Hobbs v. Beach

180 U.S. 383, 21 S. Ct. 409, 45 L. Ed. 586, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1315
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 11, 1901
Docket139
StatusPublished
Cited by175 cases

This text of 180 U.S. 383 (Hobbs v. Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hobbs v. Beach, 180 U.S. 383, 21 S. Ct. 409, 45 L. Ed. 586, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1315 (1901).

Opinion

Mr. .1 itstice Brown,

after making the above statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The art of making paper boxes requires that the better class, of square or other angular shapes, be stayed or reinforced at the comers, Avhere a union of the sides and ends is to be brought about by the application of adhesive strips of paper or muslin placed upon the .joints, and the corners thereby strengthened, before receiving their final covering of paper. Prior to. the Beach invention, the work of thus strengthening the corners of •paper boxes by these adhesive strips had always been performed in a tedious and irregular way by hand.

The Beach machine and its operation are thus described by the plaintiff’s expert:

“ The machine consists of an anvil or lower die, having at the uppper portion two Avorking faces, Avhich diverge dowmvard from one another at a right angle. Working in connection with this anvil or die, and above it, is a vertical movable die or plunger, having also two diverging working faces, the working faces of the plunger forming a notch therein, Avhich notch cooperates Avith the upper portion of the loAver anvil or die, the dies being adapted to operate upon the right-angle comer of a box to compress the said corner betAveen the Avorking faces of *387 the opposing dies. A strip of paper suitable for the stay is fed by automatically moving mechanism over a pasting device, and between a pair of shears, and thence between the upper and lower die when separated. The operation of the machine briefly described is as follows: A box whose corner is to be strengthened by the addition of a stay strip is placed upon the lower anvil or die, the inside of the corner of the box resting upon the apex of the lower die. The machine as it is revolved then feeds forward the stay strip which has the paste upon it, and as the upper die descends the shears also operate, severing from the continuous stay strip a portion sufficient for the stay. As the cutting operation is completed the upper die or plunger is descending, and forces the gummed stay strip into position upon the outside of the box corner;'and the stay strip and box corner are pressed between the working faces of the two opposing dies, and thus the stay strip is caused to conform to, and be stuck upon, the corner of the box. "When the upper die or plunger rises, the box with its attached stay strip can be removed and another corner presented, when the operation will be repeated. The upper die or plunger is provided with a spring of rubber or metal, so that it may yield slightly in the direction of its motion, so that it may give an elastic pressure upon the box, and also be made to operate upon different thicknesses of box or stay-strips.”
Briefly, this description describes fhe machine, so far as it is necessary to describe the same for the purposes-of this case. I must state, however, that the machine is also arranged to fold in the end of the stay strip within and into the interior of the box, and this it accomplishes by having the lower die longitudinally movable, and by supporting the box upon both the working faces of the lower die and upon the faces of the block within which the lower die can move. The faces of the upper portion of the die and of the block are arranged so that they form two planes at right angles to one another, the planes of the upper working faces of the die corresponding with the planes of the upper faces of the block. I refer to this capacity of the machine merely for the purpose of showing that I have considered the same, but such capacity, that is, the ability to turn the end of *388 the stay strip in and over the edge of the box, is not a feature of the machine which need always be present. I quote as follows from the specification of the patent:
“ ‘In many boxes, the stay is simply pasted against the exterior surface of the box corner, and is not turned in or over, the edge of the same, in which case the work can be done by using a non-reciprocating angular lower die dr anvil, and a single upper die or plunger.’
“ From the above quotation, it will be clearly evident that the patentee contemplated using his machine in the simple form in which I have described it, and divested of that mechanism which is involved when the stay strip is turned over the edge of the box and into the samé. As the issue in this case involves a mechanism which does not turn the stay strip over and into the box, I have deemed it best not to put into the record a description of the mechanism necessary to accomplish that result.”

The first claim of the patent is for (1) two opposing clamping dies, having diverging working faces; (2) a feeding mechanism which delivers the stay strip between the clamping dies, when the upper die is raised; and (3) a pasting mechanism. The clamping dies ai’e so constructed as to cooperate with one another in pressing upon interposed box corners the adhesive stay strips, substantially as .described.

The second claim also includes the opposing clamping dies with diverging working- faces; the same feeding mechanism, and a cutter for severing the continuous strip into stay strips of suitable length, substantially as described.

The third claim includes the same dies, the feeding mechanism, the pasting mechanism and the cutter; in short, a combination of all the elements of the two preceding claims.

The sixth claim includes the same clamping dies having the diverging working faces, one of which clamping dies is constructed to act with an elastic or yielding pressure, to enable the dies to operate upon box corners of different thicknesses.

1.. The three first claims were vigorously assailed by the defence upon tbe ground that, in view of the prior state of the art, they involved no invention. Unfortunately, however, this *389 defence comes to us so loaded down with adverse decisions that we should hesitate to sustain it, unless it were made clear that, through some misunderstanding or omission, it had not been fully presented to the various tribunals which had passed upon it,- or that their rulings had been based upon a misapprehension of the facts.

The proofs show that Mr. Beach made application for his patent in June, 1885 ; that while pending in the Patent Office it was placed in interference with five other claims, and that the patentee was awarded priority of invention by the examiner of interferences, by the board of examiners-in-chief on appeal, and finally by .the Commissioner of Patents.. It also appears that, in a suit in the Northern District of New York, defended by two of the contestants in the interference proceeding, these three'claims were sustained by the Circuit Court, Beach v. American Box Machine Co., 63 Fed. Rep. 597, and on appeal, by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Inman Mamifacturing Co. v. Beach, 71 Fed. Rep. 420; S. C., 35 U. S. App. 667. Nor do we understand that in the case under consideration the Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts differed from the New York courts as to the validity of the first three claims. Indeed, the learned Circuit Judge says expressly:

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Bluebook (online)
180 U.S. 383, 21 S. Ct. 409, 45 L. Ed. 586, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hobbs-v-beach-scotus-1901.