Church of Religious Science v. Kinkead Industries Inc.

138 F. Supp. 954, 108 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 290, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2274
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 7, 1955
DocketNo. 50 C 1813
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 138 F. Supp. 954 (Church of Religious Science v. Kinkead Industries Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Church of Religious Science v. Kinkead Industries Inc., 138 F. Supp. 954, 108 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 290, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2274 (N.D. Ill. 1955).

Opinion

HOFFMAN, District Judge.

This action was brought for infringement of claims 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 of United States patent 2,440,741, granted May 4, 1948, to Walter E. Selck and Company, an Illinois corporation, as assignee of the inventor, Herbert D. Drain. After this suit was filed, but before trial, the patent was acquired from Selck by the present plaintiff, Church of Religious Science, which is a California church corporation and the present owner of the patent and the right of recovery for past infringement. The defendant, Kinkead Industries, Inc., is an Illinois corporation doing business at Chicago, Illinois.

[955]*955The patented device was designed as an efficient, water-tight sink mounting which could be installed on-the-job with relatively few parts suitable for marketing as a kit and with the aid of simple tools. The claims in issue in this suit, when taken together, describe a sink mounting assemblage which consists of three principal parts:

1) Corner brackets for temporarily supporting the sink in the opening, including adjustable means for positioning the sink on the vertical direction.

2) A metal strip or ring made in the form of a T with the stem located between the sink and the drainboard. The head of the T overlaps the drainboard on one side and the sink flange on the other.

3) Clamping members, separably and pivotally attached to the stem of the T and arranged to exert a suitable set of forces to provide the clamping action mentioned above.

Claim 1 describes the T-shaped metal ring and clamping members and the cooperative function of these parts while claims 2, 3, 5 and 6 additionally include the supporting brackets and their function.

The supporting (corner) bracket, as illustrated in the patent, consists of a lug secured to the drainboard with an arm extending into the sink opening through which a vertical adjusting screw is inserted. When the sink is lowered into the opening, the sink flange rests on the adjusting screw and thus permits the sink to be adjusted in relation to the top surface of the drainboard. As commercially marketed, plaintiff’s corner bracket differs somewhat from the one drawn in the patent. It consists of a flat metal bar attached at each end to the drainboard and running diagonally across the corner of the sink opening (there are four brackets, one for each corner). In the center of the bar is a vertical post upon which the sink flange rests. The level of the sink bowl can be adjusted by bending the vertical post.

Once the sink bowl is rested on the corner brackets, the T-shaped sealing ring is inserted between the drainboard and the sink bowl. On the plaintiff’s de-' vice the vertical leg of the T is provided with an upwardly turned hook-like formation. The clamping bars or lugs (which are separate parts) are also provided with a hook formation which latches engagement with the hook on the leg of the T ring. A vertical extending screw is projected upwards through a hole in the end of the clamping lug and onto the bottom surface of the sink flange. This produces a double clamping action in which the sink flange and drainboard are pushed upward into sealing engagement with the arms of the T while the T-shaped frame is drawn downward tightly into a sealed position.

The defendant’s principal defense is that its Kintrim T-type Sink Rim No. 800, the accused device, does not infringe the patent in suit. The accused device, as the defendant readily admits, includes the same three principal elements as the patented device. The defendant’s corner brackets are virtually identical to those of the plaintiff’s commercial product. The only difference in the T ring and clamping members of the two is that the vertical leg of the defendant’s T ring has, instead of a hook formation, a series of rectangular slots arranged lengthwise at different elevations. The separate clamping member, instead of being in the form of a lug with a matching hook formation, consists of a substantially flat bar adapted to be inserted through one of the rectangular slots provided on the leg of the T. This clamping lug has an elevated transverse groove (located approximately midway on the lug) which catches in the slot so that half of the lug rests under the bottom edge of the drainboard and the other half, extending on the opposite side of the vertical leg of the T, is free to receive the vertically extending screw which engages the underside of the sink flange. Each part of the defendant’s device performs the same function as the corresponding part of the plaintiff’s device, and they all work together to produce the same double-edged clamping action. The striking similarity of the two devices is [956]*956most apparent from a comparison of the trade circulars advertising the two devices (Pl.Ex. 17 and 40).

The defendant claims, however, that the hook formation is the essential feature of the plaintiff’s device and, in fact, without it no patent would have been issued. The absence of this hook formation from the defendant’s device is the basis for the claim of non-infringement of claim 1 of the patent. The defendant contends that in order to distinguish the Drain device from the prior art and thus overcome the Patent Office’s initial objections to the application, the plaintiff emphasized and relied on the hook formation and its function as the unique contribution of its invention. The claims in issue in this suit describe this part of the invention more broadly as “lug attaching formations, and lugs provided with attaching formations for latching engagement with [the T frame] said lugs having portions extending beneath the drainboard and the sink flange, one of said lug portions having adjustable means adapted to clamp said frame in position relative to the drainboard and the sink.” In support of its position the defendant relies on Falkenberg v. Golding, 7 Cir., 1952, 195 F.2d 482, and the court’s statement at page 485:

“An applicant may not, before the Patent Office, limit the use of the words in his claims narrowly to avoid the prior art and thus obtain allowance and then subsequently urge a broader construction and attribute to his words a meaning which he previously disclaimed in an effort to establish the claim.”

The file history does not substantiate the defendant’s claim. Subsequent to the initial application the plaintiff submitted an additional claim (identified as No. 13) which was specifically stated in terms of a T frame encircling the sink bowl and having a hook formation. No amendment was made to the existing claims (including those in suit), however; and the court finds no emphasis in other parts of the file history on the hook formation. The claims were accepted by the Patent Office in the form submitted, and this included the description of adjustable clamping means quoted above. In its file history this case is more closely akin to O’Brien v. O’Brien, 7 Cir., 1953, 202 F.2d 254.

Considering the defendant’s device in terms of the claims in issue, the' court has no doubt that the defendant has infringed. Every part of the defendant’s T ring and clamping members, may be read in the claims, and each part functions in the manner described in the-patent.

“The test of infringement is-whether the accused device does the same work in substantially the same' way and accomplishes the same result.” Skoog v.

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138 F. Supp. 954, 108 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 290, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/church-of-religious-science-v-kinkead-industries-inc-ilnd-1955.