International Postal Supply Co. of New York v. American Postal Machines Co.

141 F. 969, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4925
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 21, 1905
DocketNo. 1,597
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 F. 969 (International Postal Supply Co. of New York v. American Postal Machines 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 Postal Supply Co. of New York v. American Postal Machines Co., 141 F. 969, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4925 (circtdma 1905).

Opinion

COLT, Circuit Judge.

This suit is brought for the infringement of three patents for improvements in stamp-canceling machines, which are used in the post offices of the United States. The parties to the suit are rival manufacturers of these machines.

The patents in controversy and the claims alleged to be infringed are as follows:

Hey & Laass, No. 341,380, applied for February 26, 1884, issued May 4, 1886; claim 4 in issue.

Laass & Hey, No. 388,366, applied for June 2, 1884, issued August 31, 1888; claims 1 and 2 in issue.

Hey, No. 632,527, applied for September 17, 1884, issued September 5, 1899; claims 1, 4, 27, and 44 in issue.

A stamp-canceling machine may be described in general terms as comprising a marking roller carrying the type, an impression roller which supports the letter during the printing, and feed mechanism which carries forward the letter to the printing point.

For the purpose of a clearer understanding of this case, these machines may be conveniently divided into two classes, those in which the letter does not control the printing, and those in which the letter does control the printing.

As an illustration of the first class of machine we may take an organization in which the two opposing printing rollers are continuously revolved in fixed bearings, with the result that, when the machine is in its normal condition, the printing mechanism is necessarily always in operation; in other words, the operation of the printing mechanism is unaffected by the presence or absence of a letter in the machine. There are two defects in this type of machine: First, the impression roller becomes smeared with ink from the marking roller, and consequently the backs of the letters are defaced; and, second, there is an imperfect registration of the printing die upon the mail matter.

In the second class of machines, in place of two printing rollers revolving in stationary bearings, we have an organization in which •one of the rollers has a reciprocating movement. In these machines the rollers are held apart when the machine is in its normal condition, •and they are brought together, or into the position for printing, only [970]*970when a letter is presented to them to be marked. After the printing!the rollers are again separated until the next letter is presented. This-organization prevents the inking of the impression roller, and secures-the proper, registration of the printing die upon the mail matter. The-present suit relates to this type of machine.

The three patents in suit describe a stamp-canceling machine in-which the letter controls the marking member. The first patent, Hey & Laass, No. 341,380, discloses one form of this machine, and the-two remaining patents, ffaass & Hey, No. 388,366, and Hey, No. 633,-537, disclose another form of this machine. In both of these machines the marking member is practically separated from the rest of the-machine, and it is moved into the position for printing by the movement of the letter as it is carried forward by the feed mechanism. In other words, we find in these patents the conception of a stamp-canceling machine in which the two printing members (the reciprocating marking member and the impression member) are fundamentally distinct organizations, employing in their operation two independent sources of power. In this dual organization, when the primary-source of power is applied to the machine, or the machine is in its-normal condition, the whole marking mechanism is at rest, and it is only when a letter moves along the bed of the machine that this mechanism is actuated. It is apparent that this conception throws-upon the moving letter the work of setting in operation an independent marking organization.

Patent No. 341,380 shows the first form in which this conception-is embodied. In this machine the movement of the marking member towards the impression member is effected by means of an electromagnet and connecting mechanism. The end of the moving letter comes in contact with and moves forward a finger, whose movement operates to close the circuit, thereby bringing together the two printing members. The marker in this machine is a flat stamp, and the printing is done by forcing the stamp down upon the moving letter. Whatever the degree of inventiveness shown in this machine, it proved^ a practical failure. No machine like this patent has ever been constructed except one model. With respect to the defects in this machine,, it is only necessary to point cut that the printing die in the operation-of canceling the stamp descends at a right angle to the moving letter. Although this patent is the first in the art to describe a machine off this type, it did not solve the problem of a stamp-canceling machine-in which the letter controls the printing.

The two remaining patents in suit, No. 388,366 and No. 633,537, disclose the other form in which the patentees embodied their conception of this type of machine. In this machine the movement of the-marking member towards the impression member is effected by the action of a spring and connecting mechanism. When the machine is-in its normal condition, the marking member is held away from the impression member against the pressure of this spring by means off a lever and catch. When, however, the end or forward part of the moving letter comes in contact with one end of this lever, the caichis released, thereby causing the action of the spring to bring together[971]*971the two printing members. Here the marker is a roller, and the printing tákes place as the roller is revolved by the friction of the moving letter upon its surface.

This machine has not proved a commercial success.. It is open to the objection of forcing upon the end of the moving letter the duty of releasing the marking roller against the spring pressure which moves the roller into the position for printing.

The principle of construction in both these machines is defective. No successful stamp-canceling machine, in which the letter controls the printing, ever has been constructed in which the end, or forward part, of the moving letter was called upon to set in operation a substantially independent marking mechanism actuated by an independent source of power, such as an electro-magnet or a spring.

The. machines of these patents show ingenuity and afford valuable suggestions. They proved, however, impractical for commercial ■ purposes ; and they cannot therefore be said to have solved the problem of an efficient letter-actuated machine. The defects in these machines are not confined to details. They lie deeper in the very principle of their construction and mode of operation.

In the complainant’s commercial machine the idea of a practically independent marking mechanism has been abandoned. The marking member is no longer mounted in an oscillating frame, and the complicated mechanism of the patents in suit has been simplified. The whole machine in fact is substantially a single organization actuated by one source of power. In this essential particular it is more like the old type of machine and the defendant’s machine, than it is like the machines described in the patents in suit.

The defendants manufacture what-is known as the Ethridge machine, since it closely resembles in construction the machine shown in the Ethridge patent No. 323,799, dated August 4, 1885.

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Bluebook (online)
141 F. 969, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-postal-supply-co-of-new-york-v-american-postal-machines-co-circtdma-1905.