Barber Colman Co. v. Withnell

14 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1411
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 7, 1926
DocketNo. 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 F.2d 780 (Barber Colman Co. v. Withnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barber Colman Co. v. Withnell, 14 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1411 (D. Mass. 1926).

Opinion

MORTON, District Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of three patents, each to H. D. Colman, one, No. 977,Í66, dated November 29,1910, which I shall refer to as the patent of 1910; another, No. 1,115,399, dated October 27,1914, which I shall refer to as the patent of 1914; and a third, No. 1,442,776, dated January 16, 1923, which I shall refer to as the patent of 1923. The usual defenses are interposed, viz. noninfringement, and invalidity, if construed to cover defendant’s machine, and also a suggestion that the 1923 patent is invalid, or limited, because of double patenting.

All three patents relate to preparing warps for weaving by mounting on them the necessary harnesses and reeds. This is done, either by tying each thread of the new warp to thfe corresponding thread of the old one, on which the reed and harnesses are still mounted, or by drawing each end of the new warp through its, proper harness and reed. Machines for doing the first are called warp-tying machines; those for doing the second, warp-drawing machines. The defendant’s machine neither ties nor draws the warp. It merely picks up the warp threads successively and presents them to an operative, who draws them in by hand. It is an aid to hand work, while the machines of the patents are fully automatic.

Mounting the harnesses and reeds on a warp has always been recognized as a necessary and troublesome piece of work. Until the advent of the machinery made by the plaintiff and its predecessors in business it was, on the evidence, done by hand. I remember as a boy seeing in the Fall River cotton mills lines of women and girls patiently and carefully, drawing in, thread by thread, the new warps. In devising machines to perform this task, the plaintiff and those under whom it claims made a valuable contribution to the industry. If this result was brought about by the patents, and the claims thereof, here in suit, such patents and claims are entitled to friendly and sympathetic consideration and to a wide range of equivalents. The defendants do not admit that such is the fact, or that the claims here in suit are for the inventions to which that result is attributable. In complicated machines like these many factors enter into commercial success, and it is not easy, nor always possible, to say how much any given factor contributed.

A warp consists of many separate threads, or “ends,” wound on a beam which is in effect a large spool. By passing a warp over a rounded bar and putting tension on it, all its threads can be brought into the same plane and for practical purposes into proper sequence; i. e., the threads are not crossed enough to interfere with successful weaving. But when this has been done the spaces between the threads are unequal, and this unevenness of spacing presented difficulties in designing a machine to draw, or to tie warps. The first problem was to devise some mechanism for keeping the operating parts of the machine in contact with the leading warp thread. It often happens that, in stretching the warp over a bar, two threads will lie very close together, and, on the other hand, single threads will become widely separated (eom7 paratively speaking) from their fellows. The machine must also be able to pick up but one of two closely adjacent threads, as well as a thread which was widely spaced.

[781]*781All this had long been recognized at the time when the plaintiff’s inventor, Colman, entered the field. As early as 1868 Biggs had taken ont a British patent upon a machine for drawing in warps, in which he showed mechanism for handling one by one the warp threads. It worked upon a principle which is that of a successful machine, built and sold by the plaintiff’s predecessor in business, the American Warp-Drawing Company, but which is basically different from that of the patents here in suit. There appear to have been two different solutions of the problem.

In this country several patents for warp-tying and warp-drawing machines, which long anticipated Colman, and which operate upon the same general principle as his machines, have been put in evidence. All of them either advanced the operating mechanism to the warp or — which amounts to the same thing — advanced the warp to the mechanism. They all had a thin, flat selector, with a smooth guiding surface, which engaged and glided on the leading warp thread and was provided with a projecting hook or notch, which caught the thread and carried it forward. This is shown in Rice (No. 176,194, April 18, 1876), in Sherman, Ingersoll & Moore (No. 255,038, March 14, 1882), Sherman (No. 355,221, December 28, 1886), and Ingersoll (No. 590,008, September 14,1897). In some of these — e. g., Sherman and Sherman, Ingersoll & Moore — the selector was a thin circular disk having on its periphery a notch which caught the leading thread, and in both of these last patents there were means of adjustment to make the notch deep or shallow according to the size of the yams being used. The point of these notches was wedge or chisel shaped; i. e., it had a sharp flat edge, adapted to enter between the leading thread and the thread next to it. If the notch were set too small, or the thread at the point where the selector met it happened to be oversize, which would often happen, it cannot be doubted that the edge of the notch caught in the thread and pulled it along. The same must have been true of the straight selector shown in the Ingersoll patent of 1897.

The first of the patents in suit, that of 1910, is upon a form of selector. In it the outer point of the notch is rounded into a needle-like point “sufficiently sharp and tapering to penetrate into the substance of a thread ner side of the point and seat itself within the which for any reason does not pass to the in-threads excepting those * * * small pocket.” Patent, p. 1, line 53 et seq. “All enough to enter the hook opening are speared or impaled by the sharp point of the hook.” Patent, p. 1, line 58 et seq. All the claims of this patent here in suit contain the word “impale” as describing the action of the hook point of this selector.

The defendant’s selector consists of a straight feeler, into which is set a flat blade, the tip of which projects beyond the side of the feeler in such a way as to make a notch. It is exactly the same idea shown in the Sherman patent of 1886 and the Sherman, Ingersoll & Moore patent of 1882, above referred to, except that in those patents the selector is circular, and in the defendant’s it is straight. The notch point is chisel-shaped as those were, instead of needlelike as in the patent. Undoubtedly it catches in the thread when the thread is oversize or the notch is too small, just as the selectors did in the patents last referred to. But the defendant’s device has not the “tapering,” needlelike point for “spearing” or “impaling” a thread, which is the distinguishing characteristic of the plaintiff’s patent. It differs from the patent very much as the patent differs from the prior art.

It follows that this patent is not infringed by the defendant, and as to it the bill should be dismissed.

The 1914 patent is for a machine for drawing warps. It has never been commercially manufactured and sold. Some of the inventions covered by this patent appear to have been made by Colman as long ago as October 24,1894, when he filed an application for a United States patent, which by subsequent proceedings became merged into the application for this patent. At the expiration of this patent in 1931, Colman will have “been claiming, and for practical purposes will have had, a monopoly of those inventions for 38 years.

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Related

Barber-Coleman Co. v. Withnell
28 F.2d 543 (D. Massachusetts, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
14 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-colman-co-v-withnell-mad-1926.