F. N. Burt Co. v. W. C. Ritchie & Co.

251 F. 909, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1046
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 6, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 251 F. 909 (F. N. Burt Co. v. W. C. Ritchie & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
F. N. Burt Co. v. W. C. Ritchie & Co., 251 F. 909, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1046 (E.D.N.Y. 1918).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

Action is brought for infringement of the patent issued to Carlos Holly, No. 1,158,211, of October 26, 1915, on application filed April 24> 1909. The invention covered by this patent “relates to a machine for making boxes of paper or similar material in which the head and flange are connected by a binder which is adhesively connected with these parts.”

The object of the invention is stated to be “the production of a machine for making boxes of this character more expeditiously, at less cost, and more perfectly” than with the .machines of the prior art.' The1 issue-as-tried depends to a large extent upon the limitation suggested by the statement that the machine in question is to- make boxes with a “head” or bottom and a “flange”; that is, the four sides. In other words, the patent describes what is called throughout the testimony a “tray,” while the defendant’s infringement consists in using a machine for the making of “necks” or “collars” corresponding roughly to the .flange portion of the box described in the Holly patent.

The Holly patent consists of 59 printed pages and 26 pages of, drawings'. The claims of the patent are 282 in number, and of these 17 are relied on in this suit. These claims are Nos. 224, 225, 250, 252, 254, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 264, 265, 266, 268,'and 269. It .is shown by the testimony'that the demand for quantities of small pasteboárd" boxes increased enormously in the first few years of the Twentieth, century, and particularly because the use of millions of such boxes followed'the introduction and consumption of Turkish tobacco cigarettes. The prior art included hat or band boxes, pill bqxés, match boxes, -and -similar containers for small articles, but the cigarette box is now, and' has been since the date referred to, the most numerous example of this form of manufacture.

No serious issue is raised over the charge of infringement, when the patent is.c.onsidered solely from the language of tlie claims; that is, when.'viewed apart from the alleged limitations ascribed by the defense to the'specifications and drawings in connection with the state of the prior art. There is also no question raised that the patent in [911]*911suit describes a meritorious and novel invention. The issue is sharply drawn upon direct comparison of the mechanical processes of the plaintiff’s and defendant’s machines, and the proof is directed to an attempt on the part of the plaintiff to show that both forms of machine are but embodiments of a basic or pioneer patent, described in the Holly specifications and stated in the Holly claims; while the defendant contends that the plaintiff’s invention must be limited to the specific or exact complete device presented by the patentee and shown in the machine used by the plaintiff, with those mechanical equivalents suggested thereby, and by the specifications and claims of the patent, when construed strictly witli reference to that particular form of machine.

The defendant charges, generally, that in order to obtain the benefits of a method patent, or the benefits of a machine patent so broad as to include all devices which would carry out the method of operation, the plaintiff omits from the several claims those words which specify and define, by reference, the particular machine or arrangement of operative devices which the plaintiff had in mind and disclosed as his invention. Broadly stated, the defendant contends that the plaintiff was patenting the exact machine described in the. words which have been quoted; that is, a machine which would make boxes, or rather, that part of a box, consisting of a flange and a head, connected with an adhesive binder.

But the defendant does not rest here; it also contends that the plaintiff was limited by the prior art to a particular combination, which narrowed the scope of the invention and the possible meaning of the claims, even though the language, of the claims, when viewed apart from the prior art, and apart from the drawings and specifications, would include any such machine as that of the defendant. It goes without saying that the particular claims, in suit can he read upon the defendant’s machine without difficulty, if the' reference to the specifications and to the particular type of machine there described be treated as illustrative only; that is, as descriptive of a preferential use or a typical instance. These claims also can plainly be read on the defendant’s machine, if the invention is not limited by the prior art to the narrower application or embodiment which the defendant claims was approved by the Patent Office, when allowing the language of the claims as issued.

The claims have been divided by the experts into four classes, which are illustrated by the first claim o f each class. These are as follows:

••224. In an apparatus of tlie eliaraelor described, in combination, an angular former, means adapted to apply a combined body and cover blank to said former, said blank comprising spaced grooves in the body portion spanned by the cover portion, and means co-opera ling with said former t,o fold said blank at the groove portions and around said former, and cause portions of said cover to enter said grooves.” ,
“250. In an apparatus of the character described, in combination, a plurality of web-feeding mechanisms, a plurality of mechanisms adapted to sever blanks from said webs, web-folding m'echanism, means whereby the aforesaid mechanisms automatically co-operate to form a composite blank, composed of a section of one web disposed on the opposite faces of a section of another web and across one edge thereof, and mechanism adapted to fold said composite blank on lines transverse to said edge into a tubular element.”
[912]*912“259. In an apparatus of the character described, in combination, body web-feeding means, cover web-feeding means adapted to operate separately from the body web-feeding means, gluing means, body-web severing means, cover web-severing means adapted .to operate separately from the body web-severing means, cover web-folding means, means whereby the aforesaid means automatically co-operate to form a composite blank comprising an adhesively attached superposed'body blank and cover blank, with a portion of the cover blank disposed on opposite faces of the body blank and around one of the edges thereof, an angular former, and means adapted to co-operate with said former to fold said composite blank in a plane parallel to said edge, around which said portion of the cover blank is disposed, into a tubular element.”
“260. In an apparatus of the character described, in combination, feeding mechanism comprising devices adapted to separately feed a pair of webs, blank folding mechanism comprising a former, severing mechanisms, one for each web, and means whereby said feeding and severing mechanisms operate to successively produce pairs of superposed blanks from said respective webs; the blanks of a pair being of different length in that dimension corresponding to the length of the webs from which they were produced, respectively, and one of said feeding mechanisms comprising means operative intermediate said severing mechanism and said folding mechanism adapted to successively transfer the blank pairs into co-operative relation with said folding mechanism.”

Another feature of the defense is that the patent in the prior art which is most strongly relied Upon, viz., the Keunen et al. (British) patent, No.

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Bluebook (online)
251 F. 909, 1918 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/f-n-burt-co-v-w-c-ritchie-co-nyed-1918.