Eames v. Worcester Polytechnic Institute

123 F. 67, 60 C.C.A. 37, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 1903
DocketNo. 1,108
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 123 F. 67 (Eames v. Worcester Polytechnic Institute) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eames v. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 123 F. 67, 60 C.C.A. 37, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973 (6th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

SEVERENS, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity upon a bill filed by the appellee complaining of the infringement by the appellants of claims x, 2, and 6 of letters patent No. 411,845, issued October 1, 1889, to O. S. Walker, who subsequently assigned to the complainant, and claims 1 and 2 of letters patent No. 425,839, issued April 15, 1890, to the said Walker as assignor to the complainant; both patents being for improvements in twist drill grinding machines. The relief sought was an injunction and an accounting for profits and damages. The defendants answered denying the validity of the patents, and denying the infringement of either of them. Upon the hearing on pleadings and proofs, it was held and decreed by the Circuit Court that the patents in respect to the claims above 'enumerated were valid and were infringed, and that an injunction should issue, and the profits and damages ascertained. The defendants assigned errors, and appealed.

Both patents relate in general to the same structure, the last being for improvements upon the first. Twist drill grinding machines are shown to have been in use for some time prior to Walker’s inventions, and a number of patents had been issued therefor in England and the United States. They consist of two parts—the grinding wheel with its appurtenances,' and the drill-holder, with the devices for properly presenting the drill to the wheel for grinding the lips of the cutting end of the drill. These devices are the subjects of the improvements claimed to have been made by Walker, a well-known form of holder being presupposed, and they are for parts only of the means by which the holder carrying the drill is supported and manipulated in the operation of grinding. There is another congeries [69]*69of devices which contributes .to the movements of the drill-holder, but it need not be here detailed. The drill-holder shown in the Walker patents consists of a V-shaped groove in which the drill rests, having an adjustable post or abutment at the outer end to prevent the retreat of the drill. At the fore end of the holder is a rest projecting inwardly from one side of the groove, which, entering one of the flutes of the drill and engaging one side of the flute a short distance back from the point, serves as a gage in shifting the drill from one side to the other, supports the drill, and prevents it from turning in the holder while it is being ground. The drill is held in the groove by the hand of the operator, and the grinding is done first on one lip and then on the other, the lips being alternately presented to the wheel by turning the drill half way over in the successive step in the operation. The holder and the wheel and their relations are shown in Fig. 2 of patent No. 411,845, thus:

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The rest above spoken of is shown engaging one side of a flute of the drill in Fig. 4, as follows:

The rest is the projection, t, and is secured to the fore end of the right-hand member of the groove, V, by screws, t'.

The patentee states that the line of contact of the rest with the drill is inclined to the bisecting line of the V angle, and intersects it near the apex of the angle, but does not state the extent of such inclination. He explains that his object in this construction is “to compensate for the variation in thickness of the drill-points.” The first claim is upon the combination of this drill-rest with a grooved holder, and is as follows:

“The V-grooved drill-holder, H, in combination with the stationary drill-lip rest, t, which has its line of drill-contact inclined to the bisecting line of the V angle, and intersecting the same near the apex of said angle, as and for the purpose described.”

[70]*70As V-shaped holders were undoubtedly old, the substance of the claim is in the provision of the drill-rest. Several forms of drill-rests, designed for the purpose of gaging the rotation and of preventing the further rotation of the drill while being ground, are shown in previous patents, and the question is whether the form and location of Walker’s drill-rest indicate the exercise of the faculty of invention or merely of the skill of the craftsman working upon the things supplied by the prior art. A patent issued to Champlin, October 31, 1876, showed a drill-holder having a grooved bed in which was provided a projection “near the end where the cutting edge of the drill comes when in the machine.” One lip of the drill rested upon this projection while the opposite edge was being ground, and it gaged the rotation of the drill when shifted in the holder. When one lip of the drill was ground it was turned half way over, and the ground lip was rested upon the projection while the opposite lip was ground. While it is not stated in so many words that this relation of the drill to the rest is a means for preventing the rotation of the drill while being ground, it is obvious that, as the inner surface of the lip is inclined, the contact of the rest would co-operate with the clamp in preventing the rolling of the drill; and it serves as a stop when the drill is turned halfway over, and fixes the alternate positions of the drill for grinding its respective lips exactly alike, thus securing equal proportions to the opposite lips of the drill. It should be observed that the contact .of the rest in this construction, though spoken of as being with the lip, is nevertheless within the flute and against one of its inner segments next the edge, and is far enough from the end of the drill to avoid contact with the wheel, and that the drill-rest is stationary. This projection or rest in the holder forms the substance of the first claim in the patent, as it does in Walker’s. And it fulfilled two of the-characteristics of Walker’s; that is, the rest was close to the cutting end of the drill, and it was stationary.

A patent to Stetson for a twist drill grinding machine, dated February 15, 1881, shows a lip-rest attached by a set-screw to the fore end of the groove in which the drill was clamped, and projecting into the flute of the drill far enough back from the end of the drill to clear the grinding wheel. It was movable only in the direction toward the drill. The lip of the drill, or rather the flute just back of the edge, as in the Champlin patent, was placed against the rest, or “finger” as it is called; the latter being “designed to enter the groove or lip of a drill for the purpose of regulating and limiting the .adjustment and revolution of such drill relatively to the grinding wheel,” as stated in the specification. From the description of this rest and its attachment, it would seem that it is adapted to perform the same service as the drill-rest of the Walker patent; that is, as a gage and a rest.

In the patent to Birkenhead of October 6, 1885, for “mechanism for supporting and guiding drills while being ground,” there is shown a V-shaped drill-holder at the front end of which was attached a drill-rest adapted to engage one side of the flute of the drill and arrest its rotation while being ground, and serving also as a guide to indicate where the rotation must stop when rotated to present the opposite [71]*71lip for grinding. This rest was adjustable for different sizes of drills by means of a screw actuating it, set parallel to a line which would coincide with the contact face of Walker’s drill-rest; so that when the rest was moved upward or downward by the screw the contact face of the rest would traverse a line corresponding substantially to the “line of contact” of the rest in the Walker patent, and which would be “inclined to a bisecting line of the V angle” of the holder. Fig.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 F. 67, 60 C.C.A. 37, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 3973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eames-v-worcester-polytechnic-institute-ca6-1903.