American Can Co. v. Hickmott Asparagus Canning Co.

142 F. 141, 73 C.C.A. 359, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4102
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1905
DocketNo. 1,190
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 142 F. 141 (American Can Co. v. Hickmott Asparagus Canning Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Can Co. v. Hickmott Asparagus Canning Co., 142 F. 141, 73 C.C.A. 359, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4102 (9th Cir. 1905).

Opinion

GILBERT, Circuit Judge,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

• The broadest claim of the Jordan patent is claim 69. It reads as follows:

“The combination with a rotatable horn furnished with means for clamping the edge or end of the sheet thereto, of a device for holding the opposite edge or end of the sheet against the horn, and means for interlocking the hooks •on the blank, substantially as specified.”

In his specifications Jordan said:

“In the drawings I have shown that form of edge-folding or hook-making mechanisms, horn-bumping or seam-squeezing device, and blank-feed device which I prefer to use and to combine together for practicing my invention; but the construction of each of these several devices may be greatly varied by those skilled in the art without departing from the principle of my invention and the broader features thereof.”

The question which is presented to us on the appeal is one of infringement only, and in determining that question it becomes necessary to consider- the nature of the Jordan invention, and to determine how far it is protected against the use of mechanical equivalents. Prior to the Jordan patent, can-bodies were formed upon nonrotating fixed horns, which were hollowed out in their interior and provided with mechanism to cause them to expand. Hooks were first formed on the ends of the sheets of tin for the interlocking seams. The sheets were then placed transversely across the upper surface of the fixed horn, and were shaped around it by folding arms curved to fit the horn and to cause the hooks to come into engagement. Then by the expansion of the horn the hooks were interlocked. The term “mechanical equivalents” has a variable meaning, and is measured by the character of the invention to which it is applied. The appellant contends that the Jordan invention was pioneer. But we think it cannot be said that Jordan was a pioneer inventor in the sense that he was the first to produce a machine to successfully form can-bodies. He was the first, however, to form can-bodies by the use of a rotating horn. In so doing, he made a highly meritorious improvement, and an invention which marks a distinct step in advance in the progress of the art, and which has gone into extensive and successful usé. His invention must be accorded a place- in[145]*145ferior, perhaps, to that of a primary invention, but far in advance of those which constitute but a slight improvement on the prior art. His claims, therefore, while not entitled to the broadest construction accorded to the former, are not to be restricted to the narrow construction applicable to the latter. He is entitled, to the protection of the doctrine of equivalency in proportion to the nature of the advance which his invention indicates. In Penfield v. Chambers Bros. Co., 92 Fed. 630, 638, 34 C. C. A. 579, Judge Severens said:

“The rule applicable to the determination of equivalency depends upon the importance and the breadth of the original invention, and does not depend upon the question whether it was the first in the field relating to that subject, but upon the degree of advancement which the invention has made in newness of discovery and utility; for there may be as much merit in bringing on a large illumination from a feeble start as in the conception of the first beclouded idea which may have originated in the course of study and discovery along that line.”

See, also, McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. v. Aultman, Miller & Co., 69 Fed. 371, 16 C. C. A. 259; Muller v. Tool Co., 77 Fed. 621, 23 C. C. A. 357; Letson v. Alaska Packers Ass’n, 130 Fed. 140, 64 C. C. A. 463; Miller v. Eagle Mfg. Co., 151 U. S. 186, 207, 14 Sup. Ct. 310, 38 L. Ed. 121.

It is plain to be seen that the Jordan invention is not founded on the earlier art. There was nothing in the preceding inventions to suggest the idea of a rotatable horn and of attaching the edge of a sheet of tin thereto and rolling it up in the form of a can-body. His patent is entitled, therefore, to stand for what the claims import, free from limitations imposed by the prior art.

Applying the doctrine of mechanical equivalents so defined, it will be seen, on reviewing the elements of claim 69, that the appellees use the rotatable horn. This is not disputed. The next inquiry is whether the appellees’ combination uses means for clamping the edge or end of the sheet to the rotating horn. In order to roll up a sheet of tin in the form of a can-body, it is absolutely essential to attach one edge of the sheet to the rotating horn. This Jordan does by what he denominates in his machine a “clamp.” It is an adjustable band of iron which engages the unfolded edge of the tin and holds it fast against the horn. In the Eldridge patent the sheet is attached to the rotating horn, both by the inturned hook or undercut which engages the hook formed upon the sheet, and by the underlying cushion resting upon a.spring which presses the sheet upward and holds it in position while it is being rolled up. Is this a clamping device, or the mechanical equivalent of the clamping device in the Jordan patent, under the reasonably liberal construction to which the claim is entitled? The definition of a clamp found in the Century Dictionary is as follows:

“An instrument of wood, metal, or other rigid material, used to bold anything, or to hold or fasten two or more things together by pressure so as to keep them in the same relative position.”

The appellees certainly use a .clamp to hold by pressure the edge ol the sheet of tin against the rotatable horn, and we are unable to see that they can avoid the charge of infringement by showing that the clamp would be insufficient to hold the sheet in position without [146]*146the aid of the hook on that end of the sheet. The hook is essential, it is true; but so is the clamp. Referring to this clamping device, the appellees’ expert witness, Kruse, admitted that it was “used for the purpose of wrapping the tin,” but said that its principal use was to assist in making the first hook. The fact that it served an additional purpose is immaterial. In using the clamp with the hook the appellees come, we think, within the terms of the claim, and use means for clamping the end or edge of the sheet to the horn. They use these means for the same, purpose for which the appellant’s clamp is used; that is, to make a point of resistance, so that the sheet may be rolled around the horn in its revolution.

Turning to the third element of the claim, we find that the Eldridge patent has a device for holding the opposite edge or end of the sheet against the horn. This is the presser plate, f. As the horn is rotated, the sheet passes beneath the presser plate, f, and while, during the first portion of the rotation, it is not held absolutely in contact with the horn, it will be seen by the time the horn has made one-fourth of its rotation the contact is close to the horn and remains so until the revolution is stopped.

Fourth, the appellees’ machine has means for interlocking the hooks on the blanks. It is true that the appellant’s machine operates with a blank on which a hook has already been formed at the end opposite that of the initial engagement with the horn, and that the appellees’ machine receives sheets of tin on which no hook has been formed. It is essential, however, to the making of tin cans that there be hooks on each end of the sheet for interlocking.

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Bluebook (online)
142 F. 141, 73 C.C.A. 359, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-can-co-v-hickmott-asparagus-canning-co-ca9-1905.