J. S. Thorn Co. v. Michael Flynn Mfg. Co.

23 F. Supp. 731, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1938
DocketNo. 9689
StatusPublished

This text of 23 F. Supp. 731 (J. S. Thorn Co. v. Michael Flynn Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. S. Thorn Co. v. Michael Flynn Mfg. Co., 23 F. Supp. 731, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035 (E.D. Pa. 1938).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Jttdge.

This is a suit in equity for the infringement of U. S. Patent No. 1,941,432 to Doering, for a casement window structure, and the issue is chiefly concerned with the operating mechanism at the bottom of the frame, for opening and shutting the window.

Inasmuch as there is a question of the priority of another device involved, it may be noted that the earliest date which can be allowed the patentee for reduction to practice is December, 1930, that the application date of the patent is October 6, 1931, and that it issued December 26, 1933.

Infringement, if the patent is valid, is not seriously disputed and may be found without discussion.

The defense is invalidity—for two reasons. They are:

First, want of invention over the prior art. This defense includes the fact assertion by the defendant that the feature of the patented combination in which, if anywhere, invention is to be found, was first conceived and reduced to practice by a person other than the patentee.

Second, that the patent is an attempt to re-patent an old combination by means of claims in which the only novel feature lies in the improvement of one of its elements.

I have reached the conclusion that the patent is invalid for both reasons.

• The patent has 20 claims, of which 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, 10, 16, 17, and 18 (ten in all) are in suit. All these claims are for the. combination described as a “casement window structure.” They all contain three major elements, which are: The frame, a window sash mounted on the frame, and operating means by which the sash can be swung outwardly, closed, or held in an intermediate position. There are a number of other minor elements which appear in some of the claims but not in all. These are, an insect screen fitting into the frame, means for detachably securing the screen to the frame, L-shaped members forming the frame and sash, and others, not important.

All but one of the claims in suit describe the principal feature of the sash operating means as primarily consisting of either a crank and handle, or worm gearing, or both. Claims 8, 9 and 10 describe the axis of rotation of the crank as oblique to both vertical and horizontal planes. Claim 18 describes it as oblique to three planes.

The objects which (he patent specification assigns to the alleged invention relate to a field already well covered, and the arguments of counsel credit it with meeting many difficulties of construction which had been met long before its date. The problems of how to open and shut a casement window without removing the insect screen, of doing it by an operating device which goes through the frame below the screen and does not have to intrude into the glass or screen, and of doing it by a rotatable crank mechanism which is self locking and holds the sash in any position, rather than by a push-bar which has to be hooked into notches, had all been satisfactorily worked out in’ the prior art. Making a unitary construction which could be assembled in the factory, and the reduction of the cost of the whole, were mere matters of manufacture which under no theory required invention.

Even on the plaintiff’s own showing, when the patent in suit came into the field there was only one further improvement to be made. In the old structures the crank extended out from the bottom frame of the window parallel and quite close to the window sill. Consequently the handle had to be long enough to extend beyond the sill in order to be turned. So extended, it took up space and made an awkard looking window.

The Doering patent (claim 18) met this difficulty by the very simple expedient of making the crank oblique to the plane of the sill, the plane of the window, and a plane perpendicular to both—that is oblique in three directions. Incidentally, the operator was moved over to the corner of the window. The result was that the sill did not interfere and you could use a very short crank and have a more compact and better looking operator. Every major element of the combination was to be found in the prior art, in combination, and cooperating exactly as in the patent. See admission of counsel as to Exhibit F; also the Watson and the Johnson Patents and the Win-Dor structure. Doering’s entire contribution consisted in tilting up the crank and slewing it around a little.

This repositioning of parts did not involve invention. Oblique worm gearing was and had been for years a perfectly familiar mechanical device. Knowledge of it is not confined to engineers and theoreti[733]*733cal experts. Any ordinary mechanic knows that oblique worm gears arc made and used and work as well as horizontal ones. Of course, designing the gear and calculating the dimensions of the thread and the precise angles of the gear teeth for a given purpose present problems of mechanical engineering which require special training, but that has nothing to do with the question whether or not the expedient of using an oblique worm would occur to an ordinary skilled mechanic. That question almost answers itself. If you want to get rid of a projecting handle, and you can not shorten the crank and at the same time keep it in the horizontal position in which you find it because of something in the way, it seems obvious that the thing to do is to make it oblique.

It seems a reasonable conclusion that the only thing that delayed this improvement was that it cost a little more to make the operator that way. There may have been some doubt as to the willingness on the part of the public to pay the price, and I suppose architects would hesitate to specify the more expensive operators in moderate price houses.

Wliat has been said would hold good even if Doering’s contribution went to the extent of introducing the general idea of using an oblique worm and crank. Actually it is much slighter than that, being confined to the three-way obliqueness described in claim 18. I find as a fact that the idea of using an oblique crank and worm having a two-way obliqueness was conceived and reduced to practice by John V. Eichel, Jr., prior to the date which the plaintiff assigns for Doering’s invention. Upon this point the question is entirely one of the credibility of witnesses.

Mr. Eichel testified that in April, 1928, he conceived of and actually constructed a sash operating mechanism actuated by an oblique worm gear. It was oblique in two planes, only, instead of three, but I am unable to see anything patentable in giving the crank the additional slant which it has in Doering’s structure. Apart from this, the only difference between Eichel’s device and the plaintiff’s was that Eichel’s gear was internal instead of external as in the plaintiff’s. That is, a segment was cut out of the plate whose circular motion moved the sash arm, and the gear teeth were cut in the inside of the partial ring that was left. The diagonal worm passed through the cut-out segment instead of contacting the plate on the outside as in the plaintiffs operator.

Eichel had a great deal of difficulty in finding a practical way to manufacture an internal segmental gear at a reasonable cost, and that, rather than any question of the workability of the device, kept him from putting it on the market earlier than he did, and in fact caused him to withhold it for nearly five years. It had occurred to him that an external worm gear could be used and could be easily enough made, but he wanted to get a device which would he still more compact and would perhaps give him more operating contact surface for the worm and gear.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F. Supp. 731, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-s-thorn-co-v-michael-flynn-mfg-co-paed-1938.