Edwin A. Kaakinen, and Kaakinen Fish Company v. The Peelers Company, a Partnership

301 F.2d 170
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 10, 1962
Docket16936
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 301 F.2d 170 (Edwin A. Kaakinen, and Kaakinen Fish Company v. The Peelers Company, a Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwin A. Kaakinen, and Kaakinen Fish Company v. The Peelers Company, a Partnership, 301 F.2d 170 (9th Cir. 1962).

Opinion

WOLLENBERG, District Judge.

The District Court for the Western District of Washington, Southern Division, had jurisdiction over these patent claims under the patent laws of the United States (35 U.S.C. § 281). Jurisdiction of the District Court is founded on 28 U.S.C. § 1338(a).

The controversy concerns a machine or picker designed to peel raw shrimp, 1. e., to divest edible meat of the head, shell, tail and other appendages. This peeling of the raw shrimp is a necessary step in the operation of a cannery where the ultimate aim is placing the shrimp meat, after blanching, in cans.

The canning of shrimp is an old industry dating from 1878, and until 1949 the picking of shrimp was all done by hand. The first successful machine came into use in the year 1949. Prior to that, from 1944, attempts to pick shrimp by machine had not been successful in eliminating hand picking. In 1949 appellee’s predecessor offered to the industry a machine embodying the inventions covered by the claims of patents in suit. Since that year these machines have virtually eliminated all hand peeling of shrimp in the canning industry.

Appellants herein were users of the appellee’s machines, and while so using these machines installed two of the accused machines 1 and used them for varying periods, not substantial in time.

In the District Court the plaintiff-appellee charged infringement as to certain patents 2 and the defendants-appellants counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment declaring the patents involved to be invalid and not infringed. The District Court found the patents to be valid and *172 to have been infringed by the defendants, dismissed the declaratory judgment counterclaim with prejudice, and ruled that defendants were entitled to an accounting for damages. 3

Jurisdiction is well founded upon appeal. 4

In respect to the validity of the invention over prior art the trial court found a new combination of old elements. 5 The controlling principles which guided our review on this point have been succinctly stated in Webster Loom Co. v. Higgins, 6 as follows:

“It may be laid down as a general rule, though perhaps not an invariable one, that if a new combination and arrangement of known elements produce a new and beneficial result, never attained before, it is evidence of invention.”

This Circuit, in Pursche v. Atlas Scraper and Engineering Co., 300 F.2d 467, 7 quoting from Professor Robinson in his work on Patents, approves and expounds upon the principle stated, supra:

“Where operations or instruments are thus united, one of two results must follow. Either each element remains unchanged in function and effect; or by the action of the elements upon each other, or their joint action on their common object, they perform additional functions and accomplish additional effects. The former union is a mere collocation or aggregation of the elements. Although they have been brought together in an apparent organism and rendered more available for use, they still remain the same distinct and independent means, still acting as so many separate units and not co-operating with each other to perform additional functions and accomplish additional results. Such unions, therefore, are not the creation of new means. They do not involve an exercise of the inventive faculties, nor can they be protected by a patent.
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“But when these elements are so united that by their reciprocal influence upon each other, or their joint action on their common object, they perform additional functions and accomplish additional results, the union is a true combination. While every element remains a unit, retaining its own individuality and identity as a complete and operative means, their combination embodies an entirely new idea of means, and thus becomes another unit, whose essential attributes depend on the co-operative union of the elements of which it is composed. Such a combination is a different invention from the elements themselves, whether considered in their separate or their aggregated state, the method of their co-operation in the combination being the result of the inventive act. Whether the elements are new or old, and whether they co-act successfully or simultaneously is of no importance. To unite them in a new means by the exercise of inventive skill is invention, and renders the combination, as an entirety, the subject-matter of a patent. * -X- * » 8

Machines embodying the combination of appellee’s machines revolutized the shrimp canneries, bringing new results in yields and upgrading of the shrimp with a consequent rise in its market value. An increased market for shrimp resulted in benefit to the fishermen and a reduction in the labor costs of canning the shrimp were other healthful effects *173 upon the industry. There had been, previous to appellee’s combination, no combination effected which would successfully peel shrimp.

The trial court, in its holding of validity of the claims over prior art, correctly analyzed the existing patents presented as a “prior art” defense. The evidence presented supports the findings of the court in this regard.

Where, as here, the inventions were new combinations, the words of the Traitel Marble Company v. U. T. Hunger-ford Brass & Copper Co. case are most apt:

“Assuming, for argument, that the law is absolute that there can be no patent for the new use of an old thing, that is because the statute allows no monopolies merely for ideas or discoveries. If the thing itself be new, very slight structural changes may be enough to support a patent, when they presuppose a use not discoverable without inventive imagination. We are to judge such devices, not by the mere innovation in their form or material, but by the purpose which dictated them and discovered their function. Certainly the art would have waited indefinitely, in the light of all that McKnight disclosed for Calkin’s contribution to its advance. It will not serve now to observe how easy it was, given the suggestion, to change his invention into that of the patent in suit.” 9

Appellants rely upon many references to sustain a “prior art” defense. Corn-huskers, rock and gravel strainers, peanut stemmers, and onion skinners are some of the other machines referenced by appellants. 10

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Related

LAITRAM CORPORATION v. Deepsouth Packing Co.
301 F. Supp. 1037 (E.D. Louisiana, 1969)
Laitram Corporation v. Deepsouth Packing Company
279 F. Supp. 883 (E.D. Louisiana, 1968)
Peelers Company v. Wendt
260 F. Supp. 193 (W.D. Washington, 1966)
Laitram Corporation v. King Crab, Inc.
244 F. Supp. 9 (D. Alaska, 1965)
Tietig v. Ladd
228 F. Supp. 637 (District of Columbia, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
301 F.2d 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwin-a-kaakinen-and-kaakinen-fish-company-v-the-peelers-company-a-ca9-1962.