Killefer Mfg. Co. v. Dinuba Associates, Ltd.

67 F.2d 362, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 142, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4470
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 1933
DocketNo. 6862
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 67 F.2d 362 (Killefer Mfg. Co. v. Dinuba Associates, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Killefer Mfg. Co. v. Dinuba Associates, Ltd., 67 F.2d 362, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 142, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4470 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WILBUR, Circuit Judge.

The appellee, Dinuba Associates, Limited, a corporation, is the owner of patent No. 1,-584,644, issued May 11, 1826, on an application filed March 6, 1923, to H. Petzoldt, for a power lift implement. The appellant, Killefer Manufacturing Company, a corporation, is the owner of patent No. 1,710,222, issued April 23, 1929, on an application filed December 8, 1924, to A. W. Hudson, for a power lift implement.

The appellant is engaged in the manufacture of agricultural implements of various types, and the appellee brought this suit for infringement, claiming that the appellant, in the manufacture of its implements, had infringed claim 1 of the patent issued to H. Petzoldt, owned by it.

The appellee seems to concede that the device patented by A. W. Hudson, owned.by the appellant, would not infringe claim 1 of the patent owned by it. It contends, however, that, whether or not the Hudson device is an infringement of its patent, the implements actually manufactured by the appellant embody the device covered by claim 1 of the Petzoldt patent.

Appellee concedes in its brief that power lift implements are old in the art, and that claim 1 of its patent should be strictly limited to the claims thereof. We quote in that regard from appellee’s brief: “At the start of the trial in the District Court, the attorney for appellee stated that the Petzoldt patent in suit was to be strictly limited to the claims thereof; that the plaintiff did not seek a broad interpretation of the claim; that the claim should be strictly construed; and that claim 1 was not entitled to a full range of mechanical equivalents.”

[363]*363We quote claim 1 of the Petzoldt patent, although without the drawings and specifications and descriptive matter in the patent the claim is quite unintelligible: “In a power lift implement, a frame, an axle journaled transversely of said frame, an arm on each end of the axle, each arm terminating at the lower end with a spindle, traction wheels rotatable on said spindle, a pair of spaced discs mounted on one spindle, a pair of spaced discs mounted on one spindle and fixed to the adjacent wheel, a plurality of pins extending transversely between the discs, and at regular intervals in a circular formation adjacent the edges of the discs, an elongated pawl pivotally mounted on the frame at a point underneath the axis of the axle and normally extending forwardly alongside of the adjacent arm, said pawl having a hooked end terminating above the pins, means for swinging the pawl into an engageable position with said pins, whereby when the hooked end is engaged with one pin and the discs rotate, the next succeeding pin will engage the pawl to disengage the hooked end.”

Before attempting to analyze this claim or apply it to the facts in the ease, a general statement with reference to power lift implements should be made. The purpose of the power lifting device is to provide means by which the implements, such as a plow, a subsoil plow, a cultivator, or other tool for working the earth, may be lifted clear of the ground by the application of the tractive power which is also utilized to pull the implement. The object of lifting the tools from the ground is to enable the implement to be taken to and from the place of work and to lift the tool while turning corners during the progress of the work instead of having the tools dragging on the surface of the ground. The tools may be rigidly attached to the carriage or body of the implement or they may be lifted by direct application of power to the tools themselves. In the implements involved in this action and described in the patents of Petzoldt and Hudson the tools are rigidly attached, and the entire carriage is lifted. The axle upon which the traction wheels are mounted is bent thus:

and, when the tools are raised above the surface of the ground, the carriage is suspended from the transverse portion of the

bent axle, that is, from the highest portion, thus:

The implements are raised from the ground by applying power to the bend in the axle, thus lifting the bent portion of the axle and with it the carriage and attached tools around the spindle of the axle, as a fulcrum. In the device under consideration the bend consists of four right angle turns, thus:

When the implement is in operation with the tools below, the surface of the ground the arms sx and s'x' of the axle are at an acute angle with the surface of the ground. The implement is attached to the transverse portion of the axle marked xx' and the wheels to the spindle ws and w's'. By rotating the axle about the spindles ws and w's' the implement is raised as the arm of the axle approaches the perpendicular. In order to rotate xx' about the line ww' and thus lift the heavy implement carriage with the tools attached, it is necessary to apply the power to xx' or some portion of the carriage suspended therefrom. This is accomplished in the device of the appellant and also in that of the appellee by a pawl, hooked over a pin in the periphery of a wheel which is secured concentrically to the traction wheel and revolves with it. This smaller wheel bolted to the traction wheel is composed of two discs attached by four or more pins in the periphery of the discs, but separated a few inches by cylindrical sleeves over the bolts. When the operator of the implement desires to raise the carriage and tools, he hooks the pawl over the revolving pin by moving a lever. When the pin has moved through an are of about 60°, it is necessary to detach the pawl, as the tools are raised sufficiently, and further connection would bend or break the pawl or cause the traction wheels to slide, as they could not turn further when rigidly connected with the carriage.

It is necessary at this juncture that the power which has been turning xx' about ww' shall be detached, and that some means other than the pawl which had been used for lifting the tools shall be substituted to hold the carriage in its elevated position. This de[364]*364taehment, or release of the pawl, is accomplished in the appellee’s patent by the next succeeding pin of the smaller wheel coming in contact with the surface of -the shank of the pawl and forcing it off the pin over which it was hooked. The patent drawing of the pawl in the Petzoldt patent is as follows (the letters are ours):

X represents the spindle to the axle, and the pins E-F are the pins of the wheel which rotate about the axis X. C is the pawl, or hook, referred to in the patent, pivoted at A and attached to the arm G. The operator pulls the cord D, moves the arm G forward and the pawl C downward until it hooks over the pin E. The power is thus applied through E and the pawl C, to the point A, so that the point A rotates about the axle X. As the wheel turns, the following pin F comes in contact with the under surface of the pawl at the point indicated by C and forces the hook of the pawl off of the pin E. It will thus be observed that the cord D operates a V-shaped lever hinged at the vertex A. The appellant claims that the appellee’s patent, if valid, merely covers this method of detachment. It is not entirely clear whether this is conceded by the appellee, as will presently more fully appear. In the devices of both the appellant and the appellee, power is applied by means of a wheel attached to the traction wheels of the implement having four pins, more or less, by a hook or pawl attached to xx' or to some part of the carriage equivalent thereto, so that as the traction wheel revolves it causes xx' to revolve with it.

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67 F.2d 362, 19 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 142, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killefer-mfg-co-v-dinuba-associates-ltd-ca9-1933.