Flowers v. Magor Car Corp.

65 F.2d 657, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 424, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3113
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 15, 1933
DocketNo. 4898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 657 (Flowers v. Magor Car Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. Magor Car Corp., 65 F.2d 657, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 424, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3113 (3d Cir. 1933).

Opinions

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a decree of the District Court dismissing a bill for infringement on the ground of invalidity of the patent. The claims in issue are 16 and 17 of letters patent No. 1,611,012, granted to Henry Fort Flowers, the plaintiff-appellant, for a “three-way dump motor truck body” or, as the invention was applied to the alleged infringing device, for a two-way dump railroad car of the gondola type.

Briefly, the thing achieved by the invention is to provide means whereby a dump ear with hinged sides or doors will, when in transit, keep both doors securely closed and when tilted for unloading will automatically open the door on the downward side and hold closed the door on the upward side. Taking claim 17 as typical, the patent is for a combination

(a) “In a dump vehicle” (very old),

(b) “A frame” (equally old)

(c) “A dump body roekable selectively about fulerums at opposite sides of said frame” (admittedly old),

(d) “Said fulerums being spaced apart” (admittedly old) “so that”

(e) “Said dump body is supported in stable equilibrium thereon during normal transport” (in railroad ears, undesirably new),

(f) “A side door for said body at each side thereof, said doors being hinged to the body to fold down for opening” (old),

(g) “And independent devices for each door (old), automatically, independently and selectively controlling the opening and closing of the door through whieh dumping is to be effected throughout the entire movement thereof” (new),

(h) “Said body operating through said devices for holding the doors closed when said body is supported on both fulerums for transport” (probably new).

If the patent consisted of this claim alone, that is, if the claim were read not in the light of the specification but exclusively in the light of its own disclosure, no one could tell how to practice the invention for nowhere does the claim disclose the independent automatic door opening and door closing device whieh is the center of the inventive combination and without whieh none of its other elements would work in holding and in dumping the load.

Even so, the plaintiff-patentee says the claim is valid because it discloses a basic invention and that anyone who employs all of its elements in any manner infringes.

In view of the art, which is full of dump cars of various types with various means for dumping, including many of the elements which the patentee quite lawfully appropriated, we cannot regard the invention as basic or the claims broader than the ear which in the specification he disclosed as his [658]*658actual invention. That disclosure is of elements both old and new which of course make the combination new. But in looking for inventive novelty in the new combination we find it in the “independent devices” for holding both doors closed to prevent spilling the load when the ear is in transit and for opening one door and holding closed the other when dumping. So the real question is narrowed down to the inventive quality of the door opening and door closing devices in conjunction, of course, with the old elements in the combination. This compels a study of the disclosure of the specification in the light of which the claims must be read, not with an inclination to restrict the invention to the precise structure disclosed but correctly to grasp the invention in order properly to ■measure the range of equivalents to which it is entitled.

Above and across the chassis or frame of the ear there are (in groups) two arms or bars whose length is greater than the breadth of the frame and about equal to the breadth of the body. One end of the first bar is pivoted on one side of the frame, positioned below ; its other end is connected with or pivoted on one end of the second bar. The other end of the second bar is movably connected with the body of the ear, positioned above, and operates on a pivot. Thus the frame, bars and body are connected. Yet in dumping movements they spread apart and come together somewhat like a pocket rule. As the body is tilted (by a power jack) for dumping on one side of the car or the other, the body turns or pivots on one fulcrum or the other. According to the side on which the body is tilted, one bar or both rise in the movement. So far this is Green (No. 425,607). Unless more is done the doors must be opened and closed manually. Flowers did more — not much in fact, yet a good deal in effect. He simply connected a short link between the fulcrum end of each bar and an extension from the lower, side of each door with the result that when it is desired that both doors be closed for transport, that is, when neither fulcrum is used in dumping, the two bars lie together on the frame and thereby the doors are rigidly held closed; and when, for dumping, the body is tilted, one or both bars rise from the frame and the body rocks about the fulcrum at the end of one bar, which causes the short link connected therewith to move in a pre-arranged direction and open the door on that side (the downward side) ■ “throughout the entire movement thereof.” The short link connected between the other bar at its upward end and the extension from the upward door operates by inaction to keep the door closed. This is new and we think involves invention. Being new it is infringed when someone does the same thing in substantially the same way and thereby produces the same results. Yet if he produces the same results in a different way he does not infringe. Thus we reach the question whether the thing the defendant did was the equivalent of the invention and therefore was infringement, or, stated conversely, was it outside the range of equivalents and therefore not infringement?

As a matter of fact what happened was this: Before the patent issued, Flowers, now the patentee, built a sample ear for operation on tracks. This ear contained the structure of the patent in suit, that is, the body in transit rested on and in dumping rocked about fulerums spaced apart on opposite sides of the frame and had control devices of short link connections between bars and doors. As in the patent, all elements from frame to body were' connected. It was demonstrated on the New York Central Railway and eventually sent to the Oliver Iron Mining Company at Virginia, Minnesota. Officers of that company were favorably impressed with the idea of side door automatic control but evidently did not like the control device of the patent-ee’s ear. Thereupon they set their engineers to work out a device of a different kind. This resulted in plans and specifications under which the Oliver Company contracted for the purchase of'forty cars to be built by the Magor Car Corporation, now the defendant. Feeling aggrieved, Flowers told the Oliver Company that he believed his patent when issued would have claims broad enough to cover the proposed construction. However, the parties composed their then present differences by agreeing that the Magor Car Corpora.tion should build the forty cars without offense to the patent if the Oliver Company would order ten cars to be built by the Differential Steel Car Company, a licensee of Flowers. This was done. Thereafter, however, the Magor Car Corporation built under the same specifications ears for the New York Central Railway Company, which are the ones here in suit as infringements.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 657, 17 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 424, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-magor-car-corp-ca3-1933.