Belknap v. Wallace Addressing Mach. Co.

10 F.2d 602, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1439
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 602 (Belknap v. Wallace Addressing Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belknap v. Wallace Addressing Mach. Co., 10 F.2d 602, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1439 (S.D.N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

WINSLOW, District Judge.

This is a suit brought by the plaintiff on a patent owned by him, No. 1,256,509. The patent covers a machine construction and a series of stencil cards co-operating with the other machine elements to stencil a series of names and addresses on envelopes or mailing wrappers. The stencil cards, which are claimed to be one of the elements of the operation, are made of rigid cardboard adapted to this particular machine, with a panel of paper in the center thereof pasted on the cardboard frame; “on the margin and baek of the margin, classification marks may be placed so as to be distinguishable by the operator as the cards are fed through the machine portion of the apparatus. The stencil panel in the center is capable of having a name and address placed thereon by an ordinary typewriter, which forms the stencil. The machine part of the invention has a printing mechanism or platen holding an envelope against the back of one of the stenciled cards, and an ink roller which can be rolled along the under face of the stencil and so force ink through it onto the underside of the envelope; a steneil-card-feeding mechanism consisting of a reciprocating claw which pulls the stencils one at a time out from the bottom of a magazine or stack and shoves them along the horizontal guides to the printing position; a power operated driving mechanism for the other mechanisms, and, in addition, a mechanism under the control of the operator for throwing both the feeding and driving mechanism, or the feeding mechanism alone, into operation, and either maintaining the feeding or printing mechanism, one or both, at will, or permitting them to come to rest after any one cycle of operations is completed, as desired.

This combination of machine and stencil card elements permits the operator to read the classification marks on each card as it lies in the guides ready to he fed into printing position, and to choose at will (from said classification marks) whether he shall print on an envelope the address typewritten in the stencil card, or whether he shall feed it through without printing from it. In other words, the mechanism and elements permit the printing and feeding both, or the feeding without printing from the card, as the operator desires, and also permits the operator to control the length of the period of rest between the completed operation for such period of time as he may desire to study the classification marks. He may skip or not skip the printing and take whatever time may be necessary for his brain to function.

The claims of the patent in suit, on which this action is based, are Nos. 3 to 6, as follows:

“3. The combination with a printing mechanism adapted to co-operate consecutively with each one of a series of address bearing strips comprising a reeiproeating member, of a series of such strips, an apparatus for feeding them consecutively through the printing mechanism, and means for temporarily disabling the printing mechanism without interrupting the continued operation of the feeding apparatus, said means comprising a cam, a co-operating cam roller, a swinging support for said roller pivoted on the reciprocating member of the printing mechanism, and a device for so moving said swinging support-that the roller carried thereby is removed from operative relation with the cam.
“4. The combination with a printing mechanism adapted to co-operate consecutively with each one of a series of address hearing strips comprising a reciprocating member, of a series of such strips, an apparatus for feeding them consecutively through the printing mechanism, and' means for temporarily disabling the printing mechanism without interrupting the continued operation of the feeding apparatus, said means comprising a cam, a co-operating cam roller, a swinging support for said roller pivoted on the reciprocating member of the printing mechanism, and a treadle and connections cooperating with the cam roller which when the treadle is depressed throw the roller and its swinging support out of normal position and away from the cam.
“5. The combination of a magazine, a series of address bearing strips stacked in said magazine provided on their upper faces with classification marks, a printing mechanism, guides extending from the bottom of the magazine through the printing mechanism, and an apparatus for feeding the strips one by one from the bottom of the magazine into the guide's, together with mechanism under control of the operator for disabling the [604]*604printing mechanism but continuing the feeding mechanism in operation, the parts being so proportioned' that when one strip has been pushed into printing position, the classification marks on the succeeding strip will be exposed to view in a position between the magazine and the printing mechanism, so that the operator may then decide whether to print from said strip or to skip it.
“6. The combination of a magazine, a series of address bearing strips stacked in said magazine each provided with classification marks on its upper face, a printing mechanism, guides extending from the bottom of the magazine through the printing mechanism, an apparatus for feeding the strips one by one from the bottom of the magazine into the guides, the parts being so proportioned that when one strip has been pushed into printing position, the succeeding strip will be exposed to view in a position between the magazine and the printing mechanism, and continuously operating driving apparatus for both feeding and printing mechanism, together with means under control of the operator for disconnecting the printing mechanism from the driving apparatus during one or more cycles of operation of the feeding apparatus, whereby the operator, after determining the classification of each strip exposed, can cause the printing mechanism to operate with it or to skip it, as the system of classification may require.”

The cards, while fragile, are, for practical purposes, indestructible and may be used indefinitely. The principal user of the combination or structure is the mail order house. New cards to feed the machine and operate with it are required, not to replace worn stencils, but rather for new or additional names or for change of address, if, for that reason, old cards are discarded. Upwards of 1,000 sets of the machine have been sold by the plaintiffs and upwards of 182,000,-000 cards have been sold by them. The profits are derived from the sales of new cards, rather than from the manufacture and sale of the machine.

The defendant has not been actively engaged in the addressing machine business and has never made a machine adapted to the use of plaintiff’s stencil cards, but the defendant has manufactured and sold stencil cards adapted to the plaintiff’s structure to one of defendant’s customers, the International Time Recording Companyj and to other customers of plaintiff. This is the basis of the suit, it being contended that the defendant, by the manufacture and sale of the cards, has become a contributing infringer.

The evidence is conclusive that the cards sold by the defendant are exact duplicates of those manufactured and sold by the plaintiff for use in its machine, so that the only question involved in this suit is whether or not the Belknap patent is valid and whether it covers the particular stencil cards as one of its elements.

“Contributory infringement essentially consists in intentionally giving aid to, or intentionally co-operating in, an infringement.” Harvey Hubbell, Inc., v. General Electric Co., 267 F. 564, 571 (C. C. A. 2d Circuit) ; Individual Drinking Cup Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 602, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belknap-v-wallace-addressing-mach-co-nysd-1925.