Auto Hone Co. v. Hall Cylinder Hone Co.

3 F.2d 479, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedMay 22, 1924
DocketNo. 434
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 479 (Auto Hone Co. v. Hall Cylinder Hone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auto Hone Co. v. Hall Cylinder Hone Co., 3 F.2d 479, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271 (N.D. Ohio 1924).

Opinion

WESTENHAVER, District Judge.

This is the usual patent infringement suit. It is based on United States letters patent No. 1,193,884, issued to Victor J. Emery and Mellen N. Bray, August 8, 1916. Claims 5 and 6 only are in issue. The defense is non-infringement. The validity generally of the patent is not challenged, but it is urged that claim 5, if given the broad construction for which plaintiff contends, is void as functional.

The device in question is a portable grinder, primarily used in truing up out-of-round cylinders, particularly automobile cylinders. It is operated with a portable electric drill. In the summer of 1922 defendant’s president, E. A. Hall, acquired from the Auto Hone Company, under a tentative agency contract, a, grinder thoii being made by it, and, finding, as he asserts, that it was defective, designed the present device said to infringe. Complaint is also made that defendant has appropriated some advertising cuts and matter furnished to Hall in that connection. At that time, and not until after the present dispute had begun, had either party any knowledge of the Emery and Bray patent or device, which had never been marketed, and the commercial use of which had ceased in 1921. The Auto Hone Company, after notifying the defendant of the alleged infringement, acquired in April, 1923, the Emery and Bray patent, and brings this suit thereon. These cross-complaints of inequitable conduct are immaterial. In its controlling aspects, the issue is one of infringement or noninfringement, and this issue involves a comparison of the elements of the two devices and their functions and principles of operation.

Emery is the inventor of the grinder for which the patent issued. The object of the invention is stated therein to provide “an improved device for grinding or lapping various materials.” Emery in 1915, when he made his invention, was a maker and repairer of marine engines, and devised it primarily for use in grinding the interior of marine engine cylinders. It is proved that his grinder was capable of use and actually used in grinding and truing up out-of -round automobile engine cylinders. In grinding marine or automobile engine cylinders, it was necessary to place the cylinder upon the bed of a drill press and connect the shaft or [480]*480spindle of the grinder with the drill press spindle or arm. It is so required, not merely to furnish an operating mechanism and power, but to center the grinder with the cylinder,' although thé evidence shows that centering might also be had by an extension of the grinder shaft.

Figure 3 of, the patent and Plaintiff’s Ex- ■ Mbits 21 and 22 best disclose the features of Emery’s invention'. It has a shaft or spindle adapted to be driven by any suitable means. At the lower end of tMs shaft, a •spider or head is mounted, the head being grooved to receive four arms, although the evidence shows that a three, and even a two, arm grinder had been made and used by Emery, which arm is pivoted at one end. In the other end is a recess to receive a grinding stone, usually a block off. carborundum or like abrasive substance. These pivoted arms, with their grinding stones, are designed and mounted to swing in a plane transverse' to the shaft as-the shaft revolves. Spiral tension springs are interposed between the shaft and each arm to force the grinding stone outwardly and hold it in contact with the cylinder wall, thus supplementing the centrifugal force resulting merely from a rapid revolution of the grinder. These elements of the device are old in the art.

The new elements pertain to its remaining features, now to be described. A collar is mounted on the shaft above the pivoted arms, from wMch project four or any desired number of lugs. Upon these lugs are pivoted detents or levers, one end of wMch enters a recess in each pivoted arm, and the other rests upon or in proximity to a screw-threaded cone or wedge member. TMs wedge cone is screwed upon the shaft, and limits or adjustably controls the distance to wMch the spring tension may expand outwardly the pivoted arms. By screwing the cone downwardly towards the grinder, the outward throw or range in operation of the arms is rigidly limited. It likewise thus limits or controls the expansive effect of the tension springs. By screwing the wedge cone in the opposite direction, the outward throw or range of the arms is correspondingly enlarged.

The novel result thus accomplished is the rigid limitation upon the effective grinding operation and the ability to predetermine and readjust tMs limit. When one end of the levers rests upon the wedge or cone, the combined spring tension and centrifugal force are overcome, and no grinding thereafter takes place. This limit may be determined before the grinding begins, so that the abrading members will cease-to grind at the low spots when that limit is reached, while continuing to grind at the high spots until a perfectly round cylinder is made. In addition thereto, the wedge cone may be adjusted as often as is necessary, so that a minimum amount of material is removed ia getting the desired result. It is asserted, and I think correctly, .that with the Emery device it was possible to work to an extremely high degree of accuracy, as closei as four-tenths of one-thousandth of an inch. It should be noted that, while witnesses speak of oval, or tapered, or out-of-round cylinders, these terms are relative, and should be thought of in terms of the thousandth part of an inch. Emery speaks of cylinders worn to an oval shape as much as .015 or .018 of an inch as a rather extreme ease. • Defendant’s device is called a hone, but uses abrading members of the same material as Emery. For present purposes I shall refer to its third form, illustrated by Plaintiff’s Exhibits 23 and 26 • and Defendant’s ExMbit C. It has a hollow, elongated body, wMch also serves generally as an operating shaft or spindle. This hollow shaft has hinged thereto four swinging arms, about 8 inches in length, spaced -about the shaft, so that each pair of two are always directly opposite each Other. These arms swing parallel to the axis of the hollow shaft, like hinged .doors. Except as they are hinged at both ends, and are four to six times the length of the arms of Emery’s device, they operate as holding members for abrading stones, and are pivotally mounted in substantially the same manner as in Emery. They also swing in a plane transversely to the shaft and radially distant therefrom. Each arm does not have a separate coiled tension spring interposed between the same and the shaft, to supplement and reinforce the centrifugal action. There is, however, a coiled tension spring interposed in the hollow shaft between an adjusting nut at the top and a plunger at the bottom. The lower end of the plunger is conical in form and presses against four dogs or levers. Each of these dogs is interposed against the inner side of the holder arms, and is pivoted at its other end to the shaft body. In defendant’s third form, or eight-dog hone, tMs plunger has an extension, with a conical lower end to operate another set of four dogs. While the elements thus described differ in form and are differently organized from Emery, they [481]*481function in substantially the same way and accomplish substantially the same result.

The levers and wedge-shaped cone of the Emery device are eliminated. Defendant has no levers or the equivalent thereof which limit the outward throw or range of the arms or holders. It has no cone or other means which enable radial adjustments to be made from time to time of the arms, or limit the swing thereof beyond which the grinders can no longer work.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 479, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auto-hone-co-v-hall-cylinder-hone-co-ohnd-1924.