A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuerth

57 F. 834, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2823
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 11, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 57 F. 834 (A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuerth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. B. Dick Co. v. Fuerth, 57 F. 834, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2823 (circtdnj 1893).

Opinion

GREEN, District Judge.

The complainant, the A. B. Dick Company, filed its bill, of complaint in this cause against the defendant, William G. Fuerth, to restrain an alleged infringement of letters patent No. 377,706, granted to one John Broderick, February .7, 1888, for a “prepared sheet for stencils,” the title to which, by .mesne assignments, is now in the complainant. In the specifications of the letters patent Mr. Broderick declares that he has invented certain new and useful improvements in preparing sheets for stencils or transmitting printing sheets; that in the practice of his invention he employs a thin porous sheet of material, impregnated or coated with a gummy or waxy substance, or other material impervious to ink, and of such porosity, and a gummy or waxy filling of such consistency, that when the impregnated or [835]*835coated sheet is placed upon a suitable support or bearing surface, and impressed upon with a writing or printing instrument^ the gummy or waxy tilling will, under llie pressure thereof, be displaced at; the point, or lines of impression so as in all cases to leave them open to the passage of ink through the pores of the sheet; and lie claims that such sheets so prepared dispensed with the necessity of employing in the preparation of stencil sheets an abrading or puncturing instrument, bearing surface, or plate. He further declared that he prepared his improved stencil sheet by preference from a sheet of thin, highly porous paper, by immersing the same in a. bath of melied gummy or waxy substance, such as paraffine, of about 120° Fahrenheit fusion point. In a paper so prepared he asserted that the stylus passes over the surface with the ease and fluency of a lead pencil, so as to produce an almost perfect representation of the writer’s autograph with a pen. The stencil, thus prepared, is then used in duplicating impressions, in the manner already familiar, by placing it on a sheet of paper, and passing an inked roller over it, or any other manner in which such a stencil may be used. He further says that the described stencil plate for the production and multiplication of impressions of printing is made by impressing the type letters, or other desired characters, designs, pictures, maps, or illustrations upon the prepared sheet; with type (as by a typewriting machine) or plates on which the letters, etc., are made of raised lines and surfaces, such as, on being so impressed, will express from the prepared sheet the gummy or waxy substance, leaving the fibers exposed and open to ■ the transmission of ink.

Them are three claims in (lie letters patent, which are as follows : í

‘•(1) A transmitting printing shoot, consisting- of a thin, porous sheet, through which ink is readily transmitted, such as Japanese dental paper, or yoshino. tilled, or coated with a substance imxicrvions to ink, as paraffine, substantially as described. (2) A transmitting printing sheet, consisting of a thin, porous sheet, through which ink is readily transmitted, such as Japanese denial paper, or yoshino, filled or coated with a substance impervious to ink, as paraffine, and having this filling dr coating removed at the points or lines of printing, substantially as described, for the purposes specified. (3) A prepared sheet for stencils, consisting of a sheet of Japanese dental paper, or yoshino. coated with a substance impervious to ink, substantially as described.”

Of these claims only the second and third are involved in this controversy. Looking at the invention, then, broadly considered, it seems to consist of a novel stencil, or rather, perhaps, a new transmitting printing sheet, extremely thin in substance, which is coated or tilled with some soft waxy substance impervious to ink, and yet is so porous (hat in the removing of the tilling or coating of wax; at any point by pressure, the sheet itself, without disturbance of fiber, becomes open to (he transmission of ink through it. Ko that the result arrived at by Mr. Broderick in his invent ion, if it be, indeed, an invention, is this: That the stencil is [836]*836made by tbe removing of the soft waxy or gummy filling or coating, rather than by the heretofore usual and more common way by perforation or cutting away of the sheet itself upon which the coating'or filling has been placed. A stencil may be defined to be a thin plate or sheet of any substance in which a figure, letter, or pattern is formed by cutting completely through the plate. Mr. Broderick’s achievement consists in the formation of. a stencil without the cutting of the letters, figures, or patterns through or from the body of the porous substance upon which the soft waxy or gummy material has been placed. Stencils were very commonly in use long before Mr. Broderick’s invention. They were made not only of metals, but as well of other material, such as paper, which had been previously coated with some substance which would render it impervious to the passage of ink. So that it must be admitted there was nothing new in making a stencil itself, as a stencil, nor in the coating of the thin paper with wax or other gummy substance as a component part thereof. Whether what Mr. Broderick did in this case evidences patentable novelty and shows invention depends not only upon the state of the art, but as well upon the exact means by which the end s'ought by Mr. Broderick was attained. The defendant stoutly contends that this alleged invention is no invention at all; that it does not embrace any substantial variation or change from what then belonged to the art, and does not, therefore, involve the exercise of inventive faculty; that the subject-matter of the letters patent was wholly within the domain of common knowledge among persons skilled in the art; that each element in the claim was well known, and’ that it only required the exercise of mechanical skill to attain the result which Mr. Broderick claims to have been the first to invent. So far as the. state of the art is concerned, it is undeniably true that, stencils were well known and in common use prior to the date of the letters patent granted to Broderick. Stencils made from waxed or gummed paper were quite as common as those made from metals or other materials.. The defendant introduced in testimony as a substantial part of his defense a large number of patents, including as well those which related to the process of coating paper with wax and other gummy substances as those which approached more nearly the domain of the Broderick invention, and related directly to stencils and other devices for making multiform copies of writings, designs, and figures. And in this part of the case the defendants’ counsel ably summed up his argument as follows:

“The preparation and manufacture of stencils was witbin the domain of common knowledge among persons skilled in the art, and each element in each claim was well known, and the function which each element would perform, combined with other elements specified in each of the claims, wds 'well known. The alleged invention required only mechanical skill, and no more than ordinary knowledge and judgment in the selection of a more or less porous paper of a class and kind then well known in the market and to the [837]*837li-ade, and in common and public use for file same purposes, and prepared in the same way, and of varying porosities, according to the style and character of the work required.”

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Related

Zuckerman v. Pilot
71 F. Supp. 478 (S.D. New York, 1940)
A. B. Dick Co. v. Underwood Typewriter, Co.
246 F. 309 (S.D. New York, 1917)
American Graphophone Co. v. Walcutt
87 F. 556 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1898)
A. B. Dick Co. v. Henry
75 F. 388 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1896)
A. B. Dick Co. v. Wichelman
74 F. 799 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1895)
A. B. Dick Co. v. Pomeroy Duplicator Co.
117 F. 154 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
57 F. 834, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-b-dick-co-v-fuerth-circtdnj-1893.