Vulcan Detinning Co. v. American Can Co.

62 A. 881, 70 N.J. Eq. 588, 4 Robb. 588, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 118
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 13, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 A. 881 (Vulcan Detinning Co. v. American Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vulcan Detinning Co. v. American Can Co., 62 A. 881, 70 N.J. Eq. 588, 4 Robb. 588, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 118 (N.J. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Bergen, Y. C.

The evidence in this cause shows that the firm of “Th. Goldschmidt,” of Essen, Germany, had, prior to 1894, as the result of experiments pursued for that purpose, so perfected a process by which well-known chemical and mechanical principles could be so applied in the separation and recovery of different metals as to render the detinning of tin scrap profitable to a degree not theretofore attained.

The successful combination was not patented, but its inventors sought to protect themselves against infringement by keeping their discovery a secret, only imparting it to such of their employes as the carrying on of the business required, and then only upon a promise not to divulge.

Dr. Hans Goldschmidt, the member of the firm most active in making the experiments and obtaining the results, testified in detail regarding the agents used, viz., electricity, steam, lime and caustic soda, and the required relative' power and quantity of each, and also described with great particularity the size, character and relative positions of the machinery and other necessary mechanical instruments used in their detinning plant.

In order to understand precisely what these inventors claimed was the secret process which they had discovered, we cannot do better than reproduce a portion of the cross-examination on this point, which is as follows:

“Q. You say that jtou invented this process that you have described?
“A. Yes, sir, I did.
“Q. Wasn’t electrolysis well known before the time you claim you invented this process?
[590]*590“A. If you mean by electrolysis electrolytical processes,. I answer that there were known a good many electrolytical processes for recovering metals of different kinds.
‘‘Q. You mean by that the separation of metals by electric current?
“A. The principles were known and some of them applied in practice.
“A. And this was true of tin, was it not?
“A. No.
“Q. So that your answer is that tin had never been removed from iron by electricity?
“A. That is not my answer; it has been removed before, but on a .smaller scale.
“Q. Regeneration of lye was known before the time last spoken of, was it not?
“A. What kind of regeneration of lye do you mean?
“Q. Application of carbonic acid and caustification by lime?
“A. The principle was known.
“Q. What, then, was novel in your process of invention?
“A. There were a good many things new, which I partly described this morning; the main tilings are the size of the baskets, the size of tho tubs, and the distances, especially worked out. of the baskets from the walls of the tubs; then the especial kind of inflow pipes, as described, .and the overflow; the electric combination of the tubs, as described;
. last, not least, the whole arrangement of the plant, which was set up in a manner that the handling of the bulky material was saved as much .as possible ; also, the making of the bundles by the steam hammer was new; all those details, of course, were never published, but were kept ■secret.”

It also appears, by a great preponderance of evidence, that while, prior to the discovery by Goldschmidt, a number of per- . sons were engaged in detinning scrap, and in so doing used the ■same agents employed by Dr. Goldschmidt, the business was not especially profitable; but when the processes which Dr. Goldschmidt claims to have discovered were applied to the detinning ■of scrap a very profitable result followed, leading to the building up of a successful business under their management at Essen. The growth of the business at Essen required the purchase of large quantities of tin scrap, some of which was bought in England and some in New York, the purchases in the latter city being made largely, if not entirety, from A. Kern & Company, a firm engaged in importing and exporting goods. The scrap from England appears to have been shipped, prior to 1895, through the Zealand Steamship Company, in the employment of which company were M. Lacmoes, R. J. Brakema and H. L. Herman, [591]*591who through their connection with the Zealand company, it is fair to presume, acquired some knowledge of the character and extent of the Essen business, for about this time they built a detinning plant at Vlissingen, Holland, under the name of the “Electro-Tinfabriek,” and through newspaper advertisements, followed by personal interviews, induced two of the confidential employes of the Essen factor}7, namely, William Zeyen, who had been employed by Goldschmidt from August, 1891, as foreman of the electrolysis room, and had become familiar with the Essen process of detinning, and William Eoerster, who had been -employed in the same factory from 1892, and worked in the cooking-room, the place where the brine was prepared and regenerated, to leave their employment in Essen and enter the service of the Holland company. Both of these employes had agreed with the Goldschmidt firm that they would refrain from communicating the processes in use which were claimed to be secrets. I have no hesitation in finding that the processes used by Laernoes and his confederates in the Holland factory were, for all practical purposes, the same as those used by the Goldschmidts in their Essen factory, and that it was the intention, deliberately formed, and boldly carried out by Laernoes and his partners, to obtain, by stealth and fraud, the secret processes and methods in use in the Goldschmidt factory, and that this theft was accomplished by debauching and corrupting the trusted servants of the Goldschmidts. It can serve no useful purpose to here recite the evidence which justifies this conclusion. It is sufficient to say that there is no denial of the facts offered in display of the iniquity of Laernoes and his partners. Considerable evidence has been taken in this cause in Germany under a commission issued for that purpose, but Mr. Laernoes was not called as a witness to explain the many damaging circumstances proven. Mr. William Zeyen is in Hew Jersey, in the employ of the complainants in this cause, and the neglect to produce him, unexplained, justifies the conclusion that he could not deny his wrong-doing. Mr. Eoerster was called and exposed the disreputable methods employed by Laernoes to obtain the secret.

[592]*592The possibility of erecting a detinning plant in this country attracted the attention of Mr. Adolph Kern, the senior member of the firm of A. Kern & Company, as early as 1892, at which time he opened negotiations with the Messrs. Goldschmidt looking to the establishment of such a plant in America, to be operated according to the processes in use in Essen. The negotiations, carried on principally by correspondence until 1897, produced no satisfactory result, and in December of that year a party of gentlemen, seven in number, of whom the defendant Assmann was one, met with Mr. Kern at an office in New York City to consider the desirability of making further efforts towards the founding of a detinning factory in the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A. 881, 70 N.J. Eq. 588, 4 Robb. 588, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vulcan-detinning-co-v-american-can-co-njch-1906.