Hookless Fastener Co. v. G. E. Prentice Mfg. Co.

6 F. Supp. 176, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1433
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 28, 1932
DocketNo. 2133
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 F. Supp. 176 (Hookless Fastener Co. v. G. E. Prentice Mfg. 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
Hookless Fastener Co. v. G. E. Prentice Mfg. Co., 6 F. Supp. 176, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1433 (D. Conn. 1932).

Opinions

HINCKS, District Judge.

This is a suit brought for the infringement of two letters patent, as followsPatent No. 1,566,996, issued to one Sundback on December 22, 1925, upon an application filed May 8, 1923; and Patent No. 1,598,183, issued to one Whitney on August 31, 1926, upon an application filed March 30, 1925. The plaintiff relies upon claims 1 to 4, 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 14, 16, 18, 19, 20, and 21 of the Sundback patent; and upon claims Nos. 1 to 6 of the Whitney patent; charging that two devices of the defendant (a specimen of each of which is in evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibits 7 and 8) infringed the Sundback patent, and that one of these two devices (Exhibit 8) also infringed the Whitney patent. The usual defenses of lack of patentable invention and anticipation are interposed. The defense of noninfringement also is addressed to the Sundback patent, but is not pressed, at least upon brief, with respect to the Whitney patent.

The parties are manufacturers of slide fasteners of the general type now commonly used upon various articles of clothing, overshoes, and luggage. The patents in suit relate only to that part of the fastener which is commonly called the slider, which by its movement in one direction closes the fastener by bringing into interlocking engagement the small metal fastener units set upon the opposing edges of the fabric, and which, when moved in the opposite direction, unlocks these fastener units, and thereby opens the fastener device.

Sundback Patent.

The Sundback patent in suit discloses a slider made of three parts, each of metal: (1) A flat blank, stamped in such fashion that two wings are separated by a narrow neck portion from which extend transverse tabs. In manufacture these wings are bent over into a position of parallelism with respect to each other, the bending occurring in the neck portion, and the tabs on both sides of the neck are bent in between- the wings, serving as abutments or lugs between the wings and preventing the further compression thereof; (2) a rivet with a right angle head or arm, which pierces both wings, serving to hold them snug against the intervening tabs of the neck, thus preventing the spreading of the wings; (3) from the head of this rivet projects an arm upon which is pivoted a pull-piece, consisting of a flat metal tab of any de[177]*177sired shape, by a perforation in its end. The pull-piece being thus engaged upon the rivet arm, the arm is permanently closed so that the pull-piece is free to slide along the rivet arm, the relative length of which is not fixed. Indeed, in one of the drawings of the patent it is shown as bemg almost as long as the overall surface of the wing; in another, barely long enough to permit the pull-piece pivoted thereon to rotate through a straight angle. When these three parts are thus assembled, the fastener units, on opposing edges of fabric, may on the operation of the slider pass through a channel between the wings. The outer walls of this channel are formed by a bending together of the outside edges of the parallel wings. The two opposing lines of units enter this channel in parallel interlocked position, but as they approach the neck of the slider, each line of units diverges at the rivet post into a separate channel of its own, the inner walls of which are formed by the wedge-shaped rivet post and the in-bent neck tabs, and it is in these diverging channels that the two lines of units emerge from the slider.

Claims 1, 2, 8, and 20 describe combinations including (1) wings forming diverging channels, (2) “means” for holding the wings against spreading, and (3) a pull device described, with certain limitations, as to its location.

But Sundbaek, No. 1,302,606, (1919) shows the wings with diverging channels, means to prevent spreading of the wings (a yoke), and also a pull device. Thus the earlier Sundbaek patent constitutes a complete anticipation of these claims unless it be that invention and novelty can be found in these combinations of the patent in suit by reason of their description of the location of the pull device. For the claims now under consideration recite that the pivoted pull device is “between the channels adjacent one wing to confine the actuating force to substantially the intermediate portion of the slider” (e. g., claim 1), and “near the intersection of the channels and at about the central portion” (e. g., claim 8). But the drawings show a variation in which the force is applied at a point nearer the ends of the' slider than its center, the specification stating the longer travel is desirable “in large sliders for heavy work.”

These claims therefore first raise a question of construction. What is meant by an application of the actuating force at “substantially the intermediate portion” of the slider? The only explanation given in the specification of the desirability of the center pull feature is that it makes for smoother operation in that in operation a component of the actuating force (directly applied in a diagonal direction with respect to the plane of the slider) will serve to raise the whole slider, instead of one end only as would be the ease if the force were applied directly at that end; also to provide room to steady the slider in its movement by application of thumb and finger on the surface of the wing-on both sides of the point where the force is applied, thus lessening the attendant chatter. Conceding without deciding- that smoother operation may be thus obtained and that the center pull feature to that extent has a certain utility, the-efficiency of this element necessarily varies. That is to say, if the pull has the effect claimed when applied precisely at the center of the slider, its efficiency does not wholly disappear when the point at which the force is applied is moved away from the center, but rather diminishes as its distance from the center increases. Indeed, even though the efficient force is applied at the extreme (forward) end of the slider, it may still be steadied against chatter, and, due at least to the partial rigidity of the stringers within the slider, the upward component of force may still tend to lift the whole slider-body. Otherwise, indeed, the claimed effect of this upward component is nil when the actuating force is applied at any point other than the center of balance — to which it is not limited by the claims.

But Sundbaek, No. 1,302,606, shows a pivoted pull device. Like the patent in suit it has a movable pivot which is adjacent the wing. If the pull device in the patent in suit, as these claims recite, is indeed pivoted “between the channels,” which strictly seems not to be the ease (the rivet post being between the channels, but the rivet-arm which serves for the pivot extending from the post over the common channel in the lower part of the slider rather than between the diverging channels in the upper part), with even greater accuracy can the pivot of the earlier Sundbaek be said to be between the channels. And, lastly, for the reasons stated at length above, the vague description of the location of the pivot by saying it is such that the application of force is confined to the “intermediate portion” of the slider, if it has any effect, is practically tantamount to the arrangement shown in the earlier Sundbaek. That is to say, the word “intermediate,” for lack of any other definition, must be construed to include everything between the ex[178]*178tremes. For the court cannot by fiat, without subject-matter to aid construction, draw lines defining the “intermediate” portion: Altogether I find these broad and vague claims completely anticipated by the earlier Sundbaek.

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Related

Hookless Fastener Co. v. Lion Fastener, Inc.
7 F. Supp. 87 (W.D. Pennsylvania, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 F. Supp. 176, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hookless-fastener-co-v-g-e-prentice-mfg-co-ctd-1932.