Brown Bag-Filling Mach. Co. v. Drohen

140 F. 97, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4766
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western New York
DecidedAugust 12, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 140 F. 97 (Brown Bag-Filling Mach. Co. v. Drohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown Bag-Filling Mach. Co. v. Drohen, 140 F. 97, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4766 (circtwdny 1905).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

This is an action to enjoin the infringement of two United States letters patent owned by complainant, No. 539,171, issued to Henry H. Cummings, dated May 14,1895, and No. 578,133, issued to Benjamin E. Brown, dated March 2, 1897. The earlier patent has 81 claims, and relates to automatic machines for filling paper bags with seed or other fine material. The later patent relates to a folding mechanism for use in connection with bag-filling apparatus such as shown in the Cummings patent, but, according to the specification, it may be used on other forms of-bag-filling machines, or generally to fold and paste a bag or other paper article at its fold. The complainant’s construction, substantially embodying the claims of the Cummings patent and the folding mechanism of the Brown invention, is in evidence as an exhibit, and was operated in the presence of the court. The bag-filling apparatus of the defendant, which was patented July 8, 1902, on an application dated August 19, 1901, is in evidence as an exhibit. Complainant contends that the defendant’s exhibit machine in some parts is unlike that which it actually uses, specially in relation to the bag opener, which in the former is claimed to be firmer than in the latter. This conceded departure by defendant from his machine as photographed, in view of the decision reached, may be regarded as immaterial.

The principal defenses relied upon are defective or insufficient description of claims, noninfringement, aggregation of devices, and want of patentability. Consideration of the questions presented does not require the court in this opinion to set forth in extenso the involved claims of the Cummings patent, 25 in number, as their characteristic and essential features relate to the mechanism and details of construction. The involved claims may, however, be [98]*98grouped as follows, and one claim set forth under each subdivision of such classification: Claims 14, 53, and 54 involve mechanism relating to a bag opener. Claim 14 reads as follows:

“(14) A hopper, a measuring device therein, and means to move the said measuring device, combined with a funnel having a snout and adapted to receive the contents of the measuring device, and a bag opener to enter and hold open the mouth of the bag to be filled, in order that the snout of said funnel may enter inside of and thus direct into the bag the seed discharged into the measuring device from the hopper, substantially as described.”

Claims 1, 2, 6, 13, 8, 9, 18, and 75 specifically refer to a flexible bag opener. Claim 1 reads as follows:

“(1) In a bag-filling machine, means to present a bag to be filled, combined with a flexible or yielding bag-opener to enter the mouth of and open the bag to be filled, substantially as described.”

Claims 29, 30, 24, 53, 61, and 41 relate to the lip-folding mechanism. Claim 29 reads:

“(29) In a bag-filling machine, a guide-box to present a bag to be filled: an elastic bag-opener; a pasting device to paste the bag; and a folding-bed and folding-blade, combined with a clamp to clamp the filled bag upon the folding-bed while the folding-blade acts against the bag, substantially as described.”

Claims 11 and 12 refer to a bag-spreading device. Claim 11 is in the following language:

“(11) Bag-presenting mechanism to present a bag to be filled, combined with a bag-opener, and with independent bag-spreading devices adapted to enter the mouth of and hold the bag open while being filled, to operate substantially as described.”

Claims 16, 17, and 19 involve what is known as a “bag carrier”; claim 16 providing:

“(16) A bag-filling machine containing the following instrumentalities, viz., a. bag-opening device to enter the open end of and pick a bag off from a series of bags; an independent funnel having a snout to enter the mouth of a bag opened by the opening device; and a bag-carrier to engage the filled bag and take it from the bag-opening device and present it in position to be folded, substantially as described.”

Claim 23 relates to an adjustable follower, and claims 34 and 35 to the pressing device to hold back the lower ends of the bags and guide-box. Claims 23 and 34, respectively, read:

“(23) A guide-box to receive a series of bags; and a sliding foot therein, combined with an attached follower, adapted to conform to variations in the thickness at the side edges of the series of bags and made vertically adjustable with relation to said foot to co-operate with bags of different length, substantially as described.”
“(34) A guide-box to present a pile of bags to be filled; a follower to keep the said bags pressed forward; and a bag-opener, combined with a pressing device to press upon the lower end of the endmost bag of the pile of bags to aid in putting the same into proper position with relation to the bag-opening device, substantially as described.”

Claim 20 refers to the specific pasting mechanism, and reads:

“(20) A guide-box to present a series of bags, and a pasting device consisting of a bar having a series of yielding or spring-supported pins, combined with the paste-box, its paste roll and means to actuate the paste roller and present paste to the said pins, substantially as described.”

[99]*99The patent to Brown is an improvement on the folding-bed mechanism and lip-folding device of the Cummings patent. The claim in controversy reads as follows:

“(1) In an apparatus for folding, a folding-blade or device, a folding-bed, means to rotate said bed, a series of nip-rolls lying against tbe periphery of and surrounding said bed and movable therewith, combined with means to move each of said nip-rolls over the surface of said bed independently each of the other- of said nip-rolls, as and for the purposes described.”

By the folding-bed operation of Cummings but a single bag can be held in position after the material is discharged therein until it is moved to the place of release or discharge. The invention of Brown, however, provided a rotatable folding-bed which revolved intermittently, and was adapted to hold in position six or more filled bags, together with a device for folding the lips or flaps of the bags and sealing the same. In short, the Cummings patent was adapted to make a single fold before releasing the bag, while the Brown invention enabled holding a series of filled bags before they were released by the nip-roll. The improvement resulted in quicker operativeness, and, according to the evidence, in connection with the self-acting mechanism of the bag-filling machine, permitted the'filling of 30,000 flat paper bags with seed or other fine material in about eight hours.

The method of operating the complainant’s machine, omitting nonessential features, is sufficiently understood from the following: The bag-opener, consisting of a slightly curved so-styled “tapering finger,” about seven inches long, is firmly attached to the rear side of the funnel, and projects in front thereof. In operation its function is to enter the bag for the purpose of separating the plies. The finger and funnel are arranged to rapidly reciprocate in the arc of a circle, and at each downward movement the finger and snout of the funnel enter the outmost of a series of bags, and conveniently part its plies.

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Bluebook (online)
140 F. 97, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-bag-filling-mach-co-v-drohen-circtwdny-1905.