Decker v. Smith

196 F. 784, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1591
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedJune 4, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 196 F. 784 (Decker v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Decker v. Smith, 196 F. 784, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1591 (N.D.N.Y. 1912).

Opinion

RAY, District Judge.

The claims of the patents in suit relate to nursing bottles — receptacles for milk or liquid food to be fed to infants. The claims in issue of letters patent No. 521,773, dated June 19, 1894, read as follows:

“1. A nursing 'device consisting of a cell or receptacle, having substantially an uncontracted and open upper portion closed by an elastic breast of dome-shaped form, terminating at its apex in a perforated nipple, substantially as and for the purposes set forth. * * *
“3. As a new article of manufacture a cover for a nursing cell or food receptacle, consisting of an elastic dome-shaped breast open at its base and adapted to embrace the cell, and terminated near its upper portion, and made integral with a perforated nipple, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.”

The sole claim of letters patent No. 587,939, dated August 10, 1897, reads as follows:

“As a new article of manufacture an elastic breast A and nipple 0 for nursing cells, having a reinforced zone D, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.”

In describing his nursing bottle (No. 521,773), the patentee says:

“My invention relates to improvements in bottles or like receptacles, used to contain liquid food' that is to be fed to infants, and that are adapted to permit the gradual removal of such food by the child in the act of sucking a mouthpiece that is connected with the bottle.
“Nursing devices may be .said to involve generally two species: ,Eirst, those with tubes entering the receptacle or cell; and, second, those known as gravity devices. In the first species the receptacle is emptied entirely by suction, while in the second the receptacle is emptied by the gravitation of the fluids to the nipple.
“My invention relates especially to the gravity species, and has for its object to facilitate the gravitation of the fluid without obstruction, and consists of a cell or receptacle constructed without breast or neck, and closed [785]*785by an elastic cover constituting an integral breast and nipple, substantially similar to a mother's breast and nipple. As a result of this construction, the receptacle as well as its cover are capable of ready and perfect cleansing, which is an all-important consideration in administering artilicial food to infants, and another result is the ready flow of the fluids by gravity into the breast and nipple without .necessitating the undue elevation of the receptacle and also the avoidance of collapse of the nipple as the result of suction.
“A further advantageous result of my invention consists in the fact that the infant is restricted to a natural hold on. the nipple, and it can only enter the mouth to a limited extent, and not so far as to gag or choke-the child, but to a sufficient distance to avoid ingestion of food- by restricting its discharge to the tongue and not beyond the tongue and into the throat, as occurs in the use of receptacles which may be forced into the mouth.”

The patent of June 19', 1894, No. 521,773, has, 1, the receptacle for the food which may be cylindrical, or elliptical with rounded corners inside and out to avoid injuring the child and to facilitate cle.ansing. It is of the same, or substantially the same, dimensions from top to bottom, and must be large enough to permit the insertion of the fingers for cleansing the receptable, and has an outwardly projecting flange at the top to aid in retaining the breast portion thereon. There is nothing new or novel in such a receptacle for nursing bottles. See patent to John E. Potter, February 17, 1880, No. 224,557, for “nursing bottle,” and patent to Martin Vessel, October 4, 1887, No. 371,-005, also for “nursing bottle.” This nursing bottle, has, 2, an elastic breast of dome-shaped form open at its base; which breast terminates at its apex in a perforated nipple, and this breast portion clasps the flange on the receptacle and closes the same.

The first claim is for the combination of receptacle and breast portion. The second claim is for the cover or breast portion as a, new article of manufacture.

The simplicity of this nursing bottle almost repels the idea of patentable invention, and would, to my mind, were it not for the fact that the prior art discloses so many comparatively complex devices for nursing bottles, which the Decker device has superseded, that I am led to the conclusion that something more than mechanical ingenuity and more than the skill of a mechanic skilled in the art was involved in the production of the Decker nursing bottle as a whole. The defendant has also copied this form of a nursing bottle, including receptacle and dome-shaped breast portion, which is some evidence of the superiority of the Decker bottle. Turned on its side, the fluid contents flows and presses into the breast portion and nipple and out through the perforation in the nipple. There is no tube connected with the nipple or breast portion or used at all, and the nipple and breast portion are integral. In the Ware patent of 1888, the nipple clasps the flange on the narrow-necked bottle, but is connected with a tube and is somewhat complex in its construction. The Kennish patent of 1876 has the tube and the complex construction going with it. These tube constructions are difficult to cleanse properly and add to the danger of the nursing bottle arising from want of proper cleansing. The nipple is 'attached to the tube, instead of being integral with the breast portion, which closes the receptacle, and the [786]*786tube and nipple pass through an opening in this breast portion. This breast portion of rubber embraces a flange on the “wide” neck of the receptacle. This cover, which is the breast portion, is, says the patent, “to provide for an instinct of the infant to press-the cheek against a soft elastic substance”; and, again, “This cover is designed to supply to the infant the feeling of the natural mammary gland.” There was nothing new in Decker in providing a breast portion of dome shape, as this is shown in the Kennish patent just described. However, the nipple and breast portion are not made integral. However, “Davidson’s nipples,” shown, but not described, in “W. H. Schieifelin & Co., General Prices Current New York, 1891,” show a nipple with a small dome-shaped breast portion integral with it (see page 464, Nipple “No. 22 or 26 small; No. 33 or .37 large”), and adapted to clasp a flange on a nursing bottle receptacle. Enlarge this breast portion in construction and attach it to the food receptacle of the J. E. Potter patent of 1880, No. 224,557, and we would have in substance the Decker construction of his patent No. 521,773, of June 19, 1894.

In the patent of October 4, 1887, to Martin Vessel, No. 371,005, we find a receptacle of cylindrical form having an approximately hemispherical lower end with flattened base and a rounded top which evidently screws on. This dispenses with all sharp angles, and, if made of suitable size, permits the insertion of the fingers for cleansing purposes. This receptacle has a branch on the side to which is attached the nipple, but there is no breast portion. The breast portion in the side makes the cleansing of that part somewhat difficult.

It seems to me very clear that by taking the receptacle, say, of the Potter patent of February 17, 1880, No. 224,557, and combining it with the nipple shown, page 464, No. 22 or 26 small, No. 33 or 37 large, of W. H.

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Related

Decker v. Western Bottle Mfg. Co.
193 F. 415 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
196 F. 784, 1912 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/decker-v-smith-nynd-1912.