Diamond Stone Sawing Mach. Co. of New York v. Dean

111 F. 380, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4970
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York
DecidedOctober 10, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 111 F. 380 (Diamond Stone Sawing Mach. Co. of New York v. Dean) 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
Diamond Stone Sawing Mach. Co. of New York v. Dean, 111 F. 380, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4970 (circtedny 1901).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

The complainant is the owner of letters patent No. 429,874, issued to George N. Williams, Jr., under the date of June 10, 1890, pursuant to an application filed November 29, 1886, for “improvements in diamond stone sawing machines and in methods of operating the same,” and alleges infringement by the defendants of claims 1, 2, and 3. The answer denies, infringement and invention, and alleges prior knowledge and use. The Williams mechanism, as illustrated by the letters patent, is a modification of what were known as “Young’s Diamond Saws,” by the elimination of certain parts thereof, and the addition of certain other parts. The defendants’ saw is also of the Young manufacture, modified, as alleged, so as to bring it within the patent. On November 17, 1886, an application for the same invention was filed by Henry Rudolph, and an interference between this and the Williams application was declared on the 5th of September, 1887. On the 31st of December, 1889, the commissioner of pátents affirmed the decision of the board of examiners in chief, which found priority of invention in Williams. [381]*381Thereafter Rudolph filed a bill against Williams in the Southern district of New York, under section 4915 of the Revised Statutes, and oh the 6th day of December, 1893, Judge Coxe found priority^ of invention in Williams. (C. C.) 62 Fed. 577. Previous to the Williams invention the Young’s diamond saw, above mentioned, cut dtiring one movement, because it was pressed down upon the stone, and was inoperative during the opposite movement by reason of the fact that a lift mechanism relieved the downward pressure, and allowed the saw to spring out of contact with the stone. Williams eliminated the lift mechanism, thereby permitting the saw to cut on both strokes. Williams used the existing feeding mechanism, but made such duplication of the parts actuating the same that the saw was fed to the stone during both its movements with intended correspondence to the speed at which the saw blade moved. These changes, illustrated by the Williams patent, went into general use, and were adopted by the defendants.

The claims involved are as follows:

“(1) The herein described method of feeding the reciprocating saw blade of a stone sawing machine, which consists in imparting to said saw blade during its forward and backward movements a forward or feeding movement during both its backward and forward strokes, said feeding,movement corresponding in extent to the speed at which the saw blade is moving forward or back at all times, substantially as set forth. (2) In a stone sawing machine, the combination, with the diamond-toothed saw blade and its sash, of means for imparting to said sash a reciprocating movement in a straight line throughout its entire stroke, a screw mechanism for positively feeding the saw blade up to its work, and means for actuating said feeding screws during both the forward and backward strokes of the saw, whereby the saw blade is fed up to its work intermittently during both its reciprocating movements. (3) In a stone sawing machine, the combination, with the saw blade and its sash, of means for imparting to said sash a reciprocating movement in a straight line throughout its entire stroke, a ratchet mechanism operating means for feeding the saw blade up to its work during its forward stroke, and a ratchet mechanism operating means for feeding said blade up to its work during its backward stroke, substantially as set forth.”

Do the defendants’ machines fall within the Williams patent? A distinction is claimed to be found, in this: that Williams provided for a rigid blade to which is applied a positive feed, while the defendants’ blade is elastic, so that a positive feed is not and cannot be applied to it. Respecting this, defendants’ expert states that in the defendants’ machine the saw is supported at the end in such a manner as to afford an elastic or yielding support, so that by placing levers beneath defendants’ saw blade, and bearing down the blade thereon with moderate force, the blade could be lifted about a quarter of an inch, and would afterwards spring back to its original position; that, while the saw was at work, if the feed were thrown out of operation the saw would continue to cut the stone for forty strokes; that “the feed screws were not then being turned at all; the saw then being pressed against the stone by its own elasticity or that of the support or both, and by this means only was caused to do effective cutting.” This witness further states that he observed that upon starting the saw, and during 100 strokes, the amount of the descent of the saw was about one-quarter of an inch, and during the following 100 strokes the saw descended a half inch, illustrating that [382]*382■during the first ioo strokes “there was apparently a quarter of an inch of the motion imparted by the feed taken up by the saw and its support, through their elasticity.” He adds this comment:

“Tlie effect of an elastic feed instead, of a positive feed in such a stone sawing machine is, in my opinion, practically to destroy any correspondence between the extent of feed and the extent of speed, such as .is referred to in tlie first claim of the patent in suit. No matter how carefully the operating mechanism may be organized for the purpose of causing such a correspondence, the result sought, if the saw is not fed positively, will not be gained. The elastic iiart of the mechanism (saw blade or support) becomes a reservoir in which the applied force is accumulated, and the expenditure afterwards of this force to produce effective cutting is then regulated not by control directly exerted by the force-conveying mechanism, but by the resistance which the saw is called upon to meet. If, for example, the work ■cut happens to be of varying density and hardness, the softer portion of the stone will be mofe readily overcome and cut, and the feed will be more rapid, and hence greater in extent per given time, than when the saw encounters harder portions of the same stone. This will serve as an illustration of how the feed may vary in an entirely irregular way in point of extent, and bear no relation to the extent of variation of the speed, which is due simply to the arrangement of the sasli-driving mechanism. It will bo seen, therefore, from the foregoing, that the presence of the elastic feed in the defendants’ machine not only distinguishes it from tlie structure of the second claim, in which a positively feeding mechanism is essential, but that because of that fact, also, the correspondence of extent of feed and extent of speed which is essential to the method of the first claim is also in defendants’ machine practically eliminated.”

The defendants use the foregoing evidence to illustrate that their machines do not fall within the invention in suit, which, as they urge, provides for a mechanism “where the ratio of feed at any given time always corresponds with the speed of the saw in its reciprocation,” and one “where the downward pressure on the blade on each stroke at any time is equal to the downward pressure of the blade on that stroke at any other time, and the aggregate downward pressure on one stroke is equal to the aggregate downward pressure on the other stroke,” and that this describes proportionate feed to the saw blade, and renders the same inelastic and positive in its action. That such is the meaning of the Williams invention is shown by the evidence of Williams, the inventor.

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Related

Diamond Stone Sawing Mach. Co. v. Brown
130 F. 896 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
111 F. 380, 1901 U.S. App. LEXIS 4970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diamond-stone-sawing-mach-co-of-new-york-v-dean-circtedny-1901.