Eastman Co. v. Blair Camera Co.

62 F. 400, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2870
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedJune 1, 1894
DocketNo. 2,888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 62 F. 400 (Eastman Co. v. Blair Camera Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastman Co. v. Blair Camera Co., 62 F. 400, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2870 (circtdma 1894).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

The two patents in controversy in this case are for improvements in photographic apparatus. The first patent was granted to David H. Houston, October 11, 1881, and is No. 248,179; the second patent was granted to Walker and Eastman, May 5, 1885, and is No. 817,049.

In the old photographic camera, the plate upon which the image of an object was taken was made of glass covered on one side with a thin film of sensitive material. The film consisted of collodion, sensitized in a bath of nitrate of silver, and exposed in the camera while wet. This was known as the wet process. This form of apparatus was cumbersome and difficult to operate in the field. In 1880, Mr. Eastman, one of the inventors of the Walker and Eastman patent, commenced the manufacture of dry plates. These plates were coated with a film composed of an emulsion of gelatine and bromide of silver, and then dried, but they were open to the objections of all glass plates, namely, they were heavy and liable to break. It was sought to overcome these objections to the use of glass plates by the substitution of strips of sensitized paper supported on rollers.

[401]*401A camera must be so constructed as to exclude tlie light, or, as commonly expressed, it must be a light-tight, box. It is apparent that where a long strip of material was used it became necessary to devise some means to determine the position and movement, of the strip in the camera. This was done by marking off the strip into lengths proper for exposure, before introduction into the camera, and by inserting a colored window in the box, through which, the operator could observe the marks on the paper from the outside. A device of this type, which appeared in 1875, is known as “(he Warnerke roll holder,” and is described in Abney’s Treatise on Photography, and other publications. It consisted of a light-tight box, containing two rollers and two rounded bars or guides, and the sensitized film was wound from one roller to the other over the exposing bed; one end of each roller projected through the side of the box, and was provided with a mill head and lock nut. The sensitized film, was previously marked by black patches of paper, which could be seen through a colored glass window at the back of the holder. The defects in this form of construction were —First, it was difficult to mark the strip without injuring it; second, the colored glass window did not form a perfect protection to the entrance of white light into the box; third, it was difficult to observe the division lines on the strip through the window. In 1877, E. & H. T. Anthony & Co. made one roll holder after the War-nerke pattern, hut slightly modified in structure. There is also found described in a London publication entitled “Notes and Queries,” published in 1855, what is called “Captain Barr’s dark slide for paper.” In this apparatus, the paper used in connection with the rollers was in short lengths, secured to a band of calico, leaving intervals of about two inches between the lengths1. The indicating device consisted of a short roller outside of the box. fitted to one of the inside rollers, on which was wound a tape of the exact length of the calico strip. There were numerous defects in this apparatus, and it does not appear to have ever gone into use.

Before the inventions of Houston, and Walker and Eastman, there were two problems which had to be met in the practical use of a long strip of film in a camera, — the sensitized strip must be properly marked, and it must be held in sufficient tension. These inventions solved these problems.

The Houston improvement consists in attaching to substantially the old Warnerke roll holder a device for marking automatically the sensitized material within the camera in such a manner as to form guides by which the operator can cut the film Ik;tween successive exposures when taken into a dark room. This is accomplished by placing a pointer outside of the box, connected with one of the rollers, which indicates the revolutions of the roller, one revolution measuring half the length of the negative, or two revolutions the whole length. The same roller which carries the pointer also carries a pin which perforates the edge of the material at each revolution, and consequently every other perforation marks [402]*402the space between the negatives. By this device, something more is done than merely measure the length of film which passes between the rollers. The pointer outside of the box indicates accurately when the film has advanced sufficiently for each negative or exposure, at the same time the pin on the periphery of the roller marks the exposed length in such a way that the division line can be readily detected in a dark room. This was clearly an improvement over anything which existed in the prior art.

The defendant attacks the validity of this patent by.the introduction of various old registering devices for measuring cloth and other materials. A type of this class of machines is found in the Dodson patents of January 20, 1880, and August 3, 1880, and it is upon these patents that the defendant chiefly relies. The machine of the Dodson patents is for measuring cloth" or bagging. The material passes over one roller, and under another roller, then over a measuring cylinder, to a spindle upon which it is wound; the measuring cylinder has points on its periphery, and a tooth at one end of the cylinder outside of the frame, which works with a toothed registering wheel, and another tooth on the inside of the frame, which works a click spring; the cylinder is described as being exactly a yard in circumference, and provided with projecting points which enter the bagging and prevent it from -slipping. By this device, the registering wheel operates to register the number of yards unwound from the roll, while the click spring enables the operator, by counting the clicks, to know how many yards have been unwound. In all the cloth-measuring and registeringdevices which existed in the art prior to the Houston patent, as disclosed by this record, there is not found the special feature of the Houston invention, namely, a projecting pin which spaces off and defines, for the purpose of cutting, a certain given length of the material. Some device of this kind was necessary in a camera using a strip of film, and, although such device may seem only a modification of old devices, yet, as the result accomplished is new and useful, I think it patentable.

On the question of the infringement of the first and second claims of the patent, I have no doubt; the defendant’s device embodies the essential features of the Houston invention, and the changes which are made are merely structural.

The Walker and Eastman patent represents a still further advance in the art. The strip of film ready for exposure must always be kept in a condition of tension. As the camera may be left standing for days, it was found that the film was liable to contract or expand under different conditions of weather, and, further, in the old apparatus, the devices for holding the film in tension did not always work perfectly. The object of the Walker and Eastman patent was to remedy this defect. The inventors spent months of effort before they hit upon the device which is the subject-matter of their patent. The means employed by them were simple, but this fact does not detract from the merits of the invention. ■ The improvement consists in the insertion of a spring in [403]*403the receiving reel, which operates to take up the slack end of the film, or to always draw the film against the resistance of the spool.

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Related

Goodwin Film & Camera Co. v. Eastman Kodak Co.
207 F. 351 (W.D. New York, 1913)
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118 F. 840 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1902)

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Bluebook (online)
62 F. 400, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastman-co-v-blair-camera-co-circtdma-1894.