James Heddon's Sons v. Millsite Steel & Wire Works, Inc.

35 F. Supp. 169, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2497
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedOctober 10, 1940
DocketCiv. 966
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 35 F. Supp. 169 (James Heddon's Sons v. Millsite Steel & Wire Works, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James Heddon's Sons v. Millsite Steel & Wire Works, Inc., 35 F. Supp. 169, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2497 (E.D. Mich. 1940).

Opinion

TUTTLE,' District Judge.

This is a patent and trade-mark infringement suit with numerous charges of unfair competition. This suit was filed April 10, 1939, and is coupled with a counterclaim by the defendant. Both plaintiff and defendant are Michigan corporations.

The plaintiff charges defendant with infringement of Jamar patent No. 1,892,892, issued to plaintiff January 3, 1933, and of Wooster design patent No. 93,370, issued to plaintiff September 18, 1934. Both of these patents relate to fish baits.

The plaintiff also charges the defendant with infringement of registered trade-mark No. 345,384 issued to plaintiff April 27, 1927, on a red stripe applied to one or more edges of boxes or labels for fishing tackle, and of registered trade-mark No. 154,046 issued to plaintiff April 4, 1922, on the words “Head-On Basser” for fish baits.

. The plaintiff also charges the defendant with unfair competition summarized as follows :

a. Allegedly configuring its fish baits like plaintiff’s “River Runt” baits.

b. Applying thereto a collar (chin piece) allegedly copying plaintiff’s bait collar.

c. Applying thereto a herringbone decoration.

d. Using red-edged boxes and labels for fish baits.

e. Using the word “basser” for fish baits.

f. Using the word “wounded” for composition baits.

g. Using the numeral 9 and,the letter R for allegedly similar baits.

h. Publishing a color chart of baits allegedly simulating plaintiff’s color chart.

i. Publishing an advance announcement in October, 1938, of allegedly similar fish baits for future delivery.

The defendant’s counterclaim charges that the plaintiff has sent notices of infringement and made threats and intimidations against defendant’s customers and has caused its salesmen to do likewise, to induce the trade to refuse to order from defendant, thereby attempting to ruin defendant’s business and causing defendant great loss and damage while plaintiff was deriving large profits therefrom. Following a hearing on November 10, 1939, the defendant was granted an order restraining the plaintiff from continuing such conduct until the case had been tried and determined.

I will take up first the Jamar patent, all claims of which are in suit.

As usual, the defenses are invalidity, or, if valid, not infringed. The first claim reads:

“A fish bait comprising a chambered body made from two separately formed end units with open ends provided with meeting surfaces disposed in a plane transverse to the bait axis, the walls of the body being of non-buoyant material and having an excess of thickness along the bottom of the bait to position the center of bait gravity below its axis, and means connecting the end units of the bait along their meeting surface in a manner to form a seal therebetween.”

That claim, in a general way, describes the meat of that patent. Considering first the material of which the bait body is made, it is limited only as to being non-buoyant. In other words, the material in it is heavier than water. The claim was *172 made broad enough to cover all materials that are heavier than water.

The next thing that he discloses and claims is that he makes the bait body in more than one part and then connects these parts together transversely. It was old to make the bait out of something heavier than water, to make it hollow, to make it in more than one piece and , to . connect these pieces together transversely.

To make the bait body heavier along the bottom by an excess of thickness was not only old in this art, but also simple and old the world over in many arts. If you have something which is made of material heavier than water but will float because it is made with an air chamber 'and you wish it to float in a particular position, you make it thicker at the part which you want to be at the bottom, because the part that is thickest is also the heaviest. If the material is .non-buoyant, the heaviest part of the structure will go to the bottom. Thus, if you make it out of non-buoyant material, and make it hollow with an excess of thickness, it is going to roll around in the water so that the thickest and heaviest part of it is down at the bottom. That was well known, and it was old in the art.

That claim reads on the prior art, hence the patent should not have been granted. As for the prior art, it is sufficient to refer to Shakespeare, No. 671,613 of April 9, 1901; Kreisser, No. 857,883 of June 25, 1907; Welch, No. 1,635,518 of July 12, 1927; and Sales, No. 573,572 of December 22, 1896. All of the other claims are void for similar reasons. The Jamar file wrapper shows that these prior patents were not cited by the Patent Office.

Long after the Jamar patent was issued, an effort was made to limit these claims which were so broad, and so lacking in invention. That effort has only been applied to the material out of which the bait was to be made.

On March 16, 1939, less than one month before this suit was started, a disclaimer was filed as follows:

“In each of the claims the units of the chambered body are formed from a plastic material susceptible of being molded to the desired, shape as contrasted with bait bodies carved from wood or formed from metal, and bait bodies formed from wood or metal are herein expressly disclaimed.”

That disclaimer is of the type that for years I have been condemning from this bench. Fruehauf Trailer Co. v. Highway Trailer Co., D.C., 54 F.2d 691, affirmed, 6 Cir., 67 F.2d 558. It comes entirely within my old illustration in this Fruehauf case of the man who obtained a poor and worthless patent from the Patent Office on a block of marble. Finding on the one hand that what he had secured so broadly was worthless in that it read on the prior art, and finding on the other hand a defendant who was making a Madonna that he wanted to reach and stop, he then went back to the Patent Office and knocked off all of those pieces of the block of marble except those which were necessary to form the outline of the thing which the defendant was making. He then asserted that what he had left in his claim was new and could not be found in the prior art.

When that happens, the Patent Office, which in the first instance has made an error, is never given a chance to say whether or not the thing which the plaintiff now tries to save out of the block of marble is new.

This case fits itself exactly into that picture. I hold as a matter of law that, even though the new claim carved out by the disclaimer had been so narrowed that it escaped the prior art, it still must fail.

Such a course of practice would abandon the assistance of the Patent Office. It would encourage patentees to use no care except to get all they could out of the Patent Office, good or bad, and then when'the time came and they found someone doing something that they didn’t like, to narrow their too broad claims down into something that would fit the defendant like a suit of clothes.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F. Supp. 169, 47 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 106, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-heddons-sons-v-millsite-steel-wire-works-inc-mied-1940.