International Banding Mach. Co. v. American Bander Co.

4 F.2d 726, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1307
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 726 (International Banding Mach. Co. v. American Bander Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York 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., 4 F.2d 726, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1307 (S.D.N.Y. 1924).

Opinion

GODDARD, District Judge.

This is a suit to restrain the alleg’ed infringement by the defendant of three patents now owned by the plaintiff. The charge is the infringement of the following claims of patents: Wagner & Malocsay patent, No. 920,698, issued May 4, 1909, claims 22, 86, 87, 88, 96, a.nd 97; Malocsay patent No. 1,261,832, issued April 9, 19.18, claims 5 and 6; M'aloe-say patent, No. 1,403,046, issued January 10, 1922, claim 3.

The first two patents have to do with machines for banding or labeling cigars or other articles. The third relates to an adjustable shelf used in connection with the packing of the cigars after they have been banded. The defenses relied upon are non-infringement and/or invalidity of the claims in issue of the patents in suit.

Machines for banding, labeling, or wrapping all kinds of articles were well known many years before the plaintiff’s patents were applied for. Apparently the use of machines for banding cigars has come into vogue in the last few years, and there are several reasons for this — among them, the increased cost of labor since the war. Then, the expense of banding by hand was 25 cents per 1.000 cigars; now it is more than double that. It costs something over 30 cents per 1.000 with the plaintiff’s machine. It is also more sanitary, and this is something which the public has recently begun to value. Another reason is that banding machines were not profitable unless the output of cigars was largor, and in late years the tendency has been toward the consolidation of companies and factories, and cigars are now made in fewer, but larger, factories than formerly. And another reason, many more cigars are now banded than ever before, to prevent substitution and “box stuffing” for widely advertised and well-known brands.

In .1917 the plaintiff began to exploit and market its machines, and has done it so very effectively that now its machines are banding all the cigars in the United States which are not banded by hand. The Malocsay machine seems to have been the first machine to band packed cigars and return them to the same position in the box which they held before being removed for banding; this is done by the band-applying mechanism which was devised for it. But there are no claims in issue referring to that band-applying mechanism per se, so its success in this respect cannot be considered as aiding them in this suit. Moreover it is not even asserted by plaintiff that the defendant’s band-applying mechanism resembles the ones on its machines.

Wagner & Malocsay Patent, No. 920,698.

The claims of this patent which are in suit are Nos. 22, 86, 87, 88, 96, and 97, all of which relate solely to the sheet-supporting and separating device. Claim 96 deals more particularly with the magazine which holds the pile of bands:

“96. A machine of the class described, provided with a label holder having oppositely disposed Y-shaped standards for the ends of a pile of bands or labels to abut against to center the pile of bands or labels, means for adjusting the said standards toward or from each other, and rods adjustable toward and from each other and. engaging opposite sides of the pile of bands or labels.”

[728]*728Apparently the use of these V-shaped standards proved, as a practical matter, to be undesirable, or at least unnecessary; for the plaintiff itself does not use them. There must be a magazine or holder for the pile of bands, and it has been customary to have this holder so constructed as to be adjustable for various sizes. In the one under consideration, they followed the plan by having the pile kept in place by adjustable side and end rods.

At page 9 of Defendant’s Exhibit A, the reproduction of Eigs. 10, 14, and 16 of the Wagner & Maloesay patent show their magazine, which comprises\the slidable end standards Bs which are adapted to be held in adjusted position by the thumb screws D4, and the slidable side rods D8, adapted to be held in adjusted position by the thumb screws D7. That this method of obtaining adjustability in sheet magazines is old is shown, for instance, by the patent to Leffler, No. 669,174, March 5, 1901, particularly Figs. 7, 8, and 9 at page 72 of Defendant’s Exhibit B. The magazine of this patent is formed of the end and side rods j1, all of which (except those unlettered in Fig. 9) may be adjusted in the slots j2 by means of the screws j4 “to adapt the holder (magazine) for various sizes and shapes of labels” (page 2 of Leffler patent, line 79).

An examination' of it demonstrates that the defendant’s machine does not have “V-shaped standards,” and this was admitted by plaintiff’s expert. The plaintiff cannot prevail upon this claim, not only for these reasons, but also because Muslar, in his patent, No. 824,569, June 26, 1906, Eig. 13 (page 88 of Defendant’s Exhibit A), disclosed adjustable V-shaped standards for the ends of a pile of labels, almost exactly like those of the Wagner & Maloesay patent and for the same purposes. Claims 22, 86, 87, 88, and 97 are all claims, relating to band or label separator.

An examination of the fundamental characteristics and method of operation of the Wagner & Maloesay separator shows that in operation the stack of bands is support-, ed alternately first or “normally by supporting rods,” or the fingers 00 as indicated in Defendant’s Exhibit A, page 8, and Eigs. 9 and 10, then by the suction chamber E'. This characteristic of the Wagner & Maloesay machine was plain in the demonstration of the actual operation of the machines which took place at the trial. In the Wagner & Maloesay machine, .the fingers holding the pile had to be taken away before the lowermost band could be withdrawn, and to provide this support the suction chamber E' was interposed. The prin-‘ ciple upon which the defendant’s machine works is quite different.

Wagner & Maloesay have a vertical magazine or holder for the bands, so that the full weight of the pile is directly upon the bottom. The defendant’s magazine is vertical at the top, but curves around so that at the bottom it is horizontal as indicated in Defendant’s Exhibit A, page 12. This curve reduces to a large extent the pressure or weight upon the supporting ledges 64, the weight of the pile being distributed around the curve. The ledges 64 are not movable like the fingers 00 which support the pile in the Wagner & Maloesay machine.

The following is a comparison of the means employed in separating or withdrawing for separating or withdrawing the bands —Wagner & Maloesay machine, referring to Defendant’s Exhibit A, page 9: As stated in the patent (page 3, line 128 et seq.): “The pile is normally supported by a pair of longitudinally 'extending supporting rods 0 projecting from the plates O' mounted to slide longitudinally in guideways D°.” Figs. 9, 15, and 16 show these slidable rods or fingers 0 in their forward or supporting position, the pile being supported thereby. In the operation of the separating device these rods or fingers 0 slide or reciprocate horizontally, back and forth from their supporting position to their nonsupporting position.

The U-shaped suction chamber E' “straddles the table A' and the carrier B, and is-intermittently moved up and down” (patent, page 4, lines 53-55); that is, it moves, from the position of Fig. 9 to that of Fig. 10 and down again. Referring to Defendant’s Exhibit A, page 12:

Eig.

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4 F.2d 726, 1924 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-banding-mach-co-v-american-bander-co-nysd-1924.