Chicago Patent Corporation v. Genco, Inc.

124 F.2d 725, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 3, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 12, 1941
Docket7720
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 124 F.2d 725 (Chicago Patent Corporation v. Genco, Inc.) 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 Patent Corporation v. Genco, Inc., 124 F.2d 725, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 3, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577 (7th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

LINDLEY, District Judge.

The District Court held valid and infringed, plaintiff’s pátent to Bellah, reissued April 19, 1938, No. Re.-20698. Defendant now insists that the patent is invalid and, alternately, properly construed, not infringed. Claims 3, 13 and 15 are in issue. 1

The pin-ball game device of the patent can not be simply or easily described. Consequently we shall endeavor to limit our discussion to only such features as seem necessary and pertinent to our conclusions. The machine is an outgrowth of bagatelle games originating long years ago. A dominant characteristic in all such related modern devices is movement of a marble or ball over a playing plane to find lodging in scoring pockets or to ring a bell by impact or electrical contact, thus indicating the score attained, the player always attempting to amass a high total.

Plaintiff’s device is coin controlled and utilizes, to propel the ball, a plunger actuated by a spring which propels separately each of five balls over the upwardly inclined surface of the playing board. Bellah claims to be the first to provide in pin-ball game devices means for an “indicated game objective” by attainment of which the player is rewarded with one or more “free games” as distinguished from “free plays.” *727 This objective is reached by accurate direction of the balls, which, when they find lodging and thereby make certain contacts, close switches in electric circuits and thereby actuate free game registration and indicate also means for changing the indicated objective and setting up another, which, if attained, in turn will reward the player with additional free games. At the beginning of the game a coin is inserted in a proper slide and when that is pushed in, the balls are placed in position to be propelled and played. The attainment of a free game makes possible replaying without insertion of an additional coin. The objective and the means for its attainment, whereby the player receives free games, the patentee disclosed in the claims we have referred to. They show means for indicating the objective; for registering and indicating the free games available to the player; for changing the game objective automatically after attainment of one free game and for changing the game objective at the option of the operator.

The structure includes a cabinet with a socalled “shuffleboard” sliding panel on which are mounted a number of electrical switches which are closed by contact with the ball. In the cabinet, in addition to the panel, is an upwardly slanted playing board which has in it certain ball exit openings, which normally register with the electric switches, for trapping and directing balls into switch closing position. One set of holes may be called secondary and the other master openings. The ball, serving as a missile to be propelled by the spring-urged plunger, is brought into proper position to be forced along and up a run-way to the top of the slanted playing board from which it rolls down toward the bottom. It may find lodgment in any one of the openings in the board and thereby complete the electric contact and make appropriate registration and from there it eventually returns to its resting place, there to remain until again put into play. If the player succeeds in dropping a ball in a master opening, the electric circuit is closed and the player awarded automatically a free game indicated to him by an electric sign. This attainment of' objective may be continued indefinitely if the player succeeds in finding the appropriate hole for the ball. Each time the objective is attained, another free game is his reward.

The patentee employs a dial for indicating the objective. This is mounted upon a shaft and is capable of rotation with it. Secured to the same hub, as a dial for indicating the objective, is a ratchet wheel capable likewise of relative rotation with respect to the shaft. A spring somewhat like that of a clock actuates the dial, causing it to rotate in counter-clockwise direction and preventing opposite rotation of the ratchet wheel.

Without going into great detail, it is by means of this mechanism that the free game indicator makes visible through an opening the free game or games obtained by and awarded to the player. The patentee said that the arrangement of scoring openings for balls and master openings for balls and the numerical scoring values and color notations indicated near these openings were provided merely to explain the operation of the new apparatus and were not in any way a limitation of the invention or “the essence of the same.”

In his patent he described the method of playing and the construction for carrying the invention into effect. He said that the examples he suggested were not to be “construed as a limitation upon the procedure the player may follow,” as there “may be considerable variation,” and that the preferred form of construction “is capable of variation and modification without departing from the spirit of the invention.” He added, therefore, that he did not desire to be limited to the “precise details of construction set forth” but rather to avail himself of “such variations and modifications” as might come within the scope of the claims.

He was claiming a device including mechanism and means to provide and indicate a definite objective for the player, accomplishment of closure of two electric switches, thereby attaining that objective, —automatic reward of a free game. That objective of course could be obtained only by the closure of the electric switches provided for that purpose. He claimed also means to indicate the number of free games available to the player, to indicate his objective, to change the objective automatically when it is attained, to subtract from the indicated free game awards each game as it is completed and to enable the player, by actuation of the coin slide, to recondition the machine for operation without deposit of a coin.

Defendant contends that the device of the patent is inherently a gambling machine without utility and, therefore, beyond protection by the patent laws. To *728 gamble is to risk money or other possession upon an event, chance or contingency in the hope of realization of gain and the test as to whether a combination constitutes a gambling device is whether it is “ * * * adapted, devised, and designed for the purpose of playing any game of chance for money or property. * * * ” Davies, Sheriff, v. Mills Novelty Co., 8 Cir., 70 F.2d 424.

Here the trial court made a specific finding that skill in operating the device is not wholly absent, that the machine may be operated “without gain being a factor” and that the court could not conclude as a matter of law that it is incapable of legitimate use. Nothing of monetary value, nothing susceptible of purchase and sale passes to the successful player. At the most, he receives merely an opportunity to continue freely his use of the device for the enjoyment of which he has originally invested a coin. Bearing in mind that issuance of the patent creates a prima facie presumption of utility, Fuller v. Berger, 7 Cir., 120 F. 274, 65 L.R.A. 381, the absence of any showing by defendant to overcome such presumption and the finding of the trial court, it is apparent that we can not say as a matter of law that the combination of the patent is inherently a gambling device.

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Bluebook (online)
124 F.2d 725, 52 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 3, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-patent-corporation-v-genco-inc-ca7-1941.