Hubel v. Dick

28 F. 132, 24 Blatchf. 59, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2234
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 16, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 28 F. 132 (Hubel v. Dick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hubel v. Dick, 28 F. 132, 24 Blatchf. 59, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2234 (circtsdny 1886).

Opinion

Shipman, J.

The first of tbeso cases is a bill in equity, filed Feb-, ruary 26, 1884, to restrain the defendant from the alleged infringement of two letters patent, one being reissued patent No. 10,437,. granted to the plaintiff January 15, 1884, and the second, No. 275,-092, granted to Harrison H. Taylor, assignor to the plaintiff, April 3, 1888. Each patent is for a machine for cutting off gelatine capsules. The original Hubei patent was dated February 13, 1877. The first reissue, No. 8,44-0, was applied for August 17, 1878, and was granted October 1, 1878. The second reissue, and the one in, suit, was applied for November 16, 1883.

The second ease is a, bill in equity, under section 4918 of the Revised Statutes, praying that letters patent to William A. Tucker, No. 805,867, dated September 30, 1884, for an improved gelatine capsulc-cntting machine, may be declared void, upon the ground that it is an interfering patent with the previous Taylor patent, No. 275,092, and is for the machine which is therein described, and of which said Taylor was the first and original inventor.

The llubel Machine, and Reissue No. 10,437. Before the date of the application for ITuhel’s original patent, gelatine capsules were, as a rule, moulded upon a board containing separate mould-pins, and were cut off by hand upon a knife fastened to the table, with its cutting edge looking upwards. Considerable testimony was given in regard to a machine used in 1865 by the defendant for making soft capsules, anil which is said to have been furnished for about three months with a cutting device. The knives are said to have been fastened to a stationary circular railway. The moulds were brought over tlio edges of these knives, and, being rotated by means of cogwheels, to one of which a crank was attached, the gelatine upon the moulds was cut. I make no finding in regard to the cutting devices upon this machine; for, if they existed, the cutting mechanism seems, to me to have been so primitive and uncertain in its results that it could anticipate nothing but a machine of a like method of construe[134]*134tion. The Hubei machine was for cutting off capsules automatically, and was so constructed that a series of mould-pins, placed at regular intervals upon a removable plate, was lifted up between a series of knives, which were moved around the mould-pins.

The following description of the machine is condensed from a description of it which was given by the defendant’s expert, Mr. Henry B. Benwick. It consists essentially of a series of moulds or pins, with hemispherical ends, arranged in rows, at regular intervals from each other, and secured in upright positions upon a plate called a “mould-plate.” The machine has a series of knives, mounted each upon the lower end of a spring, and arranged similarly to the moulds. Each of the springs is secured to the under side of a cog-wheel, but not in the center of the wheel. These wheels are all in gear with each other, and are all of the same diameter. One of them is provided with a handle secured by a crank to the wheel. When this crank is revolved, all the cog-wheels turn, and so do the knives mounted upon them, with a motion like that of the moon around the earth. The springs on which the knives are mounted serve to press them against the capsules. The way of getting the moulds into proper relation with the .knives is by setting the mould-plate so low that the tops of the capsules will be below the knives, and with their tops lying below the spaces between the knives. The moulds and capsules are then lifted up by a rack pinion and lever into these-spaces, and are moved horizontally, so as to bring the capsules in contact with the knives.

The defendant was using, when the plaintiff’s bill was brought, a machine made like the drawings in the patent which was subsequently granted to William A. Tucker, on September 30,1884. The defendant insists that sufficient evidence was not given of this use, but, taking the testimony, although scanty, which was offered by the plaintiff in connection with the admissions contained in the various answers, I am satisfied that the Tucker machine was in use by the defendant before and on February 26, 1884.

The following description of the machine is also condensed from Mr. Benwick’s description: It has a supporting frame, which carries its working parts. ' It is provided with a sort of shelf, which can be slid up and down to a short distance, and which rests upon and is carried by a nut, on the periphery of which there is a worm-wheel that is in gear with a screw provided at one end with a crank. By turning this crank the nut may be made to revolve, and consequently • to raise or lower the shelf very slowly, and through a short distance. This shelf carries the mould-plate indirectly, through the intervention of another plate upon which the mould-plate rests, and to which it is clamped. This second plate is called the “rotation plate.” In order to move it a vertical shaft passes up through the center of the nut which carries the worm-wheel, and this shaft has on its upper end a crank, the crank-pin being vertical, and taking into a hole [135]*135bored in the bottom of the rotation plate. The machine has near its top a knife-shelf, capable of vertical motion, which carries a series of circular knives mounted on springs, and arranged at the same intervals apart as the moulds. The shelf and knives are moved up and down by a lever. The mould-plate is introduced by hand at such a level that the trimming line of the capsules is opposite the knives, and is secured to the rotation plate. During this time the knives have been kept out of the way by means of pins and a rod, but are now suffered to spring into position against the capsules by means of a motion of this rod. The shaft upon which the crank and crank-pins are fixed which actuate the rotation plate is set in motion, the plate is rotated, and carries each capsule around the edge of a knife. After the capsules have been cut in two, the knives are shoved downwards by means of the lever, and the chip is, by moans of this motion, separated from the capsule.

The original Hubei patont was not drawn by a patent solicitor, and contained but a single claim for the entire machine. It omitted the moulds, and failed to designate the separate patentable features of the invention. Eeissue 8,440 was applied for, and contained six claims, as follows:

“(1) In a machino for cutting off capsules, the combination of the series of moulds, e, and the rack, pinion, and lever, F, T, H, for the purpose of regulating the length of the capsules, substantially as described. (2) In a machine for cutting off capsules, the combination of the sliding-plate, adapted to hold the series of moulds, and the screw mechanism, L, K, Ñ, for the purpose of forcing the moulds against the knives, substantially as described. (3) In a capsule-cutting machine, a series of rotary cutters, operated by a crank and pinion acting upon pinions, one of which is attached to each of said cutters, substantially as specified. (4) In a capsule-cutting machine, the rotary cutters, driven by gearing, substantially as described, and supported upon spring arms, substantially as and for the purpose set forth. (5) In a machine for cutting off capsules, the combination of the sliding-plates, adapted to hold the moulds of the rack, pinion, and lever, F, T. II, and the screw mechanism, K, L, 1ST, for the purpose of giving both a lateral and vertical motion to the sliding-plates, substantially as described.

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Bluebook (online)
28 F. 132, 24 Blatchf. 59, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hubel-v-dick-circtsdny-1886.