Crandal v. Walters

9 F. 659, 20 Blatchf. 97, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2532
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 13, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 F. 659 (Crandal v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crandal v. Walters, 9 F. 659, 20 Blatchf. 97, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2532 (circtsdny 1881).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

This suit is brought on reissued letters patent No. 6,974, granted to Charles H. Davis, March 7, 1876, for an “improvement in box-loops for carriage tops;” the original patent, No. 95,004, having been granted to him September 21,1869. The specification of the reissue is as follows, reading what is outside of brackets and what is inside of brackets, and omitting what is in italics :

“Figure 1 is a perspective view of the loop, with straps and buckles complete, attached to a piece of leather or section of a carriage top, B. Figure 2 is a perspective view of the loop ready for use. Figure 3 is a plate or cap used on the back or inside of the top, B, for securing the loop, A. Figure 4 is a cross-sectional view of the whole c omplete. Similar letters of reference indicate corresponding parts. My invention has for its object [an improvement in] to improve the construction of box-loops for carriage [tops,] trimmings, [etc.] [660]*660and, it [It] consists in forming the loops [in] from one piece of metal, either cast or struck up [into form from one single piece of plate or sheet metal,] with a series of [spurs or] lugs [projecting from the] upon its lower edges or corners next the surface to which they are to be affixed, which [spurs or lugs] lugs or spurs [pass] are passed through openings formed in the carriage top [or curtain] and [are clinched down tight upon it, and I introduce] through openings in a metal stiffening- plate [on the opposite side] placed, upon the under surface of the leather, [leather, as a stiffening plate, through which the spurs pass before they are clinched, as a further security in the fastening, by which form and construction I securely affix the box-loop to the curtain, etc.,] The lugs are then bent down or clinched upon the metal plate, thereby securely fastening the box-loop in place without the employment of rivets or screws. Box-loops, as usually constructed^ are made of leather, and either sewed or rivfeted in [place,] place, and [Thév] are liable to be bent out of shape and torn from [their fastenings;] the rivets, [and this] This method [mode of construction and application] is [slów and] expensive, requiring the labor of skilled workmen, while, by my improvement, the box [loop can be] is easily applied [by any one] and [is] not liable to get out of order. In the accompanying drawings [which form a-- part of this description, figure 1 is a perspective view of the loop, either cast or struck up from thin metal, affixed in place with buckles complete. Figure 2 is a perspective view of the loop detached. Figure 3 is the stiffening plate, C.] A is a metal loop, either cast or struck up from [thin] sheet metal, preferably the latter, [latter, which] When formed of sheet metal the blanks are cut out by suitable dies, [with] leaving spurs or lugs [lugs or spurs formed at] H, H, upon [the] two [sides] opposite edges. [The loop is then] They are bent into the form [and stamped or embossed, as in figures 1, 2, or otherwise, which completes the manufacture of the loop, which is then ready to be affixed in its place, B, figure 1. To apply this loop to a carriage top, or elsewhere, the spurs or lugs, HEE, are thrust through holes or slits made therefor in the leather, and the ends are bent and clinched down upon the other side. Buckles may be affixed to their place on B, as in figure 1, in any convenient way, and the loop put over them and affixed to B. As an additional security, plates, 0, (see figure 3,) are employed on the opposite side of the curtain, to stiffen and support the fastenings or supports, I-I, which are clinched down on them after passing through openings therein for the purpose.] shown in figure 2, to produce tKe loop. D is a strap or straps, each end passing around and through the buckle, J$, and secured, in any proper manner, to the piece, B, of the carriage top. The piece; B, is provided with a series of holes upon each side of the strap, B, corresponding in number and position to the spurs, H, upon the loop. The loop is applied to the piece, B, by passing the spurs through these holes, as shown in the drawing, and through holes, X X, formed in the metal plate, O, laid against the inner surface of the piece, B. The lugs are then bent down or clinched upon the surface of this plate, thereby firmly securing the loop in place without the aid of rivets."

Reading in the foregoing what is outside of brackets, including what is in italics, and omitting what is inside of brackets, we have [661]*661the specification of the original patent. The claim of the reissue is as follows:

“ Tlie loop-box, A, formed out of thin plate metal, as described, with the lugs or spurs, II, projecting therefrom, to affix it to a carriage top, either with or without the plate, 0, substantially as and for the purposes specified.”

The claim of the original patent was this:

“ The box-loop, A, when formed as described with the lugs or spurs, II, upon its edges, and applied to a carriage top, by passing said lugs through the same, and through the metal-plate, 0, and then bending them down upon the surface of said plate, substantially as described, for the purpose specified.”

It is apparent that the article specified in the claim of the reissue is to be (1) a box-loop; (2) made of metal; (3) the metal so thin that the article can, if desired, he struck up from it; (4) the metal of the loop to he a single piece, bent into shape; (5) the lugs to project from the loop towards the surface of the material to which the loop is to he affixed; (6) the loop to he capable of being affixed by passing the lugs through the material and clinching them down tight upon the other side, the clinching being done by bending them at right angles, and no-rivets or screws being employed. These characteristics are all found in the specification of the reissue in connection with its claim. They are all found in the specification of the original patent. The drawings of the two patents are the same. The model filed with the "application for the original patent shows all the foregoing characteristics. The claim of the original patent was so framed as to seem to require that the loop should be actually applied to a carriage top, in order to infringe. It also required that the metal plate, 0, should be used in such application. Makers of loops were not makers of carriages, and it was obvious that the invention was really of the loop ready to be affixed, and that the inventor was entitled to have a claim which would reach the maker of the loop. Besides, even if the claim of the original would have extended to the maker of the loop, it might have been questioned whether it would reach him when he made a loop without the plate, C; and it was plain that 1hat was only a stiffening or strengthening plate, an adjunct, making the article better, perhaps, but yet not of the essence of the invention. The case was, therefore, one for a reissue.

It is objected that the specification of the original patent says that the series of lugs is on the lower edges of the loop; that is, projecting from the lower edges of the long parallel sides of the loop and in the same plane with such sides. The drawings and model show such a construction. The reissue says that the lugs project from the [662]*662edges or corners next the surface to which they are to he affixed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F. 659, 20 Blatchf. 97, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandal-v-walters-circtsdny-1881.