Autopiano Co. v. Claviola Co.

234 F. 314, 148 C.C.A. 216, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2096
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 1916
DocketNo. 246
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 234 F. 314 (Autopiano Co. v. Claviola Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Autopiano Co. v. Claviola Co., 234 F. 314, 148 C.C.A. 216, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2096 (2d Cir. 1916).

Opinion

VEEDER, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). Inasmuch as this patent and the vicissitudes through which it has passed were fully discussed in our former opinion in the case of Autopiano Co. v. American Player Action Co., 22.2 Fed. 276, 138 C. C. A. 38, it is unnecessary to repeat the statement. The patent comes before the court for the first time in a form which embodies the invention actually made and without any intervening equities. We are now free to' give effect to the claims in issue. As we said in our former opinion:

“The invention of O’Connor was a highly meritorious one and broadly new. The prior art contains nothing which should require it to be narrowly construed.”

O’Connor introduced a very necessary and important improvement in the autopiano art by providing automatic instantaneous adjustment whenever there was a sidewise deflection of the note sheet on the tracker-bar. He accomplished this by his combination of control openings opened and closed by the deflection of the note-sheet, which control' openings govern the operation of bellows motors connected to adjust the relation between note-sheet and tracker-bar. Instantaneous adjustment was affected by having the note-sheet in normal position hold the apparatus out of operation, so that when deflection occurred correction would take place instantly without the necessity of bringing the elements in operative positions.

The device by which this result was effected is described and illustrated by the patentee. The bearings which carry the shaft of the music roll are arranged to slide lengthwise in the frame pieces to adjust the music roll and note-sheet. In a block, secured by a screw to the' under side of the tracker-bar, is a hole called a guide or control opening. This block is connected by a tube to a valve apparatus at the right of the air chest, which in turn is connected by a tube to a bellows motor having an arm arranged to engage a thrust collar on the shaft of the music roll. These parts automatically move the music roll instantly to the right to correct any deflection of the note-sheet to the left, the motion of the bellows motor being transmitted through the arm provided for this purpose. The mechanism for adjusting the music roll to the left is a duplicate of that just described and operates in the same manner. The guide or control openings are spaced so that the note sheet, when placed in correct or normal position on the traclcer-bar, will maintain both openings in the same condition. In this way the note-sheet, when in normal position, performs the function of holding both motors out of operation. When the note-sheet is deflected from normal to abnormal position it destroys the inoperative or balanced condition, of the motors and causes the proper bellows motor to operate before there can be the least forward run of the note-sheet over the tracker-bar in abnormal position.

The defendants’ device Exhibit 2, which the District Judge held to infringe claims 1 to 12 and 16 to 27, both inclusive, of the patent in suit,, is a servile copy of the patented structure, and requires no discussion. After a temporary injunction had issued the defendants developed the devices shown in Exhibits 3, 4 and 5. In Exhibit 3 the bearings which carry the shaft of the music roll are arranged to slide-[317]*317lengthwise in the frame pieces to adjust the music roll and note-sheet sidewise. A block secured to the frame piece beneath the under side of the tracker-bar has a hole which forms the right-hand guide or control opening through a tube connection with a double bellows motor. The bellows motor has an arm connected, by a link to a pivoted lever, the upper end of which is connected with a draw-bar at the rear of the apparatus. This draw-bar is in turn connected with the shaft carrying the right hand bearing of the music roll. In this way the bellows motor and opening are arranged to adjust the music roll automatically to the right to overcome any deflection of the note-sheet to the left, the motion of the bellows motor being transmitted through the pivoted link and draw-bar. For adjustment to the left a similar mechanism is provided, the two bellows motors being connected by a link to form a double bellows motor. The double bellows motor is connected with the exhaust chest by a tube and passages which have restricted openings into the motors so that there is normally a partial vacuum in each motor, the effect of which is to cause the motors normally to balance and lock each other from operation. Just below the tracker-bar is arranged a rod carried by two pivoted arms which extend forward beyond the face of the tracker and are arranged so that the note sheet will fit in between them,. The rod is provided with collars both inside and ouiside the arms. Springs arranged between the arms and the collars allow the arms to1 be sprung slightly apart so that the note-sheet can be fitted snugly between them. The rod carries at each end a little valve. The right-hand valve is set in position to control the right-hand control opening, while the left-hand valve is set to control the left-hand control opening. The rod and valves are made of a length slightly less than the distance between the two* control openings. The openings are positioned relatively to the tracker-bar so that the valves will be held at equal distance from the two blocks by the note-sheet when it is placed in normal position on the tracker-bar. In this position the valves will hold the two bellows motors out of operation, because the flow of air into the control openings, and thus into the two bellows motors, will be equal; that is, the balance of the two connected and opposed motors will not be disturbed. Thus the note-sheet, when in correct position, performs the active function of holding both bellows motors out of operation; when the note-sheet is deflected from normal to abnormal position, it instantly destroys the inoperative condition of the motors and causes the proper bellows motor to operate. Hence any deflection to either side is instantly corrected without any forward run of the note-sheet in abnormal position, the adjustment in either direction corresponding exactly to the deflection. This is plainly shown in operation; there is almost a continuous flutter or vibration of the bellows motors.

This is precisely the principle of the patent in suit. Ij makes no difference whatever in operation, function, or combination that in the O’Connor device the note-sheet itself by a deflection to one side opens one control opening and closes the other, while in the defendants’ device the note-sheet by deflection to one side does exactly the same thing by pushing on the little levers and shifting the valves, that is, opens one [318]*318control opening and closes the other. The little levers and valves are merely added parts which do not in the least change the law of operation or affect the arrangement whereby a'deflection of the note-sheet to one side opens the proper control opening and closes the other. O’Con-nor’s arrangement by which the margins of the note-sheet accomplish the functions of opening and closing the' guide openings directly is undoubtedly a better mechanical arrangement than the interposition of the levers and valves between the edges of the note sheet and the control openings, because it eliminates friction on the edges of the note-sheet. But this is merely the best arrangement of one of the elements of O’Connor’s combination.

That side levers and valves are merely interposed parts can be clearly seen by comparing Exhibit 3 with Exhibit 2.

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Related

Æolian Co. v. Schubert Piano Co.
261 F. 178 (Second Circuit, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
234 F. 314, 148 C.C.A. 216, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/autopiano-co-v-claviola-co-ca2-1916.