Birmingham Cement Manufacturing Co. v. Gates Iron Works

78 F. 350, 24 C.C.A. 132, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2305
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 1896
DocketNo. 407
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 78 F. 350 (Birmingham Cement Manufacturing Co. v. Gates Iron Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birmingham Cement Manufacturing Co. v. Gates Iron Works, 78 F. 350, 24 C.C.A. 132, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2305 (5th Cir. 1896).

Opinion

PARDEE, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit commenced in the circuit court August 11,1887, for the infringement of several letters patent of the United States on certain improvements in stone-breaking machines, and is brought by the Gates Iron Works to recover the gains and profits realized by using the alleged infringing machine, as well as damages sustained by the complainant. The bill declared on 10 several patents, to wit: No. 110,397, December 20, 1870, to J. H. Rusk; No. 201,646, March 26, 1878, to C. M. Brown; No. 237,320, February 1, 1881, to G. & A. Raymond; No. 243,545, June 28, 1881, to P. W. Gates; No. 250,656, December 13, 1881, to P, W. Gates; No. 259,681, June 20,1882, to P. W. Gates; No. 265,957, October 17, 1882, to P. W. Gates; No. 272,233, February 13, 1883, to P. W. Gates; No. 246,608, September 6, 1881, to P. W. Gates; No. 305,172, September 6, 1881, to P. W. Gates. The title of the Gates Iron Works to the above-mentioned patents is not disputed, nor is it disputed in this court that, if the said patents are valid, the appellants’ machine substantially infringes some, if not all, of the above-mentioned patents. The cause was heard in the circuit court, and a decree was rendered October 4, 1889, sustaining the first eight above-mentioned patents, as valid, and holding that the appellants infringed some one or all of the several claims contained in each patent. No reasons were given by the trial judge for his several findings in the case, and we are therefore compelled to examine the record without any assistance from the trial judge, save what is to be found in his ultimate findings of law and fact, the correctness of which is the matter in dispute. By appropriate assignments of error, the appellants question each finding as to each patent, and the claim thereunder, and also the general finding in the whole case.

When the suit was decided by the circuit court a suit was pending in the Seventh circuit against the makers of appellants’ machine, in which suit was involved five of the patents included in the present controversy, with others not herein involved. In that suit the bill was dismissed in the circuit court for want of equity. See 42 Fed. 49. An appeal was taken to the United States supreme court, which court affirmed the decision of the circuit court. Iron Works v. Fraser, 153 U. S. 332, 14 Sup. Ct. 883. The opinion in the case deals with five of the patents involved herein, and, so far as it is applicable to the present controversy, is controlling.

In the case at bar the first and second of the errors assigned relate to the Rusk patent, No. 110,397, which was for an improvement [352]*352in grinding mills, in regard to which the court below found that the appellants infringed the first claim, which is as follows:

“The combination, substantially as described, of soft-metal pins or plugs, c, with a driving gear of a grinding mill.”

The third and fourth assignments of error question the court’s finding in regard to the Raymond patent, No. 237,320, for grinding wheels, holding the said patent valid, and that the appellants infringed the first claim of said patent, to wit:

“The combination of the shafts, the safety pin, and the reducing devices provided with the exposed hub to co-operate with the pin; such parts being constructed substantially as described, to permit the instantaneous removal and replacement of the pin.”

The fifth and sixth assignments of error are that the court erred in holding the third claim of the patent No. 272,233, to P. W. Gates, to he, in its relation to the prior art, a valid claim, and that the court erred in finding that the devices of the defendants’ machine infringed the third claim of said patent.

The third claim of said patent is as follows:

“The combination of the leverage break pin, G, hub, E, hub, F, fastening screw, g, main shaft, B, driving pulley, C, bevel gear wheel, H, I, and crusher shaft, K, substantially as and for the pinposes described.”

It is to he noticed that these claims are for combinations wherein a safety pin cuts the important figure, and that the safety pins mentioned in the Rusk patent are made of soft metal, in the Raymond patent of wood, and in the Gates patent is a so-called “long-leverage break pin of any suitable material.” In regard to this last, the pat-entee says:

“X do not claim a safety break pin applied to the fly wheel of machinery, as this would not instantly stop the machine, neither do X claim a short break pin applied to the driving pulley of grinding and other machines; that is, a break pin with its entire body or length supported and requiring a sheering action to cut it in two. Neither do I claim, broadly, a break pin which is accessible without moving the wheels. Neither do X claim the loose collar specifically as my invention, but what I claim as my invention is * * * the combination of the leverage break pin, G,” etc.

In Iron Works v. Fraser, supra, the court discusses the question of the application of safety pins to prevent the breaking or over-straining of machinery, and holds in regard thereto that “the use of safety pins for saving machinery from the strain of a sudden jar does not involve patentable invention.” If this be the case, it is difficult to see how any one of the combinations in the three patents above referred to, in each of which the safety pin is the main figure, and is combined with old devices, can be valid, even if it be conceded that the appellants’ machine contains the features of all. In this view of the case, it is not necessary to consider the seventh assignment of error, which is that the court erred in finding or holding that the single break pin device of the defendant’s machine infringed three separate patents, to wit, Nos. 110,397, 237,320, and 272,233.

The eighth, ninth, and tenth assignments of error complain of the court’s finding as to the first, third, and fourth claims under the Brown patent, No. 201,646. With regard to these assignments, it is substantially admitted that the decision of the supreme court in the case of Iron Works v. Fraser, supra, disposes of claims 3 and 4 under [353]*353said patent adversely to the appellee’s claims as to infringement- in this case, and the only contention made in regard to this patent at this time is that the first claim of said patent is valid, and that the appellants infringe in respect thereof. The appellants contend (hat the first claim of said patent, which is for “the combination of the gyrating spindle, B, B, and conical breaking head, 0, O, with the exterior breaking surface, L, L, the sliding socket bearing, e, e, the eccentric bearing at the bottom of the spindle, B, B1, and the adjusting screws, s, as substantially described,” is not in the case, because there is no evidence with regard to the same in the ap-pellee’s main case, and none at all in the record, except the evidence of Melville B. Dayton, c,ailed in rebuttal; and, besides, that the appellants’ machine, as shown by themselves and also by the appellee, does not have in it the spindle, B, B1, unless the taper spindle is the full equivalent of the Brown spindle, which is of the ball and socket form, nor does it have a sliding bearing at the bottom end of the spindle or the adjusting screw. We agree with the appellants in both contentions.

The eleventh and twelfth assignments of error are to the effect Quit the court erred in sustaining the validity of the Gates patent, No.

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Bluebook (online)
78 F. 350, 24 C.C.A. 132, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 2305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birmingham-cement-manufacturing-co-v-gates-iron-works-ca5-1896.