Hutchins Car Roofing Co. v. Standard Ry. Equipment Co.

259 F. 226, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1635
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 8, 1919
DocketNos. 2556, 2570
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 259 F. 226 (Hutchins Car Roofing Co. v. Standard Ry. Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutchins Car Roofing Co. v. Standard Ry. Equipment Co., 259 F. 226, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1635 (7th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, as the owner of patent No. 1,-058,989, granted to Latta & Thompson, herein called L. & T., sought damages and a restraining order against the defendants, who were either the users, manufacturers, or sale agents of car roofs alleged to infringe complainant’s patent. Defendants denied infringement and disputed the validity of the patent. Appellee P. H. Murphy Company, counterclaimed, seeking relief against appellant for alleged violation of the Souder patent, No. 763,438, dated June 28, 1904, and the Murphy patent, No. 946,823, dated January 18, 1910. To this cross-bill appellant filed answer, denying infringement. Appellees also asserted that P. H. Murphy made and sold cars such as disclosed in the appellant’s patent more than two years prior to the date of the L. & T. application.

[1] Upon the various issues thus presented the District Judge, found—

[227]*227“tlie Latta & Thompson patent valid, and prior in time to Murphy, 946,823 (in suit); plaintiff having carried hack the effective date of invention, by proof beyond reasonable doubt, to the time of the disclosure of the pon and ink sketch, April, 3906. Latta & Thompson patent not infringed. Souder patent valid, but not infringed. Murphy patent in suit, No. 948,823, valid, not infringed, and inferior in date to the Latta & Thompson invention.”

From this decree both parties appeal; appellees on their cross-appeal attacking particularly that part of the decree which holds the L. & T. patent valid.

In view of the action taken by P. IT. Murphy Company in reference to its patent, herein called the Murphy patent, a consideration of the finding of the court on priority first challenges our attention. It is appellant’s urge that although the L. & T. application was not filed until May 29, 1907, nine days later than W. P. Murphy made application for his patent, yet nevertheless L,. & T. disclosed their combination by a pen and ink sketch as early as April, 1906. In support of the Murphy patent it was claimed that in the fall of 1905 sketches were made disclosing the structure later embodied in L. & T. patent.

The District Judge found in favor of appellant on this issue. Our examination of the evidence does not warrant a disturbance of this finding.

The significance of this finding is appreciated when we examine the file wrapper in respect to .the Murphy patent. After T. & T. secured their patent, Murphy made application to the Patent Office to secure a reissue patent covering some of the claims of the L. & T. patent now in issue. The statements there made under oath by Mr. Murphy are significant. They cannot be reconciled with appellees’ present' position in reference to the state of the prior art.

Mr. Murphy, succeeding his father, was a large manufacturer of car roofs, and thoroughly familiar with the various kinds in use. He had obtained some 50 patents upon car roofs and had experience in contested cases involving questions arising out of prior art citations. He was necessarily familiar with what has been termed the Mexican car roof. After reading the L. & T. patent, he sought a reissue patent to himself, thereby attempting to obtain a monopoly upon certain claims now in dispute. In his affidavit in support of this reissue application he said:

“That, prior to deponent’s invention, there were three general types of metal ear roofs, namely, inside metal roofs, outside metal roofs, and all metal roofs.”
“That deponent is informed and believes that the claims of said Latta & Thompson patent dominate deponent’s patent No. 946,823, and the structure therein shown, and thereby deprive deponent and his assignee of the benefits that should inure to them by reason of deponent being the true and first inventor of the subject-matter of said claims; and that according to the decision of said Commissioner of Patents in the matter of said Latta & Thompson application, most of the claims of said Latta & Thompson patent were patentable to this deponent, and should have been incorporated in his patent aforesaid.”

He also sought to amend his specifications by including, among other things, the following:

[228]*228“My plate car roof is as a whole flexible, because the sheets or plates thereof are independently, freely, and movably supported on the carlines or skeleton frame, and are secured thereto as above stated.”

Murphy’s claim to a reissue patent covering these claims was vigorously pressed before the department. Notwithstanding these statements, appellees now contend that the patent to E. & T. is invalid, because the prior art, and particularly the Mexican Central car roofs, clearly disclosed all that is covered by the claims in suit. It is difficult to appreciate how Murphy can expect the court to give serious heed to the contentions now made that directly contradict his sworn statement when seeking a similar grant from the Patent Office. Prior to any controversy between Murphy and E. & T., the Commissioner of Patents, in granting the patent, said:

“These applicants are admittedly the first ones to provide a designedly flexible all metal car roof.”

This finding and observation of the Commissioner of Patents is in perfect harmony with the claim of Mr. Murphy that on May 20, 1907, there were no such car roofs in existence. Entertaining the belief that his application, which was nine days ahead of L. & T., would entitle him to priority over-the latter’s patent, he under oath set forth the state of the prior art in such a way as to necessarily seriously challenge any reflection now made upop that assertion.

Appellees, having failed to secure this reissue patent, now assert that the prior art was full of patents for car roofs of the type which L. & T. monopolized by their patent. But notwithstanding this inconsistency we have carefully examined the prior art, to ascertain whether the patent to L. & T. was in fact valid. In considering this question, a brief examination of the structure in question will be enlightening. In the specifications of the E. & T. patent we find the following:

“Generally speaking, the invention relates to a car roof possessing adequate flexibility and required roofing rigidity. As components of the structure there are rigid or load-supporting metallic plates, constituting in the main the primary roofing elements, and associated with these plates are suitable means for forming weather-proof joints between the plates, which means are so constructed and arranged that, while the roof will be maintained weather-tight, it will still possess the requisite rigidity and flexibility to permit the weaving actions of the structure.”

In other words, we have what in ordinary building parlance might be termed the framework, consisting of the transverse beams or car-lines of steel, the longitudinal beams or purlins, the ridge pole or ridge purlin, which skeleton frame, thus composed of carlines and purlins, leave rectangular spaces of considerable area over the top of the car. These are covered by heavy gauge steel plates, there being a series of these on each side, each sheet completely covering the space between the carlines from the ridge to the eaves, and these sheets are. in turn flanged downwardly at the eaves and upwardly along the side and at the ridge.

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259 F. 226, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutchins-car-roofing-co-v-standard-ry-equipment-co-ca7-1919.