Black & Decker Mfg. Co. v. Baltimore Truck Tire Service Corp.

26 F.2d 686, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedJune 8, 1928
DocketNo. 1267
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 686 (Black & Decker Mfg. Co. v. Baltimore Truck Tire Service Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black & Decker Mfg. Co. v. Baltimore Truck Tire Service Corp., 26 F.2d 686, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235 (D. Md. 1928).

Opinion

SOPER, District Judge.

The plaintiffs have brought an aetion in equity to enjoin the infringement of United States letters patent No. 1,458,920 to Frederick J. Troll. The Loadometer Company is the assignee of the patent; the Black & Decker Manufacturing Company, the exclusive licensee thereunder. .The Baltimore Truck Tire Service Corporation and William A. Stutt, its president, are charged with infringement of certain claims of the patent by reason of the use of a road scale manufactured by E. & T. Fairbanks Company, at whose instance the suit is defended. The bill was dismissed as to Stutt, by consent during the trial.

The machine covered by the patent is a platform scale for weighing vehicles while on the road. It is called in the patent a road-bearing" meter, and is described by the plaintiffs as k manually portable instrument of the drive-on type for testing the wheel-bearing pressure of motor vehicles, particularly heavy trucks, and for determining wheel loads and total loads. It is used especially by state officials, charged with the duty of detecting violations of state laws prohibiting the use of the roads by certain specified motor vehicles in excess of a certain weight. It is also used by manufacturers of automobile tires, in order to determine the proper sizes to be used on particular motor vehicles.

It was developed in Maryland primarily for the first-mentioned purpose. The traffic by heavy trucks was particularly heavy during the Great War, and there was much injury and destruction of roads, and considerable difficulty in the enforcement of the law against excess weight. A number of stationary platform scales of the well-known type were installed along the roads to test suspected vehicles. Such a device was very expensive. It weighed 1,000 or more pounds, and was installed in a pit 3% feet deep and 6 by 12 to 14 feet in horizontal dimensions. It was sufficiently accurate, but, since it was necessarily stationary, it was not effective. It was not practicable to require truck drivers to go long distances out of their way; and, moreover, drivers, knowing the locations, did not have much difficulty in avoiding them. To meet the problem, a portable scale or weighing jack was adopted. It was similar in construction to the ordinary motor vehicle jack, carried in every motor car, with the addition of a weighing unit. The use of the jack obviated much of the difficulty experienced with the stationary platform scale. It was easily portable and could be conveniently carried by enforcement officials. Many [687]*687prosecutions were successfully carried on, and violations of the law were checked.

But the weighing jack, too, had certain defects. In order to get accurate results, it was necessary to place the jack under the axle at the wheel; hut this was not always possible, owing to the construction of the trucks. Nor was it possible to keep the axle level. The result was that weights were not always accurately ascertained. Moreover, considerable manual labor was involved. The work was slow and tended to block traffic on the road. The jacks themselves were short-lived, due to the stripping of threads and bending of the screws.

The final development, which resulted in the device covered by the patent in suit, was a manually portable platform seale, about 45 pounds in weight: This is not only convenient to handle, but accurate in operation. It is plaeed on the road in the path of the wheel of the truck, which is driven upon it. The truck is stopped but a short time, and the weight is registered. The truck is then driven off in the same direction and the operation repeated upon the rear wheels. The process may be shortened and the weights more accurately ascertained, if the scales are used in pairs, one for each side of the truck. Each seale may have a capacity of 15,000 to 20,000 pounds.

The commercial success of the device has been pronounced. It is now in use by the state authorities of 36 states for the detection of violations of the overloading laws, and a considerable number have been purchased for the -same purpose for use in foreign countries. It has also been sold to various tire companies for use in determining various tire sizes, particularly for use on trucks. It ha? completely supplanted the old apparatus.

The practical success of the plaintiffs’ device is further shown by the conduct of the Fairbanks Company, the manufacturer of the machine used by the defendant. The Black & Decker Manufacturing Company was in negotiation with the Firestone Tire & Rubber Company for the purchase of certain machines manufactured under the patent. The question of price arose, and the parties were unable to agree. The Firestone Company then submitted the plaintiffs’ machine to the Fairbanks Company, which thereupon designed a machine of its own, in which the main points of the patented device are reproduced.

It must therefore be conceded that the plaintiffs are entitled in this case, when the validity of the patent is considered, not only to the presumption of patentability arising from the grant of the patent by the Patent Office, but this presumption is strengthened and reinforced by the fact that the plaintiffs’ apparatus met the needs of a new situation and secured the general approbation of the public. Pangbora Corporation v. W. W. Sly Mfg. Co. (C. C. A.) 284 F. 217; Diamond Rubber Co. v. Consolidated Rubber Tire Co., 220 U. S. 428, 441, 31 S. Ct. 444 (55 L. Ed. 527); Vaco Grip Co. v. Sandy MacGregor Co. (D. C.) 292 F. 249.

The representative claims of the patent, upon which plaintiffs rely, are claims 2, 5, and 15. They are as follows:

“2. A tire-bearing pressure meter, comprising a manually portable apparatus, including a base, a platform member, and a guide therefor, a resilient member of sufficient resistance to carry a wheel of a loaded truck supporting the platform member, said apparatus being of extremely short vertical dimensions and having an inclined portion leading to the platform, so that the wheel of a truck can be run onto it without difficulty when it is plaeed in the roadway, and means for indicating the pressure on said resilient member.”

“5. A bearing pressure meter for roads, comprising a manually portable apparatus, of short vertical dimension; having a yielding support for a vehicle wheel, the same being of width only sufficient to receive and support a single wheel, and means for indicating the pressure on the support.”

“15. A method of determining wheel pressure of road vehicles while the vehicles are on the road, which consists in placing a plurality of manually portable independent weighing units on the roadway in the path of the wheels, spacing them apart to correspond to the tread, running the wheels onto the weighing units, and reading the respective weighing units.”

The apparatus, as disclosed by drawings in the specifications, shows a frame or a base of small vertical dimension, with runways at the ends. The base has a central chamber or opening, which is circular in the horizontal dimension, with straight side walls substantially vertical. It is closed at the top by a yielding platform of slightly less area, so that it may work freely up and down in the cylindrical chamber. This platform rests upon a resilient member, which is shown in the fo,rm of a coil of heavy rubber tubing, that tends to maintain the platform near the level of the top of the frame.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rienhardt v. Shinn
D. Arizona, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 686, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-decker-mfg-co-v-baltimore-truck-tire-service-corp-mdd-1928.