Hopkins & Dickinson Manuf'g Co. v. Corbin

12 F. Cas. 499, 14 Blatchf. 396

This text of 12 F. Cas. 499 (Hopkins & Dickinson Manuf'g Co. v. Corbin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins & Dickinson Manuf'g Co. v. Corbin, 12 F. Cas. 499, 14 Blatchf. 396 (circtdct 1877).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

These two cases are- separate bills in equity, wherein the defendants in each case are charged with an infringement of reissued letters patent [No. 6,693], dated October 11th, 1875, and issued to. the plaintiffs, as assignees, by mesne assignments, of George McGregor and George Voll.' The original patent [No. 88,318] to Voll and McGregor was ' dated March 30th, 1859. The invention is' an improved sash-lock, or sash-fastener. An ordinary form of sash-lock consists of a base-plate fastened to the top rail of the lower sash, a striking-plate or hook-plate fastened' to the bottom rail of the upper sash, and á vibrating lever, which is pivoted upon the base-plate, and which engages with each plate so as to prevent either sash from being opened. In the invention which is described in the reissue, a bolt is mounted in and moves with the vibrating lever, which bolt slides backward and forward in .a line parallel to the axis of the lever. When the lever is in proper position, as the bolt slides forward, it shoots beyond a catch segment or projection upon the base-plate, so as to hold the vibrating lever and prevent it from being turned until the bolt is retracted. When the bolt is retracted, and is disengaged from the catch segment, the vibrating lever can be turned and the sash can be opened. The improvement is one form of a self-locking sash-fastener, the object of which is to prevent the lever from being moved by a knife inserted between the sashes from the outside of the window. The claim of the reissue is “a vibrating lever, provided with a bolt, in combination with a striking-plate or hook, and with a catch segment behind which the bolt can pass, formed upon the plate upon which the lever is pivoted, the whole constituting a sash-fastener, and the parts enumerated in the claim being and operating substantially as specified.”

The defendants’ devices are substantially alike. Each has a base-plate, a vibrating lever mounted upon the base-plate, a bolt mounted upon and moving with the vibrating lever, a striker-plate or hook,. and a socket or depression upon the base-plate, so formed as to receive the bolt which moves up and down. The difference between the plaintiffs’ [500]*500and defendants’ devices consists in the fact, thát, in the defendants’ devices, the bolt moves In a line perpendicular to the line of the lever, instead of moving in a line parallel .to the line of the lever, and engages with a socket or depression upon the base-plate, instead of engaging with a projection from the base-plate. The defendants’ bolt has a motion and is fastened, as a latch moves and is fastened. The main question is that of infringement; and it is practically conceded by the defendants, that the determination of this question depends upon the proper construction of the plaintiffs’ reissued patent. In order to construe the claim, it is important to ascertain what was the actual invention of the original patentees.

A horizontally moving bolt, to lock the vibrating lever to the striker plate or ‘ hook, . and a vertically moving bolt for the same purpose, were old in the art, .and are mentioned in the specification of the reissue. In each of these devices, the bolt shot into a socket or depression upon the striker plate. In January, 1868, George'Yoll, one of the joint patentees, invented a sash lock, in which a horizontally moving bolt was received and was locked in a hole or socket in a “stump” or projection upon the base plate. Application was made by Yoll for a patent, on February 25th, 1868, which application was rejected on August 6th, 1868, upon the ground that the Invention had been anticipated in the patent of Brockseifer and Sargent, dated May llfh,' 1858, one of the patents which are referred to in the plaintiffs’ reissue. No appeal was taken. Twelve 'or eighteen of these locks were manufactured in February, 1868, by Voll, and were sent to the store of George McGregor, Voll’s employer. What became of these locks does not appear. Two or three weeks after the rejection, Yoll invented-another sash-fastener, which consisted of a vertically moving bolt, which engaged with a catch segment or projection upon the base plate. A completed bolt of this kind was made, and the device was sent to a firm of patent solicitors, who reported that it was unpatentable. Yoll and McGregor then united their skill and efforts, and invented the device which.is the subject of this controversy, and for which a patent was issued to them jointly, on March 30th; 1869.

The invention of Voll and McGregor was the combination of a horizontally moving bolt and a catch segment upon the base plate. It was not broadly the transfer of a known locking device, and its equivalent, from the striker plate to the base plate. In January, 1868, Voll had transferred a socket 'from the striker plate to the ba«e plate, and had connected a bolt with such socket. The second lock of Voll, viz., the combination of a vertically' moving bolt and a projection upon the base plate, was a second stage in the improvement The invention of Voll and Mc-Gregor was the final one of a series of separate inventions, in which series the prior inventions were made by one person be1 fore he was joined by his associate inventor. Each invention was distinct, and was separated from its successor by a completed, perfected and operative device. The prior inventions, although they may not have been abandoned by the sole inventor, were not included by the joint inventors in their joint invention. This is not the case of a joint invention which is the result of a progressive series of steps, which were taken by the two minds assisting each other in some -de gree. Neither is it the case of an invention which was -completed by two acting jointly* after a series of experiments, not resulting in a perfected or an operative device,- had been made by one of the inventors acting alone. In such a case, a court does not carefully ■ dissect the invention, to ascertain what parts of the whole were furnished by each person. In this case, Voll first .invented a means of locking upon the base plate. Whether this invention was patentable or-not under the claim in his application, it is: not necessary to consider. He next invented another combination, by which the same result was produced. It is agreed that this-invention was patentable. The joint inventors thereafter invented -a third device, which was the combination of Voil’s horizontal bolt -and catch segment. This was the only result of the joint labors and- inventive skill, of the two inventors.

Having thus ascertained the exact extent of the joint- invention, the question next arises as to' the proper construction to be given to the joint patent. The -specification which was attached to the application for a reissue, evidently contained, in the description of the device, the words “socket or depression.” By an amendment of the plaintiffs, these words were erased wherever they occurred, and “catch segment” were substituted therefor, before the reissue was granted. The plaintiffs seek to have their claim so construed as to include within the patent a locking device, as well by means of a socket or depression ‘ upon the base plate, as by means of a projection thereon. The invention which was actually made by the joint patentees covers a very narrow ground. It is to be noticed, -that the defendants do-not attack the validity of the patent, if it is confined to the joint invention. This invention was not broadly the combination of the old ingredients of socket or projection, so arranged as to lock the lever upon the base-plate, because, that combination had been made by Voll; but it was an improvement, upon the combination of Voll. and was subsidiary to his second invention.

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Related

Manufacturing Co. v. Corbin
103 U.S. 786 (Supreme Court, 1881)

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 499, 14 Blatchf. 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-dickinson-manufg-co-v-corbin-circtdct-1877.