Gessner v. Philips

63 F. 954, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3013

This text of 63 F. 954 (Gessner v. Philips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gessner v. Philips, 63 F. 954, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3013 (circtsdny 1894).

Opinions

WHEELER, District Judge.

The questions involved here arise upon four patents for improvements in cloth-pressing machines granted to the orator, and alleged to have been infringed by the defendants, in using a machine .subsequently patented to George W. Yoelker. Cloth is finished in these machines by being fed between hot surfaces, one having a smooth jacket, under great pressure. The machines of the kind in use in this particular art: next before the invention of the first three of these patents were one invented by Ernst Gessner, of Saxony, father of the orator, patented by Xo. 4,913, in England, December 27, 1877, in which the cloth was passed between a cylinder and two bedplates, one on each side, connected by a continuous jacket below the cylinder, and mounted on supports connected above by pig-tail springs, and screws drawing them towards the cylinder for pressure, which could not be wholly relieved from pressure without wedging them apart; and machines patented in two patents to George W. Miller (No. 257,-508, dated May 9, 1882, and No. 352,253, applied for January 6, 1885, and dated November 9,1889), in which the cloth was passed between cylinders and bedplates below, pressed together by compound levers. In those machines, when stopped in use, the pressing surfaces could not: be readily separated, to prevent press marks on the cloth from the hot surfaces, nor for access to keep these parís in order. These inventions were made to relieve those difficulties, and to increase the capacity and efficiency of the machines. The improvements consist largely in mounting the cylinder in fixed bearings on the frame of the machine, and a bedplate on each side in movable bearings sliding on guide ways on the frame towards and from the cylinder; and in mechanism for moving and securing the bedplates evenly in relation to the cylinder for adjustment, pressure, and access. The patents and claims in question are No. 387,290, claim 10, which is for:

‘•In combination, tlie cylinder, pressing devices co-operating therewith, a lever at each end of 1lie cylinder for operating the pressing devices, toggle joints adjacent to said levers, and connected therewith, one of the links of each of said toggle joints being provided with a, screw-threaded rod, substantially as described, whereby the pressure exerted by the toggle joints may be equalized, and moans for operating said toggle joints.”

No. 387,292, claim 3, which is for:

“In a cloth-pressing machine, in combination, a frame having fixed bearings for tile cylinder, and guide ways for the bearings of the bedplates ar[956]*956ranged on opposite sides of said cylinder bearings, tlie cylinder, and the bed-plates arranged on opposite sides of the cylinder, and each bedplate being provided with bearings arranged to slide in said guide ways, whereby the bedplates may reciprocate to and from the cylinder, substantially as described.”

And claim 10, which is for:

“In combination, the feed rollers, the cylinder having fixed bearings, the two bedplates, mechanical means for exerting and relieving pressure on the bedplates, and supports for the bearings of the bedplates, movable relatively to and independently of the bearings of the cylinder and feed rollers, whereby the bedplates may be moved back from the cylinder without disturbing the position or operation of the cylinder or feed rollers, substantially as described.”

And No. 387,297, claim 1, which is for:

“In a cloth-pressing machine, the combination, with the bedplate and the cylinder and the sheet-metal jacket, of means, substantially as described, whereby the ends of the sheet-metal .jacket are secured to the bedplate, and the margins thereof are prevented from springing into contact with the cylinder, as set forth.”

And claim 2, which is for:

“In combination with the cylinder and the bedplate, a sheet-metal jacket secured at one edge to the bedplate, and extending between the bedplate and the cylinder, and the clamp overlapping the opposite edge of the sheet-metal jacket, and holding it in place, substantially as described.”

All of which are dated August 7,1888.

The Voelker machine, used by the defendants, has, on a frame of two ends connected together, a cylinder, in raised, fixed bearings, driven by a gear wheel; bedplates in bearings sliding on guide ways back of the frame, on each side of, and towards and from, thé cylinder, movable by levers at each end pivoted on nuts connected by a threaded rod below the cylinder, with their short arms connected to the bearings, and their long arms connected below by toggle joints operated by cams to move the levers, and produce powerful pressure on the bedplates equalized by a rod between the cams, and thereby dispensing with connections between the bedplates; and feed rollers mounted on the frame, out of the way of the motion of the bedplates. The questions made arise principally upon the construction of the claims with reference to infringement.

The lever of claim 10, No. 387,290, is pivoted on the shaft at each end of the cylinder, and has two short arms each attached to trunnions on the ends of the'bedplates, and a long arm, connected by toggle joints to the frame below, which, when moved downwards by the operation of the toggle joints, produces, by moving the short arms, powerful pressure of the bedplates towards the cylinder, which is equalized between the ends by a screw-threaded rod in one of the links of each of the toggle joints. The combination of this claim includes a lever at each end of the cylinder for operating the pressing devices, and toggle joints having one link each provided with a screw-threaded rod for equalizing their exertion of pressure. The machine used by the defendants has all the other elements of the [957]*957combination, but no lever at or connected with either end o£ (he. cylinder, or with the cylinder anywhere, or link of a toggle joint provided with a screw-threaded rod for equalizing exertion of pres sure, or other purpose. The two levers of this machine, with their connections, to; gle joints, and cam movements, could not be substituted for the three-armed lever, its connections, toggle joints, and screw-tlircaded rod movement, without invention of respectable, if not high, order. They do the same things, but not in substantially the same way, and do not appear to be equivalents in this combination, or, with the other elements, to infringe this claim. Eames v. Godfrey, 1 Wall. 78.

Claim 3 of No. 387,292 is spoken of for the defendants as if it took' in the means whereby the bedplates are made to reciprocate to and from the cylinder as an element of the combination, and that defendants’ machine does not have such a combination. But such means do not appear to be so mentioned. Under ihe “whereby” appears to be stated an advantage, not an element, of the combination. The defendants’ machine appears to have what are included as elements of the combination producing that advantage.

Claim 10 of the same patent leaves out of the combination the frame, as such, and the specific arrangement of the bearings of the bedplates on opposite sides of the cylinder, and brings in mechanical moans for pressure, and supports for the bearings of the bedplates, movable relatively to, and independently of, the bearings of the cylinder and feed rollers. The effect of this combination is stated to bo that the bedplates may be moved back from the cylinder without disturbing the position and operation of that, or of the feed rollers.

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Related

Eames v. Godfrey
68 U.S. 78 (Supreme Court, 1864)
James v. Campbell
104 U.S. 356 (Supreme Court, 1882)
Miller v. Eagle Manufacturing Co.
151 U.S. 186 (Supreme Court, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
63 F. 954, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 3013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gessner-v-philips-circtsdny-1894.