Cohn v. Hickey-Freeman Co.

246 F. 256, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 902
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1917
DocketNo. 140-B
StatusPublished

This text of 246 F. 256 (Cohn v. Hickey-Freeman Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohn v. Hickey-Freeman Co., 246 F. 256, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 902 (W.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

HAZEL,, District Judge.

The specification of the Cohn and Weiner patent, No. 1,121,581, dated December 15, 1914, for an improved process for cutting and fitting wearing apparel, states that the process consists of cutting and working and seaming together two pieces of striped or patterned cloth, keeping the stripes or patterns in parallelism with the seam line so that they will follow longitudinally the curves of the body to be fitted. According to the patentees, in making fitted coats it was customary to cut the inner edges of the back halves curved, with the result that in striped or patterned material the back seam was intersected with lines forming darts, which gave to the coat a crude appearance. They therefore proposed to parallel the stripes or patterns with the back seam: (1) By cutting the material for the back halves straight at the inner edges and parallel with the pattern; (2) by shrinking at the armpits to form shoulder blade-pockets; (3) by drawing in or shrinking adjacent the armholes to further throw outwardly the upper portion of the cloth above the armpit line; and (4) to draw the material outwardly just above the waist by stretching along the outer edge at the waist line, and then to shrink out the resulting wrinkles or puckering of the cloth. The specification also states that after completing the second and third steps just specified the inner edge of the back half “will have the proper curvature, but the cloth above the vent line will have to he thrown back to give the proper angular position to this edge.” The defenses are, invalidity, prior use, and noninfringement.

[1-3] Plaintiff concedes at the outset that matched back form-fit-, ting coats were not novel in the custom tailoring art, but contends that in the ready to wear industry only form-fitting coats of the mismatched kind — those having converging longitudinal stripes or patterns — were in the market at the date of the invention, and that its method of making coats, though not limited to ready to wear coats, was new and novel and resulted in'- a better appearing garment.

The primal questions are whether the combination, including as an essential element the shrinking of the cloth at predetermined sections adjacent the armholes in order to curve the center seam, after drawing in the cloth or a section at the outside of the half below the armpits for making a hollow for the shoulder bade, was a new combination, and whether a new result was attained thereby. The claims disclose the process, while the specification points out the feature which the patentees contend differentiates their process from prior processes [258]*258of custom .tailors, reference being made to the drawings. The involved claims read as follows: • '

“1. The herein described process of cutting and fitting from striped or patterned cloth'the two halves'of a coat back, which consists in first cutting each half above the vent line along a straight line parallel with the stripes or pattern line, then .shrinking the cloth at predetermined sections adjacent the outer edge to curve the upper pari of the piece outwardly to the desired seam curvature, then stretching a section adjacent the outer edge to throw the par);* above thS vent .line inwardly: to'get-the desired angle of the seam edge with reference to the part below the vent line, and then sewing the curved edges of the halves together.
“2.. The improved process of cutting and shaping patterned cloth to form the back half of a garment which consists in first cutting a piece with the inner seam edge straight and parallel with the pattern lines and the upper and outer edge in accordance with the neck, shoulders, arm, and waist, then drawing in a section of the cloth adjacent the outer edge below the armpit by shrinking the material to throw the part above the armpit outwardly to effect curvature of the seam edge, then drawing in the section adjacent the armhole by shrinking the material to further throw out the part above the armpit Une cmd to bring the seam edge to the desired curvature, then stretching the section adjacent the outer edge at the waist to throw the part above the section inwardly, then taking in and smoothing out by shrinking the wrinkles caused along the seam edge, by such stretching.”

The. novel elements said to be embodied in the claims I have italicized. If the contentions of the .plaintiff are sound and such claims are valid, a practical domination by the plaintiff of the production by wholesale tailors-of form-fitting matched back coats now extensively worn by men and boys will result. Therefore the evidence pro and ,con has been carefully considered and the conclusion has been reached that the process under consideration does not disclose any patentable difference over the prior process practiced by custom tailors for a number of. years before the patent in suit in matching backs in formfitting coats, and in my opinion such prior process was adaptable to the ready, to wear industry. Even though the patentees were the first to adapt their specific method to form-fitting coats or striped or patterned material, only such slight changes or modifications were involved as would occur to the ordinarily skilled tailor, and did not call for invention. It is true that the patent law does not require that an article itself produced by a process should be new, since patentability exists in a new process for producing an old result. 30 Cyc. 823. But the mode of operation in question in a strict legal sense was not novel or new.

Generally to manipulate two pieces of clotlj by stretching and shrinking at different points, to wit, the shoulder, the neck, and the inner and outer edges of the seam at the waist line to produce a form-fitting garment, was an expedient as old as the tailoring art; and it is not believed to- have been difficult, at the time of the conception in suit, to produce by known steps a form-fitting coat of striped material in which the stripes ran parallel and did not converge at the back seam. In some of the ready to wear coats of striped material the lines, as heretofore stated, intersected the back center seam, but that was due, I think, to haste, ignorance, and carelessness on the part of those making ready to wear garments, and not to lack of- knowledge by all [259]*259tailors as to how to make a form-fitting matched back coat. The patentees’ method of shrinking the cloth at certain sections near the armhole to throw the cloth outwardly for the shoulder blade and further shrinking to curve the inner edge were steps familiar to the art.

Plaintiff claims that prior to the time of the patent in suit tailors, in making form-fitting matched back coats, shrunk for blade hollow only, and not to curve the upper part of the back half, but in my mind the shrinking to obtain a blade pocket resulted in curving the back seam. The patentees merely carried forward an old process, describing it in new terms and adapting equivalent modes or steps “under conditions recognized as possible, within the knowledge of any mechanic, but not previously stated in language,” but this was not invention. Berardini v. Tocci (C. C.) 190 Fed. 329. As said in Burt v. Evory, 133 U. S. 349, 10 Sup. Ct. 394, 33 L. Ed. 647, by Mr. Justice Lamar in quoting from the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Swayne in Smith v. Nichols, 21 Wall. 112, 22 L. Ed. 566:

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Related

Smith v. Nichols
88 U.S. 112 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Burt v. Evory
133 U.S. 349 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Duer v. Corbin Cabinet Lock Co.
149 U.S. 216 (Supreme Court, 1893)
Berardini v. Tocci
190 F. 329 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
246 F. 256, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohn-v-hickey-freeman-co-nywd-1917.