Gross v. Norris

26 F.2d 898, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3802
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 F.2d 898 (Gross v. Norris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross v. Norris, 26 F.2d 898, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3802 (4th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

WADDILL, Circuit Judge.

These are cross-appeals seeking to review certain decrees of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, dated, respectively, on April 23, 1927 and November 3,1927. The facts are briefly these:

The plaintiff, Gross, sued the defendant, Norris, for the infringement of plaintiff’s' mechanical patent No. 1,380,058, dated May 31, 1921, for parking light, and reissued March 4, 1924, as No. 15,782, and also for infringement of plaintiff’s design patent No. 57,640, for parking light, dated April 26, 1921. The District Court found the mechanical patent and the reissue thereof valid and infringed, but held the design patent invalid, and accordingly so decreed. Defendant appealed from the decree adjudging the mechanical patent valid and infringed, and the plaintiff appealed from the deeree declaring the design patent invalid.

The defendant’s appeal from the decree holding the mechanical patent valid and infringed will be first considered. The patent involved in this appeal has heretofore been the subject of litigation in this court, and claim 3 thereof declared to be valid. Gross v. Frank (C. C. A.) 293 F. 702. The patent thus sustained — that is to say, claim 3 of patent No. 1,380,058 — was reissued on December 24, 1923, the reissued patent being No. 15,782, and, in addition to the original claim 3, claims 4, 5, and 6 were made in such reissue. Claim 3 of the original patent and of the reissued patent, is as follows:

“3. In a parking light, a tubular supporting member having its upper end formed with a bayonet slot for engagement with the pin of a lamp shank and having an integral exterior supporting flange adapted to rest upon the top of the fender; means for clamping the flange to a fender; a small T-shaped casing comprising a cylindrical body open at its opposite ends and a depending tubular T portion adapted to telescope over the upper end of the tubular supporting member above the flange; multifaceted lenses secured in and projecting beyond each end of the easing; a socket screw for fastening the T portion of the casing to the upper end of the socket member the outer end of [899]*899said screw being substantially flush with the exterior of the part in which it is threaded, an insulating block fixedly secured in the lower end of the tubular supporting member; and means in said block for making electrical contact with the contacts in the shank of a lamp when the latter is inserted in the upper end of the socket member, the parts being so proportioned that the lamp is approximately in axial alinement with both lenses, substantially as described.”

Claims 4, 5, and 6 of the reissued patent are as follows:

“4. For a parking light, a small T-shaped casing having openings in its opposite ends, and projecting multifaceted lenses secured in said openings and projecting beyond each end of the casing and means fox' attaching same to an automobile fender, substantially as described.

“5. In a parking light, a member adapted to be attached to a fender; a small T-shaped casing having openings in its opposite ends and multifaceted lenses secured in and projecting beyond each end of the easing; and means for securing the casing on the said member, substantially as described.

“6. In a parking light, a tubular member; means for securing the member to a fender; a small T-shaped casing having openings at its opposite ends and multifaceted lenses secured in and projecting beyond each end of the easing; means for fastening the T of the casing to the upper end of the said member, and insulated means connected with said member for making electrical contact with the terminals of a lamp in the easing, substantially as described.”

Claim 3 is exactly the same as claim 3 of the original patent, sustained by this court as infringed in Gross v. Frank (C. C. A.) 293 F. 702, supra; therefore an elaborate discussion as to that claim is unnecessary. A brief summary of the decision in that case, sustaining the patent, is as follows:

“It is not shown in the record that any prior light had been produced with a small metal T-shaped body and projecting faceted lenses in each end thereof, as in the case of the plaintiff’s light. This was the essentially novel feature of the plaintiff’s invention, and what made his light a success was the small T-shaped casing with the projecting multifaceted lenses in each end thereof. No one had previously conceived this idea, and used a lens with multifaceted lenses on such a casing for the purpose desired, with the result that the projections and the facets on each side threw the rays of the light sideways as well as forward, greatly magnifying the size of the light. This was a real contribution to the prior art, was novel in character, calling for inventive genius, and had not theretofore been anticipated.

“If we are correct in the view stated as to the novelty and utility of the plaintiff’s invention, and as to which we think there can be no doubt, it suffices to establish plaintiff’s claim to the validity of his patent. Treating, however, the ease as one of patentable combination, based upon the alleged improvement of old devices theretofore existing, so as to produce new, useful, and valuable results, we think there can be little doubt of the validity of the patent, and that it embodiés the necessary requisites to sustain such patent, taking into account the success attained and the benefit accomplished from such combination. This would entitle it to validity alone as an advance in the art.

“The subject of this patent is in a sense an article of manufacture, and it cannot be said that the effectiveness of the light is not greatly improved, as well in its size as in its simplicity, the lessening of the cost, and the neatness and appearance of it, and that every one of the parts, used and adopted by the plaintiff, has been found to be necessary and useful in reducing it to a small, simple device, which would embody a smaller number of parts. The lenses were put in, in the location as claimed, to accomplish the very purpose of increasing the size of the light over those of the larger lamp which it seems to have displaced. Thus the otherwise merely ornamental jewel lenses were adapted to new purposes, namely, for better disseminating the light from a smaller lamp.- The plaintiff’s patent was for improvement on patents theretofore existing, not for something entirely new in itself, and hence it involved necessarily dealing with what had theretofore gone before. But this in no manner detracts from the validity of the plaintiff’s claim, if it develops that what he has procured by way of enlargement and improvement and development of the art in the previous stages is something shown to be an' ■advance in the science, and novel, useful, and valuable, and confers a real benefit. The record shows that the lamp described in the patent, when offered for sale, met with immediate commercial success, because in many respects it had practical advantages over other lamps of a similar character previously on the market. Primarily the popularity of this lamp results from its size, attractive appearance, durability, and the amount of light radiated. Because of its smaller size, it can be placed, without danger of injury, on the [900]*900fender of an automobile, where it is most effective as indicating the position of the vehicle by unobstruetedly projecting light rays fore and aft.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F.2d 898, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-v-norris-ca4-1928.