Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Keller Pneumatic Tool Co.

293 F. 945, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1701
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1923
DocketNos. 2966, 2961
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 293 F. 945 (Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Keller Pneumatic Tool Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co. v. Keller Pneumatic Tool Co., 293 F. 945, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1701 (3d Cir. 1923).

Opinion

RUNYON, District Judge.

These cases have to do with improvements in pneumatic hammers, and concern an art which was introduced to the attention of this court many years ago, when the primary patents issued to Boyer, now long since expired, were the subject of consideration, and through other cases reported as hereafter noted. Since those early days, these tools have come into such extensive use, and have been the subject of such varied and successful improvements from time to time, as to make the present art a highly developed one, and with a consequent shrinkage in the scope of possible advance.

In the cases now before us there are four patents concerned; First, patent No. 730,887, granted to Doughty on June 16, 1903, for a blank for hammer handles; claims 1, 2, and 3 thereof being involved. These claims were held invalid by the' court below, and the Chicago Company appeals. Second, patent No. 822,146, granted to Meissner on May 29, 1906, for a pneumatic hammer, and involving claims 21, 37, and 38. The court below held these claims valid, and the Keller Company appeals. Third, patent No. 866,573, granted to Boyer on September 17, 1907, for a pneumatic hammer, claims 2, 3, 5, and 9 of which are involved. These claims were held invalid, and the Chicago Company appeals. Fourth, patent No. 917,242; granted to Boyer on April 6, 1909, for a pneumatic hammer. Claims 21 and 22 were held to be valid and infringed, and from this finding the Keller Company ap- ■ peals, while from a finding that claims 24, 25, 26, and 27 were invalid the Chicago Company appeals.

In order that repetition may be avoided, and that at the same time there may be gained a fair survey of the art in general, attention is called to a number of cases noted in the margin,1 showing Boyer’s connection with the development of the art to date back as far as 1883.

Doughty Patent, No. 730,887, for Hammer Handle.

The earliest patent of the four under consideration is the patent issued to Doughty for a hammer handle. Before the appearance of Doughty’s handle, Boyer himself had invented a handle for his pneumatic riveter, fashioned after the shape of a pistol end; the similarity leading to its being generally known as the “pistol grip” handle. Through the inside of this handle ran a channel or duct, and it was [947]*947through this duct that the air or motive fluid coursed in operating the riveter. This, patent passed the tests, not only of the Patent Office, but of several courts called upon to weigh its merits. See 110 Fed. 217; 127 Fed. 130, 62 C. C. A. 244; 135 Fed. 783, 68 C. C. A. 485; 154 Fed. 953.

These pistol grip handles were made of cast steel, molding forms being used for the securing of the shape, and a core for the inner channel. So far as form and function were concerned, they fulfilled claims and expectations up to a certain point, and the defects which thereafter developed were due, not to these elements themselves, but to the material employed in the handle construction, viz. cast steel. Under high pressure, and sometimes in the course of more ordinary employment, the handle would break, and the result would be loss, both of time and money.

Doughty, a foreman in the employ of Boyer, realizing the nature of the difficulty, believed that the substitution of drop-forged metal for cast steel or malleable iron castings in the making of the handle would solve the problem, and, pursuant to this belief, he put his theory into practice, so far as making a handle blank out of drop forgings, instead of malleable iron or cast steel, was concerned, plus the boring of a channel therein for the operation of the motive fluid. For this he secured his patent. In its original patented form, as above outlined, it was not available for use, and in order to adapt it for service it became necessary to take a step not included in or covered by his patent, viz. to heat the blank and bend it into the requisite shape.

This was done, and the result was to all intents and purposes the identical Boyer pistol grip handle, the only difference being in the material employed in construction (drop forgings, instead of malleable iron • or cast steel), and the means employed for the inner duct or channel (a boring, instead of a core). In our opinion, the so-called invention of Doughty consisted of nothing more than a substitution of materials, and, while it can be freely conceded that the results secured in the Doughty handle are superior to those secured by Boyer through his cast steel manufacture, the superiority can be traced in its entirety to the employment of drop forgings as the constituent metal.

We fail to see wherein the employment of drop-forged, instead of cast, metals, can give the user the credit of inventive thought. The superior usefulness of drop-forged metals is a matter of common knowledge among all artisans who work in iron and steel, where breakage of cast metals is the evil sought to be cured, and Doughty simply adopted the expedient which would have occurred to any skillful craftsman under like circumstances. For it must be conceded by all that, if there be any invention whatever in the Doughty patent, it is in the substitution of metals, and while under some extraordinary circumstances the adoption of substitute materials has been' accorded the credit and dignity of inventive thought, we are of the opinion that the instant case does not present circumstances which would bring it within the scope of such cases as those of Westmoreland Co. v. Hogan, 167 Fed. 327, 93 C. C. A. 31; Geo. Frost Co. et al. v. Cohn et al. (C. C.) 112 Fed. 1C09, affirmed 119 Fed. 505, 56 C. C. A. 185; Dow et al. v. [948]*948McMaster (C. C. A.) 266 Fed. 518. That portion of the decree of the court below holding this patent invalid for want of invention is affirmed.

Boyer Patent, No. 866,573, Claims 2, 3, 5, and 9, for a Rivet-Set Clip or Nose Clip.

These claims are combination claims, relating to a pneumatic hammer, a tool workable in connection therewith and termed a “rivet-set,” and a spring clip so arranged as firmly, but loosely, to engage such tool. The first inquiry to be made regarding the inventive quality or value of the rivet-set clip is as to the need for such a clip. This leads' us to examine the riveter itself, originally an invention of high order, and to the means employed in its operation.

In a riveting operation two tools are involved, one the riveter itself or the so-called gun. Through this mechanism is projected the power, but this mechanism in turn calls for the insertion within itself of another tool, similar to a die, as a die exists in the mechanism of other arts: This second tool is called a rivet-set, and is shaped at its end to conform to the character of the work proposed to be done. It is this tool which .receives the initial blow from the piston of the hammer and transmits the blow to the rivet, and, being separate and distinct from the riveter or gun, must be so shaped as to be inserted in the riveter. Naturally, if this tool were simply inserted into the riveter, with no means provided for keeping it there, the powerful impact of the piston upon it while in operation would shoot it out of the riveter like a bullet. And on the other hand, if the means employed to connect these tools should join them firmly together, allowing no play whatever at the instant of impact, vibrations would be thereby greatly increased.

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293 F. 945, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 1701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-pneumatic-tool-co-v-keller-pneumatic-tool-co-ca3-1923.