Double-Pointed Tack Co. v. Two Rivers Manufacturing Co.

3 F. 26
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 3 F. 26 (Double-Pointed Tack Co. v. Two Rivers Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Double-Pointed Tack Co. v. Two Rivers Manufacturing Co., 3 F. 26 (circtedwi 1880).

Opinion

Dyer, D. J.

Complainant’s rights depend upon the validity of a patent issued February 10,1874, for an improvement in bail ears used upon pails. One Purches Miles was the alleged inventor of the device in question, and filed an application for a patent November 11, 1873, but the grant of letters patent was made to complainant, Miles having assigned to it his right, title, and interest in said invention. In his specifications the inventor makes this admission: “Wire staples have been employed to form the fastening ej'-es for bails, and these have been driven into the wood with the penetrating points nearly at right angles to the surface, and in use they are liable to pull out by the weight.” He then describes his invention as follows: “My'invention consists in a bail-fastening staple made of wire, with the penetrating ends .cut at such an angle that, in driving them into the wood, they will assume an upward inclination, so that the weight will tend to force such points inwardly, rather than to draw them out, and the bending of the ends in clinching will always be upwardly, thus making a much better and more reliable article than heretofore; and I combine with such fastener a convex metallic washer, to keep the bail from contact with the wood or the paint thereon.”

[27]*27The claims of the patent are as follows:

“ 3. The compound staple-fastening 1), for hails, made with the diagonally-cut penetrating points 2 and 3, loop 4, and body 5; said diagonally-cut points being positioned as set forth, so as to bend upwardly in driving into the wood.
“2. The convex metallic washer E, in combination with the compound bail-fastening staple D, having upwardly penetrating points 2, 3, and loop 4.”

Drawings of the device annexed to the specification show' a staple fastening with two penetrating points or prongs, the upper prong being longer than the lower. The lower prong runs at an acute angle, and the upper prong at an obtuse angle, from the body of the staple; tho 2>J-'ongs, as shown in the drawings, having an upward inclination. The joints are beveled, or cut diagonally on the lower sides, so as to cause them, when driven into the wood, as it is claimed, to turn upwardly and clinch as they are being driven. The washer used in combination with tho staple, to keep the hail from contact with the wood, is an ordinary convex metallic washer. The patent as to the first claim is attacked for want of novelty, and as to the second, because it is, as claimed, for a mere aggregation of parts.

Concerning the second claim I have no doubt. As wo have seen, that claim is for the convex metallic washer in combination with the staple. It is not perceived how the washer can he said to co-operate with the bail car in the production of a common result. It may give greater finish to the pail, and prevent the hail from rubbing and disfiguring tho wood at the point where the bail is fastened to the ear, hut the union of the two devices does not contribute necessarily to one' or the same result, and does not involve invention. The báil ear and the washer perform separate and distinct functions, the distinct office of neither being changed or affected by the operation of the other. The function of the bail ear is to afford a staple fastening for the bail. The presence of the washer does not contribute to nor aid the completeness of the connection between the hail and the bail ear, nor the attachment of the bail ear to the pail. The addition of the washer, [28]*28which is an old device, makes a mere aggregation of parts, in which each device performs its separate function, without producing anything new in operation or result by the combination. In other words, the bail ear performs the same function without the washer as with it.

The point is well put in Gidden v. Copeland, 15 O. G. 921, where it is said: “The fact that the knives, the rake, and the binder are respectively subordinate combinations, performing distinct operations, is not fatal to the patentability of a combination of these devices in a harvester, for they all co-operate to produce one definite result. But the combination of a tool chest or feed box with these other elements would not be a patentable combination, because, whatever these appendages may contribute to the production of a convenient or useful harvester, they would not co-operate with the other devices in the production of any one precise result.”

' Plainly, no invention was necessary to combine the washer with the bail ear, and I regard complainant’s patent as to the second claim void, because it is for a mere aggregation of parts which have no common function. In passing upon the -first claim in complainant’s patent it is essential that we ascertain precisely what the patented invention is. The proofs clearly show that prior to complainant’s patent wire staples were employed for the purpose of attaching the handles to pails, and that the use of such staples for that and other purposes was old. In view of the state of the art it is unquestionably necessary, in order to support complainant’s patent, that it be shown that his device presents a feature not before in existence, and which it required invention to •produce. As showing the state of the art defendants have introduced in evidence numerous samples of staples and various patents granted both before and subsequent to complainant’s patent. The Walton patent, granted in 1868, shows a bail ear constructed of wire, bent so as to have an eye, in which the bail is fastened, find two prongs of equal length. This device is unlike complainant’s, as plainly appears on the face of the specifications and claim, because the prongs are intended to be inserted in holes in the sides of the pail, pass[29]*29ing entirely through the same and clinched upon the inner side. Nor does the device, as I understand it, show beveled prongs; certainly, not prongs both beveled on the under side. This patent was re-issued in 1876, and the claim in the re-issued patent is — First, as a new article of manufacture, a bail ear for pails, made of wire, bout to form a loop, and having two prongs that are clinched; second, the combination of the staple with the bail ear; third, a bail ear made of wire and having an eye for tho bail between the two prongs.

The Krichbaum patent, granted in 1869, discloses a staple having two prongs or points one above the other; but these prongs are not beveled on their lower sides, and evidently are not made to penetrate in an upward direction, nor are they intended to be driven into the wood, as complainant’s device is. The specifications in the patent state that “these ears are secured to the pail by first boring bolos therein, in which the prongs are inserted, which being done they are then clinched down upon the inside.” This device, therefore, does not exhibit the characteristic of the Miles invention, viz., upwardly penetrating points, both arranged to turn in the same direction in the wood in driving.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/double-pointed-tack-co-v-two-rivers-manufacturing-co-circtedwi-1880.