Crown Cork & Seal Co. of Baltimore City v. Brooklyn Bottle Stopper Co.

206 F. 473, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 F. 473 (Crown Cork & Seal Co. of Baltimore City v. Brooklyn Bottle Stopper Co.) 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.

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Crown Cork & Seal Co. of Baltimore City v. Brooklyn Bottle Stopper Co., 206 F. 473, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434 (E.D.N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

CHATFIERD, District Judge.

Applications for attachment of the defendants in the above-entitled actions for contempt by violation of the injunctions issued herein, pursuant to decrees of December 7, 1912, have been considered upon affidavits, as well as the record in the cases themselves, and have been elaborately argued and briefed. Appeals from the decrees have .been taken, but not yet heard, and it appears that the defendants have, since the entry of those decrees, been using machines which they allege are constructed and operated in accordance with a method patent issued to one A. Bogdanffy, under No. 1,053,898, on the 18th day of February, 1913, and a machine patent to Bogdanffy, issued on the 18th day of February, 1913, No. 1,053,565.

Bogdanffy is a mechanician in the employment of a company in Brooklyn, whose interests are allied with those of the defendants in these actions. Prior to the actual issuance of his patent, the defendants used his form of appliance, with his permission, and knew during the trial of this action of the Bogdanffy suggested changes.

The affidavits, in opposition show that the solicitor for the defendants, as well as the solicitor engaged in obtaining Bogdanffy’s patents, and other solicitors of great reputation in New York and other places, rendered opinions, prior to the decree in this action, to the effect that the device shown in the Bogdanffy patents was not an infringement of the Painter and Wheeler patents, unless those patents be construed so broadly as to render them invalid. Again, after the decree was rendered herein, other solicitors of like standing expressed to the defendants the opinion that the use of the Bogdanffy device and method would not render the defendants liable for contempt.

-, Attention has been called by the defendants to the decision in. this district in the case of Onderdonk v. Fanning (C. C.) 2 Fed. 568, in which the court said, upon motion to. punish for contempt, that issuance of a patent since the decree covering the alterations complained of indicated that the changes were not so plainly colorable as to entitle the plaintiff to an attachment, and that the questions should not be disposed of upon motion.

In Wirt v. Brown (C. C.) 30 Fed. 187, this court again held that a change of construction, with the obtaining of a patent for the changed form, made it necessary to bring an independent suit.

In Bonsack Mach. Co. v. National Cigarette Co. (C. C.) 64 Fed. 858, Judge Dacombe held that the weight of authority was clearly against the proposition that where a machine differed in some respects from that passed upon in the case, and was made under a patent issued subsequent to the decree, the question of infringement should not be settled upon motion to punish for contempt.

On the other hand, the complainant cites the cases of Blair v. Jean[475]*475nette-McKee Glass Works (C. C.) 161 Fed. 355, Queen v. Green (C. C.) 170 Fed. 611, Lepper v. Randall, 113 Fed. 627, 51 C. C A. 337, and Norton v. Jensen, 49 Fed. 859, 1 C. C. A. 452, as authority for the proposition that where a change is merely’ colorable, or where the variation is not such as to constitute new discovery, or where the party is merely making use of the doctrine of equivalents, or. of immaterial, changes, without other purpose than to evade the injunction, the'questions raised by such acts should be passed upon in connection with the interpretation of the decree in the original action, and that the complainant should not be put to the expense of an independent suit. •

The present case would fall plainly under the decision of Onderdonk v. Fanning, supra, and National Harrow Co. v. Hanby (C. C.) 54 Fed. 493, which held that the granting of a patent is prima, facie proof that the machine covered by the patent does not infringe any other patent within the knowledge of the Patent Office, if it were not for the fact that the Bogdanffy patents are upon their face a claim for improvements over the art which the record makes plain was embodied in the Wheeler and Painter patents considered in this action, and if Bogdanffy’s machine patent were not merely a new combination, or a new form of device, dependent upon the methods and the right to use a combination of this nature covered by Painter and Wheeler.

Bogdanffy’s method patent presents a somewhat broader question, for it is difficult to see how a new combination of parts, or an improvement in a machine, even if patentable, can of itself furnish a new method, and be more than mere description of the functions performed by the machine in doing work in the new way.

Bogdanffy’s method is a claim that he secures better results by changing the order of certain steps and processes, and for the purpose of this motion we need not consider whether he thereby shows sufficient patentable novelty to obtain a patent as for an improved process or method.

The real question is that suggested in Hardwick v. Masland (C. C.) 71 Fed. 887, and Cantrell v. Wallick, 117 U. S. 689, 6 Sup. Ct. 970, 29 L. Ed. 1017, in which case the Supreme Court said:

“Two patents may both be valid, when the second is an improvement on the first, in which event, if the second includes the first, neither of the two patentees can lawfully use the invention of the other without the other’s consent’- — citing Star Salt Caster Co. v. Crossman, 4 Cliff. 568, Fed. Cas. No. 13,321.

See, also, Eldred v. Kirkland, 130 Fed. 342, 64 C. C. A. 588; Ryder v. Schlichter, 126 Fed. 487, 61 C. C.A. 469.

9This makes it necessary to determine upon this motion whether the .Bogdanffy patents are prima facie evidence of an independent invention, or whether they are merely prima facie evidence that the Patent Office found a patentable improvement or a patentable new combination available to those who had the right to use the Painter and Wheeler method and machines.

The various experts for the defendants upon this motion have given testimony as to> the advantages which they consider are obtained by applying the cork seal or gasket to tire closure after the melting of the [476]*476adhesive has been, secured. Demonstration was offered upon the argument to indicate that the cork was livelier, or not so brittle, when not subjected to the greater degree of heat. One of the experts for the defendants has testified that the defendants’ cork is cold when made to adhere; and all of these experts, as well as the counsel whose opinions have been presented in the case, base their conclusidns upon the proposition that in the Bogdanffy machine the closure is not heated after the parts of this closure are assembled. . .

The differences between the complainant and th'e defendants can be summed up in one question, as to whether Bogdanffy gets away from the Painter and Wheeler patents by heating a closure, made and treated like the Painter and Wheeler closures with the cork omitted, and immediately (as a subsequent step) inserting a cold gasket of cork into the heated closure, and then subjecting these then assembled and heated parts under pressure, in the way in which a carpenter allows glue to set when applied in liquid form.

The machines now in use by the defendants are similar in structure and function to those which were enjoined under the decree, except with respect to the apparatus and arrangement for inserting the cork in the closures.

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206 F. 473, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crown-cork-seal-co-of-baltimore-city-v-brooklyn-bottle-stopper-co-nyed-1913.