Beacon Folding Mach. Co. v. Rotary Mach. Co.

31 F.2d 646, 1 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 127, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 2289
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 646 (Beacon Folding Mach. Co. v. Rotary Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beacon Folding Mach. Co. v. Rotary Mach. Co., 31 F.2d 646, 1 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 127, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510 (1st Cir. 1929).

Opinions

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity brought in the District Court for Massachusetts by the Beacon Folding Machine Company, a Massachusetts corporation, against the Rotary Machine Company, a Massachusetts corporation, and Andrew R. Ridderstrom, J eróme P. Byron, Carl A. Tong-berg, John M. Cashman, and Christian Chris[647]*647tiansen, citizens of Massachusetts, and officers and stockholders of the Rotary Machine Company, for infringement of letters patent No. 1,527,395, applied for January 21, 1920, issued February 24,1925, to the Beacon Folding Machine Company, assignee by mesne assignments from Andrew R. Ridderstrom; for infringement of letters patent No. 1,527,396, applied for February 28, 1923, issued February 24, 1925, to the Beacon Folding Machine Company, assignee of said Ridderstrom; and for infringement of letters patent No. 1,589,718, applied for November 3, 1922, issued June 22, 1926, to the Beacon Folding Machine Company, assignee of said Ridderstrom, the inventor of all three patents.

In the court below several claims of the first patent, No. 1,527,395, were put in issue, but claim 72 is typical of the claims relied upon and reads .as follows:

“72. A folding machine having, in combination, a fold presser, means for advancing a sheet of material to the fold presser with the margin folded over upon the sheet, means whereby the fold presser is adapted to engage the folded-over sheet at the edge and margin of the fold only, and means whereby the fold presser is adapted to engage the successive portions of the folded-over portion of the sheet progressively from the edge of the fold inward to progressively press the said successive portions of the folded-over portion from the edge of the fold inward.”

In the specification of this patent, the applicant states that his “invention relates to methods of and machines for operating upon flexible material, and more particularly to methods of and machines for folding the edges or margins of shoe uppers, such as vamps and tips.”

After setting out in the specification that the objects of the invention are (1) “to provide a new and improved machine of the above-designated character [a folding machine] which shall be simple to construct, etc.;” (2) “to provide an improved method of operating upon flexible material, like shoe uppers;” (3) “to provide a folding machine with a variable gage, so that different portions of the work may be differently gaged, as desired;” and (4) “to provide an improved folding machine with positive or all-lever connections the parts of which shall operate at high speed in the desired time relation,” the applicant states: “It has hitherto been customary to provide the fold presser with a flat face which pressed down upon the work throughout its surface at one and the same time, producing, upon occasion, a wrinkled fold, parts of which were not so well pressed as others. It is, therefore, still another object of the invention to provide an improved fold presser for a folding machine, which shall operate to press the folds progressively from the edge of the fold inwardly. To tho accomplishment of this result, a feature of the invention resides in a eurvilinearly faced hammer which is adapted [by reason of an extension toe] initially to pinch the very edge of the fold and then to roll over upon the fold, ironing it out smoothly.”

The specification also points out that the fold presser, in a folding machine of the short-feed or step-by-step type, and to which it is shown to be especially applicable, operates intermittently; that is, that when tho feed elements are in operation in such a machine the presser remains still until after the feeding mechanism has ceased working, or practically so, when the presser immediately begins to operate.

The prior art discloses that the inventive features of the fold presser, if any, reside in its curvilinear face and extension toe.

In the District Court it was found that the fold presser is “distinctly different” from those of the prior art, and is “of a novel character”; that it was designed “to pinch the edge which had been folded over, and then to roll out the edging on the sheet”; that “the defendants’ machine had nothing at all similar in character to this folder of the plaintiff’s patent”; that “the revolving cam-shaped wheels of the defendants’ machine which successively pass over the edging, always moving in the same direction as the head rotates, operate on a radically different principle from the reciprocating folder or presser of the plaintiff’s machine”; that the defendants’ machine does “not embody this element [a fold presser] of the plaintiff’s claims, nor * * * the mechanism or the inventive idea of that patent”; and that the first patent was not infringed.

It is the defendants’ contention that the invention in the plaintiff’s fold presser resides in its extension toe, and not in its curvilinear face; that the toe of its fold presser is adapted to pinch or press the fold at its very edge; that while the disks on the head of the defendants’ machine each have a curvilinear face that press the fold, they do not press the fold at the very edge, but begin to press it at a slight distance in and away from the edge; that the curved notches in the disks step over the edge of the fold and do not press it; that they cannot be regarded, either as a group or singly, as the mechanical equivalent of the toe of the plaintiff’s fold presser,[648]*648for the reason that they do not press the edgo of the fold as does the toe of the plaintiff’s presser.

We have carefully examined the prior art patents relied upon by the defendants, and are satisfied that no fold presser is there disclosed having a curvilinear face adapted to roll and press a fold; although a flat fold presser having a toe is shown. Every prior art fold presser, with a single exception, had a flat face, which pressed with its entire surface. The exception is the Gimson British patent, where the face of the fold presser is not flat throughout but is flat in the region where it contacts with the fold. It presses the fold down flat at the edge, where it is adapted to apply its greatest pressure. It then yields slightly and being moved forward presses or irons- the balance of the surface which it had not previously pressed; but in its forward movement it is only the flat portion of its face that contacts with the fold.

It thus appears that the curvilinear face of the plaintiff’s fold presser is its chief inventive feature, for its toe extension, except in combination with the curvilinear face, was old. The purpose of the curvilinear face was to obviate wrinkles which might occur in a fold when pressed with a flat face or ironed out by a flat face as in the Gimson patent; and it accomplished its purpose, for machines embodying it went into general use. While it cannot be regarded as a pioneer device in the art of folding the thin or skived edge of a shoe upper, or of folding a strip of fabric or tape sewed to the edge of an upper, and be accorded a wide range of equivalents, it is of a character entitled to a reasonable range of equivalents and is not restricted merely to the device shown.

It must be conceded that each disk in the defendant’s device, in that portion of its periphery that contacts with the fold slightly beyond its edge and which rolls along and presses down the inner portion of the fold, has a curvilinear face like the curvilinear face of the plaintiff’s fold presser.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 646, 1 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 127, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beacon-folding-mach-co-v-rotary-mach-co-ca1-1929.