American Delinter Co. v. American Machinery & Construction Co.

128 F. 709, 63 C.C.A. 307, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3960
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1904
DocketNo. 1,309
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 F. 709 (American Delinter Co. v. American Machinery & Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Delinter Co. v. American Machinery & Construction Co., 128 F. 709, 63 C.C.A. 307, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3960 (5th Cir. 1904).

Opinion

SHELBY, Circuit Judge.

The bill beginning this suit was filed by the complainant (appellant here), an Arkansas corporation, against the defendant (appellee here), a Mississippi corporation. The complainant is the owner of patent No. 503,103, of date August 8, 1893, for a new and useful improvement in methods of and apparatus for deluding cotton seed, and known as the “Thomas Delinter.” It alleged that the defendant had infringed the patent of the complainant by making, using, and leasing, and offering to lease, a machine known as the “Baxter Deliuter,” ^patented October 16, 1900, as shown by letters patent No. 659,840. The complainant prayed for damages for the alleged infringement and' for a perpetual injunction. The defendant answered that the Thomas patent was dot valid, and that it had been anticipated in whole or in part by 18 other patents named, and admitted the making and leasing of the Baxter delinter, but denied that in doing so it had infringed the rights of the complainant, and denied that the Baxter delinter was substantially the same as the Thomas dellnter in purpose, construction, or operation.

The Circuit Court dismissed the bill, denying the complainant any relief, and an appeal was taken to this court. It is assigned, .with proper specifications, that the Circuit Court erred in the decree dismissing the bill.

There are two questions to be decided: (1) Is the Thomas delinter patent valid ? (2)«I fas the defendant infringed that patent ?

i. It is matter of common knowledge that when cotton is passed through the gin, while the long lint is separated from the seed, there is left clinging, to the seed a short lint. This short lint has some value when separated from the seed, and its separation adds ff> the commercial value of the seed. It has been evident for many years that a machine that would rapidly and economically delint cotton seed would be of great value. Before the invention of the Thomas delinter several debuting machines had been patented, but’an examination of them shows /that they differ in many material particulars from the Thomas machine, .and, so far as appears from the record, not one of them was successful ¡ in its operation. , We shall have occasion later to refer to them again.

A Thomas delinter was. exhibited to the trial court and to this .court . at the hearing. Its several parts are shown in the drawings accompany-..iug the patent. Any description we may be able to give will be greatly [720]*720aided by the following figure taken from the brief of the appellant, which represents the machine with its several parts adjusted:

The patent, claims, and the other evidence in the record show that the machine is constructed with a central horizontal shaft, supported by a frame at or near each end, with a drawing pulley on each end. On the shaft are placed a series of corrugated corundum wheels, 12 inches in diameter. Between the corundum wheels are space blocks. On the space blocks are stirrers, nearly flush with the corundum wheels. These [721]*721stirrers are to stir the cotton seed, and to push them towards the discharging end of the machine. The corundum wheels fastened on the shaft are surrounded by a perforated metal casing, the perforations being large enough for the lint, but not the seed, to pass through them, the inside of the perforated casing being- smooth. This metal casing is situated about one inch from the rim of the corundum wheels. Outside of this perforated casing is another metal casing, which is open at the bottom, and connects at the top with a suction fan, which draws the lint through the perforations when it has been scoured from the .seed by the corundum wheels. The cylinder of corundum wheels being put in motion by the belts, the seed pass into the machine at the top of the end marked “inlet.” They pass through the machine lengthwise, the machine being held close to the corundum wheels by the smooth perforated casing. The seed are delinted by the wheels, and pass out at the bottom of the other end of the machine, marked “outlet,” the lint as it is scoured off being separated from the seed by being sucked through the holes in the first casing. Connected with the inlet end of the machine there is a down spout, 6 or 8 feet high, and a screw-shaped block of wood next to the first corundum wheel. The feed erf seed being continuous, the space between the cylinder and the perforated casing is filled, and is kept full, although the delinted seed are discharged at the outlet. The rotation of the corundum wheels and the stirrers on the space blocks causes the circular or annular roll of seed to revolve, but at less speed than the corundum wheels. The result is that the lint is removed from the seed, and the lint and seed separately discharged from the machine.

The Thomas patent and the original drawings do not show the feed screw or the screw-shaped block at the inlet. The patent clearly shows, however, that the seed were to be fed to the machine at one end and to be discharged at the other. The evidence shows that in the construction of the first machine a screw-shaped block of wood was placed under the feed spout and next to the first corundum wheel. Later the feed screw was used. It seems evident that some device — blades with slanting edges, a screw-shaped block, or a feed screw — is useful to start the seed in the right direction and push them through the machine. The patent pointedly provided that they should enter at one end and be discharged at the other. The feed spout being kept full, gravity and the motion of the machine would cause the seed to go in the direction intended toward the outlet. The evidence shows, however, that the use of the feed screw or some equivalent device is of advantage in pushing the seed from the inlet to the outlet. In the construction of the machine Thomas would not be confined to- making an exact copy of his drawings and specifications. It would be almost impossible to insert in the drawings and description ever)*- detail. If the drawings and description furnished are sufficient for a mechanic skilled in the art to construct the device patented, they are sufficient. '

We are of opinion that the failure to- show a feed screw or an equivalent device in the drawings or the patent does not invalidate the patent.

Eighteen patents have been put in evidence as anticipations of the Thomas delinter. They include patents for grain scourers, for bolting flour, for shaft hangers, for cleaning cotton seed, and several for de[722]*722linting cotton seed. It is unnecessary to examine each of them separately to point out the differences between them and the Thomas machine. Generally, those of them that are intended to be delinters rely on the abrasion of the seed by two rough surfaces, whereas one main idea of the Thomas delinter is that the cotton seed shall be held by a .smooth surfaced casing close to the corrugated corundum wheels. The conception of avoiding all roughness or abrading quality on the part of the casing is not evidenced in any one of the patents or machines prior to Thomas’. In his specifications it is said: “In constructing the perforations which form the lint outlet, care should bé taken to avoid projections, roughness, or anything calculated either to interfere with the movement heretofore referred to of the annular body of seed or with the escape of the lint.” The prior patents, on the contrary, usually rely on making both surfaces' that come in contact with the seed rough, or in some way fashioning them that both surfaces should serve in taking the lint from the seed.

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Bluebook (online)
128 F. 709, 63 C.C.A. 307, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-delinter-co-v-american-machinery-construction-co-ca5-1904.