Autographic Register Co. v. Uarco, Inc.

86 F. Supp. 730, 82 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 152, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJuly 13, 1949
DocketCiv. A. No. 48 C 114
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 86 F. Supp. 730 (Autographic Register Co. v. Uarco, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Autographic Register Co. v. Uarco, Inc., 86 F. Supp. 730, 82 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 152, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301 (N.D. Ill. 1949).

Opinion

SHAW, District Judge.

The original complaint in this case was filed January 27, 1948, and charges the defendant with infringement of Letters Patent No. 2,258,573, issued to Arthur A. Johnson and assigned to the plaintiff, and Letters Patent No. 2,082,730, issued to Carl W. Brenn and likewise assigned to the plaintiff. The complaint is in the usual form, with customary prayers for relief.

On February 16, 1948 the defendant filed a motion for bill of particulars, and thereafter, on March 1, 1948, what was designated as a bill of particulars was filed, and on the same date there was filed an amended complaint adding two more patents designated as Nos. 2,159,500 and 2,212,174, issued to Brenn and both assigned to the plaintiff. The so-called bill of particulars above referred to is in legal effect no bill of particulars at all, because it refers to 26 claims in the Johnson patent, 10 of which are designated as typical; to 9 claims in one of the Brenn patents, of which 4 are designated as typical; to 2 claims in another Brenn patent, and to 2 claims in another Brenn patent. It specifies 3 claims in the Johnson patent which it claims are infringed.

Defendant’s answer was filed April 20, 1948, and is in the usual form. It lists 13 prior art patents as against the validity of No. 2,082,730; 22 Patents as prior art against No. 2,258,573, 15 interferences as against the same patent, as well as 5 prior patents; as to Patent No. 2,159,500, 10 prior art patents are cited; as against No. 2,212,174,9 prior patents and several interferences are cited.

As to each of the patents, it is alleged affirmatively that it is insufficiently described. It is further affirmatively alleged as a defense that the plaintiff is estopped to enforce any claim or demand in connection with any of those patents because of undue and willful delay in the prosecution in the Patent Office. It is further alleged by way of affirmative defense that by various license agreements the plaintiff has unlawfully attempted to use those patents to obtain a monopoly on materials not patented and not covered by them.

Various interrogatories and answers thereto have been fully covered by testimony taken in open court and require no further discussion at this point.

The subject matter of these claimed inventions relates in one way or another to the art of manifolding and means for facilitating the removal of sheets from piles of sheets interleaved with carbon paper, and particularly these sheets arranged in continuous form in such manner as to permit one manifolded set to be torn off and deleaved without removing the continuous strip from the typewriter, billing machine or teletype. The gist of the matter is that about 20 or 25 years ago billing machines and continuous strip manifolded stationery [732]*732became very much a necessity in offices handling large numbers of copies of forms, and it immediately brought forth a real torrent of so-called inventions. It was desirable to make several copies of an order or invoice at one time, it was necessary to separate the carbons from the worksheets, and it was convenient to have this type of stationery put up in continuous form so that the work could proceed from one order or invoice to the next without removal from the machine.

The record discloses that somewhere between 30 and 40 persons almost simultaneously discovered different ways of accomplishing this office trick, and a complete examination of all of the patents in suit with their file wrappers and all the record discloses of the dozens of applications which were filed and interferences which were declared indicates that all arrived at about the same solution at about the same, time; that in some of them a corner was torn off, others were gummed along one edge with perforated lines for detachment, some were put together with staples, and in some cases stitches were used. It would prolong this opinion to the thickness of an ordinary dictionary to attempt to describe the trifling details by which this simple office routine procedure was solved. It is enough to say as to the whole batch of patents that none of them shows any inventive genius, that they are only different ways of performing a routine office procedure.

If one could find a stenographer who would admit 40 years of service she would tell you that it was always her practice to start four or five blank sheets of paper into her machine so as to leave an open space at the top and then interleave her carbon and turn the roller so that the carbon would be sticking out at the bottom. Sometimes they used pins, as mentioned in one of the Brenn specifications; sometimes they used paper clips; and perhaps now they use bobby pins, which were not in existence so many years ago. I am unable to find that anything has been added except perhaps the fanfolding, which in itself was hardly an invention. Johnson shows continuous strips coming off a roll, but any one knows that such strips would not possibly be in registration as shown by his drawing, and admittedly it was never used commercially.

A great deal is said about putting the staple in the line of weakening in the Brenn patents, but it was demonstrated in open court, and can be demonstrated in any court, that stationery of that type works just as well without the staple as with it, that the only thing the staple could possibly-do would be to get into the typewriter and under the roller.

. It is impossible to understand this case without careful examination of the activities of A. A. Johnson, patentee in No. 2, 258,573, assigned to the plaintiff apparently before it was born.

Johnson is not a member of the bar, but is a licensed patent attorney and has been since 1918, and has been associated with the plaintiff for the last 27 years and has been familiar with-the manifolding industry since 1912. - Since 1925 he has been familiar with continuous carbon strips fastened together by various means, and with the entire industry for a longer period of time. His testimony shows that he is not only familiar with but is an expert in the field of continuous manifolding stationery. In response to an inquiry by the court as to what Mr. Johnson claimed over the prior art he said it was the facility of being able to strip the carbons from the records and not doing anything to the record sheet. This appears on pages 71 to 73 of the transcript, and is the sum total of everything that Johnson claims to have invented.

It appears from the record,. and the court finds, that Johnson was called into this situation by Brenn for the express purpose of devising some means of evading or avoiding the prior art, and that as long ago as 1926 he was given -this problem by the plaintiff to solve, and that everything he did was for the benefit of and in the employ of fhe plaintiff, and that in 1928 he hit upon the idea upon which he now claims a patent.

In order to understand the legal aspects of this case it is necessary to make a rather laborious anaylsis of the file wrappers in connection with the various patents, and [733]*733in order to be as ¡brief as possible I will refer only to the Johnson patent because all of the others follow the same pattern.

As above noted,'Johnson was employed for the purpose of inventing something, and pursuant to that duty on January 12, 1929 filed the original application with 10 claims. On July 5, 1929 the Examiner rejected claims 1 and 7 for functionality and for being indefinite and inept. He rejected claims 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 for duplication and functionality.

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Related

Autographic Register Co. v. Philip Hano Co., Inc
198 F.2d 208 (First Circuit, 1952)
Autographic Register Co. v. Philip Hano Co.
102 F. Supp. 981 (D. Massachusetts, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F. Supp. 730, 82 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 152, 1949 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/autographic-register-co-v-uarco-inc-ilnd-1949.