Ferguson Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Lorraine Metal Mfg. Co.

83 F.2d 245, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 316, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2500
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1936
DocketNo. 247
StatusPublished

This text of 83 F.2d 245 (Ferguson Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Lorraine Metal Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferguson Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Lorraine Metal Mfg. Co., 83 F.2d 245, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 316, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2500 (2d Cir. 1936).

Opinion

CHASE, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought on United States patent No. 1,684,653 for a foldable table, which was granted to Benedict E. Willett on September 18, 1928. Claims 1, 2, 12, 16, 17, 18, and 19 were put in issue. Of these claims 1, 2, 12, and 16 were held valid and infringed by the so-called cable form of table manufactured by the defendant. Infringement of claim 2 by defendant’s bell crank form of table, of which manufacture was begun after the suit was brought, was alleged in a supplemental bill, but was not sustained by the trial court. Claims 17, 18, and 19 were held anticipated and invalid.

While the suit was pending, United States patent No. 1,951,884 for a folding table was granted to R. B. Seward on March 20, 1934. The supplemental bill which was filed charged infringement of this patent by the defendant’s bell crank form of table. Claims 6, 9, and 10 were relied upon. They were all held invalid without touching upon the question of infringement. The plaintiff’s title to both patents has not been disputed.

The Willett patent discloses an actuating mechanism for moving simultaneously all the legs of a four-legged folding table, of the kind commonly known as a card table equipped with a leg pivotally mounted at each corner, in the same relative direction and to the same extent that one of them is moved, by taking hold of it and using it as a lever or handle. It had been common practice to mount each leg movably, to [246]*246provide it with a separate locking device, and to open and close such a table by moving one leg at a time with no connection whatever from one leg to another. There had been disclosed by Frank in patent No. 1,240,964 for a folding table granted to him on September 25, 1917, a mechanism by which the legs were connected each to one of the prongs of a four-prong spider mounted on a pivot in the center underneath the table top and having one prong extending through a slot in the table side outwardly to form a handle. By moving this handle slidably in the slot, the spider was made to turn in the desired direction to move all legs simultaneously either in an opening or closing direction. This construction was not suitable for the satisfactory movement of all four legs at once by applying the moving force directly to any one leg except perhaps the one connected to the prong which extended through the slot in the side of the table. Such force applied to any other leg had a tendency to ’take the prong to which that leg was connected out of the normal turning plan of the spider, thereby having a twisting effect which made movement so induced not a feasible way to fold or unfold the legs, though it was not wholly impossible. Willett not only overcame that difficulty, but made it unnecessary to have any part protrude through the table side, as did Frank’s extended prong.

He placed a pulley near each corner underneath the table top. Between each pulley he placed a slide bar mounted on the under side of the table top in line with the pulleys but with a suitable space between either end of the slide bar and the adjacent pulley to permit the use of a cable connection from one end of the slide bar around the pulley to the nearest end of a similar slide bar on the bottom of the table top at the adjacent side of the table and in line with the pulleys it lay between. The construction was carried around the table, tying slide bar to slide bar until all four would move in the same direction and to the same extent when and as one was moved. Then each pivoted leg was attached to a separate slide by a brace member pivoted at the leg and at the slide bar and of sufficiently sturdy proportions to withstand distortion when any leg was moved so as to exert enough force through the brace to carry the slide bar to which it was connected back or forth as the leg was moved. The cables between the slides caused each slide to move correspondingly and a similar brace from each slide to its table leg transmitted the force to each leg. In this way all the legs were made to move uniformly in either the opening or closing direction when one was so moved. An ordinary spring peg lock was provided to hold one of the slides in position when the legs were extended, and, because all legs and slides were tied together as described, the locking of one locked all. This construction overcame the trouble found in the Frank table when opening and closing all legs at once by using one as a handle, and proved to be a convenient and satisfactory way so to fold or unfold the legs. It differed from Frank not only in mechanical detail but in the deliberate departure from Frank’s intended application of the moving force directly to his spider and thence to each leg, and took advantage of the more convenient way of applying the force to one leg and thence through the connecting mechanism to the others. This new way to use one leg as a lever was made possible by Willett when he devised his new actuating mechanism in the form of a continuous peripheral power transmission from leg to slide and on around the table frame. It was not anticipated by Frank, whose patent is the only prior art in the record close enough to merit serious discussion. Meirowitz, in his patent No. 420,206, did, indeed, disclose a form of leg-actuating mechanism for a folding sofabed, but all he may fairly be said to have had in common with Willett was the idea of transmitting the moving force around the inner periphery of the frame by means of cables attached to bell cranks instead of going around pulleys. Though such a use of pulleys or bell cranks is but the use of equivalents, as will be pointed out later, it is plain that the Meirowitz device could not be taken to anticipate Willett, and we do not understand that any such contention is made except to bar a construction of claims so b.road as to cover all actuating mechanism extending around the periphery of the table frame to mové the legs in unison.

The defendant’s so-called cable table was made under Kovats patent, No. 1,752,-304, granted April 1, 1930. Its manufacture was discontinued after this suit was brought, and the bell crank form made instead. The cable form had pivotally mounted legs at each corner of the table; [247]*247each leg having a brace attached to it on a pivot with the other end of the brace pivoted to a slide fitted to move in a groove in a plate attached to the inside of the table frame. There was this brace and slide construction for each leg, and the slides were connected by cables which ran around pulleys, one of which was fastened in operable position at each corner underneath the table top. The slides were of a different type from the kind disclosed by Willett, but they were nevertheless slides, and were used as a part of the actuating means to do what his slides did. Each brace was locked in position, and of course with it was locked its leg, when its end moved into a curved end of a slide guide. As all legs, braces, and slides were connected, all were locked when one was, just as in Willett’s, though in defendant’s table there were four locks, each of which locked its own leg and all the others as well. There were two hand levers, one at a corner of the table opposite the other, either of which forced the ends of the braces into locked position in the curved slots and which also released them. Two were supplied simply for convenience so that one or the other could be grasped without turning the table. It is correctly said by the defendant that its cable table was capable of being used without automatic opening and closing, since each leg locked separately and when so used was an old structure in the art open to all. See patents No. 882,064 to Howlett and No. 906,131 to Hanley, granted in 1908.

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Bluebook (online)
83 F.2d 245, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 316, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 2500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-bros-mfg-co-v-lorraine-metal-mfg-co-ca2-1936.