International Harvester Co. v. Richardson Mfg. Co.

172 F. 436, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5708
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 19, 1909
DocketNo. 375
StatusPublished

This text of 172 F. 436 (International Harvester Co. v. Richardson Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Harvester Co. v. Richardson Mfg. Co., 172 F. 436, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5708 (circtdma 1909).

Opinion

COET, Circuit Judge.

This is a .suit for infringement of letters patent No. 632,124, issued August 29, 1899, to Joseph S. Kemp for improvements in manure spreaders. The principal improvement covered by the patent and the only one involved in the present case, relates to a tailboard which is incorporated in the machine for the purpose of “preventing the beater from becoming clogged in loading.”

A manure spreader is a wagon much like the ordinary farm wagon, with a movable bottom and a beater or rotatable cylinder with projecting teeth located at. the end of the wagon. By the slow rearward movement of the bottom the manure is brought agáinst the rapidly rotating beater and scattered upon the field. The rear wagon wheels give the driving power for the bottom and the beater, and these parts are operated by a lever in front .of the wagon. By moving the lever the driver can engage or disengage the connecting gears or clutch mechanism,' and thereby set the bottom and beater in operation or cause them to remain stationary.

Kemp took out several prior patents for improvements in manure spreaders, and the patent, in suit is for the addition of this tailboard and operating mechanism to the prior Kemp machine.

[437]*437A perspective view of the Kemp manure spreader with this tailboard addition is illustrated in the following cut: .

This board, as shown in the cut, is located at the end of the wagon box directly in front of the beater. Its purpose is to prevent the manure from clogging the beater in loading and transportation to the field; and it accomplishes this purpose by confining or holding back the manure in the wagon box until just before the spreading operation begins. The board is lowered into the wagon box before loading, and is raised bodily and vertically out of the box before starting the machine. This is accomplished by means of the .long pivoted arms and connecting mechanism. The board is operated from the driver’s seat by a separate lever. This lever is provided with a stop device in the form of a laterally projecting pin, which prevents the raising of the beater and movable bottom lever before the board lever has been raised. In other words, this stop device prevents the machine from starting until the board has been raised. It appears that a similar tailboard was occasionally inserted in the earlier' Kemp spreader. This board, however, was a hand board. It was lowered into the box by hand, and was raised ’out of the box by hand, or by means of a lever. In the machine of the patent in suit Kemp embodied the means he conceived for raising and lowering the board and the stop device for preventing the machine from starting until the board had been raised.

The claims in issue are 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 8. Claims 1, 2, and 3 are for combinations of the principal features of the prior manure spreader with the tailboard and the whole or parts of the mechanism for operating the board; while claims 5, 6, 7, and 8 are for combinations of the principal features of the prior manure spreader with the tailboard and a stop device which prevents the machine from starting before the board has been raised.

The Kemp board has proved to be useful. Its use is advantageous where the manure is heavy and soggy. It has not, however, supplanted the old way of preventing the manure from clogging the beater by moving the bottom forward a few inches before starting [438]*438the 'machine, and so drawing the load away from the beater. There is evidence to the effect that the complainant sells more manure spreaders without this additional feature than with it.

The complainant contends that the combination of this tailboard and actuating mechanism with a manure spreader, especially of the Kemp type, is new, useful, and involved invention; that the prior art fails to disclose any like combination; and that the broad claims of the patent which are relied on should receive a liberal construction.

On the other hand, the defendant contends that the claims in issue are void for want of patentable novelty, and that, if held to be valid, they must be limited to the specific tailboard arrangement and mechanism described in the patent. The defendant’s brief states these defenses as follows:

“First, that the claims in issue relate only to the addition of mechanism regulating the raising and lowering of an ordinary tailboard in a particular way in a manure spreader, and are void for lack of invention--in view of the prior art and on their faces, particularly if the claims-are given the broad construction for which the complainant contends; and
“Second, that the defendant does not infringe the claims in issue, but, on the contrary, is making and selling manure spreaders covered by its own letters patent, which resemble the art prior to the patent in suit more nearly than they resemble the complainant’s patent.”

Upon full consideration I am not prepared to hold that these claims of the Kemp patent are void for'want of invention. In my opinion, therefore, the important question in this case is whether these claims can be properly construed to cover the defendant’s tailboard, in view of the. nature and scope of the Kemp invention, and the differences which exist between the two boards as to structure, mode of operation, and means for raising the, board.

This question may be considered under four heads: (I) the Kemp, patent in suit; (II) the defendant’s tailboard; (III) the prior art; (IV) the alleged infringement of the claims in issue.

I. The specification of the Kemp patent in suit begins by stating the general -features of a manure spreader. It then states the “customary way” of preventing the material from becoming embedded in the beater, and then follows a statement of the invention:

“This , invention relates-to that class of manure spreaders which contain a box mounted on a wheeled frame, and in which the body or charge of manure or other fertilizer rests upon a movable bottom, by which the manure is slowly moved rearwardly in the box against a toothed beater, which removes the manure from the rear end of the body or pile and throws it rear-, wardly from the machine.
“In loading the box with a charge of manure or fertilizing matter, the latter is loaded directly against the beater, whereby the teeth of the latter become so embedded in the material that breakage is liable to occur when the machine is started. In order to avoid such breakage, it is customary to adjust the movable bottom for loading with its follower board a few inches rearward of its extreme forward position, and to move the bottom forward to its extreme forward position after loading and before starting the machine. This forward movement of the bottom moves the rear end of the pile away from the beater and furnishes sufficient clehran.ee for the beater to start freely. This clearing of the beater before starting is, however, often overlooked or -neglected, in which case breakage is liable to result.
“The principal object of my invention is to provide the machine with effi-■eient and convenient means for preventing the beater from becoming clogged [439]*439in loading, and this moans consists, briefly stated, of a safety board or gato which is arranged in the rear portion of the box in front of the beater, and which is lowered into the box before loading, and protects the beater while loading, and is raised out of the box before starting the machine.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 F. 436, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-harvester-co-v-richardson-mfg-co-circtdma-1909.