Woodley v. American Container Corp.

47 F.2d 454, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3475
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 20, 1931
DocketNo. 8907
StatusPublished

This text of 47 F.2d 454 (Woodley v. American Container Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodley v. American Container Corp., 47 F.2d 454, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3475 (8th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

BOOTH, Circuit Judge.

This is a patent suit in the usual form, the main defenses being denial of infringement and invalidity of the patent in view of the prior art. The patent involved is No. 1,156,122 issued by the United States to [455]*455James C. Woodley, October 12, 1915, covering both a fibrous composition and process of manufacture.

The trial court entered a decree dismissing the bill upon the merits, but whether for invalidity of the patent or for noninfringement is somewhat uncertain.

The specifications state:

“The invention has for its object the obtaining of a composition of matter having superior insulating qualities, of high resistance to the elements, capable of being readily worked, and thus adapted with slight modifications in proportions and in treatment for a wide range of usefulness as a roofing material, for electric insulation and in the manufacture of various articles in different arts.”

The process is stated with several variations; the first method is thus described:

“To a suitable residuum oil I add a bituminous material such as gilsonite asphalt, grahamite, elaterite or other hard asphalt. The material is heated to a temperature of approximately 400° F. in order to reduce the bituminous ingredient to a liquid condition and effect its thorough mixture with the oil. The.proportions may vary within a considerable range but should be such that when cooled the material is semi-solid and gummy. * * * To the hot liquid binding material is added a quantity of fibrous material such, for example, as waste paper which may be advantageously in the form of paper shavings or strips such as the cuttings from a printing shop, although other fibrous materials are suitable for tho purpose. The paper is preferably moist or wet and its addition to the binder quickly cools the latter to a gummy condition. Tho mixture of fibrous material and the gummy binder is then worked in a kneading and mixing machine. The effect is first to coat the paper with the binder, so that the subsequent kneading operation thoroughly disintegrates the paper into substantially elementary fibers and each of these fibers is coated with the binder and the resulting fibrous material is thoroughly mixed until a substantially homogeneous product is obtained. The operation not only eoats each of the elementary fibers with the binder but causes a considerable absorption of the binding material into the fibers approximating saturation thereof. By slowly heating the mass afterward the greater part of the water in the fibers may be driven out.”

Spraying the paper with the liquid mixture may be substituted for putting the paper into the mixture.

Tho second method differs from tho first mainly in that the gummy mass of binder and paper is forced through one or more foraminous plates, instead of being manipulated in a kneading and mixing machine; and it is stated:

“Where, as in the present case, the paper strips are covered on both sides with the gummy bituminous composition and the latter is forced through the perforations in an attenuated condition the paper is entirely disintegrated and is merged with the asphaltum in a homogeneous fibrous mass rather than as being present in the form of fibrous particles of appreciable size within the asphalt but distinct therefrom.”

Tho third method is thus described:

“The wetting of tho fibrous material produces a better product by weakening the cohesion of the elementary fibers to each other and by softening the sizing on the surface in the case of certain kinds of paper. Where the material has not been moistened the fibers do not separate so easily, but are individually broken to a greater extent than where the material is moistened, and the product is not so strong.
“In some cases it may be practicable to introduce the fibrous material to the asphalt in a solid condition, and by gently heating the mass without reducing to a liquid condition and passing the paper and gummy asphalt mixture through the kneading and mixing machine to simultaneously effect the coating and disintegration of the pap'er.”

The product obtained by any one of these methods may be rolled into sheets for roofing purposes or fashioned into other articles.

The specifications further state:

“My -invention is distinguished and characterized by the. fact, that the fibrous material is present not only in a finely divided condition, but further by tho fact that the fibrous material is of a character such that the particles will interlace or knit in much the same manner as floe knits or interlaces in forming a felted sheet.”

There are twenty-four claims to the patent.; sixteen relating to the process, and eight relating to the composition product. Claims 12 and 13 may be taken as typical of the process claims, and claim 17 as typical of the product claims. They are as follows:

“12. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass which consists in mixing fibrous material with a bituminous binder consisting of asphalt in [456]*456such proportion that the fibrous material comprises not more than fifty per cent, by weight of the total and the mixture is of a semi-solid gummy consistency, and then disintegrating the fibrous material while in intimate adhering contact with the binder to produce a substantially homogeneous fibrous composition of substantially discrete interlaced fibers cemented together by the binder.
' “13. The process of producing a substantially homogeneous fibrous gummy mass which consists in mixing fibrous material with a closely adherent bituminous binder having greater extensibility than said fibrous material, and then extending said binder sufficiently to disintegrate the fibrous material. * * *
“17. The herein described composition of matter which comprises a bituminous binding material with elementary fibers distributed substantially uniformly and homogeneously throughout the mass, the elementary fibers being separately and thoroughly coated with the binder and said fibers being interlaced or felted together, the product being a fibrous bituminous mass materially tougher than the binding material alone and being non-lique-fiable by heat.”

It is apparent from the statements quoted from the specifications, as also from the claims and the evidence, that the process consists of several steps after the ingredients have been selected in proper proportions. Some of these steps may be combined, but there appears to be an irreducible minimum of two: Coating of the fibers with the bituminous binder; and thereafter, while the resulting mass is in a semisolid gummy state, disintegrating and distributing the fibers in the binder.

As above stated, this last step is described as taken in connection with a kneading machine or in connection with foraminous plates.

The pith of the invention, if there was invention, seems to rest in this last step.

■ Mr. Stevenson, one of the witnesses on behalf of plaintiff, testified as follows:

“The characteristic Woodley mix, in my understanding, involves the use of bitumen in a certain physical condition, of which the word ‘gummy’ is descriptive; of certain fibers, up to a certain proportion of fibers. The compositions may or may not include fillers.

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Bluebook (online)
47 F.2d 454, 8 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 287, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodley-v-american-container-corp-ca8-1931.