Franklin v. Illinois Moulding Co.

128 F. 48, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4654
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois
DecidedFebruary 23, 1904
DocketNo. 26,358
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 128 F. 48 (Franklin v. Illinois Moulding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin v. Illinois Moulding Co., 128 F. 48, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4654 (circtndil 1904).

Opinion

KOHLS AAT, District Judge.

Complainant brings this suit to restrain infringement of surrendered Adams patent No. 642,059 for a “machiné for. mounting ornamental composition directly upon circular picture frames,” granted January 30, 1900, and applied for November 18, 1898; also a- surrendered reissue thereof granted on October 28, 1901, and a second reissue thereof on April 8, 1902. Complainant cannot claim rights under the -surrendered patent and first reissue. Reedy v. Scott, 10 Am. & Eng. Pat. Cases, 133; Peck v. Collins, 103 U. S. 660, 26 L. Ed. 512. Complainant appears to concede this rule, and confines the relief sought to claims 11 to 18, inclusive, of the second reissue patent No. 11,980, aforesaid.

The original patent was granted after considerable amendment required by the Patent Office, and calls for, among other things, two pivotally mounted guides, one projecting from the central portion of each crosspiece, “which serve to limit the lateral movement of the picture frame.” The specifications (lines 25 to 39) read as follows, viz.: “A guide or stop, irregular, or evén an ordinary oval picture frame, would not be sufficient to serve as a guide in the hands of a skilled workman. Two guides or stops placed substantially on line with and above the axial center'of large feed roller, D, after many experiments, attain the very highest results in practice in covering with composition both round and long oval frames,” etc. In the argument before the examiner it. is stated: “The two roller guides or stops are absolutely necessary, and it is absolutely necessary that they be disposed as in the applicant’s machine, for the reasons*already stated in the amendment.” These changes and declarations were brought out by the examiner’s references to the Groble patent, No. 430,576,- and the British patent to Huppertz, No. 7,163 (1891). From a comparison of these patents with the proceedings in the Patent Office as shown by the file wrapper, [49]*49and with the claims of the original patent, defendants’ expert testifies that the only difference between said original patent and said Groble patent lay in the difference between the two roller guides of the complainant’s original patent, located in front of and behind the rolls and in the same vertical plane therewith, and Groble’s two guides, which were located slightly at one side of his rolls, and that even this difference was still further reduced by the citation by the Patent Office of the said Huppertz patent. It should be noted here that in Adams’ second amendment to his original application he provided, in claim one thereof, for “a stop adjacent to the wheel and in a line with the axis of the shaft.” This claim was rejected by the examiner as describing an inoperative device. The examiner bases his rejection thereof in part upon the citation above set out from argument of Adams’ counsel on the application for his first amendment. In this action the applicant acquiesced.

On October 22, 1901, said original patent was surrendered, and reissued letters patent numbered 11,940 were granted to Samuel Franklin, as assignee of Adams. This reissue patent embraces ten claims, all of which proceed upon the use of two guides. This, it will be seen, transpired about 22 months subsequent to the granting of the original patent. Subsequently, and on April 8, 1902, Franklin surrendered said first reissued patent, and was granted a second reissue patent, No. 11,980, as aforesaid, embracing 18 claims, of which claims 11 to i8j inclusive, are now involved. In these 8 claims complainant, for the first time, sets out a single guide, in language which would seem to cover defendants’ device.

There are other matters sought to- be included in the reissue, but it seems important to first dispose of the bill as relating to the question of guides. The device employed by the defendant was first used by the corporation defendant in its factory at Chicago, March 8, 1900, or a little more than a month after the granting of complainant’s said first patent, and was therefore in use by said defendant two years and one month prior to the second reissue aforesaid, and prior to complainant’s first assertion of a claim to be the patentee thereof.

The main defenses urged are (1) that the device is old in the prior art; (2) that it was not involved in the original patent; (3) that complainant is estopped by laches.

These grounds of defense will be considered only with reference to the matter of guides. The prior art relied on by the defendant is embraced practically within the claims of the above-named Groble-Hup-pertz patents and of the Brausil patent. In his communication to Adams of December 20, 1898, the commissioner of patents sends to Adams the finding of the examiner, in which he states that Adams’ assertion that frames have heretofore been ornamented “by hand” must be modified in view of the prior art, citing the Groble and Huppertz patents, and that by the same test the original claims are wholly devoid of patentable novelty. Therefore the claims were rejected. In a like communication of June 26, 1899, the examiner is quoted as follows, viz.:

“Case considered as amended on the 15th inst. The claim is held to lack patentable novelty, in view of patents already of record in the ease. The only [50]*50appreciable difference between .applicant’s construction and that shown in the reference resides in the fact that his guides or stops arc revoluablc on their vertical axis, while those in the Groble construction do not revolve. This feature of the revolubility of the said guide is, however, not only not embraced in the claim, but applicant himself admits that the guides may be made stationary and with rounded faces, which is exactly the form in Groble. Besides all this, the vertically disposed and revoluble guide roller is clearly shown in the British patent to Huppertz, cited. Hence there can be no excuse of originality or novelty in applicant’s construction. The claim must be rejected on references of record and for reasons given.”

As before stated, all the citations and rejections of the Patent Office were acquiesced in by Adams. Comparing the claims first presented and those finally allowed, it is difficult to see what change was made to- effect a change in the mind of the examiner.

'However, from an'examination of the Groble-Huppertz and Brausil patents, I can discover no anticipation of the two guides of the Adams patent located in alignment with the rollers. The Groble patent shows comparatively long raised guides, located considerably out of such alignment, and on one side of the rollers. The Huppertz device shows one stop or guide located on the outside of the frame to. be ornamented, corresponding, generally speaking, to complainant’s outer guide. The said Brausil patent, No. 590,200, combines its guide and feeding- roller in one, and tire action of the disk or table in revolving tends to carry the frame out of position for moulding thereon continuously. If practicable at all, it would seem to require that it be directed by hand in order to accomplish the work. At any rate, I see nothing in any of said cited patents which, properly construed, anticipates the original Adams patent.

2. Was the guide provision of the said claims 11 to 18 of the second reissue patent comprehended in the original patent? A reissue patent must be for the same invention as the original. Walker on Patents (3d Ed.) § 233. In Parker & Whipple Co. v. Yale Clock Co., 123 U. S. 99, 8 Sup. Ct. 38, 31 L. Ed.

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128 F. 48, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-v-illinois-moulding-co-circtndil-1904.