Cincinnati Milling MacHine Co. v. Turchan

208 F.2d 222, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4391
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 24, 1953
Docket11716_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 208 F.2d 222 (Cincinnati Milling MacHine Co. v. Turchan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cincinnati Milling MacHine Co. v. Turchan, 208 F.2d 222, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4391 (6th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

SIMONS Chief Judge

The present patent infringement suit, as now narrowed by the appeal, involves solely an issue of infringement, There was no adjudication of validity in the court below and the patent having now expired the public interest does not invite a consideration of that issue.

, , . ., . , , , The patent m suit is Anderson No. 1,- '% , ,. .... 952,230 for an automatic profile milling ’ , , machine, granted on March 27 1934 upon an application filed in 1927 and renewed m 1931. Of its seventy-four , , claims but three are now pressed as havmg been infringed. These_ claims are i3, 46 and 57. They are printed m the margin. 1 The patent is owned by the appellant, a substantial part of whose bustness is the manufacture and sale of hydrauhcaUy controlled mi ling machines and hydraulic attachments for convert-mg existing milling machine tools to hydraulic operation for duplication of irregular surfaces in metal. The appellee manufactures and sells only the hydraulic attachments.

^ ^ The Anderson patent lies in the art for mechanically reproducing by means of a tracer device the shape and form of a pattern. The tracer is designed to travel over the pattern and through hydraulic means to control the movement of the cutting tool so that the cutter will respond exactly to the movement of the tracer- Anderson claimed that his object was to Provide a milling machine that would automatically cut irregular shapes in metal with only the assistance of a master or template and to provide a simple machine adapted to accurately and rapidly follow the template at any degjred rate of speed for the cutting tool without the attention of a skilled operator.

Prior to the Anderson patent, technological advances had been made in response to the need for greater exactitude in machine tools. Early in the century study was given to the development of h ydraulic tracer control dupiicating machines to replace the hand-operated metal ... , . , ,, cutting machines then m use. The latter were impractical because of their slow. ng g Qf tion and their de_ dence on skilled artisans. The earlier adyances toward automatic dupiication are exem lified by tbe Bontempi Patent Nq> 7Q9 8g8 (1902) for reproducing lagter sculptoring> Pierce No. 871)522 (1907) for reproducing fluted marble colu and Lorant Britigh patent Nq_ 2 for reproducing wooden , , . shoe lasts. The record fails to show any . , , « A1 , , commercial exploitation of these patents but Bontempi had disclosed the use of two slides moving simultaneously at right angles to each other and operated by hydraulic cylinders; so had Pierce. Lorant had disclosed a tracer designed to open a valve controlling a hydraulic *224 cylinder for operating the slide, and that was also indicated by Bontempi, supra, and in his German Patent No. 126,119. A spring pressed tracer was in Delin No. 560,574 as early as 1896, in Shaw No. 1,506,454 (1924) and Lochman No. 1,-774,279 (1930). A hand-operated valve for distributing fluids to two or more cylinders was in Pierce No. 827,993, an oscillating tracer in Delin, supra, and Shaw, supra, and a reproducing machine having three directions of mechanical movement in Bontempi, supra, and Shaw, supra.

While no one of the cited patents discloses the combination of elements in Anderson, the recorded art was available to him and lends support to the court's view, that the claims in suit, with the possible exception of a single element in claim 13, disclosed combinations of old elements and we have held that where the only issue is one of infringement, though all of the elements of the patented combination are not found in a single structure of the prior art, yet in determining the scope of the patent and its place in the art as bearing upon the question of infringement, patents showing separate elements of the combination may properly be considered, Remington Rand, Inc. v. Meilink Steel Safe Company, 6 Cir., 140 F.2d 519, 521.

The embodiment of the invention in the patent discloses a completely automatic hydraulically controlled milling machine capable of reproducing irregularly shaped metal parts throughout 360“ without manually operating the changeover valve. The tracer is continuously biased against the surface of the pattern. The pattern is mounted on a conventional work slide so that the pattern and work move as a unit while the cutter and tracer-head likewise move as a unit on a slide which moves at right angles to the other, The cutter and tracer are moved by one hydraulic cylinder and the pattern and work-table by another. These cylinders are so arranged that there is an automatic proportioning of liquid from a constant pressure source simultaneously, so as to control the direction of movement of the respective slides. The hydraulic cylinders are controlled by a series of valve mechanisms which control the pressure conditions. The tracer arm tilts with changes in the surface contour of the pattern. Its deflections actuate a primary valve to change pressure conditions therein and the primary valve, in turn, controls a secondary valve which, in its turn, activates an auxiliary section of a distributor mechanism, causing rotation of the distributor valve by pressure delivered to a pair of hydraulic cylinders. The distributor valve is comprised 0f an auxiliary valve and a main valve which direct the flow of fluid pres. gure to the main operating cylinders which move the slides in the required direction g0 that the forceg acting on the sbdes are automatically varied continu-ougly in exact relation to the direction and amount of tracer deflection ag dic_ tated by changes in the surface of the pattern being traced

The Patent summarizes the operation as f°^ows:

“Any displacement of the tracer arm from its neutral position will immediately cause a combined responsive action of the primary and secondary valve in connection with the distributor valve and an immediate change in the direction of the rafltant 1’elative between the suc* aa ™uld hmit the dls; £"nt of1+the+ tracf arm’ and ^ ^ resultant gradual rotation of th® distributor valve stem would eventually give whatever change m relatlva m°tlon that « re(fired and cauf *he tracer arm to re^urn to lts neutra posi íoh.

This sketchy general description of the operation of the machine and its parts is, of course, inadequate but they are more specifically detailed in the opinion of the district judge, Cincinnati Milling Machine Company v. Turchan, D.C., 101 F. Supp. 621, in which will be found the principal patent drawings sufficiently indicating the organization and operation *225 of the Anderson machine, so we need not repeat.

The principal controversy revolves about the “means” clauses in the several claims in suit — and this we have first to resolve. It is conceded that Turehan does not use the primary and secondary valves of the patent nor the several parts of the distributor valve with their associated parts. The appellant insists, however, that the “means” employed by Turehan constitute their mechanical equivalent, so that Turehan infringes, The court found that the “hydraulic means” or “pressure responsive means” claimed by Anderson are, in the light of the specifications and drawings, integral parts of the combination claims in suit without which the structures claimed therein could not perform the functions for which they were designed.

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Bluebook (online)
208 F.2d 222, 99 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 4391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cincinnati-milling-machine-co-v-turchan-ca6-1953.