Dudlo Mfg. Co. v. Varley Duplex Magnet Co.

253 F. 745, 165 C.C.A. 339, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1603
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 1, 1918
DocketNos. 2487, 2488
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 253 F. 745 (Dudlo Mfg. Co. v. Varley Duplex Magnet Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dudlo Mfg. Co. v. Varley Duplex Magnet Co., 253 F. 745, 165 C.C.A. 339, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1603 (7th Cir. 1918).

Opinion

MACK, Circuit Judge.

The two cases were heard together in the District Court and the appeals were argued together in this court. No. 2487 involves letters patents Nos. 644,311 and 644,312, and No. 2488, letters patent No. 654,583, all granted to one Anderson and assigned to appellee.

Tetters patent No. 644,311, for a method of winding coils or helices for electrical purposes, and letters patent No. 644,312, for an electrical helix, were held valid and infringed by defendant as to all of the claims. Claim 2 of No. 644,311 reads as follows:

“Tbe method of winding helices for electrical purposes consisting in simultaneously winding a plurality of helices upon separated zones of a single core, inserting sheets of insulating material between the superposed layers of the helices; each sheet being common to all the helices, and then separating the helices by transversely severing said sheets and core between the adjacent helices.”

Claim 1 omits the last element as to separation of the helices; claim 3 specifies in detail that each layer of helix is followed by the insulating material. The claims of No. 644,312 are:

“1. An article of manufacture consisting of a plurality of helices for electrical purposes, wound in layers on a single core, in combination with individual sheets of insulating material inserted between the layers and extending throughout all the helices, substantially as described.
“2. An article of manufacture consisting of a plurality of helices for electrical purposes, wound in layers on separated zones of a single core, in combination with layers of insulating material alternating with the layers of the helices and being common to all the helices, substantially as described.”

Plaintiff was a pioneer in the manufacture of helices in series, instead of, as theretofore, in units. It thereby secured a greater uniformity of product and a saving in the cost of manufacture. Defendant sought to obtain the same result in substantially the same way. Dike the plaintiff, it used, between the layers of windings, sheets of paper common to all of the series of helices, thereby securing the desired uniformity of tension.

Method Patent.

[1,2] But it urges in support of its contention of noninfringement of the method patent, first, that it uses no single core; second, that it severs the series of helices into units by cutting the inserted sheets of insulating material between the adjacent units during the winding of the layer of wire thereon and not after the stick of helices has been fully wound.

1. As to the absence of a core.

A. Defendant is the successor of a copartnership, the members of which own the controlling interest in defendant. A minority interest is owned by its largest customer who at one time had been a customer of appellee. This copartnership had been charged by plaintiff with infringemént of the patents in suit. By a contract of settlement with plaintiff, the firm had confessed the infringement and had agreed not to infringe thereafter. While defendant’s minority stockholder claims to have had no knowledge of the contract at the time he made his investment, the circumstances surrounding the transaction are such that [747]*747the trial court was justified in disregarding this testimony. But whether or not he had such actual knowledge at that time is immaterial. The evidence abundantly justifies the conclusion that the corporation was primarily formed for the purpose of evading the obligations imposed by the contract; the corporation took over the business as it was; under these circumstances, any estoppel arising from the contract as against the copartnership, should he deemed equally effective as against (he corporation. And inasmuch as defendant made no change whatsoever in the method of manufacture in so far as the core is concerned, it is estopped to deny infringement in this respect.

B. But irrespective of estoppel, defendant, in our judgment, does use a single core. Plaintiff preferentially covers the spindle with a prepared tube to which the first layer of wire of each coil is fastened or anchored. Defendant first rolls four or five layers of paper on the mandrel fastening them with a sticker and then ties the wire around this paper and the mandrel. Thereupon one layer of paper is fed in and while the first coil-of wire is wound thereon, the coil and paper are shellacked. Then, ordinarily, three layers of paper are fed in and another winding begins. Until the paper is cut during this wire winding, there is a plurality of coils with a single core, the shellacked paper. Whether or not, at the lime of cutting, the upper layer has been completely wound and whether or not it is intended thereafter to wind additional layers so as to produce in the end a coil of only two or of more layers of wire, is immaterial; in either case there is infringement of plaintiff’s method of producing the coil by the use of a single core.

2. As to the stick of helices.

A. Concededly, in some instances, whether because of defective machinery or defective operation, defendant, contrary to its ordinary method of manufacture, did not separate the single stick of helices into units until after the winding was complete. Furtheimorc, some special coils were always manufactured iu this, manner. In all such cases, infringement is clear.

B. While ordinarily defendant cuts the inserted sheets of insulating material between adjacent helices with sharp knives during the progress of each winding of the wire instead of sawing the stick into units after any desired length of wire is completely wound, infringement, in our judgment, is not thereby averted.

a. Even the smoothness which, defendant claims, results from its successive sharp cuttings of the insulating material, as against the single final sawings of the completed stick, is confined to the edges of the adjacent units; the two ends of the original stick frequently must be and are evened up by sawing. Obviously, however, defendant’s more laborious and delicate practice, subject as it was to interruptions and omissions by the quite frequent breaking of the knives, aimed not at a better result but at a mere evasion of plaintiff’s method. Plaintiff’s inventive concept is the simultaneous winding of a plurality of coils on a common core or spindle in combination with the insertion of insulating layers common to the entire series of helices; it is immaterial thereto whether, because of the cutting of this common insulating material between the adjacent units before the winding is [748]*748finished, the units fall apart from one another when they are completely wound, or whether the stick is to be severed into its units by sawing the insulating material between the adjacent helices only after the winding is completed.

b. Moreover, in claim 1, there is no element of separation into.units.

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Bluebook (online)
253 F. 745, 165 C.C.A. 339, 1918 U.S. App. LEXIS 1603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dudlo-mfg-co-v-varley-duplex-magnet-co-ca7-1918.