A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co.

58 F.2d 988, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1766
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 11, 1930
DocketNos. 2768, 3368
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 988 (A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co., 58 F.2d 988, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1766 (E.D. Mich. 1930).

Opinion

TUTTLE, District Judge.

We have two separate suits, one involving the patent No. 1,407,789 to Erhardt February 28, 1922. That is a patent on the combination of a stand set over a glass or •receptacle, the contents of which are to be mixed, and placing a motor with a handle on it, to be placed down through the top of that stand; the stand being so arranged that it will permit the depending agitator to pass through the top of the stand, and the motor to rest in the top of the stand and be held there in position while the motor operates and agitates the contents, so that the housewife or the soda fountain clerk can go away and leave it while the agitator works and mixes. The operator can do something else and come back again, or the operator can take it and use it by hand in some other place. It is a useful thing.

The amount of invention involved in it must be determined, of course, by studying the prior art, and deciding what Erhardt did over the prior art. There is considerable in the prior art. It seems to me that Pettifils’ patent No. 1,199,920 in 1916 and the publication in the Electrical Record of March, 1916, showing the Lindstrom-Smith Company device, intended for identically the same purpose and used for identically the same purpose, must defeat the patent of Erhardt.

I do not discover anything new that Erhardt did, except to make the motor and the stand entirely separate so they could be removed, one from the other, easily and readily. I cannot discover anything in the way that it is done that is enough to get a patent. I eanndt discover any genius in it. I do not think the mechanic would need to be very skilled in order to do that thing.

It cannot be said that Erhardt was the one that first thought of using a motor in this way, letting the motor do the work, fixing the stand or something to hold it in position so it could do the work, while the operator could do something else. There is nothing new about the motor. There is nothing about that patent that revolutionized any art. There did not seem to be any great advantage in that over the form shown in the Electrical Record. So far as there was an advantage in using the motor separately, if one wanted to, he could take the one shown in the Electrical Record in 1916 and fix it so he could use it. In fact, I do not know why the frame and all could not be stuck down into the eggs, if they wanted to, and a whole pan of eggs be beaten, with the form shown in the Electrical Record in 1916. If they did discover that the frame was a nuisance, too easy to get dirty, and they did not want to bother with it, it would not) require mueh of a mechanic to arrange it so that they could leave the stand and glass and take the motor out. Or in Pettifils if they wanted to fix [989]*989that so that the motor part could be easily removed, thousands of mechanics would think of dozens of ways of releasing that in that frame.

In Pettifils we have the single standard, and in the Electrical Record we have the standard with several legs. Erhardt shows it with three legs.

I am unable to see anything that goes beyond the skill of the ordinary mechanic who would do work of that kind, or to make that change, if they desired it. The refinements of the kitchen have been developing in recent years, and along with them we find the developments here.

One of the next steps taken we find shown in the patent in the second suit, the one to Gilbert, No. 1,698,363 of January 8, 1929, which contains further refinements and further details. There is a patent which, as I see it, simply groups together a lot of different refinements on different parts, not very closely related to each other, all tending to a common cause in a way, but no more so than where some very skillful carpenter should begin to build a little finer house than anybody else builds. He fixes his windows better and his floors better, his walls better, does each part of it a little bit better and arranges it a little more convenient, and gets a combination that would be much finer, but he could not get a patent on it. He could not prevent his next-door neighbor from copying all or any part of it. It would not be very good taste or very neighborly, but if he did it, he could not help it.

- So I find Gilbert’s a very fine, very wonderful little instrument for the kitchen and for the housewife, each part of it nicely made, but the refinements in each part have very little to do with the other parts and none of the steps rise to the dignity of genius, and none of them go far enough to justify a man’s being rewarded with a patent. Each of them, or the combination of all of them, is the work of good mechanics. Taking the base, for example, there are many things mentioned about that base, but there is not any one of them that entitles it to a patent, nor do all of them taken together entitle it to a patent. We have something that we want to prevent from tipping over. We always know enough to make a large base. Some of them do it this way and some of them do not, but they know how to do it. The principles of the center of gravity with relation to the size of the base and all that are well known to those who have studied mechanics, and they are well known to those who have never studied mechanics and do not know anything about the subject. It is fine to have those rubbers in the holes and the wide base, but there is) nothing about it that approaches anywhere near an invention and no patent should be granted for it under our law. They have the extending ears. All mechanics know; that if they want to fasten anything to the floor, they can punch holes in the base and fasten it down, or have an ear extending out, put a hole through that, and fasten it down. Each way has its certain advantages for certain purposes. It is the work of a mechanic and not of a genius. It is not the sort of thing that is entitled to a patent.

You can describe it in technical language or general language. You might describe the building of a house in technical language. You might describe the putting on of the side boards by saying that you lap one edge over the other and drive the nail into the one that went on, and then lap the next one over it so that no nail shall be exposed to the weather, but you could not get a patent on it. It would be what a good mechanic putting side boards on a house would do.

There is the adjustable feature. That is a good thing, a fine thing. They began to make it without it. Then somebody, some mechanic, not a genius, discovered that it would be desirable to make it adjustable. It is a mechanic’s job to make it adjustable. It can be done in different ways. This is the usual manner. One could shut his eyes and see pictures of many things adjusted in that way, up and down a standard, just exactly as that is adjustable.

I look at this as I did when I first heard these patents. It ran through my mind then that here are patents that a judge would be justified in declaring void on the reading of them. He would have a right to take judicial notice of 'What is usual in the mechanical world, and from the date of these patents he would be able to say that it was not genius that produced the drawings and the specification, or the things made under the specifications and the claims.

The curved standard there is helpful. That makes more room. We have all seen hundreds of things that involve that very principle. If you want to make something more roomy, you curve it óut. I could pick out many, many things of that kind. It is not invention to do things of that kind. There is the hollowing out of the base for the glass receptacle to rest in.

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Related

A. C. Gilbert Co. v. United Electrical Mfg. Co.
58 F.2d 990 (Sixth Circuit, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 988, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-c-gilbert-co-v-united-electrical-mfg-co-mied-1930.