Keller v. American Sales Book Co.

26 F. Supp. 835, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 413, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3029
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 20, 1939
DocketNos. 2118A, 2180
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 835 (Keller v. American Sales Book Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keller v. American Sales Book Co., 26 F. Supp. 835, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 413, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3029 (W.D.N.Y. 1939).

Opinion

KNIGHT, District Judge.

The two actions above-entitled have been consolidated and are being tried as one. The issues in each are the same, except as to the period of alleged liability. For the purposes of this opinion reference will be made to the defendants as one.

Plaintiff sues for the alleged infringement of Keller Patent No. 1,489,833. Claims 5 to 8 and 14 to 25, inclusive, are in suit. Claims 6, 17 and 25 are typical, and those only need be discussed.

The patent is titled “Method of Operating upon Printed Webs” and relates to the “production from a continuous printed web or webs of books, pamphlets, magazines, periodicals, newspapers, folders and the like.” The application was filed December 30, 1919, and the patent issued April 8, 1924.

The practice in the manufacture of books, magazines and pamphlets now is, and heretofore has been, to print the web (sheet on which the printing appears), cut it into sheets of uniform dimensions thereby making signatures (printed sheets containing a number of pages, as 4-8-12-16), fold the individual signatures, assemble the signatures in their sequence, and bind. Keller proposed to simplify and make this work more efficient by eliminating the cutting of the web into sheets in the press room and the separate handling of the sheets during [836]*836the several succeeding operations. In his proposal the paper is drawn from the supply roll through cylinders, which print both sides of the web, then between other cylinders which crease it transversely (successive creases or folds being in opposite directions, partaking of an accordion or zigzag fold). The creased web is then dropped down into a truck or bin fold on fold.

His method is designed to operate to interfold a plurality of webs. This is done by aligning two or more bins or trucks, each containing a single web, bringing the ends of the separate webs together, withdrawing the webs from the separate positions aligning them with creases in register and either refolding them to produce a single pack for storage purposes or feeding them to apparatus for cutting, stitching and folding. The printed matter in such composite pack is so arranged that, when the signatures are folded and cut, the paging will run in consecutive o.rder. The method by which Keller proposes to gather webs from separate stacks and assemble them so that the creases of one web interfit with the creases of the other webs is the basis for the patent.' So far 'as claim is made here everything else in the process is old in the art. Webs were printed singly and in plurality, transversely creased at determined intervals, and stacked by means of such creasing. It is old in the art to print a web and zigzag fold it transversely, and superimposing and then folding simultaneously several printed webs is also old in the art and conceded so to be. The claims in suit are not concerned with the apparatus for performing the operations which take place after the web group has been completed and leaves the last group of fingers of the web assembling device.

Claim 6 reads: “The method which consists in separately printing a plurality of webs, transversely creasing each web at predetermined intervals, placing said creased webs in separate stacks, and withdrawing the webs from said stacks with the creases of one web interfitting with the creases of an adjacent web.”

Claims 17 and 25 are substantially the same as Claim 6, except as to the statement of the relation of the transverse creases and that Claim 25 refers to the assembly of the webs rather than the withdrawal thereof.

The only thing new or claimed to be new in these typical claims is the method of withdrawing the webs from the bins or trucks so as to .effect a proper register when a plurality of webs are employed, and control the feed of a single web or web group for the subsequent operations.

This method is illustrated by the following diagram from the patent:

Keller Patent No. 1,489,833 Issued Apr. 8th, 1924

[837]*837J shows the trucks; W, the webs; H, the transverse creases; K, the knife which cuts webs of more than one signature wide; L, the knife which transversely severs the webs at the required length; 14, shows the longitudinal stitching; M and N, the folding rollers. The webs are assembled by means of fingers, which mechanically lift each web at alternate transverse creases, the separate webs being mechanically brought together, one superimposed upon the other as the fingers pass them along, each set of fingers adding an additional web to the composite web and passing the web to the next set of fingers as it advances toward the storage bin for interfolding or to the cutting, stitching and folding machinery.

Defendant does not manufacture books, magazines, pamphlets, periodicals, newspapers or folders. It does manufacture what is known as manifold stationery, described as “stationery with which carbon is associated to make multiple copies of business entries in salesbooks, autographic registers, billing machines, typewriters, * * It has been engaged in that business for many years and has a volume of business running annually into many thousands of dollars. It manufactures forms for production orders, bills of lading and the like, utilized generally by railroads, large manufacturers and by other business interests. Defendant prints its forms on long strips of paper, with perforations between each form. It is then dropped into a container, folding automatically to form a zigzag pack. Several of these packs are formed, arranged in the desired sequence, the ends of the packs joined, the webs drawn manually from the packs, and assembled together in a composite zigzag pack. It should be rioted that defendant’s perforations do not control the feeding or the withdrawal movement of the webs as called for by Claims 14 and 15, and therefore these claims are clearly not infringed.

Defendant prepares the composite pack in three ways: (1) Without further action, after assembly it is shipped to the purchaser loosely folded in a suitable container. The purchaser folds the pack at a desired length, interposes carbon, if desired, and runs it through a machine or typewriter; (2) In a type of pack to be shipped with carbon interleaved, in order to prevent slipping of the carbon, the pack is stapled loosely between each successive fold by being run through a rotating stapling machine;, (3) In a type designed for use in a machine which will bring the original and copy forms into, exact registration for use, holes are punched on the margins of each strip at the time of manufacture. These strips when ready for use are fed through a specially adjusted machine having pins which fit into the holes and draw the several forms into alignment or exact registration. If the supply is used on a machine not equipped to effect registration automatically, the material is brought into alignment manually by the user.

By plaintiff’s method the web is transversely “creased or folded, successive creases or folds being in opposite directions” to permit the webs to be fitted together in alignment in an assembly of webs. Defendant does not crease the web but makes transverse perforations between successive forms. In its method of manufacture it is not necessary to secure exact register of the printing on the original with the printing on the copies. In plaintiff’s method the webs are assembled by machinery; in defendant’s method by manual operation. Under certain circumstances creases could not be employed by defendant in its process.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 835, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 413, 1939 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-american-sales-book-co-nywd-1939.