Grand Rapids Show Case Co. v. Baker

216 F. 341, 132 C.C.A. 485, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1914
DocketNo. 2350
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 216 F. 341 (Grand Rapids Show Case Co. v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Rapids Show Case Co. v. Baker, 216 F. 341, 132 C.C.A. 485, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1354 (6th Cir. 1914).

Opinion

SANFORD, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity brought by the appellant; the Grand Rapids Show Case Co., the plaintiff below, against Barney R. Baker and the other individual appellees, doing business as B. R. Baker & Co., for the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 11,907, on wardrobes, reissued to John E. Kennedy,'May 7, 1901, and subsequently assigned to the plaintiff, and letters patent No. 825,362, on article-supports for wardrobes, issued to the plaintiff, as assignee of Anthony Vanderveld, July 10, 1906; the bill alleging that the inventions described in said two letters patent were adapted for, and capable of, conjoint use in one structure, and were both infringed by the structure used by the defendants. The appellee the Curtis-Leger Fixture Co., being the manufacturer of the structure used by the defendants, under letters patent No. 909,990, on extensible supporting devices, issued to Elmer A. Clark, January 19, 1909, was allowed to intervene and conduct the defense, and is hereinafter called the defendant. The defenses were anticipation and want of invention; invalidity of the Kennedy reissued patent; non-infringement; and multifariousness. After a hearing on pleadings and proof, the court below, being of opinion that the defendants’ structure did not infringe either of the plaintiff’s patents, dismissed the bill of complaint, with costs; from which decree the plaintiff has appealed to this court.

The devices in controversy, which are known as garment racks or slides, are extensible garment-hanging devices, used in connection with wardrobes in stores for the sale of ready-made garments. Each consists, in the commercial structures, of three horizontal members of equal length, arranged vertically, the upper member being fixed in position inside the wardrobe, and the two others, from the lower of which the garments are suspended, being progressively slidable or extensible, upon a telescoping principle. When retracted or closed, the entire rack, with the suspended garments, is inside of and protected by the wardrobe; when fully extended, the intermediate member projects about half its length beyond the upper fixed member, and the lower member about half its length beyond the intermediate member, thus ex[343]*343tending the lower member entirely outside of the wardrobe and making the suspended garments readily accessible.

The following illustration shows a wardrobe, with the defendants’

garment rack extended:

In the defendants’ commercial device the upper fixed member of the garment rack consists of a hollow rectangular casing, with a slit in the bottom; the intermediate member, of two bars joined in the form of an I beam; and the lower member, to which a garment-hanger rod is attached, of a hollow rectangular casing similar to the upper member, but inverted, with the slit in the top. The web of the intermediate beam extends through the slits into the interior of each of the two rectangular casings, its flanges being within their cavities, and thus connecting them together. In its operation the upper flanges of the beam slide upon the lower flanges of the upper casing, and the upper flanges of the lower casing slide, in turn, upon the lower flanges of the beam; there being roller bearings or other anti-friction devices inside of each of the casings at suitable points of contact with the beam. The following illustration shows the interfitting arrangement of the casings and beam, both connecting them together and enabling them to slide the one upon the other:

Kennedy’s Reissued Patent. The specification of Kennedy’s reissued patent states that the object of his invention “is to design a form of wardrobe more particularly applicable for stores for ready-made garments, whereby storage-space may be economized, classification of size and price facilitated, and time saved in selling and handling the goods,” and that “it consists, essentially, of a wardrobe, each section of which is provided with extensible supports or hanging devices, comprising each a plurality or set of members, preferably tubes or rods, the uppermost member of each set being mounted upon or carried by the frame of the wardrobe, and the lower member being suspended by suitable carriers from the said upper member.”

[344]*344Figure 3 of the drawings, showing one of the extensible hanging devices retracted, and Figure 4, showing such device partly extended, are here reproduced.

The extensible hanging device is thus described in the specification:

“I have herein shown the extensible support or hanging device as comprising an elongated main supporting member F, preferably made as a tube or rod, and a plurality of longitudinally-movable auxiliary members supported by and below the main member, as F* F2. . The main member F is supported on the back B by the bracket <? and on the ton front board by the bracket II, said brackets being suitably attached to member F. The auxiliary member Fi, shown as situated next below the fixed member F, is suspended therefrom and sustained thereby by upturned carrier-brackets I)'i, brazed or otherwise connected to the member Fi at its inner end and intermediately of its length, respectively, as clearly illustrated in Figs. 3 and 4. The end bracket is provided with means to counteract the upward thrust of the adjacent end of its attached member, and herein the bracket I is shown as provided with grooved rollers ii, journaled therein above and below the member F to engage therewith, the bracket having a single grooved roller ¿i resting on the member F. The third or undermost member F2 of .the set or series is similarly provided at its inner end and intermediately of its length with upturned carrier-brackets JJ\ respectively, suitably secured at their lower ends to the member F2. Suitable rollers j are journaled in the bracket J to engage and run upon the top and bottom of the intermediate member Fi, while the bracket /i has a single grooved roller p to travel upon the top of the member yi, which latter is shown as provided at its outer end with a stop-collar and handle †, stop-collar p- being secured to the outer end of t'ae member or rod F2.”

The specification contains six claims, in one of which the horizontal members of the extensible hanger are described as three “tubes” or “rods”; in two, as a main supporting “member” and a plurality of auxiliary “members”; and in three, as a main supporting “rod or tube” and a plurality of auxiliary “rods or tubes.” Claims 1, 2 and 3, which sufficiently illustrate these three classes, are as follows:

“1. The combination with the wardrobe, of a tube or rod having fixed supports in the frame of the wardrobe above the level of the door or opening, a second tube supported by the fixed tube and having the outer end free, and suspended at the inner end and intermediately of its length from the fixed tube by upturned brackets, so that said second tube may be slid out approximately half its length beyond the outer end of the fixed tube, and a third tube suspended from the second tube and having its outer end free, and supports at its inner end and intermediate of its length, co-operating with the [345]*345second tube, whereby the third tube may be slid out approximately Its entire length beyond the outer end of the fixed tube and the front of the wardrobe. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 F. 341, 132 C.C.A. 485, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-rapids-show-case-co-v-baker-ca6-1914.