Diamond Match Co. v. Hanover Match Co.

78 F. 622, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 15, 1897
DocketNo. 33
StatusPublished

This text of 78 F. 622 (Diamond Match Co. v. Hanover Match Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diamond Match Co. v. Hanover Match Co., 78 F. 622, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488 (circtedpa 1897).

Opinion

DALLAS, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit upon two patents, both of which relate to machines for bundling match splints preparatory to dipping them into an ignitable compound.

1. Patent No. 281,408, dated July 17, 1883, was issued to William H. H. Sissum for “machine for bundling match sticks.” The first and tenth claims are involved. The first is as follows:

(1) The combination, with a hopper having its front or back, or both, provided with a pivoted lower section or sections, and a roller arranged therein for carrying the match sticks from the hopper, of means for imparting a positive .and constant vibrating or swinging motion to said section or sections in a direction transverse to the length of said roller, substantially as specified.

It is contended that this claim is void, but the argument in support of that contention, though presented with much ability, has failed to persuade me that the .presumption in favor of the validity of the claim has been rebutted. It is insisted that each of the elements were old; 'but, if this were conceded, yet, as for a combination, this claim would still be good. I cannot agree that coaction of the several parts is not shown, or that their co-operation to produce a unitary result was ’ not ■ contemplated. • The ultimate end in view was the proper delivery of the splints to a device employed at a succeeding [623]*623stage of the general process. To facilitate this, their right delivery to, and reception by, the roller forming the bottom of the hopper was of importance, and to this immediate purpose the hopper and the roller were both made to lend their aid. 11 is said in the respondents’ brief that the function of the pivoted section of the hopper is to deliver the match sticks to the roller, and that that of the roller is to deliver them from the hopper; but the fact is that their proper delivery is not a distinctively twofold operation, but is really secured, as a whole, by the combined action of both instrumentalities, which, by reason of their conjoint operation, both contribute to the achievement of the desired object. This is clearly shown and explained by the complainant’s expert, from whose testimony I adopt the following: “The combination expressed in claim 1 of the Sisum patent, being for elements combined and co-operating with each other ‘substantially as specified’ in the specification and drawings, includes not only ‘hopper, having its front or back or both provided with a pivoted lower section or sections,’ and ‘means for imparting a positive and constant vibrating or swinging motion to said sections’ of the hopper, but it also includes, as ‘a roller arranged’ with respect to the hopper ‘for carrying the match sticks from the hopper,’ such a roller as is shown in the patent, to wit, one which is provided with notches or grooves across its periphery at intervals, and each adapted to receive and carry a single match stick therein. The arrangement refeiTed to in the claim is also substantially the arrangement shown in the drawings in which the periphery of the notched roller forms a part of the bottom of the hopper, and in which arrangement the match sticks contained in the hopper tend by their gravity to enter the notches in said roller. The arrangement of the roller with respect to the hopper, referred to in the claim, further includes — First, the close proxinmtion of the hopper to the roller face, whereby the match sticks have no escape from the hopper except by way of the notches; and, second, the parallelism of the notches in the periphery of the roller with the vibratory lower section or sections of the hopper. In this particular relation of the roller notches with the vibratory side or sides of the hopper there is a special coaction or co-operation of such vibratory side or sides of the hopper with the walls of the notches in the roller, the walls of said notches acting as shoulders in opposition to the approaching side of the hopper, in that one of its movements, so that, by the resisting action of the notched shoulders and the pushing action of the hopper side or sides parallel with said notches, the match sticks thus acted upon from both sides are more effectively distributed in the notches ready to be carried out of the hopper for spaced distribution in the bundle or coil which it Is the ultimate purpose of the machine to produce. This combination is nowhere to be found in the prior art of match bundling, or in any analogous art, or in any of the machines belonging to more or less remote arts, and represented in defendants’ patent and publication exhibits in this case.” The claim is, in terms and in fact, for a combination. The pivoted and vibrating section of the hopper is not, in itself, the entire provision for the proper delivery of the match sticks. That element of [624]*624the combination is, it is true, first described in the specification, and it is there said that the swinging section “facilitates the proper delivery”; but delivery and reception constitute a single continuous act, and in its reception of the splints the notched roller, “arranged therein” as shown- in the specification and drawings, also plays a part in accomplishing the purposed end; and its function is not, in this regard, a distinct one, but is performed conjointly with that of the peculiar hopper, and it is by their combination — not solely by either — that the single object of the composite organism is effected.

The tenth claim of the Sisum patent is as follows:

(10) In a machine for bunching match sticks, the combination, with a hopper in which the match sticks are placed, of a roller haring a notched periphery rotating in the hopper, and fingers normally extending into circumferential grooves in the roller, and adapted to be raised to preclude the entrance of match sticks into the notches of the roller, substantially as specified.

The defense as to this claim is noninfringement; and, as bearing upon that issue, two questions are primarily presented, namely, as to the true date of actual invention, and as to the scope which should be accorded to the claim, in view of the state of the art at that date. The uncontradicted evidence respecting the first of these questions is conclusive. I find that the invention of- Sisum was made not later than in the year ,1875. Three patents of still earlier date are relied upon, not as anticipatory, but as requiring the limitation of this claim to the specific mechanism described. It is not necessary to discuss these patents in detail. They all relate to different arts, none of which is, in any reasonable sense, analogous to that of the manufacture of matches. One is for a brush-making machine, another is for an improvement in cotton gins, and the other relates to grain bundling. They disclose nothing which could have been successfully applied to the coiling of match splints, or which it is at all probable would ever have suggested to any one a device designed “to preclude the entrance of match sticks into the notches of the roller.” Taylor v. Spindle Co., 22 C. C. A. 203, 75 Fed. 301 et seq. Therefore this claim is to be as broadly construed as its terms will fairly admit of, and infringement is to be tested, not solely with reference to absolute identity of parts, but by a liberal application of the criterion of substantial equivalency of the combinations. This view of the matter is decisive; for, notwithstanding the structural differences between the arrangement of the complainant and that of the defendants, they are, so far as is material, the same. The variations may be sufficiently stated in few words.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Taylor v. Sawyer Spindle Co.
75 F. 301 (Third Circuit, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 F. 622, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-match-co-v-hanover-match-co-circtedpa-1897.