Economy Appliance Co. v. Fitzgerald Mfg. Co.

35 F.2d 756, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedAugust 1, 1928
DocketNo. 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 756 (Economy Appliance Co. v. Fitzgerald Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Economy Appliance Co. v. Fitzgerald Mfg. Co., 35 F.2d 756, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795 (D. Conn. 1928).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

Economy Appliance Company and Frederick W. Collier charge the defendant with infringement of claims 2, 3, 4, 5, and 9 of letters patent No. 1,358,932. The patent was issued to the plaintiff Collier as assignor to Eeonomy Appliance Company on November 16, 1920. The application was filed February 15,1917. The patentee has joined with his assignee in suing the alleged infringer.

Defendant does not seriously contest validity, but argues against a conclusion holding infringement, and asserts that the claims should be so limited as to exclude defendant’s structure.

The patent in suit is for a toaster embodying a central heating element of the usual kind which may be heated either by gas or electricity. On either side of this heating element is a slice holder so planed that the slice of bread to be toasted will be held in position parallel to the heating element and at a predetermined distance therefrom. The problem which Collier sought to solve was concerned with the development of means for so reversing each slice holder that the untoasted portion of the bread would be brought adjacent the heating element and held by the slice holder in substantially the same position in relation to the heating element as the bread was held before reversal. This Collier accomplished by mounting his slice holder' upon carrier members so designed that the slice holder can turn upon itself in a minimum of space. This turning motion is accomplished by supporting each slice holder upon two vertical axes. The carrier member moves about one of these axes in such a way as to carry the slice holder a sufficient distance from the heating element to permit reversal of the holder. The holder itself rotates about the other vertical axis.

Collier has been for many years skilled [757]*757in the toaster art. Before developing the toaster disclosed in the patent in suit, he had designed various other.toasters, none of which he considered ideally successful commercially. There can be little doubt but that he was quite familiar with the more relevant prior art here introduced. He states that his invention consists primarily in the development of a device adapted so as to use a plurality of sliee holders in connection with a single heating element, and in the fact that he is the first to so mount his slice holders as to cause them to rotate about two separate axes. I am convinced that the greatest merit in Collier’s disclosure lies in this last feature of his invention, because, by the adoption of two axes of rotation, he is enabled to reverse the position of the slice holder within a minimum space, and thus produce a compact, attractive toaster, ideally suited for use on the dining room table. The claims in suit read as follows:

“2. In a toaster, the combination of a heating element having a plurality of heating surfaces, a plurality of slice holders and a plurality of axes for supporting the sliee holders whereby the slice holders are movably mounted in such a manner with relation to the heating element that either side of a slice holder can be presented to the same surface of the heating element.
“3. In a toaster, the combination of a heating element having a plurality of heating surfaces, a plurality of slice holders, and a plurality of axes for supporting the sliee holders, whereby the slice holders are movably mounted in such a manner with relation to the heating element that each sliee holder is reversible with relation to that heating surface to which the sliee holder is first presented.
“4. In a toaster, the combination of a heating element having a plurality of heating surfaces, a plurality of slice holders, and a plurality of axes for supporting the sliee holders whereby the sliee holders are'movably mounted in such a manner with relation to the heating element as to be within their own -space limits reversible with respect to the heating surface of the heating element to which the slice holders are first presented.
“5. In a toaster, the combination of a heating element having a plurality of heating surfaces, a plurality of sliee holders, axes and carrier members for supporting the slice holders whereby through a compound movement about the axes the placement and angular positions of the slice holders with relation to'the heating element are brought about and at all times controlled.
“9. In a device of the class described, the combination of a heating element having a plurality of heating surfaces, a plurality of carrier members and sliee holders and a plurality of axes for supporting the carrier members and sliee holders whereby the slice holders are so mounted with relation to the heating element that each slice holder is reversible by means of a motion which causes the major part of the holder to at first recede from and then to approach the heating element.”

Collier discloses as the ideal embodiment of his invention a toaster, each slice holder of which is mounted upon two carrier members or crank shafts. These carrier members are so positioned as to predetermine at each stage of the rotation of the slice holder its position in relation to the heating element. The carrier members are mounted one upon either side of each slice holder, and so fixed in the frame of the toaster that during part of the revolution or reversal of the slice holder it revolves about one carrier member and during the remainder of the revolution it revolves about the other. As a result, the angular position of the slice holder in relation to the heating element is fixed and predetermined at every stage of its rotation. Collier recognized, however, that this feature is not essential to his invention, and specifies in his patent that one carrier member is sufficient support for his sliee holders. The device of the patent in suit has met with a substantial measure of commercial success. Since the patent was issued, four licenses have been granted, and in eaeh instance the patentee was approached by the prospective licensee. Under these licenses approximately 700,000 toasters have been sold, and the royalty returns to plaintiffs have been considerable.

Defendant does not seriously contest the validity of the patent in suit, but it does argue strenuously against any holding of infringement, and insists vigorously that, if the claims here involved be held valid, they should be so limited as to exclude therefrom defendant’s structure. The alleged infringing toaster is made by defendant under the patent to FitzGerald, No. 1,426,284, issued August 15,1922, on an application filed January 13, 1921. It will thus be seen that the application for this patent was not copending with that for the - patent in suit, as FitzGerald filed about two months after the patent to Collier issued. The defendant has departed slightly in its commercial toaster from the disclosure of the FitzGerald patent, but the devices are so similar, and the modifications [758]*758so unimportant that the FitzGerald patent may be taken as disclosing defendant’s structure.

Defendant’s toaster consists of a heating element which, for all practical purposes, is identical with plaintiffs’, on either side of which is mounted a slice holder. Each slice holder is supported by a single arm or rod pivotally mounted to the frame of the toaster.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 756, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/economy-appliance-co-v-fitzgerald-mfg-co-ctd-1928.