Jackson v. Birmingham Brass Co.

79 F. 801, 25 C.C.A. 196, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2363
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 79 F. 801 (Jackson v. Birmingham Brass Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jackson v. Birmingham Brass Co., 79 F. 801, 25 C.C.A. 196, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2363 (2d Cir. 1897).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The specification sets forth that the patentee has “discovered a new and useful process for converting seamless metal tubing into concavo-convex oblate spheroidal figures, and impressing thereon ornamental figures or designs.” The ornamentation of the spheroidal figures involves a process which defendant concededly does not use. It is covered by the second claim, which is not in controversy here. After stating that in the production of ornamental metal work, such as railings, balusters, fenders, and similar articles, it “has heretofore been the practice to make use of metal balls, either cast or spun of thin metal, to adorn such work,” the specification proceeds:

“The object of my invention is to produce spheroidal coneavo-eonvex ornaments from sections of tubing. I make use of dies of the desired forms and [802]*802sizes, in which a section tubing of the proper length - to form the hollow spheroidal body is placed to receive the action of a press. The dies may he made in two equal or unequal parts, and the upper one may be attached to the slide or plunger of a press, and the lower one may rest upon the platen or seat of the press. To produce these hollow spheroidal bodies of a shape and surface configuration, resembling such objects as the pineapple, the acorn, and other analogous formis, the shape and size of the two dies for forming these objects will be different. * * * The section of tubing to be used must be of large bore or orifice, as compared with the thickness of the metal which forms it, and will he placed in the lower die directly under the upper die that is attached to the side of the press, and the compressing will begin simultaneously at both ends thereof, and cause the metal to curve inwardly all around; and the dies will meet if-the piece of tubing is of the proper length to form a globe, the dies of course being hemispherical for that purpose; but if the dies are of different forms or sizes, as would be necessary to form a bodjr of the shape of the pineapple, the tube or blank will be proportionately longer, and the dies will meet at the line of the greatest diameter of the article produced.
“In forming these spheroidal bodies, a raised central girdle will he made around the article, by stopping the action of the dies before they have reached the line of the greatest diameter of the article. To form an aperture at the extremities of these ornamental hollow metal bodies, a stop at the base of the concavity of the dies may he used to limit the swaging, upsetting, and turning in of the metal at the ends of the section of tubing, whereby an aperture will be provided through or into which a rod, wire, or baluster may be inserted.”

After a description of tlie drawings, tlie existing state of tlie art is thus referred to: .

“Having- described my improved process of forming hollow spheroidal bodies, X would state that I am aware that very small articles, like heads, have heretofore been shaped by compressing the ends only of tubular sections into a rounded form, without shaping the periphery thereof, the tube being comparatively thick in relation to size of the article to be formed, so that sufficient body is provided in the tube to prevent crimping or doubling; and I am aware that larger hollow articles have been swaged into more or less rounded form from comparatively thin tubular metal by first casting a thick temporary lining of soft metal into the tube to give body thereto, and then shaping in one or more sets of rounded dies; but my invention differs from the former in making bodies of any desired size, without using tubing of a thickness increased as the diameter is enlarged, and also in not only swaging and upsetting the ends of the tube into a smaller diameter, but also enlarging the diameter of the middle part thereof; and it differs from the latter most essentially in not employing lining of soft metal or any other material, and it differs from both in that, whereas in those cases there is only a changing of the shape of the tube, there is no upsetting of the metal, making it thinner in some parts, and in others thicker. My process does thus greatly change the thickness of the metal- in different places, and, so far as -I am aware, I am the first to discover that comparatively thin tubes of large diameter can be swaged and upset into spheroidal form by dies, and that the metal can thereby be upset without crimping to receive the desired forms.”

The claim relied upon is the first:

“(1) The process herein described, of forming hollow spheroidal bodies from thin sheet metal, oblate at their extremities, which consists in first forming the metal into a tube, then placing a short section of said tube between two dies having the form of the body to he made, and compressing the tube in the said dies.”

This metal tubing may be either plain or corrugated. Corrugated tubing was well known long prior to 18SG. All the drawings which accompany the specification exhibit plain tubing only, and the words “tube” or “tubing,” wherever used in the patent, are unqualified by either adjective, “plain” or “corrugated.” The process [803]*803by which defendant's articles are made has been set forth in a stipulation. It is substantially the process of the patent, defendant, however, using corrugated tubing only, with such resulting changes as the use of such tubing imports. The judge who heard the cause at circuit found rliat then; was no infringement, and upon this appeal it will not be necessary to discuss any of the other questions presented on the record.

When a piece of plain, seamless tubing is corrugated, the metal composing it is bent inward and outward alternately, into a succession of what may be called incipient folds and creases. In the ordinary use of language, it may be said to be crimped. Under pressure tending to collapse it, such collapse will be effected by a folding in on one or more of these incipient creases. When pressure is applied, as in defendant’s process and in the process of the patent, viz. by placing the section of tubing upright between two concave dies, and compressing axially, the collapsing pressure of the walls of the cavity "into which the end is forced is uniform on the entire circumference of the tube, thus folding in the metal equally on every crease; and, as it is continued, the tube' is crimped more and more, until every fold is laid down close upon its neighbor. If the middle portion of the tube before axial compression is of slightly less diameter than the concavity of the dies, or if the tube is so long that the dies are not brought into contact, such middle portion will expand by reducing the depth of the creases or crimps in that portion from what it was after corrugation. Examination of the exhibits of defendant’s manufacture reveals another fact. In almost all the exhibits apertures are left at both ends. This has been effected by having in the bottom of each die a stud pin or projection of such diameter that it will check further folding in of the end of the tube, when the diameter of that end has been reduced to or a little short of the diameter left when the crimps have been folded together as close as possible. In one case, however, the stud or projection of one die has been of smaller diameter than that of the Lube with all its crimps folded closely in. The tag giving exhibit number is misplaced, but it is a copper-colored girdled exhibit which has been cut open.

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Related

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255 F. 83 (Second Circuit, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. 801, 25 C.C.A. 196, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-birmingham-brass-co-ca2-1897.