Hunt, Helm, Ferris & Co. v. Elbert

296 F. 921, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1095
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 6, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 296 F. 921 (Hunt, Helm, Ferris & Co. v. Elbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt, Helm, Ferris & Co. v. Elbert, 296 F. 921, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1095 (W.D. Wis. 1923).

Opinion

EUSE, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity, in which complainant charges the defendants with infringement of two patents — one covering animal stalls, numbered 988,561, and issued April 4, 1911; the other covering cattle stanchions, numbered 1,066,195, issued July 1, 1913. Infringement of claims 1 and 4 of the stall patent, and claims 1 and 2 of the stanchion patent, is claimed.

[1] Taking up the stanchion patent first, it will be sufficient to set out in full claim No. 1:

“In a stanchion, side members each comprising an inwardly facing channel and a wood insert substantially filling the channel and projecting inwardly therefrom and having a rounded surface adapted to contact with the neck of the animal held by the stanchion.”

The advantages claimed for plaintiff’s patented stanchion, resulting from the use of the inwardly facing channel iron bar with a wood insert, are stated in the specifications to be as follows:

“The wooden heads on the inserts are much more comfortable for the cattle than the usual metal. The wood' insert, filling, as it does, the channel in [922]*922which it lies, adds greatly to the strength of the side member, so that a relatively light channel may be used. This arrangement thus saves something in the expense of the metal work of the device.”

From the foregoing it is apparent that the scope of this patent is-narrow, relating merely to the material of which stanchion side members are composed. It is clear that the side members of the stanchions manufactured and sold by the defendant Olson Manufacturing Company are substantially the same as' the side members of plaintiff’s patented device, and, if plaintiff’s, patent is valid, infringement is proven. The serious inquiry is whether or not the plaintiff’s patent is valid. The evidence establishes that wooden side bars for stanchions were old in the art, as illustrated by the patent to Barnard, No. 746,913, issued December 15, 1903; also that wooden linings to matal side bars of stanchions were in use prior to plaintiff’s claimed invention, as illustrated by the Harris patent, No. 942,639, issued December 7, 1909, and the Taylor patent, No. 608,730, issued August 9, 1898.

Furthermore, the use of channeled iron side bars in stanchions, with the channel facing outwardly, was also old, as illustrated by the Foster patent, No. 734,532, issued July 28, 1903, and the Ferris patent, No. - 999,364, issued August 1, 1911. Again, wooden side bars, screwed into metallic ends, were disclosed by the Baker patent, No. 903,267, issued November 10, 1908. The improvement disclosed by plaintiff’s patent over the prior art in stanchions is obtained by facing the channel of the side member inwardly and inserting a wooden strip into the channel, so that it fits tightly therein, and so forming the head or inner side of this wooden strip that it overlaps the edges of the channeled iron and presents an even and smooth surface, by which it is claimed the strength of the wooden strip and iron supplement one another, recesses in which dirt may accumulate are avoided, and the.thrust of the animal confined in the stanchion presses the wooden strip more firmly into the channeled iron, instead of tending to splinter the wood and loosen the screws, as was.-the case formerly. 1

To fill the channel of a channeled iron with wood, for the purpose of decreasing weight and expense and permitting the two elements to supplement one another in strength, was also old, as illustrated by the Mesker patent, No. 435,848, issued September 2, 1890/ Likewise the patent to Letchworth, No. 249,958, issued November 22,, 1881, discloses a hame, composed of a cast metallic body provided with a groove or depression, which groove or depression was filled with wood-to form one of the outer side surfaces of the hame. It is established by the evidence that.from about 1904 or 1905 the Todd Manufacturing Company, of New Albany, Ind., and its successor, the National Hame & Chain Company, have manufactured and marketed what are called '“Scotch hames,” characterized by a pair of inwardly facing channeled hame members of metal, each having a wood insert substantially filling the channel, said wood insert projecting inwardly from the channel and having a rounded head surface, overlapping, the edges thereof and adapted to contact with the leather surface of the collar on the neck of the horse embraced by the hame. it is clear that in these “Scotch hames” the advantage claimed for plaintiff’s patent by way of so com[923]*923bining the wood and iron that the thrust of the animal would tend to force the wood firmly into the channel of the iron, was fully realized.

In this state of the art I am of opinion that the improvement covered by plaintiff’s stanchion patent represents merely mechanical skill and not invention. Full consideration has been given to the contention that delay in the discovery of plaintiff’s improvement negatives the claim that the improvement is obvious; but, as I view it, the “Scotch hames” not only disclose the identical combination which is the subject of plaintiff’s stanchion patent, but invoke identically the same functional principle, and, without giving the same undue weight, it may properly be mentioned that in the progress of plaintiff’s patent through the Patent Office it was earnestly urged that the thrust of the cow confined in a stanchion when reaching for its food was the same as that of the ox in its yoke. Undoubtedly this is so, and a fortiori the same as the thrust of the horse upon its collar and hames. As I view it, the inwardly facing channeled insert with the wooden strip, manufactured, marketed, and used in the “Scotch hames,” involves in an analogous art the adoption and public use of the improvement claimed by plaintiff. In view of these considerations, I am of opinion that the stanchion patent is invalid.

[2] Taking up the animal stall patent, No. 988,561, claim 1 reads as follows:

“The combination oí a series of stanchion-supporting frames, partitions extending at an angle to said frames and located adjacent to the ends thereof,- and means adjustably connecting said frames independently of each other with said partitions, for the purpose set forth.”

By the phrase “for the purpose set forth” we are referred to the specifications, wherein the characteristic of adjustability is dealt with as follows:

“Each of the frames IB is adjustable independently of the others back and forth upon the brackets 13, and the bars 27 for positioning the stanchions carried thereby, in order that the animals, confined in the stanchions may be so positioned with relation to the gutter as to cause their.,droppings to fall into the latter.”

Clearly, then, claim 1 contemplates longitudinal adjustment with reference to the gutter, after installation, which defendant’s device does not permit.

It is earnestly insisted by plaintiff that the “unit construction” of stanchion frames and stalls is granted to it by this patent. The first five of the original claims of the patentee contained the following language:

“A series of stanchion supporting frames, each separate from the other and constituting independent units.”

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Bluebook (online)
296 F. 921, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-helm-ferris-co-v-elbert-wiwd-1923.