Clements Mfg. Co. v. Regina Corp.

34 F.2d 931, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3339
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 1929
DocketNo. 320
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 931 (Clements Mfg. Co. v. Regina Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clements Mfg. Co. v. Regina Corp., 34 F.2d 931, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3339 (2d Cir. 1929).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND,

Circuit Judge. This is a suit for infringement of Clements’ reissue patent No. 15,627. The claims relied upon axe 1, 4, 6, 11, 12,13, and 18. The invention relates to improvements in vacuum cleaners and has for one of its principal objects to provide means for connecting a suction hose directly with the inlet of the pumping chamber, so as to cause the connection between the normal floor nozzle and the inlet to the floor nozzle to be disconnected. Infringement is not disputed, and the only question raised on this appeal is of the validity of the patent. Judge Moseowitz, who presided at the trial, held the patent valid and the claims relied on infringed.

[932]*932The Clements vaeuum cleaner has the dual capacity of cleaning floors as it is moved over them and also of cleaning walls, draperies, and upholstery, and it is so constructed as to be easily converted from “on” to “off” floor service without the use of tools, by inexperienced persons. The patent has had a great commercial success and the only defense seriously raised to it is anticipation by the alleged prior use embodied in the so-called Domestic cleaner and by patent No. 1,102,130, to G. S. Bennett. Clements had prevailed and secured this patent over Kirby under a decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Clements v. Kirby, 274 F. 575. It is largely because of the Domestic prior use and the Bennett patent, which were not before that court, that the defendant argues that it is entitled to prevail here.

The specification of the patent in suit describes a flat cylindrical casing, which is called the pumping chamber, in which a fan is rotated by a motor attached to one side of the fan casing. Beyond the pumping chamber extends a discharge outlet tangentially arranged. Integral with the fan casing is the suction chamber communicating therewith through a port and provided with a screw-threaded passageway closed by a cap. The suetion passage extends from the suetion chamber next to the port into an elongated narrow suetion nozzle adjacent to the floor which it is desired to clean. A dust-receiving bag is attached to one end of the tangential discharge way and at the other end is closed by a spring clip. Such are the main features of the device as arranged for cleaning floors.

When it is proposed to clean walls or draperies, the screw-threaded cap is removed and a hose tube is inserted in the serewthreaded passageway above mentioned and passed through and across the suetion chamber into the port in the wall of the fan chamber. This tube cuts off the suction chamber, which is in use in floor cleaning, as well as the floor nozzle, so that the direct full pull of the fan may draw the dirt through the hose tube, its attached hose, and distant nozzle.

In Clements v. Kirby (C. C. A.) 274 F. 576, Judge Denison said: “The primary elements of such a structure are the pump or fan chamber and the suction chamber. The two are divided by a partition having an opening. The suction chamber is provided with a suitable intake nozzle, and the pump chamber has a tangential outlet to the dust receptacle. By the suetion effect of the pump, the dust is pulled through the intake nozzle suetion chamber and the partition opening into the pump chamber, and is therefrom blown out to the dust receptacle.”

In describing the structures as related to cleaning draperies and upholstery, Judge Denison said Clements had improved the primary structure by making “an opening in the outer shell of the suetion chamber, directly opposite and registering with the partition opening, and inserting through the outer shell opening and tightly into the partition opening an open-ended tube for a hose connection, whereby the suetion pull was cut off entirely from the normal suetion chamber, and this function transferred to the suetion nozzle at the outer end of the hose. This improvement has demonstrated its utility and has been largely adopted.”

Claim 4 may be regarded as typical of those relied on and reads as follows:

“4. A suction chamber having a fan chamber and a second chamber adjacent to said fan chamber anil separated therefrom by a dividing wall provided with an opening, said second chamber being provided with an opening in the wall thereof opposite the opening in the dividing wall, a coupling member adapted to be secured in the opening in the second chamber and having a tubular extension adapted to extend across said second chamber in operative relation to the opening in said dividing wall, and a cover adapted to- close the opening in said second chamber when said coupling member is removed.”

It is seen from the foregoing that Clements combined a satisfactory machine by which dirt-laden air was sucked in a continuous flow through the nozzle, through the suetion chamber, through a restricted opening in the fan chamber, into and completely through the fan chamber, and out tangentially into the dust collector and air releasor at the rear when used as a floor cleaner, and at the same time provided a hose converter which could be projected through an opening in the outer wall in the suction chamber, completely through the suction chamber, and which at the same time was so positioned and supported in relation to the outer and inner walls of the suetion chamber as to prevent wabbling of the converter coupling or disrupting of its sealed relation with the inner partition. It was held in that position at all times when in use, so that the full suction power of the fan was utilized and all connection with the suetion chamber and nozzle entirely and automatically cut off. '

The Domestic cleaner is thought by defendant to defeat'the Clements patent. The witness Quist, who was one of the inventors of this cleaner, said of this device:

[933]*933“The cleaner is made with the suetion chamber below — three bellows on the top. It has wheels in the back, with a crank shaft, and in the front is a nozzle, and between that nozzle and the chamber is a bag, and when you operate this machine, the bellows are actuated by the revolving of the wheels, creating a suction in the nozzle. When you want to use it for the hose, you take out the plug in the front, insert the tube, which fits into the hole, thus cutting off the suetion from the nozzle. You move it back and forth, creating a suetion then in the hose nozzle — it has to be two persons operating it when it is used with the hose and nozzle attachment, and by moving it backwards and forwards, you create a suetion then in the hose.”

It is true that in the Domestic cleaner the hose connection cut off the floor nozzle, but it did not, as in the Clements device cut off the suction chamber and itself extend to the pumping or fan chamber. It is contended to be sure that the space marked Aé, A8, between P and the outer wall in the Domestic cleaner is the suetion chamber, as is the space marked by the similar numerals in the Clements device (Appendix A and Appendix B to appellants’ brief). But this narrow orifice in the Domestic cleaner, however it may correspond in location with the suetion chamber in the Clements device, is not the air space adjacent to the suction device, and the large space below the bellows in the Domestic cleaner was identified as the suetion chamber by appellants’ witnesses Quist and Blanch, as well as by appellee’s expert Sessions.

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Related

Clements Mfg. Co. v. Eureka Vacuum Cleaner Co.
70 F.2d 701 (Second Circuit, 1934)
Clements Mfg. Co. v. Eureka Vacuum Cleaner Co.
1 F. Supp. 384 (E.D. New York, 1932)
Einson-Freeman Co. v. Bohnig
43 F.2d 609 (E.D. New York, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 931, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-mfg-co-v-regina-corp-ca2-1929.