C. Howard Hunt Pen Co. v. Radiant Point Pen Corp.

135 F.2d 870, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 429, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1943
DocketNo. 172
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 F.2d 870 (C. Howard Hunt Pen Co. v. Radiant Point Pen Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. Howard Hunt Pen Co. v. Radiant Point Pen Corp., 135 F.2d 870, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 429, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437 (2d Cir. 1943).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff is the owner of two U. S. Patents: No. 2,001,726 which was granted to Lloyd S. Henwood May 21, 1935, for a writing pen and No. 2,121,541 which was granted to the same man on June 21, 1938, for a method for manufacturing pen points. It sued the defendant and its president in the District Court for the Southern District of New York for the infringement of both of the two claims of No. 2,001,726 and claims one and two of No. 2,121,541. The complaint was dismissed on the merits as to the president of the appellant and no appeal was taken from that order. Both claims of No. 2,001,726 and claim 1 of No. 2,121,541 were held valid and infringed and the defendant has appealed.

The patentee undertook in Patent No. 2,001,726 to disclose and claim new improvements in a steel writing pen which would better its wearing and writing qualities by increasing the thickness of the metal at the tip and provide a suitable even flowing point for use in inexpensive fountain pens as well as in ordinary dip pen holders. He succeeded remarkably well. Without an appreciable amount of advertising and apparently because of its own inherent superiority, the pen of the patent has been manufactured and sold in very large quantities. Such success, especially in the inexpensive fountain pen trade which had for many years been putting up with unsatisfactory pen points, is real evidence by way of commercial success that something new and useful was added to a steel pen point by this patentee.

When we come to the evidence of what he did, however, some difficulty in understanding his changes from the old is due to the extremely small dimensions which have to be considered. It was apparently those changes which brought on the great demand for the improved pens though the appellant has suggested that this demand was due to the fact that they were made of stainless steel gold plated. The record, however, shows that other pens made of such steel so plated failed to compete with the patented pen in any way worthy of the name and that is convincing evidence that the material used and the way it was plated cannot be what made the pen so successful commercially.

Those changes may best be brought out by describing first the closest prior art and then the pen of this patent. Steel pens have long been stamped out and bent to shape with slitted points that sometimes had a pierce hole and sometimes did not. Such pens sometimes had thickened points and sometimes not; but as the patented pen did and the invention, if any, is centered on that point we may lay aside all prior pens which had no thickened points. As the thickened point of the patent in suit was made by the bending down of tabs, the prior art now relied upon is confined to that construction and is found in two patents. One is the British Patent No. 2,804 granted to Petit in 1886, and the other is the United States Patent No. 1,365,318 granted to Hawkes on January 11, 1921, and assigned to this plaintiff.

The Petit patent shows a pen point made from a blank which had small and nearly semi-circular projections on either side of the tip. These are bent “ * * * towards the underside of the pen and are brought parallel or nearly parallel to each other.” The space left between these wings is kept filled with ink so long as any remains in the pen and the capillary attraction of the wings is utilized for that purpose in the trough-like groove they make. A further obj ect stated, and presumably attained, was to prevent the pen point entering the paper when under writing pressure and since the “curvature of the edges of the wings * * * prevents the point of the pen entering the» paper by the pressure exercised in writing and as the wings * * * prevent the sharp edge of the slit in the point from touching the paper the scratching of the paper and the spluttering of the pen are avoided.” This pen with its bent down wings did not, however, fill the need of the cheap fountain pen trade and though the patent in suit is not much of a departure from the Petit disclosure, if it was, and it was, enough to satisfy a demand that had existed for some ten years or more, it may well be that it took inventive thought and skill to make just that little change which had long eluded others.

The Hawkes patent is for a process of making pens which includes the distortion of the point in the blank at the same time the blank itself is shaped after the annealing step has been taken and before “the pen is hardened, tempered, and slitted in [872]*872the usual manner.” The type of distorted point which was emphasized in the drawings was that known as the “turned up” and the specifications mentioned ball pointed pens but they also stated that “my invention is applicable to pens having any type of point involving shaping or distortion of the metal, and it will be understood that I do not limit myself to the production of ball pointed or turned up pointed pens.” The claims covered the steps disclosed in the order stated. The object of this invention was not to produce a new kind of pen point but to save time and material in making the known types. The defendant, however, insists that the patent in suit discloses nothing new after Petit and if held valid will merely serve to prolong, for the benefit of the plaintiff, the monopoly of the grant to Hawkes.

We do not agree for the reasons to be stated in connection with a description of the patented pen. It is made from a blank differing but slightly from that of Petit in respect to the wings. In Fig. 1 of No. 2,001,726 there is apparently a small indentation at the extreme outer end between the wings which are subsequently bent down but the specifications make no mention of that. The defendant’s enlargement of that indentation, if it be one, is what is relied on to avoid infringement but that need not be further noticed on the question of validity.

What is said to, and we think does, show an inventive advance over the prior art is not simply the patentee’s disclosure of the bending down of the wings or tabs “in planes generally at right angles to the plane of a writing surface on which the pen is adapted to be used,” but in so bending them that “the base or upper sides of the tabs are somewhat spaced from each other, * * * ” This bending down was done by a tool which was in part a blade five one-thousandths of an inch thick that pushed the blank at that point down between sides of a tool which then moved together to bring the tabs up tightly to the blade. The removal of the blade left them at least its width apart and left that much undistorted material in its former place separating them at “the base or upper sides.” Though very small, it was considerable in comparison to the thickness of the metal of the blank and enough to permit the shearing of the slit through it so that this shearing need not cut through the metal added to the pen point by the bending down of the tabs. Both the claims in suit are tied to this new feature which was mot present in the prior art and to which may be attributed the usefulness the patent statute makes necessary to entitle an applicant to a patent for what is new. Why this slight change from Petit to a construction which could also be made by the process disclosed by Hawkes for making pen points should have produced what was needed to make the production of cheap fountain pens feasible is hard to grasp. Perhaps that is why no one did it before this patentee and perhaps that is added proof that it took invention to bring it about. However that may be, the British patent did not disclose this feature and so did not anticipate. Art Metal Works v.

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Bluebook (online)
135 F.2d 870, 57 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 429, 1943 U.S. App. LEXIS 3437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-howard-hunt-pen-co-v-radiant-point-pen-corp-ca2-1943.