American Street Flushing Mach. Co. v. St. Louis Street Flushing Mach. Co.

180 F. 759, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5507
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedJune 17, 1910
DocketNo. 5,208
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 F. 759 (American Street Flushing Mach. Co. v. St. Louis Street Flushing Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Street Flushing Mach. Co. v. St. Louis Street Flushing Mach. Co., 180 F. 759, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5507 (circtedmo 1910).

Opinion

DYER, District Judge.

This cause was begun in this court in 1905. It was tried by my predecessor, who entered an interlocutory decree in favor of complainant and referred the matter of accounting to Byron F. Babbitt, as master. An appeal was allowed to the Circuit Court of Appeals from the decree here entered in September, 1906. The decision of this court was affirmed, and the master proceeded to take testimony, and thereafter on the 9th of December, 1909, made his report and filed a transcript of the evidence taken. The master’s report concludes as follows:

“In view of all the foregoing, and by way of summary, I make the following findings and recommendations:
“First. I find that the defendant St. Louis Street Flushing Machine Company has realized from its sales of infringing street flushing machines profits In the aggregate sum of $4,950, the allowance of which amount to complainant is respectfully recommended.
[760]*760“Second. I find that the defendant William Ratican has realized on account of his ipdividual infringement of .complainant’s patent rights profits in the sum of $15,039.03, the allowance of which to complainant herein is respectfully recommended.
“Third. In the absence of any testimony showing, or tending to show, that complainant has sustained any actual damages by reason of defendant’s infringement, I find that complainant is entitled to no damages, as such, and that its recovery is limited to the profits severally realized by said defendants, and as hereinabove set forth.
„ “Respectfully submitted, Byron F. Babbitt, Special Master.”

Exceptions were duly filed to this report, by both the complainant and the defendants. It is this report and the exceptions thereto that is now before the court for consideration.

The Court of Appeals very tersely stated in its opinion (156 Fed. 574, 84 C. C. A. 340) the controversy between complainant and defendants. The court says:

“This was a suit to enjoin infringement of United States letters patent No. 795,059, granted July 18, 1905, to complainant, the American Street Flushing Machine Company, as assignee of L. F. Ottofy, the inventor. * * *
• “Taking the claims and the specifications together, we find the invention is for a device for scouring and flushing streets, consisting of and resulting in forcing water under pressure from a tank located on a moving cart connected by pipe to a nozzle or nozzles having narrow elongated delivery apertures, extending,downward from the tank and to a position near the surface of the street forward of the rear wheels, and so adjusted that the water is forced out of the apertures in a flat sheet nearly parallel with the surface of the street in a forward and lateral direction, so as to loosen up the dirt and simultaneously force it away to the sides of the street and into the gutters, without injury to the surface of the street. There is no claim that any of the elements of the patent are new. The tank, the water under pressure, the nozzle, the delivery apertures, and the means of adjustment are all old; but the contention is that the particular combination of these elements in the patent produces a new and useful result; and is patentable. The new and useful result'claimed is the effective loosening up of dirt and material on the street and washing them off into the gutter by one action without injury to the street.”

The court further says:

“Practically the only contention, aside from, that of want of patentable novelty, now for consideration, is that the invention of the patent is limited to a narrow compass. This is entitled to serious attention. The state of the art when Ottofy entered the field was well advanced. The numerous patents pleaded as anticipations and given in evidence disclose the art of street flushing and washing, and the kindred art of street sprinkling had been much exploited by inventors. The- field had been thoroughly worked. The mechanism employed was simple,, and nothing abstruse or obscure was involved. Streams Operating forwardly and laterally had been produced before; but no broad flat stream- operating nearly parallel to the surface of the street as to perform the function of a shovel in scouring and flushing the street had ever been produced. In view of the prior art, the novelty and merit of the present patent rest exclusively in the employment of means and in the combination of elements to produce this fiat nearly parallel stream. The patent, therefore, is not a pioneer or primary one in any sense, and the owner is not entitled to much range of equivalents.”

The master recommends that judgment be entered against the defendants separately, as follows: ■

“Against the St. Louis Street Flushing Machine Company for $4,950, and against William Ratican for $15,039.03.”

[761]*761The first of these recommendations is based upon the profits derived by the company from the sale of 14 street flushing machines,_ manufactured by it, and sold to various parties. The entire machine, including the nozzle claimed to have been infringed, was manufactured by the defendant. The master is of opinion that the complainant is entitled to all of the profits derived from the sale of the machine, without regard to the value of the particular nozzle infringed. There was no evidence offered by either side (so far as I have been able to discover from the record) to show the profits that came to the defendant from the use of this improved or patented nozzle over what he might have made by the use of other nozzles that did not infringe the patent of complainant. The claims of complainant’s patent did not and could not cover the entire machine and to ascertain the profits to defendant, growing out of the use of the patented device, proof must be offered.

In the case of Brown et al. v. Lanyon Zinc Co. (recently delivered by the Circuit Court of Appeals for this Circuit) 179 Fed. 309, the court says:

“The chief complaint directed against the accounting, and the only one - which merits particular mention, is that an erroneous standard of comparison was used in measuring the profits realized by the defendant from this infringement. At the outset it is well to observe that the invention in suit did not cover the entire furnace of the Ropp type, as used by the defendant, but only a part of it, consisting of the supplemental chamber wherein the rabble operating mechanism was housed and protected from the direct action of the heat, dust, and fumes while it actuated the rabbles in the main chamber by means of an arm extended through a slot in the intervening wall or floor, and that, although the defendant’s use of this improvement was a wrongful use of the plaintiff’s property, its use of other parts of the furnace was a lawful use of its own property; that is, of what was open to use by all alike. Therefore, the plaintiffs’ interest in the profits derived from the use of the entire furnace was confined to such as arose from the patented feature, the supplemental chamber, and the remaining profits rightfully belonged to the defendant. That is well settled. In McCreary v. Pennsylvania Canal Co., 141 U. S. 459, 463 [12 Sup. Ct. 40, 42 (35 L. Ed.

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180 F. 759, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-street-flushing-mach-co-v-st-louis-street-flushing-mach-co-circtedmo-1910.