Vogt Instant Freezers, Inc. v. New York Eskimo Pie Corp.

59 F.2d 99, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1253
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMay 31, 1932
DocketNo. 4855
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 F.2d 99 (Vogt Instant Freezers, Inc. v. New York Eskimo Pie Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogt Instant Freezers, Inc. v. New York Eskimo Pie Corp., 59 F.2d 99, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1253 (E.D.N.Y. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is an action in which plaintiff seeks relief by injunction and money damages for the alleged infringement of patent No. .1,733,740, issued to Clarence W. Vogt, assignor to Vogt Instant Freezers, Incorporated, for apparatus for manufacturing ice cream and the like, granted October 29, 1929, and patent No. 1,742,171, issued to Clarence W. Vogt, assignor to Vogt Instant Freezers, Inc., for process of manufacturing ice cream or the like, granted December 31, 3929.

The defendant by its answer interposes the defenses of invalidity, noninfringement, and estoppel.

The plaintiff is a Kentucky corporation, lately engaged in the development of an ice cream freezer, which is now said to he on ■file market, but, as plaintiff admits, is not covered by the patents in suit.

The defendant is a New York corporation, and a subsidiary of the original Eskimo Pie Coiporation, a Delaware corporation, and maintains a factory in the borough of Brooklyn, N. Y., in this district, wherein it manufactures ice cream, particularly for the production of chocolate-coated ice cream bars, sold under the trade-mark Eskimo Pie, and the apparatus and process used by the defendant in such factory are alleged by the plaintiff to infringe elaims 9, 10, and 11 of patent No. 1,733,740, and claims 9 to 12, both inclusive, and 14 and 15, of patent No. !,- 742,171, respectively.

Patent No. 1,733,740 is addressed to ice cream freezing apparatus comprising a reservoir to receive semifrozen mix to he drawn upward through a pipe by suction and spread upon rolls kept extremely cold by internally circulated brine, the soft mix being intended to freeze almost instantly upon the rolls, scrapers are arranged to chip the frozen ice cream from the rolls, a belt conveyer is designed to carry the chips to a can, and a com - [100]*100pressor worm above tbe can forces its contents into a compact body.

Patent No. 1,742,171 is based upon the same machine that is disclosed in patent No. 1,733,740, and claims as 'a process the functions of this machine.

Both patents arise Out of one application, which was divided during the prosecution in the Patent Office.

Late in the year 1926, R. S. Reynolds was the president of the United States Foil Company, which then controlled the Eskimo Pie Corporation, of which he was also the president, and through him the said Clarence W. Vogt was given a position with the latter company, at Louisville, Ky., and began work on January 2, 1927.

The work assigned by said R. S. Reynolds to said Clarence W. Vogt was the development of a machine capable of freezing ice cream instantly to a finished product, thus avoiding the necessity of using the usual refrigerated hardening room; and this is true whether the said Vogt’s conception of the methods or devices antedated his employment or not.

The said Clarence W. Vogt, on January 18, 1927, filed a patent application, serial No. 161,844, covering a method and machine which he contended would accomplish that -purpose. From that application, which was divided as required by the Patent Office, the patent in suit eventuated.

Under the stipulation made in this action, Vogt cannot claim conception of .method or devices, respectively, earlier than July 1, 1926.

The conflicting claims of the said Reynolds and Vogt, as to originality of conception of the said machine, do not require consideration, in the face of the assignments and agreements made by Vogt and Eskimo Pie Corporation and the assignment by Eskimo Pie Corporation to the plaintiff herein.

During the months of January and February, 1927, Vogt constructed what he calls a test unit to demonstrate the machine of his patent application.

This test unit was constructed at the expense of the Eskimo Pie Corporation, and was experimented upon at the plant of the Frozen Pure lee Cream Company, at Louisville, Ky.

This machine had rolls upon which partially frozen ice cream was spread and frozen, and scrapers to chip off the frozen material. It was operated in a small hardening room.

A written contract of employment was entered into by Vogt with the Eskimo Pie Corporation, on February 25, 1927, in and by which he agreed to assign to the corporation the patent application which he had filed on January 18, 1927, on which the patents in suit are based.

Although Vogt continued to experiment with the said so-called test unit, he was unable to produce ice cream which had a proper overrun, that is, one that was sufficiently aerated to be marketable.

Commercial ice cream of the general type must contain a large percentage of air to be profitable to the manufacturer and to be acceptable to the public, as without proper aeration it would be soggy.

In his efforts to overcome the said - defect, Vogt, using portions of the first test unit and adding others, built a new machine, in the operation of which unfrozen ice cream mix was sprayed against cold rolls.

This machine differed from the one shown in the patents in suit in the use of spraying nozzles, and Vogt contended it was not covered by them.

Vogt took out a .separate patent upon it.

Both Vogt and the officials of the Eskimo Pie Corporation considered that the spraying machine possessed good possibilities for successful development, and the Eskimo Pie Corporation was willing to spend more money to develop the idea, and Vogt tried to put it on the market.

Vogt refused to comply with the request of the Eskimo Pie Corporation, to assign to it the patent application covering the spray machine. In view of this new machine, Vogt wanted a more favorable contract, which was refused.

In August, 1927, Vogt resigned his position with the Eskimo Pie Corporation, and in the same month organized the plaintiff corporation.

The dispute continued, resulting in the exchange of the reports or opinions of the attorneys for the respective parties, and, while the claim of the Eskimo Pie Corporation to an assignment of said patent application was denied by Vogt’s counsel, they conceded that said corporation had shop rights in the spray machine.

Plaintiff’s attorneys in their said report, which was submitted to defendant, contended that the said spray machine was .quite different from the first machine which had been assigned to Eskimo Pie Corporation, and said corporation had shop rights as to this spray [101]*101machine, hut no right to claim the entire patent rights in it.

After a, series of negotiations and pursuant to a written offer from plaintiff, Eskimo Pie Corporation, on December 5,1927. in consideration of $12,000 paid to it, assigned to plaintiff all its rights in the Vogt experiments, devices, and patent applications. This assignment conveyed to the plaintiff the shop rights, and all other rights which Eskimo Pie Corporation had in the spray machine and the experimental machinery, canceled Vogt’s contract, and released to plaintiff all rights in the then pending patent application which eventuated in the patents in suit.

The defendant redesigned the ice cream making apparatus in its Brooklyn plant, late in 1928, the work being done by men who knew nothing of Vogt, and whose ideas camo from old chocolate-cooling machinery, and from a fish-freeziug apparatus they saw in Gloucester, Mass.

There is no evidence that these men received any suggestions from It. S.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F.2d 99, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogt-instant-freezers-inc-v-new-york-eskimo-pie-corp-nyed-1932.