Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Bond Bottle Sealing Co.

227 F. 51, 141 C.C.A. 599, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1915
DocketNo. 1943
StatusPublished

This text of 227 F. 51 (Crown Cork & Seal Co. v. Bond Bottle Sealing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Bond Bottle Sealing Co., 227 F. 51, 141 C.C.A. 599, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290 (3d Cir. 1915).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree of the District Court of the United States for the District of Delaware, dis[52]*52missing the complainant’s bill of complaint, which charged the defendant with infringement of certain letters patent owned by the complainant, relating to the manufacture of “Crown Caps” or closures for sealing bottles containing; liquids. The bill charged infringement of three Letters Patent, being No. 792,284, granted June 13, 1905, to the complainant as assignee of William Painter, for Methods or Process of Manufacturing Bottle Closures; No. 887,838,-granted May. 19, 1908, to the complainant as assignee of William Painter, for Machine for Making Closures for Bottles; and No. 887,883, granted May 19,1908, to the complainant as assignee of William H. Wheeler, for Apparatus for the Manufacture of Bottle Closures. At the trial, the complainant abandoned the charge of infringement of the two Painter patents, and restricted its charge to claims 1, 4, 6, 7, 23, 24, 25, 26 and 27 of the Wheeler patent, which, together with the inventor’s description of his invention, appear in the opinion of the District Court, reported in 217 Fed. 891.

The validity of the patent in suit is not disputed. The defense is non-infringement.

The complainant charges that the defendant’s machine produces a Crown Cap or bottle closure of the same design, composed of the same parts, constructed in the same way, and united by the same method and mechanism as the one produced by the machine of the patent in suit. The defendant admits that the closure produced by its machine, both in its parts and in its entirety, is identical with the closure produced by the machine of the patent in suit, but denies that the parts are united by a method or mechanism covered by the patent.

The controversy in this suit relates to the manufacture of the well known “Crown Cap,” and involves the mechanism used by the parties in uniting its several known parts. The mechanism relates to the important element of heat employed by both in effecting adhesive union. The complainant assembles three parts of the closure, heats them all while not under pressure, and completes adhesion by cooling them under pressure. The defendant heats two parts of the closure while not under pressure, does not heat the third part at all, or if so, not until after that part is inserted into the cap by pressure, which is maintained during cooling. The controversy relates to- the fact of heating the third member by the defendant’s machine and the means employed to .that end. Before this question can be understood or tire issue discussed, it is necessary to- recite, with some attention to sequence, the developments of the manufacture of the type of closures to which this suit relates.

The crown cap closure was introduced by the complainant in 1892, and until 1909 was almost exclusively produced by it, to the extent of many million gross annually, under patents presently to be considered.

The basic patent for the crown cap, being No. 473,776, ’was granted on February 2, 1892, upon an invention of William' Painter. This patent is not in the record and has no place in this litigation except to show that the patent upon which the art was based has expired. Though subsequently applied for, there was issued on the same day, upon another invention of Painter, patent No. 468,226, for certain [53]*53modifications of the original closure. While the latter Painter patent is not the basic patent of the art, it is the patent that is at the bottom of this controversy. It likewise has expired.

It was disclosed by Painter patent No. 468,226, which, though not precisely accurate, will be conveniently referred to as the original Painter patent, that a crown cap or closure of the type conceived by Painter and now made by both parties to this suit, consists of three members:

1. A thin metal shell having a slightly rounded upper surface and a dependent fluted flange or skirt which locks over a bead on the lip of the bottle, and thus holds it in a sealing position. Throughout the testimony, this member is referred to as the “cap” or “shell.”

2. A thin cork sealing-disk which is tightly compressed within the cap or shell, and which, when in use, is pressed down tightly upon the edge of the bottle mouth.

3. A film of an adhesive substance which is interposed between the cork disc and the under surface of the metal shell, the function of which is to cause the cork disc to adhere to the metal shell, so that no metallic taste may be imparted by contact to the liquid contents.

In disclosing the means by which to make such a sealing closure, Painter directed that the metal cap should be coated on its inner side with “an inodorous, tasteless and insoluble liquid-proof material,” stating:

“It is to be understood that this resistant or non-corrodible coating need only be a very thin film, and I secure the best results by the use of a fusible adhesive material, which is tasteless and odorless — such as thin shellac varnish. * “ *
“The combination of a metallic sealing cap coated inside with a protecting film and a permeable or porous sealing-disk is a valuable portion of my invention, and especially if the sealing-disk be composed of cork.
“The very hard spots or masses of various sizes and forms found in all ordinary cork will, as hereinbefore indicated, render thin cork disks more or loss defective as compressed sealing-disks. * * * I therefore, prior to the application of the disks to bottles, free the disks from said hard spots. In other words, I subject them to a heavy pressure, which breaks or crushes and disintegrates the normally hard masses, * * * this crushing operation may be performed prior to the insertion of the disks into the caps; but it is best accomplished at the túrne the dislc is forced into the cap the latter having had its interior already coated with a film of well dried shellac mid then heated sufficiently to melt the shellac and render it adhesive. * * *
“A cork disk, as received from the corlc-cutting machine, is placed in the cap, previously coated inside with shellac and well heated and then subjected to heavy crushing pressure in suitable dies, and the edge of the flange is compressed, thereby flattening the inner lower portions of the corrugations and slightly reducing the diameter of the flange at and near its edge. Under this operation, the hard spots in the cork are not only crushed but the cork disk is developed into a concavo-convex form and it is also well confined in the cap by the melted shellac.”

Although owning and operating under the original Painter patent and being shown by it the advantage of heating the fusible film in a closure before inserting and compressing the cork disk, it does not appear that the complainant ever pursued' that method. Between 1892 and the period embraced between 1905 and, 1908, which was prior to certain patents granted upon other inventions of Painter and also prior [54]*54to the patent in suit, the complainant united the parts of the crown cap by what was known as the oven-baking method. Before the parts were united, they were assembled. A paper disk or collet, bearing upon each side a film of fusible material, was placed within the hollow of the metallic cap, and the cork disk was pressed into the hollow of the cap upon the' collet of fusible or binding material.

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Bluebook (online)
227 F. 51, 141 C.C.A. 599, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 2290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crown-cork-seal-co-v-bond-bottle-sealing-co-ca3-1915.