Warren Bros. v. Pace

247 F. 117, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 26, 1916
DocketNo. 319
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 F. 117 (Warren Bros. v. Pace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren Bros. v. Pace, 247 F. 117, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918 (N.D. Ohio 1916).

Opinion

CLARKE, District Judge.

This suit is brought by Warren Bros. Company, a corporation, against the defendants, individually and as partners, to enjoin the carrying out of a contract entered into by the defendants with the commissioners of Cuyahoga county, Ohio, for the construction of a highway of materials such that the plaintiff claims it would infringe the fifth, sixth, and eleventh claims of United States letters patent No. 727,505 owned by the plaintiff.

A considerable part of the roadway had been completed when the case was tried, and the claim of the defendants is that the composition required by the terms of the contract to be used was departed from with the consent of the inspecting and of the county engineers for the reason that thé quantities of materials specified were such that they would not absorb the required amount of bituminous matter without making the surface of the road too soft for the use to be made of it. .For this reason all parties concerned confined the testimony to the pavement as actually laid, with the assumption that the remainder of it would be of the same character.

In Warren Bros. Co. v. City of Owosso, 166 Fed. 309, 92 C. C. A. 227, the Circuit Court of Appeals for this (the Sixth) Circuit, decided that the patent in suit is valid, and that claims No. 5, No. 6, and No. 11 were in that case infringed, but what mixture of materials was contemplated or used does not appear from the report.

In Warren Bros. Co. v. City of New York, 187 Fed. 831, 109 C. C. A. 591, the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit, following the decision in the Owosso Case held the patent to be valid, and the 'specifications appearing in the report are held to infringe claims No. 5, No. 6, and No. 11.

A due subordination of authority requires this court to accept as controlling the decision in the Owosso Case, but except for this ob[118]*118ligation, upon the record before me, I should have great difficulty in sustaining this patent. This disposition to question the validity of the conclusion of the Court of Appeals springs chiefly from the impression made upon, the mind of this court by the affidavit of Logan Waller Page, which by reference in the affidavit of the defendants’ expert, Samuel N. Pond, becomes a part of the record in this case. The testimony of this witness was not in the Owosso Case, but in part at least it appears to have been before the courts of the Second circuit in the New York case. • •

Page, when he made the affidavit referred to, was director of the office of public roads of the United States Department of Agriculture; he is obviously a man of high scientific attainments, and had served by appointment of- the President of the United- States at least twice as the representative of the United States at International Road Congresses, one held in Paris and one in Brussels. He states that he had frequently refused to testify in patent cases, and that he had consented to do so only in cases which, though not in form, were in fact against the cities of Chicago and Indianapolis and of New York, and he says that he made exceptions to his practice in these cases because he thought it was his duty to be of service to the public. This witness gives a condensed statement of the industry of road making with stone, and refers to publications in 1893 and 1895, which seemingly disclose clearly enough what Warren describes in the specification of the patent in suit as his discovery, viz. that the best provision for eliminating voids and for establishing stability in paving materials is to be found not, as was supposed before his discovery, in the use of sand or of fine gravel, but in the use of mineral components of relatively large size. He points out very pertinently that the permissible percentages of mineral aggregate stated in the patent in the suit are such as to render the so-called invention extremely vague and uncertain, and he illustrates this statement by. showing that if the minimum of the intermediate sizes in the Warren preferred mixture, ranging from one-fourth inch to impalpable powder, is taken, it will be impossible to obtain a 100 per cent, mixture by employing the maximum amounts of the other two ingredients, e. g., 3 per cent, of impalpable material, plus 10 per cent, of material between impalpable powder and one-fourth inch in size, plus 80 per cent, of material larger tiran one-fourth inch in size, equals 93 per cent. He gives the results of four combinations of stone and impalpable powder, all seemingly within the scope of Warren’s preferred mixture, yet in each of these the percentage of voids is above that of claim No. 11, and in three of the cases is very material^ above it. From publications long prior to the application for the Warren patent he shows that the statement is seemingly without foundation; that except by his method it is impossible to reduce the void space in an aggregate of rock below 21 per cent. Further to this experienced, and obviously candid road builder, the use which Warren makes of the expression, “inherent stability” is, as it seems to this court to be, extremely vague, and he declares that the proportions and gradations of material described cannot be prodüced except by a most careful separation by measures and screens for different sizes of stone, by selecting the prescribed proportion of [119]*119such sizes and by then mixing them in the manner suggested by the patent.

The record in the Owosso Case, though not in evidence, has been inspected by'this court, and it is significant that this last statement describes the manner in which the witness (in this case Schultee) testified in the Owosso Case, the plaintiff prepared and mixed its materials in order to obtain the patented combination.

It may be noted in passing that no evidence was introduced in the trial of this case which tends directly to modify the views thus expressed by Mr. Page, and that two cases commenced by the plaintiff, in which his testimony was used, were dismissed after a motion for preliminary injunction was denied.

These observations will suggest why, although this court feels it its duty to follow the Owosso decision, it also regards itself as constrained to put a somewhat strict interpretation upon the claims of this patent, in determining the question whether or not it has been infringed by the defendants, which is the only question which the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals leaves open for our determination.

The patentee of the patent in suit declares that his invention consists in the discovery that the best composition of the street pavement mixture, to which his patent relates, is one “as free from voids as possible and also stable and nonliable to displacement,” and this is obtained, he says, by using larger sizes, grains or pieces of stone—■ “say up to those which will pass through a 2-inch ring,” and by employing with these larger grains, proper quantities of the smaller sizes down to impalpable powder. This general description of his invention is followed by a statement of the “proper quantities” of the indicated ingredients which he has found from experience give the best results, which is “1 per cent, to 3 per cent, of impalpable powder, from 10 per cent, to 30 per cent, of material between impalpable powder and one-fourth inch in size and from 50 per cent, to 80 per cent, larger than one-fourth inch in size.”

It cannot escape notice that that part of the specification thus condensed is so indefinite that, as Mr.

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Related

Cookingham v. Warren Bros.
3 F.2d 899 (Ninth Circuit, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
247 F. 117, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-bros-v-pace-ohnd-1916.