Gerrard v. Cary

9 F.2d 949, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedDecember 19, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 949 (Gerrard v. Cary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerrard v. Cary, 9 F.2d 949, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341 (E.D.N.Y. 1924).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

This is a suit- in equity for the alleged infringement of patent No. 1,466,334, issued by the United States Patent Office to Alee J. Gerrard and Parvin Wright, two of the plaintiffs herein, and also for alleged acts of unfair competition on the part of the defendants.

The plaintiffs amended at the trial by bringing in as a plaintiff Gerrard Wire Tying Machines Company, Inc., a New York corporation, to meet the objection of the defendants that the alleged unfair competition of the defendant, if any, was with that company, and not-with the other plaintiffs.

The defendants tender the.issues of invalidity and noninfringement, and deny unfair competition.

The action is based on claims 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 of the patent in suit, which read as follows:

“1. In a wire straightening and swaging machine, the combination of means to straighten a wire; means to receive predetermined lengths of said wire; a power shaft; a cam loose on said shaft; means to connect said cam with said shaft when a predetermined length of wire has entered said receiving means; a lever actuated by said cam; one member of a pair of swaging dies carried by said lever; a stationary anvil carrying another member of said pair of dies co-operating with said first-named die member; and a cutting-die member rigid with and spaced from one of said swaging die members, substantially as described.
“2. In a wire straightening and swaging machine, the combination of means for feeding and straightening a predetermined length of wire; a continuously rotating power shaft; a pedestal having a faee through which said wire is fed; a lever pivoted between its ends to said face; an anvil provided with one member of a pair of swaging dies rigid with said face, disposed in the path of movement of one of the ends of said lever, and adjacent the path of travel of said wire; another member of< said pair of swaging dies carried by said lever end; and a cutting die member moving over the said pedestal face and rigid ■with one of said swaging die members, substantially as described. •
• • “3. In a wire straightening and swaging machine, the combination of a pedestal having á vertically disposed face through which [951]*951a wire may bo fed; a wire straightening means carried by said pedestal; a wire feeding means carried by said pedestal; a power shaft and connections carried by said pedestal for operating said wire straightening and wire feeding means; means associated with said pedestal for receiving predetermined lengths of wire after it has been straightened; a lever pivoted on said face of said pedestal having a free end moving in the are of a circle and carrying cutting and swaging- die members spaced from each other; and an anvil located in the path of travel of said swaging die member adjacent the feed wire and carrying- a eomplemental swaging die member adapted to coact with said first-named swaging die member, substantially as described.”
“5. In a wire straightening and swaging machine, the combination, of means to straighten the wire; means to receive predetermined lengths of said wire; a power shaft; actuating means loose on said shaft; means to connect said actuating means with said shaft when a predetermined length of wire has entered said receiving means; means controlled by said actuating means; one member of a pair of swaging dies carried by said last-named means; a stationary anvil carrying another member of said pair of dies co-operating with said first-named die member; and a cutting die member rigid with and spaced from one of said swaging die members.
“6. In a wire straightening and swaging machine the combination of means, to straighten the wire; means to receive predetermined lengths of said wire; a power shaft; actuating- means loose on said shaft; means to connect said actuating means with said shaft when a predetermined length of wire has entered said receiving means; die operating means controlled by said actuating means; a swaging die operated by said last-named means; a stationary anvil co-operating with said die operating means; and a cutting member rigid with and spaced from said swaging die and actuated by said die operating means, substantially as described.”

The defendants offered in evidence the following patents issued by tbe United States Patent Office to show the prior state of the .art:

No. 231,255, issued to J. M. E. Baaekes, dated August 17, 1880, for nail-pointing die, discloses dies for simultaneously severing and pointing nails.

No. 326,240, issued to A. Prestat, dated September 15, 1885, for machine for making shoe nails, discloses dies for Rattening the sides of the nail, and a separate and independent cutter or cutters for severing the completed nail from the blank.

No. 326,644, issued to H. Hammond, dated September 22, 1885, for shearing die, discloses dies for swaging and cutting an ax blade.

No. 343,253, issued to D. M. Redmond, dated June 8, 1886, for machine for making umbrella ribs, discloses swaging and cutting-dies.

No. 354,603, issued to H. K. Jones, dated December 21, 1886, for metal screw machine, discloses combined cutting and swaging dies; the wire being fed in through ordinary straightening devices.

No. 354,828, issued to II. T. Crepeau, dated December 21, 1886, for wire nail machine, discloses dies, which, by a combined swaging and cutting action, cut the wire and swage a point.

No. 375,209, issued to C. C. Small, dated December 20, 1887, for nail making and distributing machine, discloses two rolls, each of which has a point swaging- or forming die, feed rolls for feeding the wire thereto, and a cutter to sever the pointed nail from the wire.

No-. 393,519, issued to C. D. Rogers, dated November 27, 1888, for die for pointing and cutting off nails, etc., discloses dies which, in severing the blank from the wire, form a cone-shaped point having a compressed surface.

No. 480,032, issued to I. G. Platt, dated August 2, 1892, for method of forming button bars, discloses the use of dies for swaging and cutting.

No. 648,094, issued to R. W. Barker, dated April 24, 1900, for machine for making lingoes, discloses a machine for swaging- and cutting wire, and the patentee says (pago 1, lines 10-30):

“The object of my invention is to provide an improved machine to facilitate the manufacture of lingoes, to do the work now requiring several persons and machines, and to economize in time, labor, and space in said manufacture. The method in vogue is to run the wire through a machine to straighten it and cut ,it into lengths sufficient to make two lingoes. Another person puts these lengths in a press to flatten them in the center. They are then passed to another machine and are cut in two at the flattened portion by a die, so as to round the ends of the lingoes. Finally they go to a punching machine, and a hole is there punched through the flattened ends.
[952]*952“My machine has a feed mechanism attached and performs all the operations necessary to make the completed lingo. It feeds the wire, cuts off to length, flattens the head, punches the hole, and cuts the end round and smooth.”

Lingoes are straight wire lengths, swaged at one end, and perforated or slotted, to be connected with the warp threads of a loom to weight and tension them.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 949, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerrard-v-cary-nyed-1924.