American Paper Barrel Co. v. Laraway

28 F. 141, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2235
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 16, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 F. 141 (American Paper Barrel Co. v. Laraway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Paper Barrel Co. v. Laraway, 28 F. 141, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2235 (circtdct 1886).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

These are two motions fop preliminary injunctions in the above-entitled cases. No. 516 is a bill in equity to restrain the infringement of three letters patent, Nos. 206,396, 243,677, and 243,-678, respectively dated July 30, 1878, June 28, 1881, and June 28, 1881, all granted to the defendant, and assigned by him to the plaintiff; the first two being for improvements in the manufacture of barrel heads and other articles from paper pulp, and the third being for machinery for moulding barrels from paper pulp. No. 517 is a bill in equity to restrain the infringement of letters patent No. 258,236, dated May 23,1882, issued to the defendant and Dwight Slate, assign-,, ees to the plaintiff, for a machine for moulding barrel heads from-pulp.

On August 1, 1876, the defendant assigned to the plaintiff, a corporation established for the purpose of manufacturing barrels .from pulp, an invention specified in an application for a patent which had previously been made, .and agreed to assign to it all inventions, applicable to paper pulp vessels, which he might make during seven years from that date. In pursuance of that agreement the patents in suit were assigned. From August, 1876, to January, 1884, the defendant was a director in said corporation, and, during substantially the same period, was in its employ as superintendent of machinery upon a salary varying from $1,000 to $2,500 per annum. The salary ceased on December 15, 1883. A serious difficulty seems to have existed between the defendant and S. M. Hotchkiss, an officer of said corporation, and the former left its service, and for most of the time since has been occupied in Boston in the manufacture of pulp barrel machinery. On December 2, 1884, two letters patent, Nos. 308,615 and 308,616, for such machinery were issued, — the first to the defendant and W. P. Laraway, assignors to the defendant-and John F. Seiberling; the second, to the defendant, assignor to the same two persons.

Suit No. 516.

The important novel features of construction contained in the machinery which is described in Nos. 206,396 and 243,677 are specified by the patentee as follows:

“First, the idea or principle of perforated movable walls, which will compress the pulp, and express the water; second, the combination of the side compressors with the interspace compressors; third, the mould, so constructed that the sides and one end of the hollow article can be formed and compressed at once. ”

The important feature of No. 243,678 was a matrix, composed of hinged inner staves and. outer staves radially moving inwardly; the interspaces being provided for by interstaves, both inner staves and [143]*143outer staves being perforated; tbe outer face of tbe inner staves, and the inner face of the outer staves, being grooved, and covered with a finely-perforated mould face.

The defendant sets up in his affidavit a variety of defenses, viz.: That the claims of Nos. 243,877 and 243,878 were anticipated by a patent to Wheeler & Jerome; that the machine described and claimed in No. 243,878 was in public and open use in Medina, New York, for two years before the dale of the application for said patent; that the defendant is equitably entitled to have the title to the three patents for the counties of Orleans and Niagara, in the state of New York, conveyed to him, which the plaintiff refuses to do; that the plaintiff aquiesced in the defendant’s manufacture; that he is a workman employed by the day, and has no interest in the new machine; that a British patent to one Lake, dated June 25, 1877, was granted for the subject-matter of the three patents, and that the American patents are not limited on their face to expire with the Lake patent, and are therefore void; and that the new machine does not infringe.

Mr. Laraway’s antagonism against the persons with whom he was formerly associated has led him to unnecessarily decry his own inventions.

No time need be spent upon tbe alleged anticipation by the Wheeler & Jerome patent. Mr. Larawav was the assignor of the patents in controversy, and upon this motion lie is estopped from saying that he was not the first inventor. Indeed, this point was not made in the argument.

The alleged public use of the Medina machine is in conflict with Mr. Laraway’s statements as an applicant for a patent, and with his testimony upon a question of interference. The affidavits in the case lead me to the opinion that his former statements were correct.

Considerable space is given in the affidavits to the alleged equitable title of Laraway to two New York counties. I do not deem it wise to settle this difference upon ex parte affidavits. If the defendant’s claim is true it affords no excuse for his manufacturing in Boston infringing machines to be used in Ohio; and, as it is stoutly denied, the doctrine that he who seeks equity must do equity will hardly allow a court to permit the defendant to continue infringement until the merits of this controversy have been thoroughly ascertained.

The points in regard to acquiescence by the plaintiff, or that Laraway is employed by the day, and has no interest in the machine, are not of sufficient importance to spend time upon. His position in regard to the infringing mechanism is very different from that of a person who works under the orders of another, without any pecuniary interest in the machine upon which lie works.

The fact that United States patents are not limited upon their face to expire with the life of a prior English patent is not hold, in this circuit, to affect the validity of the United - States patents. Canan v. Pound Manuf’g Co., 23 Fed. Rep. 185.

[144]*144The question of infringement is the one of importance. If the defendant has built in Boston but one set of machinery, it was at one time constructed in accordance with his patent, No. 308,615, of December 2, 1884. He says that the machine “which is complained of” is not in accordance with that patent, in that it does not have the interspace compressors therein described, but has, instead, the spring plates of the Wheeler & Jerome patent, and that these interspace compressors are unperforated. He intends it to be understood that he has been engaged upon only one set of machinery. If that is true, it is also true that the machine contained, in July, 1885, the interspace compressors of patent 206,396, and was made like the other two patents in controversy, and had the continuous series of perforated external side compressors of No. 243,677, and that it infringed the third claim of No. 206,396, the first, second, and third claims of No. 243,677, and all the claims of No. 243,678.

If the defendant has altered the original machine in accordance with the statements in his affidavit, it infringes the first, second, and fifth claims of No. 243,678. I do not thoroughly understand Mr. Laraway’s account of the construction of the machine, so far as the fifth claim is concerned. His affidavit does not give a clear statement of the way in which he makes the inner core; but, so far as I can understand it, the fifth claim is infringed.

The orders to show cause upon these motions were dated March 18, 1886, and were returnable on March 26th. On that day, upon the defendant’s motion for further time, it was ordered that he should have till April 5th to file answering evidence, and that the plaintiff should have until April 9th to file rebutting evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 F. 141, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-paper-barrel-co-v-laraway-circtdct-1886.