Allis v. Buckstaff

13 F. 879
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 F. 879 (Allis v. Buckstaff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allis v. Buckstaff, 13 F. 879 (circtedwi 1882).

Opinion

Dyer, D. J.

This is one of a series of twelve cases, heard together, in which the several defendants are charged with the infringement of letters patent No. 122,215, granted December 26, 1871, to Nelson E. Beckwith, for- an improvement in head-blocks, of which the complainant is assignee, and the several bills contain the usual prayer for an injunction and account. Contest is made on the question of infringement, and among other defenses set up in the original answers it is alleged that Beckwith was not the original inventor of the alleged improvement, but that the same was described and represented in a patent, No. 20,660, issued to J. Comly Post, June 22, 1858,- for an improved method for clamping and laterally feeding the log in saw-mills; also in a patent, No. 54,177, issued May 15, 1866, to Gr. W. Rodebaugh, for head-blocks for saw-mills; also in a patent, No. 52,904, issued February 27, 1866, to E. H. Stearns, for head-blocks for saw-mills; and also, in a patent, No. 99,4S6, issued February 1, 1870, to Selden and Briggs, for an improvement in head-blocks. " v

. It is further alleged in the original answers that the Beckwith invention was, before a patent was issued therefor, invented by and known to John F. Morse, of the city of Oshkosh, Wisconsin, and was also known to John S. Everett and Charles C. Avery, of the same place; further, that before Beckwith made application for a patent, or reduced his alleged invention to practice, or put it into practical use, or had any knowledge thereof, the said invention “was known to, and had been used in public by, the following-named persons at the places following, to-wit: By the firm of James Jenkins & Co., at the city of Oshkosh, Wisconsin; by John F. Morse, of the [881]*881city of Oshkosh, Wisconsin; by Lawrence McYicar, at Manistee, Michigan.”

There is a further allegation in the original answers that the invention described in the Beckwith patent was known to, and had been previously combined by, one Pond, of Eau Claire, Wisconsin, and John E. Morse, of Oshkosh, in the same state; that each of these parties, at the time Beckwith obtained his patent, was using diligence in perfecting bis said invention, and that Beckwith surreptitiously and unjustly obtained the patent upon which this suit is based.

In the amended answers it is alleged that the same device or combination described and claimed as new in the Beckwith patent, or substantial and material parts thereof, were, before the alleged invention thereof by Beckwith, “invented by IT. D. Dann, wlio lately resided in the city of Oshkosh, but who * * * has moved to Waupun, Wisconsin, and now resides there, in the year I860; and by Franklin B. Muzzy, who resides in the city of Bangor, state of Maine, in the year 1860, and that said mill-dog or head-block, substantially as described in said patent, * * * was used by the firm of End-dock & Go., in the years 1869 and 3 870, at the village of Winneconne, Winnebago county, Wisconsin, which said firm, during said years, was composed of one Euddock, E. E. Wellington, and one Parmeter, in the year 3869, and of said Euddock, Parmeter, Wellington, and one Jones in the year 1870;” and the respective places of residence of said parties are stated.

In the specifications forming part of the Beckwith patent the patentee says:_

“ Tlxe principal difficulties encountered in sawing logs into boards are as follows: First. When a log has been reduced to such thickness that only sufficient material remains for one or two boards, it is almost impossible to hold it upright upon its edge against the standards upon the carriage during the operation of sawing. The liability of the log to thus turn and slip upon the liead-bloeks is greatly aggravated if its lower edge, next to the standard, is waney or rounded oft from any cause. For this reason it is customary in all saw-mills to leave the last cut in the form of a thick plank, affording sufficient bearing surface to prevent its turning upon the head-block. Two thicknesses of lumber are therefore sawed from the same log or cant. Secondly. The standards employed for saw-mill carriages are usually so constructed to hold the log that when the latter is to be sawod entirely into narrow boards of the same thickness the last two or three are liable to bend during the operation of sawing, varying the thickness of each more or less, and producing thereby imperfect boards.
[882]*882“ My invention has for its object to overcome these difficulties; and to this end it consists in constructing the standards with wide-bearing faces for the logs, and in providing each with a central vertical slot or mortise, through which a series of hooks are projected to grasp the log or cant. The lower hook is curved upward, to catch into the lower edge of the log next the standard, and the upper hooks are curved downward, to catch into the face of the log. The lower hook, and the series of upper hooks, therefore, move in opposite directions to grasp the log between them, and prevent^ it from slipping. The hooks are operated simultaneously by a lever from the back of the standard, and by a suitable system of connecting bars. * * * By this arrangement the upper hook holds the log securely in contact with the lower hook, while the latter holds it firmly against the standard, and prevents it from slipping until the last board is sawed. By constructing the standards with a wide face, and in arranging the hook to project through a central slot, a broad bearing is formed for the log upon each side of the hooks, so that when the log is reduced to the thickness of two or three boards the latter are held securely against bending while being sawed.”

In connection with accompanying drawings, the specifications proceed to state in detail the construction and arrangement of the various parts of the device, and the patentee then claims as new:

“(1) In combination with the standards for saw-mill carriages, the hooks, 0, D, adapted to be simultaneously projected in opposite directions through the central .vertical slot in the face of said standard, substantially as described, for the purpose specified. (2) The combination of the hook, 0, and connecting bars, F, I, with the operating lever and the hook, D, substantially as described, for the purpose specified.”

There is a further and third claim, which, however, it is unnecessary to refer to.

In the case of Allis v. Stowell, (unreported,)

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Related

Allis v. Stowell
1 F. Cas. 530 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Missouri, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. 879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allis-v-buckstaff-circtedwi-1882.