International Banding MacH. Co. v. American Bander Co.

9 F.2d 606, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2439
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1925
Docket336
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 F.2d 606 (International Banding MacH. Co. v. American Bander Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Banding MacH. Co. v. American Bander Co., 9 F.2d 606, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2439 (2d Cir. 1925).

Opinions

MANTON, Circuit Judge:

Appellant sues claiming infringement of claims 22, 88, and 97 of patent No. 920,698, granted May 4, .1909, on application filed April 26, 1907, and claim 5 of patent No. 1,261,832, granted April 9, 1919, on application filed May 11,1916. Both patents relate to a banding machine which is used for banding cigars.

The first patent (No. 920,698) has 97 claims, and claims 22, 88, and 97 are as follows :

“22. A machine for applying bands to cigars and other articles, provided with a vertically disposed U-shaped suction device and movable means for supporting bands above said device, so that when said device is raised it engages the lowest band and when lowered withdraws it from the pile, leaving all other bands in said supporting means.”
“88. A machine for applying bands to cigars and other articles, provided with a support adapted to engage the lowermost 'band of a pile of bands to support the latter and to form a space between the lowermost band and the next one above, and means adapted to pass into said space to support pile of bands on withdrawing the said support.”
“97. In a machine of the class described, means for holding a pile of labels, said means including reciprocating tongues which at times support said pile, pneumatic means adapted to rest against the lowest label of said pile and hold said lowest label slightly flexed and means for reciprocating said tongues so that they support said pile when not supported by the said pneumatic means and cause said tongues to enter between said lowest label and the pile while said lowest label is flexed.”

The second patent (No. 1,261,832) has 17 claims, and claim 5 reads as follows:

“5. In a machine of the class described, the combination of the band container, of a reciprocating conveyor, suction means for withdrawing bands individually from said container, means on said conveyor for receiving the band from the suction means and holding the same on the conveyor, moistening means, and band-applying mechanism, conveyor adapted to transfer the band to the moistening means and thence to the band-applying means.”

The object of the invention of the first patent is said to provide a new and improved banding machine, designed for rapidly and accurately applying bands or labels to cigars and other articles and to wrap the same singly around the articles and secure their overlapping ends together, without danger of injury to the articles or to the bands or labels.

The object of the second patent is said to provide a machine which will securely, accurately, and rapidly apply bands to cigars and other articles where an adhesive is used, and it is desired to return the cigars to the box whence they came without turning them in any way so that, if they happen to be dry, they will go back exactly as they came out, and thereby escape all injury. The second patent is said to be a patentable improvement over the first patent, and the machine is claimed to be a pioneer machine for banding boxed cigars. The first patent is a pioneer for banding cigars of any sort, particularly loose cigars. But the first patent did not band boxed cigars with sufficient rapidity for the trade. It is pointed out that cigar banding differs from label applying machines of the prior art, because labels are pasted directly to the sun-face of the bottles or boxes, whereas cigar bands are neither pasted to the surface nor the wrapper of the cigar, but axe banded around the cigar, and this is usually done when the cigar is dry and somewhat brittle. Gum or paste is applied to only a small surface of one of the very narrow ends of the cigar band, and the band is then wrapped around the cigar with its narrow end gummed and aligned and slightly overlapping the other narrow end, and stuck thereto. It is desirable that the adhesive should not be allowed to come in contact with the cigar itself. Care must bo taken to avoid the wrapper of the cigar becoming cracked or broken. In case of boxed cigars, special care must be taken in handling the cigars as well [608]*608as in the banding, so thatrfhe 'overlapping ends of the bands are truly aligned and proper fit made for their reception back into the box. The first patent provides for a complete machine comprising the combination of a plurality of co-ordinating mechanisms, the details of which mechanisms we need not consider.

The main elements with which wé have to do consist of a hopper containing a supply of cigars to be b'anded; mechanism for presenting one band at a time to a location where it is to be banded, and in proper alignment to receive the band;' a magazine containing a supply of assembled cigar bands; a separator for withdrawing individually one cigar band at a time and presenting it 'in proper alignment for the ensuing steps; means for applying wet gum or paste to a small area near one end of the withdrawn band; means, called the conveyor, for carrying the freshly gummed band on its way, in proper alignment for the ensuing steps; means for applying the band around the positioned cigar, thus wrapping the band around the cigar with its plain end and its gummed end overlapped, and causing them to stick together; and means for ejecting the banded cigar. Claims 22, 88, and 97 relate to the magazine and separator. They should be regarded as part of the complete machine— a machine for wrapping such things as small and frail cigar bands around cigars. The claims áre not for a magazine and separator per se. Each of the claims begins with reference to a machine “for applying bands to cigars and other articles.” They all specify in appropriate words a particular invention for embodiment in a successful cigar banding machine.

It is the duty of the court to read a claim in the light of the entire disclosure of the patent as a whole. ' It will interpret an expression positively recited in the claim as satisfied'by any suitable instrumentality capable of performing the stated function successfully, unless, by so doing, violence to some other patent may be committed. It should never interpret a positively recited generic expression as limited to the precise instrumentality disclosed by the patent, except where such narrow interpretation is necessary to distinguish the claim from the prior art. In such cases, the courts will always do so in order to uphold the validity of the claim where that is possible.

In claim 5 of the second patent, it will be noted that the machine is intended for use in boxed or packed cigars. One of the purposes is to band the cigars without turning them; that is, rotating or rolling them. The main elements of this claim are: (1) The magazine which contains, the assemblage of cigar bands and which is like/the first patent in suit. (2) A pneumatic separator, which draws the individual cigar bands successively, also like the pneumatic separator in the first patent. (3) A reciprocating conveyor ■which receives frorá the separator each withdrawn band, and conveys the band to the next two mechanisms, and then releases the band and returns at once along its former pathway and is ready to receive the next band. This differs from the unidireetion conveyor of the first patent, which travels around a circuit with intermediate movement, and is a direct and active factor in performing the operation of wrapping the band around the cigar, and. is the sole factor that ejects the cigar when banded. (4) The suction means on the conveyor for receiving the withdrawn band from the separator and holding the band while on its way. This is somewhat like the first patent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F.2d 606, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 2439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-banding-mach-co-v-american-bander-co-ca2-1925.