Edwards Mfg. Co. v. National Fireworks Distributing Co.

272 F. 23, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1921
DocketNos. 3445, 3446
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 272 F. 23 (Edwards Mfg. Co. v. National Fireworks Distributing Co.) 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
Edwards Mfg. Co. v. National Fireworks Distributing Co., 272 F. 23, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1580 (6th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

DONAHUE, Circuit Judge.

The bill of complaint filed in the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of Ohio, Western Division, charges infringement by the Edwards Manufacturing Company of claim 6 of the Wertz Patent, No. 926,308, June 29, 1909, and of the single claim of the Clark patent, No. 991,956, May 9, 1911. Both patents relate to toy pistol construction. The District Court entered a decree finding claim 6 of the Wertz patent valid and infringed; that the claim of the Clark patent was not infringed by the defendant’s construction, and for that reason did not pass upon the validity of that patent. The defendant appealed from that portion of the decree finding claim 6 of the Wertz patent valid and infringed, and the plaintiff filed a cross-appeal from that portion of the decree finding that defendant’s construction did not infringe the Clark patent.

Claim 6 of-the Wertz patent reads as follows:

“0. A toy pistol, comprising a magazine adapted to receive an explosive tape therein, a spring for guiding the tape, a trigger, a hammer on the trigger, and a spring on the hammer adapted to engage the tape, for feeding it in the path of the hammer, as the hammer is actuated preparatory to striking the tape.” : '

It is not seriously contended by the' defendant that this claim of the Wertz patent is invalid. On th'e contrary, it is claimed that, in view of the prior art and the Patent Office proceedings preliminary to its issue, it is not entitled to the liberal construction of a generic invention,- dominating the broad combination ;of a guide spring with, any means for feeding the ammunition tape, so as to include within the range of equivalents defendant’s wholly different construction.

[1] The case of Crescent Specialty Co. v. National Fireworks Distributing Co., 219 Fed. 130, 135 C. C. A. 28, involved the validity of claim 6 of the Wertz patent, and the validity of the single claim of the Clark patent. That case, however, was an appeal from an order of the District Court granting a .preliminary injunction against the infringement of these patents, and necessarily this court confined its in-vestigaiions to a determination of the qúestion whether the District Court in granting the preliminary injunction had “exercised its discretion upon a wholly erroneous conception of pertinent facts or law,” and therefore did not finally determine the validity of either patent; [25]*25but upon a full consideration of the evidence in this case, this court now adopts, without repeating, what was said by it in the opinion in that case in reference to the validity of claim 6 of the Wertz patent.

[2] It appears from the file wrapper of the Wertz patent that the Patent Office, in rejecting some of the original claims, required a revision as to terms as follows :

“In tlxe nomenclature of the art, the part which strikes the cap, cartridge, or firing pin is known as the hammer; that which is manipulated by the finger, to discharge the gun or pistol, as the trigger; the spring which actuates the hammer as the mainspring; and the part 6, on which the cap of fulminate is exploded, as the anvil.”

The applicant, in pursuance of this suggestion, amended claim 6 in conformity therewith, designating the part to which the feed spring was attached as the hammer, instead of the trigger. Appellant’s construction has the separate trigger and hammer, and, in order to make this a vital distinction, it now contends that this amendment of the Wertz claim constituted an estoppel limitation, both in intent and effect, and that irrespective of intent or effect of this amendment, in view of the prior art, the claim cannot be lawfully extended to embrace defendant’s device, which discloses a different principle of construction, mode of operation, and specific result.

In the form shown by Wertz the trigger and hammer are one piece, pivotally operating upon a fulcrum. The feed spring was inserted in a recess in the part above the fulcrum, which part of the single piece hammer and trigger the Patent Office insisted should be designated as the hammer, notwithstanding it was integral with the part below the fulcrum, which the Patent Office required to be designated as the trigger. To meet this requirement, the applicant substituted the words “spring on the hammer” for the words “spring on the trigger.” It is apparent, therefore, that this amendment of claim 6 did not involve any surrender whatever of the claim as first stated, but rather a mere change in the terms used to designate parts of the construction to conform to the nomenclature of the art, and therefore cannot be construed as an estoppel limitation either in intent or effect. National Tube Co. v. Mark, 216 Fed. 507, 522, 133 C. C. A. 13; Frey v. Marvel Co., 236 Fed. 916. 921, 922, 150 C. C. A. 178.

[3] While undoubtedly the plaintiff’s invention is in a crowded art, and for that reason claim 6 cannot he given a broad range of equivalents, yet certainly there is no reason for giving it such a narrow construct ion as to exclude from its protection equivalents functioning in exactly the same manner, producing the same result, and differing only in form and arrangement.

It appears from the evidence of plaintiff’s expert that the feature which differentiates the improvement covered by claim 6 of the Wertz patent from the prior art centers about the tape-holding and tape-feeding springs, which co-operate to control the tape and effect a uniform, regular feeding movement, and which also co-operate to prevent backfire. It is unnecessary to review the prior patent art further than to say that these two elements co-opcrating to produce these results are not found therein.

[26]*26[4] These elements constitute the main feature of the invention. It is not merely a new arrangement of old parts, but introduces at least one new element, the feeding spring, into toy pistol construction, and to that extent, at least, this claim should not be narrowly construed.

[5] If, however, as contended by counsel for appellant, defendant’s device discloses a different plan of construction, a different mode of operation, and a different specific result, then it is not the equivalent of plaintiff’s patent, and does not constitute infringement.

[6] In the defendant’s construction a rigid pawl, instead of á flat spring, as in Wertz, is used for feeding the tape on the anvil. One end' of this pawl engages the trigger extension, and the other end comes in loose contact with the tape-holding spring in the inside upp.er portion of the pistol casing. This pawl is held in place by engagement with one end of a spring coiled on the casing fulcrum of the trigger member. By reason of this spring attachment this pawl, in performing its function of feeding the tape on the anvil, presses yieldingly against the ammunition tape, as does the flat tape feeding spring in the Wertz patent. It also co-operates with the guide spring to prevent backfire. The fact that in defendant’s construction a part of the feeding element is a rigid pawl engaging with a spring that permits it to press yieldingly against the tape does not distinguish it from this element of the Wertz patent, in which a yielding spring constitutes the entire element. The principle is the same;, it is actuated by the same finger pressure upon the trigger, functions in the same manner, and produces the same result.

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Bluebook (online)
272 F. 23, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-mfg-co-v-national-fireworks-distributing-co-ca6-1921.