then solidified by the gradual evaporation of the ether.

A very similar process is covered by United States patent to Poulton, No. 1,299,408, which was granted April 1,1919, upon an application filed April 16, 1915. Indeed it is not easy to distinguish the Poulton process or product from that of Denayrouze. Poulton also used a solution of pyroxylin in ether and alcohol. The solution was subjected to a moderate temperature above the boiling point of ether, but below the boiling point of alcohol, whereby the ether was gradually but only partially vaporized. The mixture was then allowed to stand for a period, whereupon solidification took place. Obviously these processes depended upon the power of ether to dissolve or aid in the solution of nitrocellulose, and, since solidification took place only when the ether was at least partially removed, the loss of ether or some ancillary process to recover it entailed considerable expense. Moreover, the risk of fire in the manufacture was increased and the odor of ether in the finished product was noticeable and offensive. Poulton called his product Sol-a-Kol, and attempted to market it, but without success. The defendants claim that his failure was due to lack of funds to conduct the business and to business misfortunes. How accurate this explanation may be it is not necessary to determine, for Sterno Corporation purchased the patent from the creditors of the bankrupt Poulton Company in 1918, but never adopted the process, and the reasonable conclusion is that the use of ether is attended by consequences which make the process inferior to that which the defendants actually employ.

In 1916, Jacob Schaub, the patentee, was an employee of the plaintiff as a mechanical expert. He had had little or no scientific education, but was possessed of some skill in the handling of machinery, and had had some little experience with nitrocellulose solutions in handling lacquers, etc. The plaintiff company at that time was endeavoring to produce a solid alcohol by the ether alcohol process, under the direction of one Clover. It was a complete failure, notwithstanding the expenditure of a sum in excess of $50,000. Schaub had been employed by Clover to make dies and tools and to prepare for the manufacture of bottle warmers and stoves which would be required when the alcohol fuel should be perfected. When it became clear that the main operation had failed, Schaub began making, experiments to see if he could improve the product, and as early as December, 1916, he had made such progress that the company retained him, and on January 4, 1917, released Clover from its employment. Schaub’s idea was that something should be found to replace the ether collodion so that there would be no evaporation or loss of this substance. Making use of the facts well known to the art, that nitrocellulose is soluble in commercial methyl alcohol, and that such a solution may be coagulated by ethyl alcohol containing from 5 to 10 per cent, of water,, he succeeded in developing a process which was free from the defects of both the soap and the ether alcohol nitrocellulose methods, and which retained in the finished product all the ingredients used in its manufacture. In the *631 summer or fall of 1917, the perfected article was placed on the market, and during the great war all of the output was purchased by the United States.

As already stated, Stemo Corporation achieved considerable success in the sale of a solid alcohol containing a framework of soap in the years 1914 to 1920. In November, 1920, this product was abandoned, and the defendants began the manufacture and sale of an article under the same name,- “Sterno,” made without the use of either soap or ether, and so similar to Theroz in ingredients, in properties, and in mode of manufacture as to give substance to the charge of infringement of the patents in suit. A war of prices ensued until Theroz, which brought 34% cents a pound in 1920, was selling below cost at 12 cents a pound at the time of trial in 1925. At this point the plaintiff company made no further reduction of price, but permitted the defendants to get the business.

Two facts are abundantly proved by the testimony: (1) That the Sehaub method is a substantial practical improvement upon the solid alcohols theretofore produced and patented, and (2) that Stemo, in its freedom from soap and ether, and its adoption of the solvent power of commercial methyl alcohol and the solidifying power of water, resembles more nearly the plaintiff’s goods than any other ever produced. Indeed the manufacture of solid alcohol in the United States is now confined to the parties to this litigation. It is for the court to decide whether the patents in suit, in the first place, are valid patentable inventions, and, secondly, whether the claims of the patents are infringed by the defendants.

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

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 629, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theroz-co-v-united-states-industrial-chemical-co-mdd-1926.