Gallagher v. Hastings

21 App. D.C. 88, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5460
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 20, 1903
DocketNo. 215
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 App. D.C. 88 (Gallagher v. Hastings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallagher v. Hastings, 21 App. D.C. 88, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5460 (D.C. Cir. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an interference case involving the invention denned in the several counts of the following issue:

[90]*901. A body-bolster for railway-cars formed with elevated outer and middle portions and depressed intermediate portions, substantially as set forth.
“ 2. A body-bolster for railway-cars formed with elevated outer and middle portions, and depressed intermediate portions having grooves to receive the sills of the car-body, substantially as set forth.
“ 3. A body-bolster for railway-cars formed with elevated outer and middle portions adapted to bear against the floor of the car-body depressed intermediate portions adapted to receive the inner sills of the car-body, and end ledges adapted to receive the outer sills of the car-body, substantially as set forth.
“ 4. A body-bolster for railway-cars formed with an upper and a lower flange and a centrally-located vertical connecting-web; said bolster having elevated. outer and middle, portions and depressed intermediate portions, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.
' “ 5. A body-bolster for railway-cars formed with elevated outer and middle portions, and depressed intermediate portions ; said elevated portions being provided with center and side bearings on their lower surfaces, substantially as set forth.
“ 6. A body-bolster for railway-cars constructed with an upper flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts, and with a lower flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts, substantially as set forth.
“ 7. A body-bolster for railway-cars constructed with an upper flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts adapted to bear against the floor of the car-body, depressed intermediate parts adapted to receive the inner sills of the car-body, and end ledges adapted to receive the outer sills of the car-body, and provided with a lower flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts, substantially as set forth.
8. A body-bolster for railway-cars constructed with an upper and a lower flange and a centrally-located vertical con[91]*91necting-web; said bolster having elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts at top and bottom, substantially as set forth.
9. A body-bolster for railway-cars constructed with an upper flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts, and a lower flange formed with elevated outer and middle parts and depressed intermediate parts; said elevated parts of the lower flange being provided with center and side bearings on the lower surface, substantially as set forth.”

In the beginning the burden was heavily cast upon the appellee, George S. Hastings, because his application was not filed until January 4, 1900, whereas the appellant, Thomas S. Gallagher, had procured a patent, some four months before, under an application made April 6, 1899.

The examiner of interferences and the examiners-in-chief were of opinion that this burden had not been overcome by the evidence on behalf of Hastings, and, in succession, decided in favor of Gallagher. On appeal to the Commissioner those decisions were reversed, and award of priority made to Hastings, from which this appeal has been prosecuted. The case presented is somewhat peculiar in its features. Neither of the nominal parties has any pecuniary interest in the controversy. The name of each is used for the sole benefit of his assignee. The assignee of Gallagher is the Shickle, Harrison & Howard Iron Co. of St. Louis where it carries on an iron and steel foundry, making, among other things, cast-steel bolsters for railway-cars. Hastings’s assignee, the J. G. Brill Go. of Philadelphia, is a manufacturer of cars but has no foundry for casting the bolsters, and so forth, used in their construction. The only witnesses introduced were the nominal parties, each of whom testified on his own behalf, or, rather, on behalf of his assignee.

These were not independent inventors, working out the same conception separately and unknown to each other, but each claims the conception, and reduction to practice, of a construction that was set on foot by one, to meet a novel condition, and was manufactured by the other.

[92]*92Certain undisputed facts lead up to the point of conflict between the witnesses and are essential to the determination of the claim of invention which is involved therein. Hastings is a mechanical engineer and as the representative of the L Gr. Brill Co. went to St. Louis in August, 1898, to attempt to obtain the order for a number of motor-trucks for a street-car company of that city. A sample set of center pivotal bolster-trucks were sent for the inspection of the manager of that company to aid in the selection of new double trucks for a number of cars then mounted on Robinson radial trucks. Some of the company’s cars were very large and wide with special framing, and Hastings sent on a sketch of this framing from which a blue-print was made, August 27, by the Brill Co. showing the conditions to be met. Sketch was also sent of car-body framing of cars mounted on the Robinson trucks. The framing of these cars precluded the use of the center pivotal trucks and demanded a maximum traction-truck which was not then provided by the Brill Co. The car company specially desired a swinging bolster and a truck that would carry the car as low as poossible. The Brill Co. sent out a truck designed for the wide-sill car first mentioned and Hastings returned to St. Louis October 2, 1898, and procured one of the cars which he mounted on the trucks about October 10. He had in the meanwhile, received a blue-print and model from the Brill Co. for trucks for the cars then on the Robinson trucks. This blue-print was dated October 6, 1898. Hastings found that the application of a truck made after this print would necessitate cutting out parts of the car-sills. This was objectionable because it would weaken the car. The problem was then to mount the car so as not to disturb the intermediate sills, and at the same time carry it low enough so that one step would answer for entry to the platform. With this problem in his mind Hastings called at the office of the Shickle, Harrison & Howard Co., with the view, as he states, of having them, under his direction, design a special bolster to suit the requirements of the Robinson car. He explained what he [93]*93wanted to Mr. Harrison and was turned over to Mr. Gallagher, the superintendent.

Gallagher had previously invented and patented a car-body bolster a feature of which was the ledge at each end for the support of the outside sills, but he admits that he had never thought of the invention of the issue until Hastings came to him to get him out of his difficulty. Passing for the present the conflict with respect to the invention, it appears that after the interview aforesaid, Gallagher’s draftsman, named Palmquist, went down to the car with Hastings, and made additional sketches as well as exact measurements of the necessary parts of the car-frame. Patterns were made after drawings had been finally agreed upon, and the new bolster was cast and delivered to Hastings who arranged the truck and mounted the car.

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Bluebook (online)
21 App. D.C. 88, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 5460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallagher-v-hastings-cadc-1903.