Goodyear Shoe Mach. Co. v. Spaulding

101 F. 990, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 4, 1900
DocketNos. 1,008, 1,009
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 101 F. 990 (Goodyear Shoe Mach. Co. v. Spaulding) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodyear Shoe Mach. Co. v. Spaulding, 101 F. 990, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192 (circtdma 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The defendants in these two cases, respectively, use machines of the same construction. A single mechanical device is alleged to infringe two distinct patents. The Spaulding suit is on letters patent 412,704, dated October 8, 1889, to French & Meyer, for a shoe-sewing machine. Claims 1, 2, and 5 are involved. It is unnecessary to distinguish them, since a finding as to one is decisive as to all. The Cook suit is on letters patent 564,986, dated August 4, 1896, to Fowler & Warren, for a shoe-sewing machine. This patent has but one claim. In each case the sole question is of infringement.

[991]*991The prior art is sufficiently presented in the old Dancell machine, .he inventions of the patents, as well as the defendants’ device, may be regarded as improvements upon Dancell. The Dancell machine was useful and operative, and was employed upon turned shoes to unite the sole and upper. Its chain-stitch forming operation is performed by the needle, the looper, and tension devices. On the needle is imposed the work of pulling thread from the supply through the tension devices, of drawing up the slack of previously drawn loops through the successive needle boles, and of firmly setting the stitches. Defects in this operation are that the pulling1 up of the slack from the loops through the needle holes and around the between substance, and setting the stitch by a downward pull, tend to cut the between substance, and to pull apart the sole and upper which are being sewed together; that the needle is forced to pull its thread against the strain of the tension device; and that there is reeving of the thread through the needle hook, resulting in a weakening or breaking of the thread. French & Meyer devised a “take-up” which relieves the needle of the task of drawing up the slack of the last loop and setting the stitch. This is the subject-matter of the Spaulding suit. They provided, also, means to relieve the needle from pulling thread from the supply; but this is not involved in the infringement charged in the Spaulding suit. The Cook case relates to a “pull-off” which relieves the needle of the task of drawing thread from the supply, and gives the needle slack thread, instead of thread under strain of the tension.

The defendants use the Dancell machine, with an addition on the front which may be called a “front take-up roll.” The complainants say that tins first pulls off thread from the tension, wherefore it is called a “pull-oif” in the Cook case, and then takes up slack from the loop, wherefore it is called a “take-up” in the.Spaulding suit. In other words, it is charged that it performs two distinct functions, each of which is within the prohibition of a patent in suit. The defendants deny infringement, and affirm that in the normal operation of iheir respective machines they do not in fact “pull off” or “take up” any appreciable amount of thread. Looking at both cases together, there is force in the complainant’s contention that if the defendants’ front take-up roll does not in fact take up, pull off, or both, it cannot give slack to the needle, and therefore is, upon the evidence in both cases, an entirely useless incumbrance. It must be said that the brief for the defendants does not give the court much aid in understanding why the device in controversy is employed by the defendants. The omission by the learned counsel for (he defendants to add to a bare description of the parts and their operation a full account of their effect upon the thread is remarkable in a brief of 68 pages. It does not follow, however, that, because the complainants may have placed the defense in something of a dilemma by comparing the contentions of fact in the two cases, they are entitled to prevail in either case or in both.

If the contention of the complainants be accepted that it has proved both a pull-off action and a take-up action, there still remains the question of infringement in each case. The dilemma in which counsel have [992]*992sought to place the defendants is not a true dilemma, since it' does not cover the entire case, but only a branch thereof, and since it does not exhaust the alternatives. There is still the possibility that the defendants’ take-up roll may have some take-up action and some pull-off action, which, employed together, are of benefit to the machine of the defendants, but neither of which is an infringement of a patent. The defendants, while denying that the complainants have proved the facts upon which infringement is charged, contend that, even upon the state of facts claimed, there is no infringement. They contend that the complainants rest upon an erroneous construction of the patents in suit. We may assume, for the purposes of this decision, that a pull-off actiop of one-fourth or three-eighths of an inch is proven by the complainants in the Cook case, and a take-up action of one-fourth or three-eighths of an inch in the Spaulding case.

We will consider first the Cook case, which involves the pull-off and the Fowler & Warren patent. The claim is as follows:

“In a chain-stitch hook-needle sewing machine, the combination of tension, looper, hook needle, a pull-off mechanism between the needle and the tension, and actuating mechanism timed to cause the pull-off mechanism to make its pulling stroke after the hook needle has Completed its loop-drawing stroke and while the loop is held under strain by the hook of the needle, substantially as described.”

The novelty is not in the provision of a pull-off, since this was old, nor in the mechanism to actuate it, but resides in a new operative relation between the pull-off mechanism and the other stitch-forming devices, especially the needle, viz. the needle hook, after it has drawn out the loop, takes part in the pulling-off operation, by holding the loop against the pull of the pull-off truck, and thus compels the pull-off truck to draw its thread from the tension. The patent office referred the applicant to the French & Meyer patent (in suit in the Spaulding case) saying:

“If there be any substantive advantage derived from holding the thread in the hook of the needle when the pull-off is operated, rather than holding such thread by the shank of the needle, as in the reference, such advantage should be set forth in the description.”

This was done in the following language:

“The advantage derived from holding the thread in the hook of the needle when the pull-off is operated, rather than holding such thread by the needle shank (for example, as in patent No. 412,704, dated October 8, 1889, to French & Meyer), is that a supply of thread for the loop about to- be drawn is maintained in the preceding loop, which is impossible if the shank of the needle is relied upon to hold the thread,” etc.

Tbe specification says, also:

“After the needle makes its back stroke, drawing a new loop of thread through the stock and the preceding loop, the pull-off truck moves, and slackens the thread between the needle hook and tension, the preceding loop furnishing slack thread between the needle hook and the preceding stitch.”

Therefore, as the needle goes through the stock, it has slack thread on both sides, — on one side from the previous loop, and on the other from the tension. We have now to consider only the slack on the tension side; for, in respect to such slack as is taken by the defend[993]*993ant from the loop, there is no infringement in the Cook case.

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Bluebook (online)
101 F. 990, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 5192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodyear-shoe-mach-co-v-spaulding-circtdma-1900.