Hemming v. S. S. Kresge Co.

24 F. Supp. 981, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1822
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedOctober 20, 1938
DocketNo. 2607
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F. Supp. 981 (Hemming v. S. S. Kresge Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemming v. S. S. Kresge Co., 24 F. Supp. 981, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1822 (D. Conn. 1938).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

This is a suit brought by the plaintiff against the Kresge Company to restrain the alleged infringement of U. S. Letters Patent No. 1,685,588, granted to the plaintiff on September 25, 1928, for table cutlery. Title to the patent in suit in plaintiff is admitted.

The bill charges the defendant with infringement as to certain table cutlery sold by it, and made by the Robinson Knife Company of Springville, New York, and seeks an injunction, accounting and damages. The defense in this case has been conducted by the manufacturer.

Infringement is charged of claims 2 and 3 which are in suit, and they read:

“2. In combination with a cutlery blade having a tang, a handle having a tang-receiving bore formed in one end thereof, said bore being of relatively short length and having closed sides and a bottom, the lower part of the bore being of a size to frictionally engage and center the tang in the bore and the upper part of the bore being of greater . diameter than the width of the tang and having lateral recesses opening thereinto, and a metal filler in the bore completely filling the recesses and spaces unoccupied by the tang and extending above the said end of the handle and enclosing the adjacent part of the tang so as to form a bolster and to simultaneously anchor the blade to the handle without exposure of the part of the filler within the handle.
“3. In combination with a cutlery blade having a tang, a handle having a tang-receiving bore formed in one end thereof, said bore being of relatively short length arid having closed sides and a bottom, and having lateral recesses opening thereinto, and a metal filler in the bore completely filling the recesses and spaces unoccupied by the tang and extending above the said end of the handle and enclosing the adjacent part of the tang so as to form a bolster and to simultaneously anchor the blade to the handle without exposure of the part of the filler within the handle.”

The patent in suit and the invention defined by the above claims relate to the manufacture of table cutlery, and particularly to that type of cutlery in which the tool portion of the article is provided with a tang to be received in a bore or socket provided in the handle portion of the implement. While the patent discloses a knife illustrative of the application of the [982]*982invention, the latter may be used with other types of table cutlery, such as forks and spoons.

In so far as relevant to this case, there are two methods of joining the tool portions of cutlery and the handles thereof. One method is the poured filler method. It consists of so forming a tang on the tool portion and a bore in the handle that when the tang is inserted in the bore, and the bore is then filled with molten filler material, the latter, upon cooling and hardening, will form an interlock between the. parts.

The second method is the plastic handle method. It consists of providing the tang of the tool portion with a. suitable enlargement and of then molding or otherwise forming the handle over the said enlargement. When the handles are made of certain plastic compositions, such as ebonite, xylonite, celluloid or Catalin, they may be pre-formed with a bore corresponding generally in shape to the tang and its enlargement, and may then be softened by heat and the. tang and its enlargement inserted into the bore. Subsequent cooling results in a contraction of the handle, interlocking the tang with the handle.

The patent in suit describes and claims a poured filler method but the claims in suit define an article which plaintiff avers contains no process limitations, but are truly article claims and are infringed by an article having the structure recited in the claims, regardless of whether or not it is made by the poured filler method or by the plastic handle method.

Going now into the details of the invention described in the patent in suit, it will be noted that the handle portion of -the implement is provided with a bore of relatively short length, said bore having closed sides and a bottom, which serve to receive the tang on the tool portion of the cutlery. The bofe has a portion of greater diameter than the tang and is provided with lateral recesses opening thereinto. According to” the method described in the patent, the tang is inserted into the bore with its heel portion projecting above thd handle. This heel portion and part of the handle are then enclosed in a mold, the latter having bolster molding faces around said heel portion. A fusible metal is then introduced into the mold to fill the spaces between the bore and tang and the recesses, and to simultaneously fill said bolster molding faces, whereby the tang is-connected to the handle and the bolster is formed without exposure of that part of the filler which is disposed within the handle.

According to the specification, page 1, lines 80 to 89, inclusive: “The gist of the invention consists in providing means whereby the conventional plug of fusible metal having a bolster and tail piece, is anchored in the handle. As before mentioned, this consists in providing one or more indentations or recesses extending laterally from the bore in the handle to be filled with the same fusible metal comprising the bolster and its tail piece and to form an integral part of the latter.”

The usual defenses are reljed on, namely: 1. Invalidity of the claims in view of the prior art; and 2. Non-infringement.

In considering the prior art, it should be borne in mind that the claims are narrower than what the patentee described in the patent as the gist of his invention, the claims having been limited in view of the prior art cited by the Patent Office during the prosecution of the application which resulted in the patent in suit. Plaintiff now asserts that his contribution to the art consists in providing a bore in the handle having lateral recesses opening thereinto; a filler in the bore extending into said recesses without exposure of the filler upon the outside of the handle; the filler at the same time forming the knife bolster. On reading claim 2 it is found that it is even narrower than what the patentee believes to be his contribution to the art in that it calls for a bore, the lower part of which is of a size to friction-ally engage and center the tang in the bore, the upper part of the bore being of a greater dimension than the width of the tang.

An examination of the prior art patents and those which are cited to illustrate the state of the prior art convinces me that the patent in suit was improvidently granted by the Patent Office. U. S. patent No. 179,482, granted to Leonard on July 4, 1876, describes table cutlery, such as a knife, the blade of which is constructed with the flat tang C, having a screw-thread cut on its two edges. The handle is bored out to form a cylindrical cavity, the diameter of which corresponds to the threaded tang. Into this cavity the tang is screwed, the thread working its way until the blade is drawn toward the han[983]*983die into its proper relative position. Then, placed in suitable molds, metal is poured around the heel of the blade to form the bolster, and this metal flows into the cavity in the handle on each side of the tang as shown in Fig. 3. This inseparably secures the handle and blade together. In other words, it was not new with the plaintiff to secure the tang of a cutlery implement to the handle portion thereof by means of a filler which at the same time forms the bolster.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. Supp. 981, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemming-v-s-s-kresge-co-ctd-1938.