Keasbey & Mattison Co. v. American Magnesia & Covering Co.

143 F. 490, 74 C.C.A. 510, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 24, 1906
DocketNo. 34
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 143 F. 490 (Keasbey & Mattison Co. v. American Magnesia & Covering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keasbey & Mattison Co. v. American Magnesia & Covering Co., 143 F. 490, 74 C.C.A. 510, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764 (3d Cir. 1906).

Opinion

GRAY, Circuit Judge.

This suit was brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, in equity1, for an injunction, and accounting, and damages, by the appellant, the Keasbey & Mattison Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, against the appellee, the American Magnesia & Covering Company, also a Pennsylvania corporation, for infringement of letters patent No. 397,860, issued to the patentee, Henry G. Keasbey, February 12, 1889, the title to which, by due and legal assignments, was vested in the complainant company.

The patent was for a new> and useful improvement in machines for molding tubes or cylinders, and the patentee states the object of his invention to be “the production of an apparatus or machine for. forming or molding tubes or cylinders of plastic material, such as are employed for covering steam and like pipes, by which the tubes or cylinders are formed perfectly; rapidly and cheaply.” The defenses relied upon in the court below, were:

(1) Non-infringement.

(2) That claims 1, 3, and 5 of the patent in suit (the ones here involved) are invalid, because the combination of these claims is disclosed in the prior art.

(3) That the combination of the patent in suit was an invention of Wilfred S. Griffiths, and not of Henry G. Keasbey, the patentee.

(4) That the apparatus of the patent in suit was in public use two years before the application for a patent.

(5) That in view of the prior art, it required no more than mere mechanical skill, at the date of the alleged' invention, to construct the combinations of claims 1, 3 and 5 of the patent in suit.

(6) That claims 1, 3 and 5 are not true combinations, but are mere aggregations, and therefore invalid.

The court below found that the patented device was the invention of Wilfred S. Griffiths; and not of the patentee, Henry G. Keasbey. The court did not, therefore, consider any of the' other defenses, but, on the ground stated, entered its decree dismissing the bill with costs.

The questions raised on this appeal by the specifications of error, involve not only the one upon which the court dismissed the bill, but also, the validity of claims 1, 3 and 5 of the patent, and, though the view taken by this court will to some extent render necessary the discussion of those other questions, the action taken by the court below upon the claim that the patented device was the invention of Griffiths, and not of Keasbey, gives to it a dominating importance.

In a short opinion, the learned judge of the court below says:

[492]*492“If I had enjoyed the advantage of seeing and hearing the witnesses, I should have felt better qualified to judge between the two conflicting accounts that have been presented to the court, but as I have nothing before me except the cold record, I must rely upon the tests of inherent probability and corroboration. So far as the former test is concerned, there Is not much to choose, I think, between the contradictory statements of the rival claimants. Standing by itself, each account is plausible, and each is-susceptible of attack at certain points, as the briefs of counsel have not failed to make clear. In a position of such perplexity, I have, therefore, felt bound to give considerable weight to the corroborating testimony of several other witnesses, which supports the account of Mr. Griffiths. * * * The weight of the evidence seems to establish the fact, that the patented device was invented late in the year 1885, by W. S. Griffiths.”

From a careful reading of the testimony, as disclosed in the record, we can appreciate the perplexity produced thereby in the mind of the learned judge. We have, however, reached a different conclusion as to the disposition to be made of the case under the circumstances. There is undoubtedly a clear and absolute conflict of testimony between Keasbey, the patentee, and W. S. Griffiths, in regard to the main fact of invention of the device of the patent in suit. It is not disputed that Henry G. Keasbey, the patentee, as manufacturing partner of the firm of Keasbey & Mattison, had conducted experiments, for the purpose of devising an apparatus for molding pipe and boiler covering of magnesia, asbestos and water, prior to any relation of Wilfred S. Griffiths thereto. Keasbey testifies that his attention was called to devices for molding tubes or cylinders, in November 1885, by the purchase from their firm, by a man named Hanmore, of large quantities of carbonate of magnesia, and that it was discovered that Hanmore was using it for steam pipes, for the prevention of radiation of heat; that Hanmore afterwards told him, that if the covering for application to steam pipes, composed of carbonate of magnesia and asbestos paper, could be molded successfully into sectional covering, there would be a large demand for it; that Hanmore then showed Keasbey a small tin mold, which he had with him, and a short half section of pipe covering about six inches in length. Keasbey then returned to Ambler, and had a tin mold made, and molded one or two-sections of covering with it. As the tin inclosure prevented evaporation, Keasbey testifies that he had a mold made of brass wire gauze (of which he makes an exhibit), lined it with muslin, filled it with the Hanmore composition, and dried it in an oven in the analytical department of his establishment, which was heated by steam; that, owing to the open character of the mold, the water easily evaporated, and in a very short time the contents were turned out on a plane dry surface, until the drying was completed; that he molded in this-way several sections of a suitable size, to cover a half inch pipe, and applied it to the pipes then in use in the laboratory. Satisfied by his-experiments, that it was possible to successfully mold the Hanmore composition into sectional coverings, Keasbey then determined to-begin the development and perfection of an invention suitable for the purpose. He testifies that the day following the finishing of the half inch coverings, he took them from the steam pipes, to which they had been applied, and started across to Wilfred S. Griffiths’ office (Grif[493]*493iiths being the superintendent of the works, under Keasbey & Mattison), to- show them to him, and give him directions with regard to starting work on the invention he had in view. He met Griffiths coming out of his office, showed him the half sections, and explained that he wished to have some machine and smith work done for the apparatus he had in mind; that this was the first time Wilfred S. Griffiths ever heard or knew of magnesia sectional covering. Keasbey then describes, in detail and at great length, the form of mold which he directed Griffiths to have made for experimental purposes, and relates all of the steps and all of the difficulties‘which he encountered during his experiments, and how he overcame them.

This summary by counsel for appellant, of Keasbey’s testimony, though entirely correct, does not convey to the mind in full, the impression made by Keasbey’s testimony when read in extenso. Its ■coherence and intelligent handling of the subject-matter of the inquiry, bespeak a trained mind, and one familiar with the discussion of mechanical operations and devices. In the course of his testimony, Keasbey produced a series of drawings, some 12 in number, illustrating the successive steps in the development of the invention as claimed by him. It is true, that all but four of these drawings were recently made, presumably for the purposes of the suit.

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Bluebook (online)
143 F. 490, 74 C.C.A. 510, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 3764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keasbey-mattison-co-v-american-magnesia-covering-co-ca3-1906.