F. F. Slocomb & Co. v. A. C. Layman Mach. Co.

227 F. 94, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1047
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedJanuary 30, 1915
DocketNo. 312
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 227 F. 94 (F. F. Slocomb & Co. v. A. C. Layman Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. F. Slocomb & Co. v. A. C. Layman Mach. Co., 227 F. 94, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1047 (D. Del. 1915).

Opinion

BRADFORD, District Judge.

The bill charges infringement of reissue patent of the United States No. 11,843, granted July 31, 1900, and United States patent No. 927,609, granted July 13, 1909. .Both patents were assigned to and are owned by the complainant. No. i 1,843 was granted to James Craig and Frank F. Slocomb for an improvement in leather-staking machines, and No. 927,609, hereinafter referred to as the breast roll patent, was granted to Frank F. Slocomb for a leather-staking machine table. The charge of infringement with respect to the reissue patent has been restricted to claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 13, 19, 21 and 23, which are as follows:

“1. In a leather-staking machine, a plurality of rollers mounted on a jaw thereof, and means for enabling one of said rollers to be raised or lowered independently of the other roller.
[96]*96“2. In a leather-staking machine, a plurality of rollers mounted on a jaw thereof, means for enabling one of said rollers to be raised and lowered independently of the other, and means for varying the distance between said rollers.
“3. In a leather-staking machine, an upper jaw, a lower jaw, a blade carried by said lower jaw, a roller mounted in bearings attached to said upper jaw, adjustable arms carried by said upper jaw, stems adjustably supported in said arms, means for securing said stems in their adjusted positions and a roller having bearings in said stems.
“4. In a leather-staking machine, an upper jaw, a roller mounted in suitable bearings attached to said jaw, adjustable arms carried by the latter, said arms supporting adjustable threaded stems, and a roller having bearings in said stems.
“5. In a leather-staking machine, an upper jaw, a roller journaled thereupon, arms adjustably mounted on said jaw, adjustable stems supported by said arms, and a roller journaled in said stems.
“6. In a leather-staking machine, an upper jaw having a plate attached thereto, a roller journaled in bearings depending from said plate, slotted arms having a cross-piece attached thereto, means for securing said arms to said plate, bearings capable of vertical adjustment depending from said arm:., and a roller journaled in said bearings.”
“13. In a leather-staking machine, an upper and lower jaw, a roller mounted in suitable bearings attached to said upper jaw, adjustable arms carried by the latter, stems adjustably supported in said arms, and a roller having bearings in said stems, in combination with a plurality of upright blades attached to said lower jaw, one of said blades occupying the space between said rollers when said jaws are in their forward position.”
“19. In a leather-staking machine, upper and lower jaws pivotally supported, a blade carried by said lower jaw, a roller mounted in bearings attached to said upper jaw, arms carried by the latter, stems adjustably supported in said arms, means for locking said stems in position and a second roller having bearings in said stems.”
“21. In a leather-staking machine, in combination with the jaws thereof, mechanism for reciprocating and opening and closing said jaws, and laterally-movable means for adjusting said jaws, said means being controlled and operated by the knee of the attendant.”
“23. The combination with the jaws of a leather-staking machine, of mechanism for reciprocating and opening and closing said jaws, and laterally-movable means .for adjusting one of said jaws, said means being located below said jaws.”

With respect to the breast roll patent the charge of infringement has been restricted to claims 4 and 5, which are as follows:

“4. The combination with a staking machine, of a breast roll rotatably mounted thereon, and means to lock said roll.
“5. In combination with a staking machine, a breast roll rotatably mounted thereon, and means to lock said roll in different positions.”

[1] The complainant in the bill as amended charges the defendant with direct infringement in manufacturing, using and selling leather staking machines embodying the inventions described and claimed in the two patents in suit, and also with contributory infringement in furnishing and supplying repair parts to owners and users of such leather-staking machines for the purpose and with the intent that such repair parts should be united with other elements to complete the combinations claimed in the said patents. The bill does not allege that the defendant furnished repair parts to persons other than those owning and using staking machines manufactured and sold by the complainant under the patents in question, nor that the repair parts [97]*97were separately patented. Nor is there any evidence showing or tending to show that repair parts were furnished by the defendant to persons not owning and using the machines to which th*y were applied. Nor has it been shown that the repair parts were furnished and supplied by the defendant with any actual intent to defraud or wrongfully injure the complainant in the enjoyment of its patent monopoly unless the furnishing of such repair parts per se gives rise to the presumption of such wrongful intent. The facts do not present a case in which an alleged contributory infringer supplies repair parts to those using the patented mechanism without authority and wrongfully. The parts so furnished by the defendant were procured by the owners of the patented mechanism in order that they might not lose the beneficial enjoyment of the machines which they had a right to operate. The owners and users of the complainant’s patented machines had a right to restore them to and maintain their efficiency by making from time to time suitable repairs not amounting to reconstruction. This right in the absence of a stipulation to the contrary was vested in them and not in the complainant. Morgan Gardner F. Co. v. Buettner & Shelburne M. Co., 203 Fed. 490, 121 C. C. A. 612; Wagner Typewriter Co. v. F. S. Webster Co. (C. C.) 144 Fed. 405. If the purchaser and user of the complainant’s machines cannot, in the absence of a stipulation to the contrary, remedy defects resulting from their operation by making repairs falling short of reconstruction, he is at the mercy of the patent owner who can prevent him from enjoying their use by means of making such repairs and thus compel him, if he intends to use such machines at all, to purchase new ones from the holder of the patent monopoly. This would in most cases largely destroy the beneficial use of the machine, in contemplation of the purchaser at the time of buying and serving as a consideration for the purchase. The charge of contributory infringement is based upon the furnishing by the defendant to purchasers and users of the machines of the patents in suit from time to time of various repair parts. The furnishing of these repair parts is treated by the complainant as amounting to a reconstruction, of the patented combination mechanism.

[2] The defendant, however, contends that the parts so furnished by it to such purchasers and users of the complainant’s machines and their application thereto did not in any sense constitute reconstruction, but simply renewal by supplying repair parts not separately patented which hi the course of time from the operation of the mechanism became worn out or otherwise defective.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
227 F. 94, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-f-slocomb-co-v-a-c-layman-mach-co-ded-1915.