Gibbs v. Montgomery Ward & Co.

19 F.2d 613, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1177
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 26, 1927
DocketNo. 1006
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 19 F.2d 613 (Gibbs v. Montgomery Ward & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gibbs v. Montgomery Ward & Co., 19 F.2d 613, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1177 (D. Md. 1927).

Opinion

SOPER, District Judge.

The complainant in this ease is the patentee of a number of letters patent relating to animal traps, and is engaged in the manufacture of traps under his patents, including the patent in suit. The defendant is the well-known Chicago mail order house, and has an established place of business id Baltimore. It sells infringing traps manufactured by the Triumph Trap Company of Oneida, N. Y., and the defense of the suit [614]*614is being conducted by that corporation. For convenience, tbe Triumph Trap Company ■will be called the defendant in this opinion. The patent in suit is No. 1,540,690, issued to Gibbs on June 2, 1925, upon an application filed November 12, 1920, for improvements in animal traps. The claims of the patent relied upon are claims 14, 15, and 16, which are as follows:

“14. In an animal trap, the combination was a pair of pivotally mounted jaws, of a closing lever embracing the jaws and pivot-ally mounted between the jaw pivots, a spring bearing against the back of the lever and adapted to elevate the lever to close the jaws, and means on the lever for preventing displacement of the spring from behind the lever.
“15. In. an-animal trap, the combination with a pair of pivotally mounted jaws, of a substantially flat closing lever embracing the jaws and pivotally mounted between the jaw pivots, a coiled spring having one end bearing against the back of the lever and adapted to elevate the latter to close the jaws, and a flange at the side of the lever to prevent displacement of the end of the spring from behind the lever.
“16. In an animal trap, the combination with a pair of pivotally mounted jaws, of a latch for maintaining the jaws in open relation, a treadle operatively associated with the latch and mounted between the jaws when the latter are open, a closing lever embracing the. jaws and pivotally mounted at one side of the trap intermediate the jaw pivots and a spring adapted to actuate the lever to close the jaws.”

The defendant claims that the patent in suit is invalid, and that the defendant’s trap does not infringe. The invalidity of the patent is urged upon several grounds, to wit: (1) Priority of invention in the trap of the defendant; (2) the introduction in claims 14 and 15 of new matter not disclosed in the specification; (3) lack of invention; (4) double patenting of the same invention described in the prior patent to Gibbs, No. 1,-458,286.

A brief account of the activities of the patentee prior to the filing of the patent application will make it easy to dispose of the defense of priority of invention. Gibbs is a construction or electrical engineer, with experience in the management of public service properties. He became interested in trapping as a sportsman, and bought a marsh for trapping muskrats in Dorchester county, Md. As early as the spring of 1916 he set to work to devise improvements in the animal traps on the market, and in 1917 and 1919, visited Oneida, N. Y., a center of the trap-making industry. He there met Holdridge G. Green, superintendent of the defendant’s factory, on April 24, 1919, and endeavored to interest the defendant in his latest trap, quite similar to that covered by the patent in suit. Failing in this purpose, he employed Green and organized a factory in Chester, Pa., with Green’s assistance and advice. Green left the employ of the defendant on May 29, 1919, and went to Chester on or about June 1. In the following fall, the manufacture of traps for sale in the Gibbs factory began, and it has since been actively engaged in the business.

Gibbs’ patent was applied for November 12, 1920, and with one unimportant exception hereinafter mentioned, disclosed the same structure which Gibbs exhibited to Green on April 24, 1919. Green remained with Gibbs until October 1, 1919, when he returned to the defendant’s employ and continued with them for a period of approximately five years. He filed an application for patent No. 481,582 in the Patent Office on June 28, 1921, covering the trap subsequently manufactured by the defendant.

Since it is conceded that Gibbs devised his trap prior to April 24, 1919, the burden of proof is upon the defendant to show beyond a reasonable doubt that Green made the invention prior thereto. Washburn v. Wire Co., 143 U. S. 275, 12 S. Ct. 443, 450, 36 L. Ed. 154. This burden the defendant fails to meet. It depends entirely upon the testimony of Green, who, in the case at bar, was uncertain whether the trap which became the subject of his application of 1920 was devised before or after April 24, 1919. He was less uncertain as a witness in interference proceedings in the Patent Office in 1926 between his application and the Gibbs patent, when he testified that his trap was devised in the latter part of May, 1919. The defense of priority, so far as the main invention is concerned, therefore falls.

The testimony is more confusing in regard to the unimportant element of the trap hereinbefore mentioned. This is described in the concluding words of claim 15 as “a flange at the side of the lever to prevent displacement of the end of the spring from behind the lever.” The ends'of the spring engage the back of the lever which closes the jaws of the trap and it was found desirable to flange the sides of the lever to prevent the displacement of the ends of the spring. It is conceded that the Green trap of May, 1919, contains such a flange, and [615]*615that the traps manufactured in the Gibbs factory did not contain this construction until the fall of 1919. There was testimony on the part of the complainant tending to show that in the winter of 1918-19, Gibbs manufactured at his marsh a number of traps equipped with flanges. Whether flanges first appeared in the Gibbs or in the Green trap, it is not necessary to decide for reasons which will hereafter appear.

These flanges also form the basis of the defense of new matter, since, in the defendant’s view, they were not disclosed by the specifications of the patent, but were im< properly introduced as a part of claims 14 and 15. This point was first raised by the Examiner in the Patent Office who was in doubt as to whether the drawings of the trap, as filed with the application for the patent, showed the flanges. After considerable hesitation, the Patent Office finally determined that the flanges were visible in the drawings. This conclusion the defendant challenges. Presumably the position of the Patent Office is correct, but here again it is not necessary to decide the issue, as will be hereinafter explained.

Claims 14 and 15 must be held invalid for the substantial reason that they lack invention over the Rasmussen patent, No. 870,-251, of 1907. 'It is quite clear that the Rasmussen patent contains substantially the same combination' of elements as claims 14 and 15, to wit: (1) A pair of pivotally mounted jaws; (2) a closing lever embracing the jaws and. pivotally mounted between the jaw pivots; (3) a spring bearing against the back of the lever and adapted to elevate the lever to close the jaws. This conlusion is not seriously contested by the plaintiff. The only noticeable difference of any importance lies in the fourth element of claims 14.and 15, which specifies a means on the lever for preventing the displacement of the spring from behind the lever. The lever of the Rasmussen trap is not equipped with a flange, but it has means for preventing the displacement of the spring which perhaps may be considered as the equivalent of the flange.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F.2d 613, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-montgomery-ward-co-mdd-1927.