Hall Printing Press Co. v. George Mann & Co.

237 F. 662, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1237
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 11, 1916
DocketNo. E 13-178
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 237 F. 662 (Hall Printing Press Co. v. George Mann & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall Printing Press Co. v. George Mann & Co., 237 F. 662, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1237 (S.D.N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

LEARNED HAND, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). In this case infringement, though not formally conceded, is so obvious, however the claims be taken, that I may pass it over without more.

The next—and, as I view it, the only—question is of validity under the prior art. To an intelligent understanding of the patent it is necessary to consider what is the art of rotary planographic printing [664]*664and how it grew. It represents in fact the convergence of two quite independent branches of the printing art: First, lithography, which, as its name implies, is the printing from a flat stone bed; and, second, the rotary press. Each of these arts was very old at the beginning of the twentieth century, but they had, at least in the United States, never been combined. In lithography no substance had for long been perfected which could be rolled upon a cylinder, without which the flat bed remained a necessity. It is true that,the German patent to Bohn & Huber, which was applied for in April, 1893, was for a rotary planographic press; but either it was not successful, or its use was confined to Germany, because there had appeared nothing of the sort in the United States before 1901. In September of that year White, the patentee here, filed his application for a true rotary indirect planograph, which resulted in patent No. 705,180; but the record does not show that it was ever made and used. It was a modification of his earlier rotary direct press, patented in No. 689,527, and was intended only for heavy materials, such as tin, glass, and the like. In August, 1903, Rubel planned a true rotary indirect planograph, which was worked out by Tucker, and bore the name of the capitalist, Kellogg, who put it out. This press was for printing paper and completed the art. The question in this case turns wholly upon 'the relative movements of the cylinders in such a press as Kellogg’s.

I have presupposed heretofore, with substantial accuracy, that all rotary presses, not of planographic type, printed directly from the form cylinder. A patent like Clause, 585,907, was an exception in the art, and the rubber transfer sheet was apparently added for printing on tin or other hard substances. The transfer cylinder was, however, well known in the lithographic art, at least in the early 80’s, and had been thoroughly developed just, as it appears, after the rotary planograph went into- use.

In both kinds of press, the rotary direct and the indirect lithograph, obviously the pressman would occasionally miss a sheet, because we are considering always a sheet-fed press, and no one has yet made an automatic sheet feed. When this happened in the direct rotary press, if it kept running, the form would touch the impression cylinder and ink its surface. The next sheet would therefore carry an offset on its back, and the next, and so on, till the impression cylinder had been cleaned by successive sheets. It became, therefore, practically a necessity to trip the impression cylinder from the form, or the form from the impression cylinder, and the art responded to the need in repeated instances. In some of the patents cited by the defendants this purpose expressly appears: Toyc, 557,626, page 3, lines 85-112; White, 689,-527, page 2, lines 65-67. A very common means of tripping the press was to mount the impression cylinder eccentrically, and have a hand lever or pedal by which the operator could throw it out of contact with the form, by a device similar to that shown in Fenner, 276,015. Sometimes it was the impression cylinder that was moved, as in Hawkins, 272,835, and many others cited by the defendants; sometimes it was the form, as in the little auxiliary cylinder of Buxton et al., 405,009, Figure 8, cylinder B, or in Spalckhaver, 703,491. Thus, in the rotary [665]*665press art, the separation of the cylinders for all the purposes which White’s present patent shows was a well-understood commonplace.

The same need was differently answered in the lithographic press, because of its different constitution, and of the necessarily intermittent nature of its operation. It must be remembered that the printing stone must by hypothesis be flat, and its movement therefore rectilinear. Obviously that movement must therefore be reciprocating, and if it was coupled directly with an impression cylinder it was equally necessary that during the return stroke the contact between them should be in some way broken. When indirect lithographic presses came in, the contact between the transfer cylinder and the stone had also to be broken in the same way, though the transfer and impression cylinder might remain together. Whether there was or was not a transfer ■cylinder, the separation of the bed stone from its contact during the reciprocating movement was accomplished by cutting away enough of the transfer or impression' cylinder to. effect a clearance at the proper part of its circumference. The cylinder was then automatically stopped when the stone was to return, and the clearance was enough to keep the face of the stone from being smudged. The impression cylinder was likewise stopped, and in contact with the transfer cylinder, during this portion of the cycle, if the press was indirect. In’such a press, if the sheet were to be missed, however, the impression roller and the transfer cylinder would begin to rotate again on the next stroke, and the impression cylinder would carry off the ink from the transfer, and. the transfer cylinder itself would be inked twice by the stone. Hence the same necessity arose for some device by which these result's could be avoided, and this device was only a prolongation of the stasis of both cylinders for one and one-half cycles, instead of one-half a cycle. While this effected a separation of stone from transfer, it did not move them apart. Ford likewise devised a separation of the impression from the transfer cylinders in such machines; but it was not necessary to use this when a sheet was missed-, and it was not in fact capable of being used for that purpose.

Such was the situation in each of the two lines which converged in the first years of the century to form the rotary planograph transfer press which is here in question. The press being the old lithographic transfer press in which the stone was superseded by a rotary cylinder, it must be apparent, that the same problem arose when a sheet was missed as had arisen in each of the arts from which it was descended. Therefore it took no invention from the vantage ground of prior ex-périence to see that there must be either a stasis of the machine, or a separation, not only of the transfer and the form, but of the impression and the transfer. A stasis of- the press was well known to be a disadvantage; indeed, its avoidance was one of the important reasons for a rotary press. The throwing out of the cylinders was therefore •directly indicated by the whole history of the rotary direct presses. But to abandon the stasis as a means involved with equal obviousness the separation of all three, because, though the form were separated from the transfer cylinders, the latter would smudge the impression roller and print'a set-off on the back of the next sheet, and, though [666]*666the impression were separated from the transfer, the form would smudge the transfer, or at least give it too much ink for the next sheet.

' The first efforts at a rotary planograph which appear to have been made in the United States, as has been said, were those of White himself, in his machine described in 705,180 and 705,181, and this press was not for the printing of paper, but of thick materials, such as tin or the like.

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Related

Hall Printing Press Co. v. George Mann & Co.
241 F. 990 (Second Circuit, 1917)

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237 F. 662, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-printing-press-co-v-george-mann-co-nysd-1916.