J. F. Rowley Co. v. Chester B. Winn, Inc.

41 F.2d 88, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 138, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1869
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedOctober 16, 1929
DocketNo. 1113
StatusPublished

This text of 41 F.2d 88 (J. F. Rowley Co. v. Chester B. Winn, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. F. Rowley Co. v. Chester B. Winn, Inc., 41 F.2d 88, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 138, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1869 (W.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

ABLER, District Judge.

The Rowley patent in suit No. 961,165 was obtained June 14, 1910, on an -applies tion filed October 15, 1906. Defendant is sued for infringement on two legs of different construction, namely, Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3, alleged to infringe claims 2, 3, 5, 6, 8, 9, 11, and 12, and Defendant’s Exhibit 24, alleged to infringe claims 2, 11, and 12.

In order to understand the Rowley invention it is necessary to go back to an earlier patent issued to Rowley on February 27, 1900, No. 644,464, the application for which was filed July 15, 1899, and which has now expired. This patent is in evidence, and it appears that its claims covered broadly a positive control of a leg section pivoted to a thigh section by employing a suspender with a loop slidingly connected with the leg’ section, and more specially a sliding connection with the leg section consisting of straps attached to the leg section and sliding on the loop. An interference between Martin and Rowley, decided by the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia on June 4, 1909, and reported 146 O. G. 722; is also important to an understanding of the ease. The first Rowley patent, No. 644,464, was passed upon by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit on January 5, 1915, J. F. Rowley Co. v. Columbus Pharmacal Co., 220 F. 127, 128. The Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia also passed on the patent in suit in J. E. Hanger, Inc., v. J. F. Rowley Co., 54 App. D. C. 336, 298 F. 359.

As expressed by the Court in Rowley v. Columbus Pharmacal Co., construing the first Rowley patent (No. 644,464): “While the ultimate disposition of the case must depend upon the construction of the claim in respect to an express limitation found therein, this in turn depends in part upon the advance which Rowley made over existing knowledge; and the inquiry may well be approached along the road adopted in Davis Co. v. New Departure Co. (C. C. A. 6) 217 F. 775. This is to inquire: First, what was Rowley’s real advanced step or new concept? Second, is defendant’s structure witliin the limits of such advance? And, third, if so, do the terms of the claim, when fairly read, require such an interpretation as to sanction defendant’s appropriation of Rowley’s idea?”

Turning first to the decision of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia in the interferenee between Martin and Rowley with respect to the subject-matter of the Rowley patent in suit, No. 961,165, we find that the counts of the interference were two, and that they are identical with claims 8 and 9 of the Rowley patent as subsequently issued. We find in the opinion of the court the following statement with respect to the invention, namely: “The invention is narrow in scope and resides in a changed location of the connection between the suspender and leg-section of an artificial limb.”

On examining counts 1 and 2 (claims 8 and 9 of the patent) we find the “connection between the suspender and the leg section” defined as follows, namely, in claim 8 as “a lever fulerumed in the thigh section and having upper and lower arms, the lower arm being connected with the leg section,” and in claim 9 as “a lever mounted on said pivot and having an upper arm arranged wholly within the thigh section and a lower arm extending downwardly through the slot of the thigh section into the leg section and secured to the latter.”

In this interference it was brought out that Rowley as early as 1897 was a manufacturer of artificial limbs and an inventor in that art. That Martin entered his employ in 1897 without mechanical training and remained until January 11, 1906, when he entered the employ of the Queens City Artificial Limb Company, of Buffalo, N..Y., with which Mr. Winn, of Chester B. Winn, Inc., [89]*89defendant in this suit, was connected. Martin claimed to liave conceived the invention in December, 1904, but the court found that there was no evidence outside of his own testimony that he disclosed it to any one prior to January, 1906, when he entered the employ of the Queens City Company. The decision in the interference was accordingly in favor of Rowley.

Coming to the decision of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia in the Hanger Case, for the infringement of the Rowley patent here in suit, No. 961,165 (54 App. D. C. 336, 298 F. 359), we find that all of the claims here in suit were before the court in that ease with tho exception of the .fifth claim. In that ease the court gave Rowley credit for uniting into one device the old carrying straps and the operating shin straps, in such a wa,y as to permit the control of the shin seetion by the raising or lowering of the shoulder, referring to the fact that that was the subject of the earlier patent No. 644,464, and citing in support of this statement the decision in the Columbus Pharmaeal Co. Case, referred to above. In the opinion in the Hanger Case the court then proceeded to trace the origin of the invention leading to the patent in suit, No. 961,165, going back to the “Sexton Leg,” made by Rowley in 1900, which, says the court, “contained a back check substantially the same as that disclosed in Figure 1 of the patent in suit.” This “Sexton Leg” was held by the court to constitute a reduction to practice of Rowley’s idea, inasmuch as it was thereby put into concrete form and demonstrated to his employees. The court accordingly held that the invention was not abandoned through Rowley’s delay in filing his application, namely, from June, 1900, to October, 1906.

Coming to the question of tho scope of the patent No. 961,165, tho Court of Appeals in the Hanger Case pointed out that (54 App. D. C. 336, 298 F. 359, 361): “While the earlier patent covered broadly the idea of the combination of the carrying suspender and operating suspender, so as effectually to control the shin section by voluntary movement of the shoulders, the specific embodiment of that invention was an outside control; that is, a control resulting from attachment of the lower projection of the suspender to the outside of the shin section.” (I have added the italics.)

The court then goes on to say:

“Claims 2, 3, 11, and 32 of this patent purport to cover a combination effecting the control we have described by a connection 'through the interior of the thigh seetion, instead of being made outside of the knee joint,’ while claims 6, 8, and 9 require that the extension loops 9 shall he operatively connected to a back cheek at a point within tho thigh seetion. * * *

“Back checks per so were old (limiting tho forward movement of tho leg section on its pivotal connection to a position in alignment with the thigh seetion), but that of Rowley is so designed as to perform the double function of a hack check and a lever, to the upper arm of which the extension cords 9 are attached. * * '•

“The extension loops 9, it will he seen, are connected with a forward projection of the back check at 8, and in this way is obtained the leverage necessary to control the shin section. This extension (projection) is the element mentioned in claim 9 as ‘a lever mounted on said pivot,’ the pivot being the connection between the upper and lower leg sections. It thus appears that what Rowley had in mind was a combination of the elements set forth in his claims, in which the lower extensions of the suspender are so attached to a lever inside the thigh section as to make possible control of the shin seetion, as described.” (Tho italics and words in parentheses have been added.)

In the Hanger Case defendant’s structure is shown by a cut at 54 App. D. C. 336, 298 F.

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Bluebook (online)
41 F.2d 88, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 138, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-f-rowley-co-v-chester-b-winn-inc-nywd-1929.