Joseph T. Ryerson, Inc. v. Harley Davidson Motor Co.

52 F.2d 464, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1650
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 4, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 464 (Joseph T. Ryerson, Inc. v. Harley Davidson Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph T. Ryerson, Inc. v. Harley Davidson Motor Co., 52 F.2d 464, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1650 (E.D. Wis. 1931).

Opinion

GEIGER, District Judge.

The plaintiff, as holder of Conradson patént, No. 1,140,299, sues for infringement. That patent, applied for March 30, 1914, and issued May 18, 1915, pertains to an “automatic spindle lathe.” The mechanism, either upon or outside of the patent descriptions, is quite difficult to describe with fair conciseness in an opinion. The defendant is using a machine purchased from a maker holding a number of patents issued to Bullard and Stevens; and except upon certain contentions respecting the infringing aspects of the defendant’s machine, the ease involves Conradson and Bullard and Stevens patents as conflicting patents. The particular Bullard and Stevens patent whose construction is involved in this case was applied for shortly before Conradson, and issued about three years later. It is stipulated, however, that the defendant’s machine is an embodiment of a later patent to Bullard and Stevens, granted in 1920, which, so the patentee states, covers automatic multiple spindle machine tools, “in general * *% * styled after and is an improvement upon my former multiple spindle machine for which letters patent of the United States Number 1,258,089 were granted March 5, 1918.” So if, upon the conflict between the Conradson and the earlier Bullard patent, it appears that the defendant’s machine exemplifies, not only the latter, but also as to the claims in issue, the earlier Bullard patent, the case is made out.

It may be said at the outset’ that upon mere comparison of the Conradson and the earlier Bullard patent, their relative claims in question here appear clearly to be conflicting; and, as will be seen, it is impossible to escape a finding that such claims with .slight changes in language as to certain elements, not only* on their face, but upon the proofs dealing with the development of the Conradson structure and his work in developing the situation for patent application, appear to have been copied in Bullard from Conradson.

[465]*465It is believed that instead of a detailed description of the structure shown in the patents, or in use by the defendant, it may suffice, except so far as detail may be necessary in tbe consideration of either validity, scope, or the infringing character of the defendant’s machine, to treat tbe subject by assuming that the parties, first of all, appreciate fully what there is, basically, in common between tbe conflicting patents and the defendant’s machine. If, therefore, the matter is approached upon consideration of the claims and the concessions which the parties make respecting their identity, leaving for determination the narrower issue, whether the differences in language or in structure, as those differences are asserted in connection with those claims are real and substantial, the court will have considered and disposed of the issues as the parties have really litigated them. This will he entirely consistent with a broad concession that the structures of the respective parties may not he comparable in appearance, may be widely variant in detail, perfection, and efficiency of mechanical organization; and it is likewise consistent with the thought that, with such variation, any or all of the elements comprised within any claim are, separately, old in the art, and yet the particular combinations covered by the claims in question may he broadly novel and found in the alleged infringing structure.

An attempt will therefore be made to consider the case upon direet approach to tbe claims asserted by the plaintiff, and, in view of tbe stipulation respecting defendant’s machine, to consider, first, the claims of the Bullard patent, which, as noted, appear to be either an entire, or, as tbe defendant claims, only a partial, copy of Conradson. If, as to some of such claims, complete identity appears, then the only question remaining may be whether the defendant’s machine is within such identical claims. This attempt may be further premised upon general observations respecting the commencement and prosecution of Conradson’s work. That he commenced his work in the year 1912, long before anything was done by the rival patentees, that thenceforward until the date of filing his patent, he prosecuted his work diligently, with the result that late in 1914, so the testimony shows, he had completed, or practically completed, a machine — “90% complete,” so the witnesses state — is not open to doubt. That he diligently prosecuted the work of preparing for application for patent is likewise free from doubt. This general situation is of importance in view of the complexity of the structure and the mass of detail requiring attention, not only in the building and organizing of the machine, but the accurate development of drawings, descriptions, -and the like, incident either to construction of a machine or to patent application; and it is particularly relevant, as against the defendant or its manufacturer, in respect of the claims in question which, as will be seen, were in general form and substance prepared and filed by Conradson with his patent application, and, with amendments, allowed, before they appeared in co-pending patent application of Bullard and Stevens.

So, too, in the consideration of each of the several conflicting claims, it may and should he quite conclusively presumed that, as between the conflicting patents, identity of description of elements means,

1. Structural identity in fact, at least within the conception of the rival applicants.

2. That, respecting an element stated in variant language, there is a strong presumption that Bullard’s statement covering such element was made for the purpose of evading or avoiding a corresponding element of Conradson then clearly in the mind of Bullard.

It is believed conducive to brevity, perhaps to clarity, if these “conflicting” claims be considered in parallel. We come first to claim 1 of Conradson’s patent, and claim 64 of Bullard patent, No. 1,258,089:

Conradson

Claim 1.

In a multiple spindle lathe,

(1) a revolving carrier having a step by step movement,

(2) a plurality of revolving driving spindles having a stationary support,

(3) a plurality of •work-holding spindles mounted in said carrier to revolve therewith and encircling said driving spindles and geared thereto to be revolved thereby,

(4) means for operating said spindles at variable speeds, and

(5) a tool carrier having a reciprocating movement toward and from said work-holding spindles, and

(6) tool holders mounted in said tool carrier to register respectively . with said work-holding spindles.

Bullard

Claim 64:

In a multiple spindle machine,

(1) a revolving carrier having a step by step, movement,

(2) a plurality of revolving driving spindles having a stationary support,

(3) a plurality of work-holding spindles mounted in said carrier to revolve therewith and encircling said driving spindles and geared thereto to be revolved thereby,

(4) means for operating said spindles at variable speeds, and

(5) a tool carrying means having a reciprocating movement toward and from said work-holding spindles.

[466]

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Related

Fleming v. Reinecke
52 F.2d 449 (Seventh Circuit, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 464, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-t-ryerson-inc-v-harley-davidson-motor-co-wied-1931.