Juengst v. Gullberg

171 F. 428, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5606

This text of 171 F. 428 (Juengst v. Gullberg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Juengst v. Gullberg, 171 F. 428, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5606 (circtsdny 1909).

Opinion

MARTIN, District Judge.

The complainant alleges that, the defendants have infringed his letters patent No. 761,496, issued on 1he 31st day of May, 1904, covering a signature gathering machine. Printed sheets, as they cotne from a printing machine, are usually folded once or more. These folded sheets are known to the trade as “signatures.” They may be in pamphlets or simply sheets. They are gathered to form a book or magazine. A signature gathering machine takes these several sheets or pamphlets automatically and assembles them for the book or magazine. As these sheets or pamphlets called “signatures” are frequently imperfect, by leaves being missing or too many present, it is essential that the machine be so constructed that it shall gather only perfect signatures, and that imperfect signatures may be detected in such a manner that the error may be readily corrected. The machine must be adjusted for a predetermined thickness of the signatures, and if there is a deviation from that it must be detected. The complainant claims that his patent covers such a machine, and this the defendant does not deny, but asserts that prior patents involve the same principles, and, therefore, the complainant’s machine is nonpatentable. The defendant further asserts that, if the complainant has a patentable machine, it exists only in the adjustability of the gripper jaws, which device he has not infringed.

The complainant offered no machine as an exhibit, but used in argument certain drawings from the figures of the patent, and a small model, which model to my mind was of little practical benefit. As I understand the patent in suit from figure 1, the gripper lever is marked D and is secured on a rock shaft, A8. Lever D contains a pair of jaws, D2~D12, which work on a pivot, 13. The lower jaw is connected with a rod, Ds, and at the end of this rod is a screw cap, Dr, upon which is nut, Ds, over the screw cap in the rod D4, and threaded into rod D3. These parts are adjustable by the nut, D7, so that the jaws may be opened to a greater or less distance, whereby they are to take signatures of predetermined thickness. Arm D15 connects with rod D4, and at the end of this arm is a point, D18. When the machine is adjusted for work and signatures are taken by the gripper jaws that are of correct thickness, the detector finger, I)18, at the end of the arm, D]5, passes through a gate on the lever, B, which is formed by plates B3 and B4. If a signature is reached which is either too thick or too thin — varies from a predetermined thickness — linger DJ(S on the end of the arm D15 will fail to pass through the gate. When this occurs, D16 comes in contact with one of the plates, B3 or B4, throws down the lever, B, which contacts with lever, C, and stops the motion or disconnects. It seems unnecessary to describe the machine further as to the manner of giving the signal, etc.

The complainant’s patent seems to rest upon the adjustability of the gripper jaws, as the same are connected with detective and signaling mechanism. While this principle may be found in prior patents in use in different kinds of machines, the complainant seems to have been first to apply it to a signature gathering machine. So [430]*430well developed, however, was the prior art, that his patent must be limited to this device. If we were to broaden it to equivalents sufficient to cover the defendant’s device, and apply a like doctrine of equivalents to prior patents, said prior patents would embody every element of the complainant’s claimed invention.

Does the defendant’s machine infringe this device of the complainant’s machine ?

The defendant produced as an exhibit a machine, the working of which was plain and simple. In his machine the gripper lever, D, is attached to a rock shaft, A6. It has two jaws, marked in the drawings D2 and D.12, which always open the same width — about half an inch. They are opened and closed by a pin marked 4, which slides through the lever, D, and abuts against toggle D17. The other end abuts against stop 2 and in the opposite side of gripper lever, D. When the sliding pin, 4, strikes stop 2, it is forced against the upper part of toggle D17, and in connection with spring D5 serves to bring the jaws together on the signature. Lever B is hung on pin "26 and has two prolongations pivoted on different centers. At the end of these prolongations are fastened adjustable dogs, B3 and B4. In the defendant’s machine the gripper jaws always open to the full .extent. No adjustment of these jaws is essential. In setting the defendant’s machine for predetermined thickness of signatures, the adjustment is made by these dogs being moved a greater or less distance apart further up or down on members B, as necessary to permit the detector finger, D16, to pass between parts B3 and B4 when the machine is working normally. When the signature grasped by the jaws of the defendant’s machine is too thick or too thin, the finger, D, contacts with either the dog B3 or B4, and throws part B with the dogs B3 and B4 into a position whereby rod C is connected with bar K7 and contacts with link or dog 10, and thus connects the bar K4 and handle 20 and rod 11, which throws the machine out of gear and stops.

The defeftdant’s expert very aptly described the operation as follows:

“At this point I wish to call attention to the fact that in the machine of the patent in suit all the mechanism is mounted on a single rock shaft, Ae; that is to say, the gripper lever, the arms G, which actuate the stop mechanism, and the arm P>, which has a curved extension on which the adjustable plates are secured. This is not at all the case in defendant's machine. In the defendant’s machine there is a rock shaft, and means are provided for rocking the shaft, and that shaft carries nothing, absolutely nothing, but the gripper lever. The means that are tripped by the grippers when the machine operates abnormally are not supported by this rock shaft, nor have any connection with it, but are carried by two rigid rods or bars which have no movement whatever. The arms which are thrown by the tripping device when the machine operates abnormally are mounted on another entirely independent rock shaft, having no connection whatever with the rock shaft which carries the gripper lever. It is an absolute and fundamental difference between the construction of defendant’s machine and what is set- forth in the patent in suit. * * *
“The adjustment of the dogs in defendant’s machine permits of a much finer adjustment, than the adjustment of the jaws (of the complainant’s machine). It permits of a much safer adjustment, as the engagement between the dog and the finger during the movement of the parts becomes an abso[431]*431lutoly positive one, and accidental mistakes in tlie slipping ,and consequent disengagement of ilie finger and dog is precluded. It is much simpler in construction. It is more easily made; that is to say, the operator can make this adjustment with greater facility. The adjusted or adjusting parts are not subjected to the wear and tear caused by the violent opening and closing of the jaws and the concussion caused by the closing of the jaws on paper. In defendant's machine the jar or concussion incident to the opening and closing of the jaws, which takes place with considerable force, does not affect the parts carrying the (logs, on which part the adjustment is made.

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Bluebook (online)
171 F. 428, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/juengst-v-gullberg-circtsdny-1909.