Frank B. Killian & Co. v. Allied Latex Corp.

188 F.2d 940, 89 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 219, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4146
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedApril 30, 1951
Docket21941_1
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 188 F.2d 940 (Frank B. Killian & Co. v. Allied Latex Corp.) 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
Frank B. Killian & Co. v. Allied Latex Corp., 188 F.2d 940, 89 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 219, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4146 (2d Cir. 1951).

Opinion

L. HAND, Chief Judge.

The Allied Latex Corporation appeals from a judgment, holding valid and infringed Claims Nos. 1, 8, 9,11,15,16,17,18, 19, and 20 of Patent No. 1,605,445, issued to Fred L. Killian, on November 2, 1926; and Claims Nos. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 11, 14 and 15 of Patent No. 2,128,827, issued to the same patentee, on August 30, 1938.

The “Bead-Roller Patent.”

The claims of the first patent are the same as those which we had before us and held valid and infringed in 1934 j 1 and we may refer to our opinion in that case for a description of the patented machine. The Eighth Circuit also held the same claims valid in 1939 ; 2 and Judge Westenhaver in the Northern District of Ohio held them valid in two unpublished opinions. Concededly, the nearest approach to Killian’s disclosure is Hadfield’s Patent No. 1,097,917, which issued on May 19, 1914, more than eleven years before the date of the application for the patent in suit. In all the former actions the defendants appear to have principally relied, not upon the disclosure of Hadfield’s patent, but upon a prior use of his machine, which the district judges uniformly found that the evidence did not sustain: a finding which the Eighth Circuit and we affirmed. Having done so, we said that it seemed to be “conceded that the Hadfield machine was better than the machine of the Had-field patent and the nearest thing in the art to the machine of the Killian patent”, and we concluded that, “if the machine was not” —an anticipation — “neither was Hadfield’s patent.” 73 F.2d 55. With deference, that was. a non sequitur, for we had disposed of the machine by discarding it as an established prior use, and without considering how nearly it anticipated the patent. In the case at bar the Hadfield patent alone is in evidence; and upon inspection it at once appears that Killian’s variants upon it, unless we consider the elimination of one of the two brushes, were trivialities of design: 1. e. in the means by which the “forms” were frictionally rotated, and were held upon their supports against the lifting actions of the brush. It is not conceivable that any court would have regarded these as patentable, had the Hadfield patent made any impress on the art; and only because it had not done so did Judge Westenhaver refuse to treat it as an anticipation. This appears from the following passage: “Whether an apparatus constructed in accordance with the Hadfield patent would have operated, I do not know. * * .* The device as disclosed * * * I think would not have operated. Be that as it may, here was a patent applied for in January, 1912, issued in 1914, and never went into general or commercial use. It remained, so far as the record shows, a paper patent. With all the industry needing and calling for the Killian apparatus, all manufacturers continued for fourteen years using hand labor, wholly uninfluenced by the existence of Hadfield. It is apparent that Hadfield brought to the industry nothing. His patent did nothing to carry forward the useful arts.” (The plaintiff at bar does not challenge the operativeness of Hadfield’s patent.) We in our turn, took substantially the same view, so far as we considered Hadfield’s patent *942 at all; we said on page 56 of 73 F.2d: “that Killian’s conception was within the skill of any good mechanic is. refuted by the fact that the art felt the need of a machine, but continued to roll beads by hand until Killian arrived.”

It is true that, when a substantial period has passed between the appearance of an earlier disclosure and the application of the patent in suit, the reasoning which we have quoted has been again and again applied. We have ourselves often used it: 3 moreover the Supreme Court appears still at least to countenance that approach. 4 On the other hand, as we said in Condenser Corporation v. Micamold Radio Corporation, supra, 145 F.2d 879: “The lapse of time between one invention and another of itself tells very little. * * * lapse of time alone is no test of the difficulty of taking a last step, until it appears that the art in fact knew the earlier steps, already taken.” Countless patents lie in patent of-' fices, in fact unknown either because they were premature, or were not exploited, or because all their uses were not foreseen; yet an inventor is charged with an acquaintance with all of them. So far as they in fact anticipate his invention they stand on precisely the same footing as though he had had them before him. The fact that the art has not profited by them is irrelevant unless it also appears that they were generally known; and they are then relevant only in so far as they may indicate that the originality, necessary to step from them to the invention. in suit, does not appear to have been part of the equipment of others versed in the subject matter. The phrase, “paper patent,” is a mere bit of rhetoric, usually employed as a makeweight by judges who wish to support the patent in suit, but are embarrassed by a reference, of an escape from which they are not too confident. It is a meaningless platitude.

Assuming, as we will, that automatic “bead rolling” would have been as desirable before the advent of latex as it became later, there were nevertheless obstacles to the manufacture of “prophylactics” in 1912 which had, or at least may have, largely disappeared by 1925. We said in Stevens v. Carl Schmid, Inc., supra, 55, 5 of Hadfield’s machine: “its continued operation was prevented by public authorities in 1912 because of the character of the articles that were being manufactured” ; and we do not know for how long that opposition continued to be strong enough to make it undesirable to use such machines with the inevitable publicity that would follow. That was one reason why Hadfield’s machine was “dismantled and abandoned for fourteen years until the litigation in Ohio furnished occasion for recollection of it”; and the elevén years that passed warrants no stronger inference of patentability than does a comparison of the two. We agree with Judge Westenhaver that Hadfield did not “enrich the art”; but we cannot agree that this justified the conclusion that Killian’s invention was patentable. To this there is possibly one theoretical exception: Killian only disclosed, and all his claims were limited to, a single brush, while Hadfield disclosed two. Only one is necessary, arid as a new question we could not support a patent upon the omission of one of Hadfield’s two. Nevertheless, it so happens that in all the earlier actions the infringers used a single brush; and the invention, supposing it can be thought to have been an invention at all, was entitled to the narrowest of all equivalents. Thus it become possible to decide this action upon the issue of non-infringement without actually overruling any of the past decisions. Moreover, since the patent has long since expired, none of those objections apply to that course, which have been raised in the *943 case of living patents, for the claims will not remain in terrorem. The judgment will he reversed, and the complaint upon the first patent will be dismissed for non-infringement.

The “Distributing Patent.”

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Bluebook (online)
188 F.2d 940, 89 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 219, 1951 U.S. App. LEXIS 4146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-b-killian-co-v-allied-latex-corp-ca2-1951.