Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Aluminum Stopper Co.

108 F. 845, 48 C.C.A. 72, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3830
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMay 7, 1901
DocketNo. 387
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 108 F. 845 (Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Aluminum Stopper Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Aluminum Stopper Co., 108 F. 845, 48 C.C.A. 72, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3830 (4th Cir. 1901).

Opinion

BTC AWLEY, District Judge.

Prior to the inventions hereinafter to be described, which are the subject-matter of this controversy, the common method of stopping bottles was with cork, wood, rubber, or some other resilient material inserted longitudinally into the neck of the bottle, and held there by its elastic lateral pressure in frictional contact with the circumference, supplemented, in cases where gaseous liquids caused internal pressure, by wire or twine on the outside of the bottle head. About the year 1876, William Painter, foreman of the machine shops of Murrell & Keizer, began experiments upon a device for bottle stoppers, which culminated years afterwards in patented inventions, the essential features of which lie in the forcible contact of a permanently expanded or flexed margin of a disk with the packing material held between the disk and bottle surface. A rough draught, purporting to show the original conception, drawn from memory by William Fifer, a workman then employed in the shops, but who has long since ceased any connection therewith, has been offered in evidence. These preliminary experiments, according to Fifer, were not successful. Fifer tells us that Painter said to him, “George, we’ll have to try something else, as we can’t get Ihese bottles • blown near enough to use this kind of cap;” and that he was then directed by Painter to “lay all the parts and tools that he had used on the shelf until after a while.” We have no direct tpstimony as to the later experiments. Fifer found other employment, and Painter has not testified in the case; the record showing that at the time the testimony was taken he was, and had been for a long time previous thereto, subject to nervous prostration, unable to stand the strain of business and the excitement incident to a long examination and cross-examination. Robert A. Hall entered into the service of Murrell & Keizer as an apprentice about the year 1878, and, with the exception of about six months in 1889, has been continuously engaged in the machine, shops under the direction of Lewis E. Keizer, who conducts the business under the firm name; his partner, Murrell, having long since died, and Keizer being the sole owner thereof. Hall worked under the direction of Painter, whose first application for a patent for a bottle stopper was filed June 5, 1885, and letters patent No. 827,099 were issued September 29, 1885, to William Painter and Lewis R. Keizer, to whom a one-half interest was assigned. This patent, with No. 449,822, application for which was filed March 7, 1890, covers what are known and may be hereafter referred to as the “Rubber Seal Patents.” On October 12, 1885, Painter filed an application for the patent out of which this controversy arises. The history of the proceedings in the patent office will be hereafter referred to. Fatent No. 540,072 was issued May 28, 1895, application for reissue of the same was filed December 26, 1895, and July 26, 1898, it was reissued, as No. 11,685. On November 5, 1889, June 16, 1890, and May 19, 1891, Painter filed applications for other patents, which were issued February 2, 1892, — No. 468,226, No. 468,258, and No. 468,259. These last named cover what are known as the “Crown Seal Patents.” Robert A. Hall filed his application for a patent for a bottle-sealing device February 28, 1894, and letters patent No. [848]*848541,208, issued June 18, 1895. All of Painter’s patents were assigned to the Bottle Seal Company, of Baltimore, to whose rights and business the complainant company,, organized and incorporated under the laws of Maryland in 1892, succeeded. The defendant Keizer was one of the organizers of the Bottle Seal Company, the stock in which he subsequently sold, but continues to receive a royalty of $2,000 or $3,000 a year from the complainant company on account of his interest in the rubber seal patent. All of the machinery for the making of the rubber seals and crown seals for the complainant company were manufactured in Keizer’s shops under the direction of Hall from the date when those seals began to be used up to about the time of the obtaining of the Hall patent. This patent was assigned to the defendant company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Maryland, May 2, 1896. The defendant Keizer was the organizer and is the controlling stockholder and the active manager of this company, Hall being a stockholder therein. The complainant company manufactures and sells about 30,000,000 stoppers per annum; the defendant company, since its organization, has been engaged in manufacturing and selling its stoppers to a considerable extent, — the two being the only companies engaged in supplying the market with the bottle-stopping devices which originated with the Painter inventions. The bill of complaint was filed November 12, 1898, in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Maryland, in equity, and prayed for an injunction restraining the defendants from infringement, and for an account, etc. The answer denied the infringement, alleged want of novelty and patentability, attacked the validity of the reissue, charged abandonment, fraud, and perjury, and set up an estoppel. The court below held that there was no infringement, and ordered the bill dismissed on this ground, and a decree was entered accordingly, and the appeal from this decree brings the case here. It is necessary, under the practice in this class of cases, for this court to ascertain and decide whether the decree appealed from should have been rendered for the complainants or for the defendants; for, if it should conclude that the court below erred on the question of infringement, that conclusion will not avail the appellant unless it should also decide all the other defenses against the appellees. It will be convenient to consider these defenses in the order in which they have been presented by the learned counsel for the defendants, and, like him, we will use the terms “complainant” and “defendants” instead of “appellant” and “appellees.”

First. It is claimed that the original and reissued patent, No. 11,685, is void for want of utility. Utility being one of the qualities necessary to patentability, the granting of the patent is prima facie evidence of it; and this is not negatived by the fact that the device is susceptible of improvement, or that like inventions are so far superior to it that they may entirely supersede the use of it. Comparative utility between machines or processes is no criterion of infringement, and comparative superiority or inferiority does not necessarily import noninfringement; nor does it tend to avoid infringement if the defendant’s device is simpler and produces bet[849]*849ter results, unless the cause is due to a difference in function or mode of operation or some essential change in character. Differences in utility do not necessarily import differences of invention. The burden is upon the defendant, in a case like this, to prove want of utility. He must show either that it is theoretically impossible for such a device to operate, or demonstrate by clear proof that a person skilled in the art to which the invention pertains has endeavored in good faith to make the patent work, and has been unable to do so; and it follows that such evidence is overthrown, or will be overthrown, if it is demonstrated by practical experiments of credible persons that they have succeeded in producing by the patent process the results claimed by the patent. The defendants have undertaken to show by the expert Lorenz that the patent is a failure; that, after experiments, he could not succeed in stopping bottles by following the directions of the patent; and the expert Hall, being the person heretofore referred to, has undertaken to show theoretically that it is a failure.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. 845, 48 C.C.A. 72, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 3830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crown-cork-seal-co-v-aluminum-stopper-co-ca4-1901.