Columbia Machine & Stopper Corp. v. Adriance Mach. Works, Inc.

226 F. 203, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedMarch 3, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 226 F. 203 (Columbia Machine & Stopper Corp. v. Adriance Mach. Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbia Machine & Stopper Corp. v. Adriance Mach. Works, Inc., 226 F. 203, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144 (E.D.N.Y. 1915).

Opinion

VEEDER, District Judge.

Two suits by the complainant for infringement of the sixth claim of patent No. 1,095,406, issued May 5, 1914, to the complainant, as assignee of Clarence J. Lawson, for an improvement in machines for applying bottle closures. The first suit is based upon the manufacture and sale of infringing machines; the second, on use. In the first suit the defendant Adriance is the president of the defendant Adriance Machine Works, Incorporated, and the owner of patent No. 1,096,521, issued to Adriance and Calleson, on May 12, 1914, and of patent No. 1,096,527, issued to Calleson, for bottle sealing machines. The identical claim in issue was asserted by Adriance and Calleson in an application in interference with the application for the Lawson patent in suit. Lawson prevailed, and the patent was issued to him. No machine constructed in accordance with the Adriance and Calleson patent was sold “or used by either of the defendants. After the construction of a single experimental machine under that patent, all subsequent machines were constructed under the patent granted on the sole application of Calleson. The second suit is based upon the use of two machines purchased from the defendants, one before and the other after the issuance of the patent in suit, and differing only with respect to- the form of cam used.

The specification of the patent in suit describes the invention as relating to: •

“Improvement in automatic machines for applying bottle closures to the necks of bottles, in which'a bottle capping head and a bottle support are reciprocated with respect to one another for the purpose of applying a bottle closure to the neck of an interposed bottle, and my objects are the production of a mechanically simple and strong machine which will perform the operations reliably, successfully and quickly with a .minimum of human attendance.”

The means devised for this purpose are described in the claim in issue:

“A closure applying machine, comprising a base, a main shaft extending vertically therethrough; a bottle support concentric with the shaft; means for imparting rotary motion to the shaft; a sleeve around said shaft above the fable; a sealing head mounted on said sleeve; a cam ring on the shaft, the groove of which engages the sealing head for imparting a reciprocating motion thereto upon the revolution of the shaft.”

It admits of no doubt that this machine embodies a highly useful, and simple combination of elements whereby a sealing head is positively raised and lowered to perform the operation of capping bottles smoothly, swiftly, and with certainty of operation. Smoothness and uniformity of operation are essentials in a machine operating upon brittle glass bottles, usually filled with a gas-charged or carbonated liquid which must not be agitated. The complainant’s machine, opr' erated with three sealing heads, caps over 90 bottles per minute, with a percentage of breakage of one-tenth of 1 per cent,, as compared with 2 per cent, usually allowed theretofore.

[205]*205The; patent in suit is expressly described as an improvement in automatic machines lor applying bottle closures. Bottle capping machines vviiii reciprocating parts were not new; nor is any novelty claimed for the sealing heads. Rawsons’s patent deals with the means, and organization by which sealing heads are brought into operative relation with the bodes upon which they are to act. As such it clearly disclosed pal entable invention. This is shown by the three prior patents cited by the defendants’ counsel in his final argument, not, so far as appears, in anticipation of the patent in suit, but as an indication of the prior art: Brewington patent, No. 860,787, dated July 23, 1907, for a bottle capping machine; Macdonell patent, No. 211,413, dated January 14, 1879, for machinery for filling and corking bottles; Seger patent; No. 375,776, dated January 3, 1888, for a capsule machine. In the Brewington patent the cam, arranged above the sealing head, forces ihe sealing head down, but its return is due to a spring. Moreover, the patent also shows the cam as stationary and the heads rotating thereunder. In the Macdonell patent the corking machine revolves around a stationary shaft on which there are three stationary cams. The bottles are carried on separate spring supports, and are raised and lowered as the frame revolves about the stationary shaft. Instead of a sealing head, the machine has a cork holder, which does not move vertically. ' The bottle is lilted up, so that its neck enters the mouth of the cork holder, when a cork, placed by hand in the hold - er, is pushed down into the bottle by a plunger. The Seger patent is for a machine to- make metal capsules by the successive action of a series of dies. At most, it discloses a grooved barrel cam having a plurality of grooves and operating reciprocating parts.

1 do not understand it to be seriously denied that the machine described in the Adriance and Calleson patent would infringe the patent in sub. 'I'lie material consideration is whether the defendants’ machine, made in accordance with the Calleson patent, infringes. Objectively the principal difference between the defendants’ machine and the machine of the patent in suit is that in the former the power is supplied from above, while in the latter it is supplied from below. In the complainant’s machine a main shaft extends vertically through the base, where means are provided for operating the concentric table support, hi the Calleson machine the main shaft extends down into the base, where, likewise, means are provided rotating the concentric bottle support. The claim in issue calls for:

"A closure applying machine comprising a base; a main shaft; extending verHc:thy • iicuethrougli; a bottle support concentric with the shaft; means Cor imparting rotary motion to the shaft.”

It is not to be supposed, the defendant argues, that the patents prescribed a main shaft extending vertically through the base merely to indícale that the base was a support for the shaft; it must have been intended that the shaft should have some special function because of that detail of construction, and the reason was that he thereby emphasized the fact that the driving means in his machine must all'be below in the base of the machine. The answer to this argument is that the claim does not specify the location of the means for impart[206]*206ing a rotary motion to the shaft. It may be located anywhere, so long as it performs the prescribed function of imparting a rotary motion to the shaft.

The claim specifies “a bottle support concentric with the shaft.” There is no limitation with respect to the manner in which this bottle support shall be actuated. As a matter of fact, in the complainant’s machine it is rotated intermittently, while in the defendants’ machine it is rotated continuously. During the cap-applying operation the movement of the bottle support is stopped in the complainant’s machine; in the defendants’ machine the sealing heads are moved horizontally with the bottle support. This difference, not included'in the claim in suit, necessitates the oscillating movement of the sealing heads in defendants’ machine, which requires a cylindrical guideway for the sealing heads.

The defendants’ contention centers mainly upon'the two clauses of the claim in issue specifying:

“A sleeve around said shaft above tbe table; a sealing bead mounted on said sleeve.”

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Bluebook (online)
226 F. 203, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-machine-stopper-corp-v-adriance-mach-works-inc-nyed-1915.