Chicago Grain Door Co. v. McGuire-Cummings Mfg. Co.

183 F. 326, 105 C.C.A. 538, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5049
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1910
DocketNo. 1,648
StatusPublished

This text of 183 F. 326 (Chicago Grain Door Co. v. McGuire-Cummings Mfg. 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
Chicago Grain Door Co. v. McGuire-Cummings Mfg. Co., 183 F. 326, 105 C.C.A. 538, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5049 (7th Cir. 1910).

Opinion

GROSSCUP, Circuit Judge,

delivered the opinion:

Experience has pointed out that thieves are much more likely to break open freight car doors, and steal the contents of the car, where [327]*327the fact that the car has been broken open is not susceptible of quick discovery, than where it is capable of ready detection and discovery; for a quick discovery of the fact that the car has been broken open is followed by an immediate trailing of the thieves. The inventions involved in this suit, both the one relied upon by appellant, and the one used by appellee, were to expose to quick discovery (usually within a day or two at most), by the railway inspectors, the fact that the car had been opened up. And to this end, the purpose of the inventions was to SO' construct and apply a bracket which could not be removed and replaced while the car door was closed.

The common type of box car is provided on opposite sides, midway of its length, with doorways, through which freight is loaded and unloaded — the doors hung on rollers on an overhead track, sliding along outside of the car and overlapping it — as distinguished from a different type of car in which the doors slide into and fit flush in the doorway. To keep these doors from being swung outward at the bottom, metal brackets or keepers are provided, whereby, the lower edge of the door is confined to the side of the car when in a closed position. And to prevent pilfering of the cars, prior to the conception of the idea which appellant’s patent was intended to further, reliance was placed upon a locking of the forward edge of the door by means of a staple and interweaving wire or metal strip, the ends of the wire or metal strip being fastened together by a lead seal. With the ordinary bracket then employed, this use of a seal, and the notice that its breaking gave to the next inspector examining it, was avoided by simply taking out the lag screws with which the bracket was fastened, whereupon the door could be pried out sufficiently to permit of the entrance of a thief, and, the work of stealing accomplished, the bracket restored without an}' indication of its having been removed, or of the door having been opened. The Hill patent prevents this by so combining the car door bracket with the ordinary commercial form of lag screw, and with the car door itself, that so long as the car door is closed, the lag screws cannot be removed without first opening the door, which, of course, involves the breaking of the seal. The device is illustrated in the following cut:

and its operation is described in the patent as follows:

"“In accordance with my invention, I so construct the bracket that after one of its retaining-screws has been partially placed in position, it is necessary to rotate the bracket with the screw, after the manner of a wrench, until the screw has been effectively driven home and the bracket secured to its proper operative position; the bracket being held in such position by the screw. It is obvious that, in order to remove a plate so secured to the car-body, it is necessary first to rotate the plate with the screw, in the opposite direction from that in which it was previously rotated, in order to effect its detachment, and it is also obvious that so long as the car-[328]*328door extends across suck plate and in contact therewith, such reverse rotation of the bracket for the purpose of detachment is rendered impossible.”

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Bluebook (online)
183 F. 326, 105 C.C.A. 538, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5049, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-grain-door-co-v-mcguire-cummings-mfg-co-ca7-1910.