Ham Boiler Corp. v. Hugo

23 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3157
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 1927
DocketNo. 63
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 163 (Ham Boiler Corp. v. Hugo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ham Boiler Corp. v. Hugo, 23 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3157 (2d Cir. 1927).

Opinion

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The patents- in suit relate .to inventions in meat, and especially in ham boilers, in which there had long been a substantial development, which had progressed from a press with open ends, in which the juices were lost, to closed receptacles. Earlier patents show a metal box to hold the ham, a telescopic cover, a crossbar over the cover, adjustable and detachable locking devices between the bar and the box, and a coyer resiliently held against the ham so that it may rise and fall as the ham contracts and expands in cooking. To produce a ham that is solid, and not stringy, pressure is required. The boiling swells it, and as it cools it shrinks. To keep it under pressure, and preserve its shape to the fullest extent before removal from the receptacle, the cover must not only be under pressure, but must follow responsively the movement of the ham as it rises and recedes.

In boiling hundreds of hams in a large establishment, the convenient adjustment of the receptacle, the bar, and the cover is manifestly important, and each patent states that the “invention consists in the arrangement and combination of parts.”

The only claim relied on in the first patent is elaim 1, which reads as follows:

“1. In a ham boiler, the combination of a body receptacle having formed as an integral part of each end a vertical series of rack teeth which project outward and downward, a cover for the receptacle telescoping therewith, a bar having ends projecting over and beyond the vertical planes’ of the racks aforesaid, members pivoted to the ends of the bar and having hooked co-operation with the rack teeth to hold the bar, in fixed adjusted position with respect to the body, and resilient means interposed between the cover and the bar.”

It is quite clear that in this ease the field' of invention is very narrow. This is recognized by the specification itself, which not only says-that the “invention consists in the arrangement, and combination of parts,” but refers to Adelrnann’s earlier .patents,. The only differences between patent No. 1,272,-883 and Adelmamfls patent No. 1,206,494, referred'to, are that there were in the earlier-patent :

(1) No vertical series of rack teeth in-' tégral with the ends of the receptacle body and hooks pivoted to the bar; but, instead, pivoted teeth designed to engage with a series of openings in dogs pivoted to the crossbar.
(2) Instead of a rigid crossbar connected with the cover by bolts and coil springs around the bolts to press the cover, so as to put the ham under pressure, a flexible bar-fixed to the cover by bolts which will act resiliently to press the cover downward on the' ham.
(3) Instead of having the ends of the bar-projected beyond the vertióle planes of the racks, so that the dogs are hung to swing by gravity away from the rack teeth, dogs which-are pivoted to the ends of the bar, but not be-. yond the plane of the lugs on the receptacle ends.

It is difficult to see why the operation of. the devices called for by these two patents is - not the same in result. The difference in details of construction may give the patent in suit _ certain advantages of convenience, though boilers made under the earlier patent are still on the market in substantial numbers. They have dogs pivoted to a flexible spring bar and adjusted by wing nuts engaging lugs fixed to the box, instead of dogs pivoted to a rigid bar and engaging with rack teeth on the ends of the box. In the earlier patent the flexible bar is the resilient means 'which responds to the action of the ham under pressure, while in the patent in suit the coiled- springs serve this purpose. To be sure, the flexible bar, while a resilient means adapted to the above purpose, is not in the language of elaim 1, a “resilient means interposed between the cover and the bar”; for the bar, being flexible, required no such resilient means, but the coil springs around the bolts in the patent in suit were a “resilient means” so interposed, readily suggested by such prior art as the patents to Briggs, No. 1,079,160, and Butz, No. 1,165,223, and the French patents, No. 449,376 to Pavard and No. 510,709 to Chaignet.

The French patent to Le Bourhis, No. 465,708, narrows the field of invention in these ham boilers so much further as to leave little to . the inventor beyond his precise structure. The Le Bourhis patent discloses a receptacle with a series of lugs or rack -teeth integral with each end. Into them are hooked stirrups or steps at the lower ends of eoil springs, at the upper, ends of which are .sim[165]*165ilar stirrups, fastened to lugs on the box cover or ¿ounterplate. The function of the springs consists in moving the counterplate toward the bottom of the box, and consequently compressing as strongly as may be desired the substances placed therein.

Furthermore, the Patent Office referred to the patents to Butz and Briggs, and the French patents to Le Bourhis and Pavard, and rejected all the claims of this patent in the beginning. The first claim was then amended, so as to read that the vertical series of rack teeth formed an integral part of each end of the receptacle, and that the ends of the bar projected “beyond the vertical planes of the racks.” This was accompanied by a cancellation of original claim 2, which provided generically for “rack and pawl means acting between the ends of the receptacle and the ends of the crossbar to adjustably interlock the crossbar with respect to the receptacle.”

Now, defendants’ device consists of a box, a telescopic cover, dogs each with a series of rack teeth adapted to engage a continuous flange forming the lip of the receptacle, links between the upper ends of the dogs, lugs fixed to the cover, and springs coiled around the pivots between' the inner ends of the links and the lugs, exerting a resilient pressure against the contents of the receptacle. The link construction makes it possible for the cover to be further tilted, and to adapt itself more exactly to the shape of the ham than in the patent in suit, where the cover is substantially limited by the slidable bolts to a rectilinear movement.

The defendants’ device has no rack teeth integral with the body of the receptacle, and also no bar having ends projecting beyond the planes of the racks. Not only was the amendment to the claim inserted to call for a specific structure of rack teeth integral with the box ends, in order to avoid rejection by the Patent Office, but defendants followed the patent to Rispel, No. 1,208,013, and used toothed racks to engage a flange. Moreover, the very reason for inserting by amendment the provision about having the ends of the bar projecting beyond the plane of the racks was to secure the advantage of having- the dogs, when released, swing by gravity away from the teeth. (Specification, patent in suit, lino 55). The dogs in defendants’ device are not hung so that they would so swing.

But more decisive than all this is the indubitable fact that, even it defendants’ links, in spite of the history of the art and of the action in the Patent Office, were regarded as the patentable equivalent of a crossbar, yet the “members pivoted to the ends of the bar and having hooked co-operation with the rack-teeth” would not and could not hold' such “bar in fixed adjusted position with respect to the body” of the receptacle as called for by the claim. The bar shown in the specification of the patent in suit is rigid, and is in a fixed position as soon as the dogs engage with the rack teeth.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 163, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ham-boiler-corp-v-hugo-ca2-1927.