Atlas Trailers & Water Mufflers, Inc. v. Gray's Iron Works, Inc.

43 F.2d 191, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 276, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 1930
DocketNo. 183
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 43 F.2d 191 (Atlas Trailers & Water Mufflers, Inc. v. Gray's Iron Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Trailers & Water Mufflers, Inc. v. Gray's Iron Works, Inc., 43 F.2d 191, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 276, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260 (S.D. Tex. 1930).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, District Judge.

Plaintiff sues for an injunction and for damages, alleging the infringement by defendants of a patent, No. 1,544,465, granted to W. H. Lovell et al. and now by assignment the property of plaintiffs.

The patent relates to improvements in trucks. Both plaintiff’s and defendants’ devices, as exhibited in model form at the trial, show a cotton trailer, low, flat, having a central beam with two side bars, upper and lower fifth wheels adapted for securing short turning, and the evidence shows that both plaintiff’s and defendants’ trucks operate efficiently and economically in the business for which they are designed.

The evidence also shows quite extensive commercial use of plaintiff’s trailer, and that, whether the device displays invention or not, it is a commercially .useful article.

As described in it, the patent “relates to improvements in trucks, and has for an object to provide an improved truck adapted particularly to be hauled in trains by tractors in which the front and rear wheels are mounted for pivotal steering movement with connections between the same for coordinating this movement.”

Defendants contest plaintiff’s suit on several grounds:

(1) That, in view of the state of the art at'the time the patent was issued, plaintiff’s device does not exhibit invention, but merely mechanical skill.

(2) That plaintiff’s assignor was not the first and prior inventor.

[192]*192(3) The claims, while purporting to'claim a valid patentable combination, merely describe an aggregation of old elements, each operation in accordance with its own function, and together producing no new or novel function.

(4) That, if the claims are valid, they are not infringed (a) because for a combination some of the elements of which are wanting in defendants’ device; (b) because in the course of the progress of the application from the Patent Office certain claims were rejected, and certain restrictions inserted in 'those remaining, which give to the patent such a narrow scope as that only the precise copying of the device will constitute an infringement of it.

Much evidence was offered upon the point that Voight, and not Lovell, was the first and prior inventor, and it tends strongly to establish the defense; and, were it not for the fact of the interference prosecuted by Voight, and his subsequent abandonment of it, followed by the patent to Lovell, I'should be strongly inclined to the view that the defense was made out.

In view of the sharp conflict in the evidence, and of the heavy burden which the circumstances surrounding the assertion of the defense now puts upon defendants [American Optical Co. v. Shur-On Optical Co. (D. C.) 9 F. (2d) 932; Drum v. Turner (C. C. A.) 219 F. 188], I am disinclined to and will not sustain that defense.

The' defense of noninfringement is also strongly presented from the viewpoint of the narrow and strictly definitive scope of plaintiffs’ grant in the light of the admitted fact that defendants do not use some of the elements of plaintiffs’ combination.

There can be no question that, if plaintiffs’ patent has any validity, it must be limited very narrowly, for it was granted in a field already worked out. It consists, either of a mere aggregation of old elements, as claimed by the defendants, or of nothing more than a combination of such elements. In such case infringement cannot be predicated of a device which uses a portion, but not all, of the parts of the combination. Dry Hand Mop Co. v. Squeez-Ezy Mop Co. (C. C. A.) 17 F.(2d) 465.

Here defendants make their upper fifth wheels do the work of the complainants’ upper fifth wheels and V-shaped supports.' In plaintiff’s patent there is claimed means for connecting the lower fifth wheels of both trucks to the trailer, whereas defendants connect, the front and rear axle by crossed steel -bars, and not fifth wheels. Neither do the defendants use one drawbar for detaching the mounting in connection with the lower fifth wheel of the trailer.

It is the law that “a combination is an entirety,” and that, “if one of its elements is omitted, the thing claimed disappears.” Wichita Visible Gasoline Pump Co. v. Clear Vision Pump Co. (C. C. A.) 19 F.(2d) 435, 437; Sargent v. Hall Safe & Lock Co., 114 U. S. 86, 5 S. Ct. 1021, 29 L. Ed. 67. But though this is the law in its general statement, it seems to me that the devices of plaintiff and defendants are so essentially alike in their structure, form, and operation, that it would be keeping the promise to the ear while it breaks it to the hope, to say that plaintiff has a patent valid at all and not here infringed, for the most narrowly constructed claim in the most crowded art has some “range of equivalency.” Sanitary Refrigerator Co. v. Winters, 280 U. S. 30, 50 S. Ct. 9, 10, 74 L. Ed. 147. I am therefore not willing to sustain the defense of noninfringement, but will find that, if plaintiff’s patent is valid, it is infringed.

When the question of validity for want of invention is examined, either from the general standpoint that no invention was involved in conceiving plaintiff’s device, or from the more detailed point of attack, that the claims define merely an aggregation of old elements, without new function, I think the ease is different, and that plaintiff must fail, because nothing in the patent discloses that imaginative flash which makes the jump spark connection between quest and discovery, which is called invention.

In the first place, it seems entirely plain to me that the patent involves a mere aggregation and combination of old elements, evolving no new co-operative function. Grinnell Washing Machine v. Johnson Co., 247 U. S. 428, 38 S. Ct. 547, 549, 62 L. Ed. 1196. That case lays down the rule that “generally speaking, a combination of old elements in order to be patentable must produce by their joint action a novel and useful result, or an old result in a more advantageous way,” and specifically, that, “so long as eaeh element performs some old and well-known function, the result is not a patentable combination, but an aggregation of elements.”

An analysis and study of the patent in suit, its drawings, specifications, and claims, in the light of the prior art, shows plainly that this is so, and this is emphasized by a reading of the file wrapper, which shows that, though a mere paraphrase, and in some in[193]*193stances almost a copying of old claims, largely because of tbe insistence in tbe application, supported by photographs and illustrations of tractors in active use, upon the widespread acceptance of the trailer in commercial use, the patent was granted.

After its first rejection, the applicant, in addition to discussing some of the cited references, and attempting to differentiate them in wholly inconsequential points, emphasized the advantage of its fifth wheel construction, both as to the metal used, and as to the method of attachment thereof, using this language: “The high bolster or block is dispensed with and the strain is transferred in one plane from the rods direetly to the small king bolt.”

The applicant then goes on: “The construction of the Y shaped supports, together with the central longitudinal beam, the arrangements of the fifth wheels and the wide plates 14 together with the other parts form a small flat yet very strong and durable construction.

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43 F.2d 191, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 276, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-trailers-water-mufflers-inc-v-grays-iron-works-inc-txsd-1930.