Vortex Mfg. Co. v. Ply-Rite Contracting Co.

33 F.2d 302, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 154, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 11, 1929
Docket1250
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 F.2d 302 (Vortex Mfg. Co. v. Ply-Rite Contracting 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
Vortex Mfg. Co. v. Ply-Rite Contracting Co., 33 F.2d 302, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 154, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298 (D. Md. 1929).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

The ¡bill of complaint, which is brought by the Vortex Manufacturing Company, 'an Ohio corporation, the exclusive licensee of Charles H. Parkin, deceased, and the Union Trust Company of Cleveland, executor of the Parkin Estate, against the Ply-Rite Contracting Company, a Maryland corporation, and five individuals, citizens of Maryland and officials and directora of that company, asks for relief on four, separate grounds: (1) Infringement of Parkin patent, No. 1,282,460 (application filed February 15,1916, and patent granted October 22, 1918), of which Charles H. Parkin was the inventor; (2) infringement of Bagnall and Taylor patent No. 1,239,074 (application filed June 16, 1916, and patent granted September 4, 1917), of which Parkin was the owner; (3) infringement of plaintiff’s registered trade-mark “Par-Lock”; and (4) unfair competition. For convenience and simplicity, the parties plaintiff will be referred to in the singular number.

The alleged infringements and unfair competition relate to a process for applying plaster to concrete and masonry walls and ceilings. Prior to 1917 and 1918, when plaintiff’s patents were granted, it had for a long while been common knowledge among contractors and builders that, if a plaster coat, namely, the finished layer, be applied directly to a cement structure, its adhesion was very weak, and the plaster was likely to fall off after a short while. Sometimes an injurious chemical reaction took place. Concrete structures being exceedingly porous and pervious to moisture, it was difficult, if not impossible, and always unhealthful, to apply a finished plaster coat thereto, and, even when no finishing coat was applied, the walls or ceilings were found frequently to be damp, streaked, or discolored. In other words, since an absorptive wall is porous, when the surface pores are filled with plaster, they act as mechanical keys to bond the plaster to the wall. In proportion as the pores are diminished in number, the roughness of the surface must be increased. So it became customary to roughen the concrete surface by hacking or chopping it, but at best this was a clumsy method. If the surface was wet, the pores became filled with water, .and the plaster could not be pushed into them. Some water is a necessary part in the chemical reactions involved in the hardening of plaster, and, if the wall is so dry as to suck the water out immediately, the hardening may be impeded or even prevented. Furthermore, it had become customary to allow a concrete wall to stand for a week or 10 days in order that it might “set” properly. This resulted in the plasterer’s work as a whole being subject to considerable delay in completion.

In order to meet these difficulties, bond paints were used, but this method was found to be expensive, dirty, and, at best, uncertain. As a result of elaborate research work and experiments with bond paints, Parkin finally devised “a method of finishing and coating structural surfaces of the type set forth by arresting the passage of moisture from the structural body to the finished coating by means of an application of a moisture impervious fluid bond material, at normal temperature, to said structural surface, applying an inert material to said bond and subsequently applying a finished coating to said inert material, said inert material acting as a key or clutch for the reception and retention of a finished coating.” Such is claim 1 of the Parkin patent. The other three claims are virtually identical, except that claims 2 and 4 call for the application of the bond material by force of impact. The principal advantages claimed for the patent are four, as summarized in the specifications: (1) Labor-saving, through mechanical application of the bond and the inert material; (2) economy hy reason of a thinner application of the finished coat; (3) rapidity of application of the finished coat, due to elimination of suction; and (4) decrease in the dead load of the finished coat.

Parkin then found that the most efficient way of applying the bonding coat of asphalt to the wall or ceiling, and in turn the grit to the bonding coat, was first to blast the asphalt bonding coat on in the form of a liquid film with an air gun, and then to blow the grit into it, also with an air gun. This process is the basis of the Bagnall and Taylor patent, and is described thus (claim 4): ’ “The process of coating a- surface with viscous ductile material which consists of projecting toward said surface under pressure an annular stream of said material, and pro *306 jecting into said stream at a point between its source and said surface a blast of air also turned toward said surface, at a pressure above that of tbe liquid.”

Claims 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 of this patent are substantially similar to claim 4 and to each other (such differences as do exist being hereinafter referred to). The remaining claim, 7, describes the method of imbedding the grit as follows: “The method of forming structural surfaces, which consists in applying to a given surface an adherent material, air blasting upon said layer a coating of a comminuted substance at such a pressure as to embed each particle about half of its depth, and finally applying a final coating to such comminuted substance so applied.”

The most satisfactory results are produced by applying two coats of asphalt, a half-day apart. The inert material may be applied as quickly as 10 minutes after the second asphalt coat, and the plaster after a further minimum interval of 3 days. The fluid bond material may be composed of ordinary asphalt dissolved in naphtha, gasoline, or benzine, or similar solvent, although plaintiff claims that the best results are only obtainable by a secret formula for the blending of the materials which it refused to divulge, but the names of the materials and the formula strength are open matters. The compound must be of such consistency as to pass through the gun readily at 100° F. If the temperature where the work is being done is lower, it becomes necessary to add a small amount of “thinner,” and in winter temperatures it is found advisable to warm the compound rather than to reduce it further with “thinners.” Beyond this, temperature is not a factor in the process.

For this method as a whole Parkin adopted and registered the trade-name “Par-Lock” to denote a 100 per cent, locking of the plaster to the wall or ceiling, that is, a par-locking device. Licenses have been granted to some 20 concerns in the larger cities throughout the country to use the Par-Lock method; such licensees being called “Par-Lock Appliers.” The business grew from a coverage of 1,000,000 square feet in 1922 to 8,500,000 square feet in 1927, and a grand total of more than 20,000,000 square feet since the process was put on the market. Among the licensees was one William Zeller •of Baltimore who had in his employ Messrs. John Gunther and H. Elmer Cann, two of the present defendants. These men left Zeller and formed the Ply-Rite Contracting Company in 1926, made contracts for applying a coating of asphaltie material in a liquid form by means of an air gun substantially identical with that covered by the Bagnall and Taylor patent, and were able to take business' from Zeller by reason of the fact that they used a bituminous asphalt, obtainable at a much lower price than the Trinidad asphalt that the Vortex Company supplied, because of greater durability, to Zeller and its other licensees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 F.2d 302, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 154, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vortex-mfg-co-v-ply-rite-contracting-co-mdd-1929.