Trubenizing Process Corp. v. Jacobson

21 F. Supp. 674, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 20, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Supp. 674 (Trubenizing Process Corp. v. Jacobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trubenizing Process Corp. v. Jacobson, 21 F. Supp. 674, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260 (S.D.N.Y. 1937).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

These two suits for patent infringement are closely interwoven, and have been for •that reason tried together. The first suit is brought by the Trubenizing Process Corporation against F. Jacobson & Sons, a copartnership, for infringement of the two Liebowitz patents, Nos. 1,968,409, and 1,968,410, for apparel, both issued July 31, 1934. The defendants in that suit hold licenses under three patents held by the Celanese Corporation, the plaintiff in the second suit, and these three patents are, with a large number of others, relied on as anticipations of the Liebowitz patents. The second suit is by the Celanese Corporation against Essley Shirt Company, a licensee of the Trubenizing Corporation, the plaintiff in the first suit, for infringement of the Woodman & Dickie patent, No. 1,716,255, issued June 4, 1929, for fabric or material ; the Dreyfus patent, No. 1,828,397, issued October 20, 1931, for stiffening fabric; and the Dreyfus patent No. 1,903,960, issued April 18, 1933, for fabric and sheet material.

The usual defenses of invalidity and lack of infringement are asserted in both cases.

The first Liebowitz patent, No. 1,968,-409, is stated to relate to articles of wearing apparel. The drawings show a loosely woven fabric or net work of cellulose acetate threads inserted between two layers or plies of textile fabric. According to the specification, this assembly is stiffened and bound together by moistening with acetone or other suitable solvent which will peptize the cellulose ester threads. In the preferred method, the plies are placed between two pads wet with solvent, and pressure is applied; then heat and further pressure are applied, with the result that the solvent is driven off. It is stated that the adhesive binder does not form a continuous film, but has open spaces which make the laminated fabric pervious both to air and water. The important advantage asserted is that the collar or other article of apparel can be fabricated by usual methods and the stiffening treatment applied after the stitching operations are completed.

The claims relied on are Nos. 2, 3, 4, 7, 9, 10, and 11. Claims 2, 3, 4, 10, and 11 are product claims, and claims 7 and 9 method claims. Claim 3 is typical of the product claims, and reads:

“3. A moisture permeable stiffened article of apparel comprising two or more plies of textile fabric having their opposed faces adhesively united with a binder of cellulose derivative elements arranged to provide open spaces between said elements.”

Claim 2 describes the cellulose derivative threads as being “spaced relatively to each other a distance greater than the thickness or diameter of each thread.” Claim 4 describes the cellulose derivative threads as being “disposed in intersticed arrangement.” Claims 10 and 11 describe the acetate threads as being “spaced sufficiently closely” so that the pattern will not be apparent on the surface of the article. Claim 7 is typical of the method claims, and reads:

“7. The method of making a stiffened article of apparel which comprises applying a fabric comprising cellulose derivative threads between the opposed faces of two plies of textile fabric, treating the laminated fabric with a solvent adapted to peptize the cellulose derivative threads, and applying pressure and heat to unite and stiffen the plies.”

The second Liebowitz patent, No. 1,968,410, is described a*s an improvement of the first patent. This improvement consists in interweaving the cellulose acetate threads in the ordinary lining fabric of the material. In Fig. 2 these acetate threads are shown as each third thread in the warp. It is stated, however, that although the particular example illustrated shows the cellulose derivative yarn only in the warp, it may be used both in the warp and the filler, or in the filler alone.

The claims relied on are Nos. 1, 6, 7, 8, and 10;- of these, Nos. 1, 6, 7, and 10 are product claims, and No. 8 is a process claim. Claim 10 reads :

“10. A moisture pervious article of wearing apparel comprising plies of fabric stiffened and adhesively secured together by an intermediate layer of textile lining material having cellulose derivative threads interwoven therewith.”

The process claim 8 is as follows:

“8. The process of cementing fabric parts of an article of apparel which comprises disposing between the parts to be [676]*676cemented a piece of fabric woven with yarn made of a cellulose derivative substance, applying to said parts, from the outside, a solvent which will penetrate through the fabric and make the cellulose derivative substance cementitious, and applying pressure to bind the parts together.”

The Woodman & Dickie patent, No. 1,716,255, concerns the treatment of a single ply of material to make it waterproof or gas proof. According to the description, fabrics made of thermoplastic yarns or threads composed of filaments or fibers consisting or having a basis of cellulose acetate or other cellulose derivatives, or such fabrics mixed with silk, cotton, wool, or other fibers, are subjected to heat and pressure, with or without the use of plasticizing or softening agents or solvents thereby producing a greater or less melting effect on the filaments or fibers of the cellulose derivative or derivatives by the. action of the heat and pressure, so that the pores or interstices of the fabric are reduced to extremely minute dimensions, or closed completely. It is also pointed out that the extent of the melting effect, and the degree of closing the interstices of the fabric, will vary with the degree of heat and pressure employed, and with whether or not plasticizers or softeners or solvents are used. The claims relied on are Nos. 1, 2, 3, 7, 8, and 9, and all of these are process claims.

The Dreyfus patent, No. 1,828,397, relates to a stiffening fabric suitable for use in the making of garments. The stiffeners formerly in use are stated to have been made of wool, cotton, or the like, reinforced or not by stiffer material such as hair. These were objectionable because they were bulky and apt to soften when damp. In one of the methods disclosed, a mixed fabric containing organic derivatives of cellulose is treated with a material tending to stiffen it. The treating material is described as solvents, softening agents, or swelling agents. The claims relied on are Nos. 1 and 2, both process claims.

The Dreyfus patent, No. 1,903,960, is described as relating to the manufacture of new fabrics or sheet materials having waterproof to gas-proof properties or capable of other applications. According to the description, a fabric or sheet material is made by uniting under appropriate conditions of temperature and pressure a fabric composed of or containing filaments or fibers of thermoplastic derivatives of cellulose with a fabric composed of or containing filaments or fibers of non thermoplastic or relatively non thermoplastic material.

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Related

Trubenizing Process Corp. v. Jacobson
98 F.2d 899 (Second Circuit, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Supp. 674, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trubenizing-process-corp-v-jacobson-nysd-1937.