Chain Belt Co. v. New York Scaffolding Co.

245 F. 747, 158 C.C.A. 149, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1544
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 10, 1917
DocketNo. 2408
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 245 F. 747 (Chain Belt Co. v. New York Scaffolding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chain Belt Co. v. New York Scaffolding Co., 245 F. 747, 158 C.C.A. 149, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1544 (7th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

ALSCHULER, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). 1. The claims are for a combination, no element of which possesses novelty, and the combination itself shows but slight advance over the prior art. Patent No. 854,959 (1907) to Murray presents all the elements of the Henderson combination, except the U-shaped bar forming the bottom of the frame in which the crossbeams or putlogs are laid. In Murray’s frames the side bars extend below the floor, and are bolted or riveted to the angle iron putlogs there shown. The frame has a revolvable drum extending between the sides of the frame, with handle and ratchet for operating the drum on which the cable is wound. In this construction the frame holding the drum is necessarily set at right angles to the building. Patent to Bowyer (1888) and to Sladek (1898) show painters’ scaffolds having a frame U-shaped at the bottom, and supporting a hoisting drum between the upright sides of the frame; the lower U supporting directly the scaffold boards laid in them, without the intervention of putlogs. The evidence fairly establishes that in 1908, prior to Henderson’s invention date, appellee, who 'owned the Murray and other patents for scaffolds, and had built up a large business in the supplying of scaffolds for the erection of high buildings, had furnished for the erection of the Blackstone Hotel at Chicago, scaffolds in which there was the U-shaped bar frame similar to that of Henderson, but with putlogs composed of two angle irons bolted together, the U-frame extending down between them, and the connecting bolts resting on the top of the under web of the U, the floor boards of the scaffold being, as in Henderson, laid parallel to the building. This employment of the U-bar did not change the position of Murray’s machines, which, as shown in his patent drawings, was at right angles to the building. Henderson’s contrivance having the ends of the putlogs laid directly in the U-frames at 7, necessitates the setting of the frames parallel or broadside with the building.

The evidence of prior art does not show a complete scaffold wherein, as in Henderson, the pairs of frames are so disposed that putlogs are laid directly into the bottoms of the frames without the intervention of bolts or equivalent contrivances. The special advantages claimed for the Henderson combination over others were testified to [749]*749be the saving of space in the width of the platform, greater security, and greater facility in the installation and removal of the scaffolding. All these, save the first, are quite dubious. There is in these drum machines necessarily considerable width of frame to accommodate the hoisting drum, which must be wide enough to hold 100 feet of cable. The frames and drums when set on the scaffold in pairs — two for each putlog — and at right angles to the building, might appreciably obstruct the width of the scaffold, and in so far as Henderson shows a combination wherein these drums might extend broadside of the building, he made advance to the extent that there was thereby effected substantial saving of room on the platform, although neither in the specifications nor the claims is mention made of the position of the drums with reference to the building wall.'

We do not find in the prior art, or in the prior use, any operative scaffold of this general nature which seems to embody all of the elements present in Henderson’s combination. His advance, however slight, is not so wholly wanting in invention or novelty as to justify a finding contrary to the presumptive validity of the grant to him, and we therefore conclude that his claims in issue here are valid. The validity of these same claims was recently in issue in a suit in Nebraska wherein appellee herein was plaintiff and appellant Whitney defendant. The District Court found for the defendant, but on appeal the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit held the claims valid (New York Scaffolding Co. v. Whitney, 224 Fed. 452, 140 C. C. A. 138), although the District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, in a suit by appellee herein upon the same claims reached an opposite conclusion, holding the claims invalid as not disclosing invention (New York Scaffolding Co. v. Liebel-Binney Construction Co., 243 Fed. 577, — C. C. A. —, October term, 1914), the decree therein having been recently affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

2. The infringement alleged is in the manufacture and sale of two articles known as the Whitney scaffold hoist and the Little Wonder machine, made pursuant to patents to Whitney, numbered respectively 998,270 (1911) and 1,114,832 (1914). These patents are for devices for hoisting scaffolds, and the suit here was brought against appellant Chain Belt Company, on the claim that it manufactured the hoisting mechanism of these two patents, and knowingly sold or delivered them to users who would so apply and combine them with putlogs and scaffold floors as thereby to present all the elements of the combination of Henderson’s claims 1 and 3, whereby in such manufacture and sale there was contributory infringement by the Chain Belt Company. Appellant Whitney intervened, alleging that all the machines made by the Chain Belt Company were made for him, that they had ceased making the Whitney scaffold hoist, that the Little Wonder did not infringe, and he asked that appellee be enjoined from prosecuting various suits it had instituted against users of the Little Wonder.

Upon the question of infringement we will consider first the Whitney scaffold hoist. This shows a hoisting drum revolubly mounted in .a frame which has a straight rod or bar bolted to the lower ends [750]*750of the frame-. When this frame is used by setting it on the scaffold broadside to the building, putlogs may be laid in and held by the bottom of the frame, as is contemplated by the Henderson patent, and, when in such position, the Henderson claims in issue” are readable upon such structure, unless it may be said that the bottom of this Whitney frame, by being bolted to the sides, is not in effect the continuous U-shaped bar of Henderson. But in so far as the function of this bar is to support, by laying therein, the putlogs, it is not of essential materiality whether the continuousness of the frame .is effected through one or several pieces of metal, or whether the corners are rounded or rectangular. InasSmuch as this bottom affords support extending around and holding the putlog laid therein, it does not seem important whether it is the precise bar described by Henderson, or its manifest equivalent, capable of performing this same function in the same'manner as in the Whitney scaffold hoist, if otherwise all the elements of Henderson’s combination appear. It was this same Whitney scaffold hoist whose manufacture and sale for the alleged purpose of its use in a like combination was the contributory infringement charged in the above-named Nebraska suit; and the Circuit Court of Appeals there further found that in such cases where the Whitney scaffold hoist having the drum was shown to have been made, and sold to be set broadside of the building, and used in pairs with putlogs laid therein after the manner of the combination of the Henderson claims, it contributed to the infringement thereof, and should be dealt with accordingly.

It was sought to show by the evidence that the Whitney scaffold hoist was intended to be used, and in most instances was used, by setting it with its hoisting drum at right angles to the building, and employing the double angle iron putlogs bolted together, with the bolts resting on the lower crosspiece of the frame, as has been referred to in connection with the Murray hoist on the Blackstone Hotel job.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
245 F. 747, 158 C.C.A. 149, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chain-belt-co-v-new-york-scaffolding-co-ca7-1917.