Davis v. Perry

115 F. 333, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4750

This text of 115 F. 333 (Davis v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Perry, 115 F. 333, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4750 (circtedny 1901).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

The bill is to restrain infringement of rights alleged to be secured to the complainant by several letters pat[334]*334ent. The first of such letters, numbered 399,844, was issued in 1889. The only claim in question is:

“(1) The body or well, A, of the stand, having airtight cover, B, and tube, C, fitted in said cover, and reaching into the well and above the cover, B, in combination with the float, F, placed in the tube, the apertured cover, E, closing the upper end of the tube, C, and the dip funnel or tube, G, held fast in the float, F, and projecting up through the said cover, E, substantially as described.”

The specification states:

“The object of my invention is to provide a cheap and practical inkstand, constructed to avoid almost altogether the evaporation of ink; and to this end my invention consists, principally, of a float and dip funnel, the float being placed loosely in a tube fitted in an airtight cover of the inkwell, so that pressure on the float will depress it, and cause the ink to rise and fill the pen. Upon removing the pressure the float rises and the ink recedes, so that only a very small surface is exposed to the atmosphere. The invention also consists of the construction and arrangement of parts, all as hereinafter described and claimed.”

It will be observed that claim 1 describes certain parts: (1) The body or well; (2) the airtight cover, B; (3) the tube, C, fitted in said cover, and reaching into the well and above the cover, B ; (4) the float, F, placed in the tube, C; (5) the apertured cover, E, closing the upper end of the tube, C; (6) the dip funnel or tube, G, held fast in the float, F, and projecting up through the cover, F. In defendant’s infringing inkstand there is no cover, E, nor any equivalent thereof. Therefore in the defendant’s stand there is one less element than is contained in the combination.

But it is urged that this element, to wit, the cover, E, is an unimportant and useless part of the complainant’s invention. Such view cannot be accepted, inasmuch as the specification at all times designates the cover as a factor aiding the essential function of the combination, and, indeed, Davis seems to have so regarded it.

It may be inferred fairly that the complainant had two ends in view— First, to construct the stand so as to minimize evaporation; and, second, to adjust the parts so that, on pressure upon the funnel surmounting the float, the latter would be depressed, and the ink thereby forced through the float and funnel to meet the pen at a higher point than the level of the ink in the stand itself. For these two ends Davis regarded an airtight chamber as a necessity. In the specification he says:

“In tbe cover, B, is fitted the tube, 0, which reaches nearly to the bottom of the inkwell, and projects somewhat above the plate, B2, where it is provided with the small ring, D, in which fits the small annular cover, E, for the tube, O. The tube, C, is formed with a flange, b, and the central opening of the rubber disk, B', is drawn in close contact with this flange, so that the said tube is held airtight in the cover, and over or above the flange, b, is placed the small soft rubber ring, d, to act in connection with the soft rubber disk, B', to make an airtight connection between the tube and cover. The ring, D, is screwed upon the upper end of the tube, O, and serves as a nut to connect the tube to the cover, and when screwed down the ring, d, is compressed between the flange, b, and the inner surface of the outer cover, B2. The outer edge of the soft rubber disk, B', is by preference somewhat thickened or enlarged, as shown at f, to form a cushion between the upper edge of the ink well or stand, A, and the flat portion, f', of the metal cover, B', so that when this outer cover is screwed down upon the threads, g, of the inkwell, the cushion, f, will be compressed, and [335]*335the cover as a whole made airtight upon the stand, A. In the said tube, 0, is placed the float, F, in which is fitted the funnel or dip tube, B, which reaches up through the annular cover, E. The lower end of the tube, G, is open at the bottom to receive the ink.”

From this it will appear that Davis intended by the cover, B, and the annular cover, E, to make his inkwell airtight. This would prevent evaporation, and the manifestation of care to bring about an adjustment that would delicately close the inkwell indicates that he regarded the containment of the air in the well as necessary to force the ink through the float, when the same should be depressed, and also to aid in preventing the ink from rising too freely between the float and the tube.

The defendant’s stand is relatively a simple structure. Although a cover is provided, it does not make an airtight connection with the well, as it is held in position by gravity alone. Otherwise, defendant’s cover does take the place of the cover, B, and while it is not fastened to the well, and is removable at once, yet when resting upon the well the air is practically maintained therein. But the annular cover, E, is entirely wanting. The float and the funnel are integral, and while the flaring funnel, when the float is depressed, rests upon the cover, closing the mouth of the tube, it does not closely engage the same, nor is there any connection which makes, or is intended to make, the well airtight. Therefore, unless the claim may be recast, and the patentee’s conception that the well should be airtight, and that there should be an annular cover for the purpose of effecting this, may be rejected, upon the theory that the results desired would be obtained quite as well otherwise, no infringement is shown. Such recasting of the claim and reversal of the patentee’s conception is not justified.

The next inquiry relates to the infringement of letters patent No. 413,390, issued October 22, 1889. The claims alleged to be infringed are as follows:

“(1) An inkstand provided with a cover, combined witb a tube fitted in the cover, a float placed in the tube, a dip funnel fitted in the float, and a check placed in the passage of the float, substantially as and for the purposes described.”
“(3) The cover, B, formed with the plate, E, and dome, F, having opening, f, the said dome and plate forming a space, G, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.”

It was found, upon a depression of the float in the usual introduction of the pen, that the ink would spurt from the funnel. To use the words of the patentee:

“The invention consists, principally, in the employment of a check in the ink passage through the float to prevent the ink from being forced in a jet up into the dip funnel. The invention also consists in the employment of a double-walled cover forming a chamber to catch and return any overflow of ink. The invention finally consists in the construction, arrangement, and combination of parts, all as hereinafter described and claimed.”

Respecting the check the specification states:

“The dip funnel screws into the top of the tube, D’, and its lower end is formed with the check, i, which prevents the ink from being forced in a jet up into the funnel when the float and funnel are forced downward by pressure on the pen placed in the funnel. The check, i, instead of being [336]*336made a part of the funnel, may be placed anywhere In the passage, D'.

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115 F. 333, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-perry-circtedny-1901.