George Haiss Mfg. Co. v. Link Belt Co.

2 F. Supp. 728, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2232
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 1, 1930
DocketNo. 5549
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 F. Supp. 728 (George Haiss Mfg. Co. v. Link Belt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Haiss Mfg. Co. v. Link Belt Co., 2 F. Supp. 728, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2232 (E.D. Pa. 1930).

Opinion

. KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity based on alleged infringement of re-issue patent No. 15,515, re-issued January 2, 1923, to George Haiss, for a wagon loader, designed to move forward bodily into the material upon which it is working, means being provided to dig the material and feed it laterally into the path of the buckets of an elevating conveyor, which in turn dump it into wagons placed behind the machine.

The same patent was involved in another and earlier suit between the samé parties (herein referred to as “the first suit”) in which, after trial, the District Court for. the Eastern District of Pennsylvania dismissed the bill, holding that claims 8 and 9, .the only [729]*729claims in issue, were invalid in view of tlie prior art. 27 F.(2d) 397. On appeal the District Court was reversed by tbe Circuit Court of Appeals and claims 8 and 9 were held to be valid and infringed. 31 F.(2d) 432.

The bill in the present suit was filed December 13, 1929. The infringement alleged is the sale by the defendant of wagon loaders having a new typo of feeder somewhat different from the infringing structure of the first suit. The defenses are (a) invalidity, by reason of anticipation, want of patentable novelty and invention, and (b) noninfi’ingement. These defenses will be taken up separately.

To establish invalidity the defendant has introduced into evidence German patent, No. 37,496^ to Vollhering & Bernhardt issued 1886, which it contends is a complete anticipation of the Haiss re-issue patent in snit. At the outset wo meet the question, whether the defendant is estopped by the application of the doctrine of res ndjudicata to contest the validity of the patent. That depends upon whether the order of the Circuit .Court of Appeals in the first suit was a final determination of the suit. The order vacated the decree of the District Court and remanded the case with instructions to enter a decree adjudging claims 8 and 9 valid and infringed. A decree in accordance with the mandate was entered by the District Court, the decree including the usual reference to a master to ascertain profits and damages. In Harmon v. Struthers (C. C.) 48 F. 260, it was held that a decree for ihe plaintiffs in a patent suit awarding an injunction and an accounting' with a reference to a master was interlocutory only and did not, in a, second suit based upon a different alleged infringing device, preclude inquiry into the validity of the patent. That ease is not precisely on all fours with ihe instant, ease because there had been no appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals, but in Australian Knitting Company v. Gormly (C. C.) 138 F. 92, almost the exact situation here presented was before the court, and it was held that the decree of the lower court sustaining the patent, awarding a permanent injunction, and referring the ease to a master for an accounting was interlocutory merely and not conclusive of the validity of 'the patent in a subsequent suit between the same parties prior to the rendition of the final decree in the first ease, although on an appeal from such interlocutory decree it had been affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. The only distinction between that case and the instant one is that there the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a decree sustaining' the patent, while here it reversed a decree invalidating it. Whether a distinction can he drawn between the ease just cited and the instant ease, and whether or not, in what appears to bo a conflict of authority, the rule of the cases cited is the better one, are questions with which we need not be too greatly concerned because there is another element in the situation here presented which puts it beyond question that even the fundamental issue of validity of the patent has not as yet been finally disposed of in the first case.

On February 1, 1930, in the first suit, the defendant presented to the Circuit Court of Appeals a petition based on affidavits praying that the ease he reopened for the purpose of taking further proofs with regard to German patent 37,916, referred to above, that the defendant be allowed to amend its answer and set up such patent as an anticipation, and that the Circuit Court of Appeals review the ease in the light of the German patent and consider and pass upon the same as to its effect as an anticipation. The affidavits set forth at length the reasons why the German patent had not been discovered and pleaded in the prior course of the snit. The Circuit Court of Appeals on January 21, 1930, made the following order: “The defendant’s petition for leave to file a bill in the nature of a bill of review is granted, without expression of opinion as to the merits of said petition, to the extent that the District Court is authorized to entertain a motion by the Defendant for leave to file a bill in the nature of a, bill of review and to decide the same.” The practice upon applications of this nature is carefully laid down in National Brake & Electric Co. v. Christensen, 254 U. S. 425, 41 S. Ct. 154, 156, 65 L. Ed. 341. “Such applications,” said the Supreme Court, “are addressed to the sound discretion of the appellate tribunal, and should be decided upon considerations addressed to the materiality of the new matter and diligence in its presentation. s * * In our view the proper practice in mutters of this sort required the Circuit Court of Appeals to regard the petition, ’ * as an application for leave to file in tho District Court a petition in the nature of a bill of review invoking a consideration of the effect of the judgment in the Third Circuit. Such consideration the Circuit Court of Appeals may well bo directed to undertake in the exercise of its proper function in determining the rights of the parties. * * * ” Whether, in view of the practice as thus set forth, it is to be assumed that the order of the [730]*730Circuit Court of Appeals, 258 F. 880, was made upon considerations addressed to the materiality of the new matter and diligence in its presentation, and involved a determination that the new matter is material and presented with due diligence, or whether it was intended to refer the whole matter to the District Court, reserving the final consideration of all questions including diligence and materiality of the evidence for itself when the record again reaches it, is immaterial. In either case it is obvious that there has not been a final disposition of the first ease, even upon the question of validity. This court must, therefore, in this ease consider whether or not the German- patent is an anticipation of the Haiss re-issue.

In order to get an understanding of the general purpose of the German patent, we read the claim in connection with the statements of the specification. The claim is for “the combination of a container A, lying under water, with a dredger B.C.C., into a combined floating vessel, for the purpose of making possible the use of flap-bottom barges, for the transportation, by means of machines, of the dredged material.” In prior dredging operations, says the specification, in which the dredged material was to be transferred from the scows to the land, the scows had to lie alongside the elevator or transferring machine until they were emptied by it. The patent provides for a device by which scows (made with flap bottoms) could dump their contents into under-water containers and promptly depart, leaving the containers to be emptied by the bucket elevator as an independent operation.

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Related

George Haiss Mfg. Co. v. Linkbelt Co.
63 F.2d 479 (Third Circuit, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 728, 1930 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-haiss-mfg-co-v-link-belt-co-paed-1930.