H. Schindler & Co. v. C. Saladino & Sons, Inc.

81 F.2d 649, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3514
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 23, 1936
DocketNo. 3106
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 81 F.2d 649 (H. Schindler & Co. v. C. Saladino & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H. Schindler & Co. v. C. Saladino & Sons, Inc., 81 F.2d 649, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3514 (1st Cir. 1936).

Opinions

WILSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from the District Court of Massachusetts- holding invalid a patent, No. 1,970,376, granted to Walter J. Hamburger on August 14, 1934, and dismissing the complaint against the defendant-appellee for infringement, although the District Court found that, if valid, the defendant had infringed the patent.

The patent involved a process for making tennis strings of silk, with what is termed a “perfect spiral”; that is, with a strand of a different color from the body of the string, and displaying a visible spiral, regularly spaced, on the outside of and the entire length of the string.

The District Court held that, in view of the prior art, the process employed by the plaintiff-appellant in obtaining what is termed the “perfect spiral” was a mere exercise of mechanical skill, and did not constitute invention.

Silk strings for tennis rackets have come into use only within the last twelve or fifteen years. Prior to that time the strings for rackets were usually made entirely of gut. In making strings of gut, which contains in itself a natural binder, the ■ method is different from that when made of silk. In the manufacture of sill: tennis strings a slow drying colloidal binder is used, which remains tacky, or sticky, for some length of time after immersion in it, or a sufficient length of time to allow the several strands of silk to be twisted into a single string and to be bound closely together.

Gut strings for tennis rackets were usually made in their natural color. After silk came into use for the purpose, a popular demand arose for a strand of a brighter color than that of the body of the string, to be wound helically outside the body of the string and at regular intervals.

It seems to be clear from the evidence that, notwithstanding this demand, until the process perfected by Hamburger for meeting this demand, that is, of twisting a colored strand so that it would appear on the outside of the body of the string in a regular or perfect spiral, no one had succeeded in accomplishing this result. Previously, in twisting the colored strand with the strands comprising the body of the string, it would disappear for a time within the body of the string and appear at irregular intervals, and the result was unsatisfactory. The -process claimed by Flam-burger is described ■ generally in his specifications and testimony as follows:

In thus assembling the identifying strand and the cord-like structure, said strand is laid in position alongside of the cord-like structure forming the body of the string, under less tension than that to which the cord-like structure is subjected. The assembled cord-like structure and identifying strand are then twisted from end to end to give the final structure the required twist, and because of the fact that the identifying strand is under less tension than the strands forming the body of the string,‘said identifying strand will remain on the outside of the body of the string as the twisting takes place and will not become buried inside at any point during the twisting operation.

The plaintiff, as assignee of the Hamburger patent, contends that the process by which it produces a perfect spiral has the element of novelty; that it was an advance in the art; that it met a demand of the public, and has all the elements of an invention.

The defendant contends that, granting that it produced a perfect spiral- and met a public demand, the method described in [651]*651the claims of the patent was merely the application of what would be apparent to any skilled workman in adapting the prior art to the end sought to be ODtained, but that certain devices, or their equivalents, used by the plaintiff in accomplishing the result and that were essential thereto, were not included in the claims of the patent.

While it is true that the granting of a patent by the Commissioner of Patents carries with it a presumption of validity, if the prior art is not adequately cited in the file wrapper, the presumption is weakened; and the presumption is overcome if an essential element or step in the process is omitted from the claims of the patent. Boynton v. Chicago Hardware Foundry Co. (C.C.A.) 77 F.(2d) 799, 801; International Flatstub Check Book Co., Inc., v. Young & Selden Co. (C.C.A.) 284 F. 831, 832.

We think the District Court was right in holding, in view of the prior art and what is common knowledge, that to cause a strand of different texture or color to be spiraled or wound helically about a cord by twisting, it must be longer and under lesser tension, if it is to remain on the outside of the cord.

The defendant contends that what the patentee — who admits he knew these facts from his student days and from the efforts being made in the prior a'rt to obtain a perfect spiral — discovered was that, in addition to the obvious steps in the claims of his patent beyond the prior art, it was also convenient, if not essential, in perfecting his process that the vessel containing the liquid colloidal mixture should have two rollers over which the strands of silk were to pass, and that part of the bottom roller over which the strands intended to form the spiral passed should be larger than that over which the strands intended to form the body of the string passed, and this resulting in longer strands for the spiral than for the body of the string; and that a second step, which was essential to a successful result of his process, was attained by passing the strands of silk intended to "form the string through the larger opening of the trumpet or funnel-shaped device, and the strands of silk intended to form the spiral through a smaller opening, but finally leading into the same channel through which the strands forming the body of the string passed just before it emerged from the small end of the funnel, by means of which they came out of the small end of the funnel side by side in the form of two cords, and assembled in the proper relation; the cord for the spiral being under lesser tension than the cord forming the body of the string.

Although efforts had previously been made without "success to produce the sócalled perfect spiral by arranging the strands for the spiral by hand alongside or together with the body of the string, or by placing it below the strands composing the body of the string, and under lesser tension, according to the testimony of Hamburger the result produced by laying the strands forming the cord for the spiral “progressively” alongside the cord intended for the body of the string under lesser tension, and in the manner it came from the trumpet, was an essential step in producing the perfect spiral.

Originally the trumpet device was included in a claim under this patent, but was canceled subject to applicant’s right to file a divisional application.

While Hamburger admits that, prior to the invention of the patent in suit, it was old to twist the web formed by the folding or the gathering together of the body strands separate and apart from the spiral strands in order to twist them together, and thereby form a tennis racket string, the part played by the trumpet in his process was emphasized by him as appears in his testimony:

“X-Q. 16. Do I understand you right that naturally, if the identifying strand is smaller in diameter and lighter than the body of the string, it will be under lesser tension without particularly trying to make it so? A. No.
“X-Q. 17. Didn’t you say so ? A.

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Bluebook (online)
81 F.2d 649, 29 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-schindler-co-v-c-saladino-sons-inc-ca1-1936.