Kilmer Manuf'g Co. v. Griswold

62 F. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2846

This text of 62 F. 119 (Kilmer Manuf'g Co. v. Griswold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilmer Manuf'g Co. v. Griswold, 62 F. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2846 (circtndny 1894).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

The complainant, as the owner of two letters patent granted to Irving A. Kilmer for improvements in adjustable bale-ties, brings this bill against the defendant for infringement. The first of these patents, No. 282,991, is dated August 14, 1883, the second, No. 372,375, is dated November 1,1887.

No. 282,991.

In the specification the patentee says:

“Tile object of the invention is to produce a device in which the loose end of the band-wire, when put in place, shall be clasped or gripped so- as to preclude unintentional separation, and in which the parts in contact will not be cut "or broten.”

The clasp is made of wire of a size considerably larger than the band-wire. The wire of the clasp is bent at the middle, forming a sharp Y-shaped recess. The two ends of the wire so bent are returned upon themselves and bent over the looped end of the band-wire, which is thus permanently attached to the clasp. In use the band-wire is placed around the bale, the free end is slipped into the Y-shaped recess and is then bent back and twisted about itself. As the bale is released from the press it expands and this pressure on the band tends to force the wire down into the angle, which, being smaller than the wire, pinches the wire tightly and prevents it from slipping or pulling out. The clasp being of round wire has no sharp cutting edge and the band-wire is in no danger of being abraded or broken. The claim relied on is the second. It is as follows:

“In a bale-tie, a clasp, B, made of wire larger than that of the band and having the pinching angle b, as set forth.”

The defenses are lack of novelty and invention and noninfringement.

The complainant’s brief contains the following concise proposition:

“In order to anticipate the invention covered by the first Kilmer patent it is necessary to find in the prior art a bale-tie having the following characteristics: 1. A band made of wire. 2. A clasp made of wire and of larger gauge than that of the band. 3. A pinching angle formed in the wire clasp. By ‘pinching angle’ in this connection is meant an angle formed by bending the wire composing the clasp into the form of a V having an apex smaller than the diameter of the band-wire, so that the wire will be pinched by the mere forcing of the wire down into such angle, irrespective of any inward movement of the sides of the clasp.”

Turning to'the patent granted to Isaac T. Smith, February 2, 1875, for an improvement in bale-ties, it will be found that ail of these features are present, except that the clasp is not, apparently, made of wire. The band is made of wire, the clasp is made “of wrought-iron, malleable iron, or other suitable material having its ends bent over on top, forming a double hook,” etc. Material having the properties described may very properly, upon the testimony in this cause, be called wire. The complainant’s brief, in discussing the question of infringement, says, on this subject:

[121]*121"Contrary to defendants’ contention, the saddle of the Griswold tie is made from a strip of metal which is properly designated as ‘wire.’ Two reasons seem to have influenced defendants’ experts in declaring that this saddle-piece is not made from ‘wire;’ first, that it is not cylindrical, and, second, that it does not appear to have been made by the process of ‘drawing.’ (1) The first of these reasons is disposed of by the definition of the term ‘wire’ ¡mil the several illustrations of the different forms of wire taken from Knight’s Mechanical Dictionary. Knight says: ‘Wire is usually cylindrical, but it is ¡liso made of various other form», as oval, half-round, square and triangular, and of more complicated shapes for small pinions,’ etc. Among the illustrations given by Knight are various forms where the wire is saddle-slmped in cross section, very much like the saddle of defendants’ tie. A reference to the Pendleton and Proctor patents on cotton-gin saws shows that ihe term ‘wire’ is frequently used to designate the strips of flat metal out of which cotton-gin saws are made. Mr. Denox, one of the defendants’ witnesses. and who is connected with the bale-tie business of the Washburn & Moon Mfg. Co., says that the term ‘wire’ is applied to flat goods as well as cylindrical, lie says: ‘We receive orders for flat wire of all dimensions up to an inch or thereabouts in width.’ (2) Equally erroneous is llie statement of defendants’ expert Mr. Brevoort, that the saddle of defendants’ tie is not ‘wire,’ because it has not been made by ‘drawing.’ ”

It is apparent, therefore, that a clasp made of wire would be within 1he Smith patent. The Smith clasp is made of material that may be “bent over’’ and it is of larger guage than the hand-wire. There is also a pinching angle formed in the clasp. Indeed, the description of the Smith device applies equally well to the Kil-mer clasp. The specification of the Smith patent says:

"Whan tho bale is pressed and tbe wire passed around the same, the ends of the wire aro bent a.nd passed through the central lop opening, a, into the Y-shaped recesses, b, b. When the pressure is removed from the bale the bale at once expands, drawing the wires into the Y-sbaped recesses and pinching them tightly therein, so tha t they cannot slip out from the same.”

Assinning that this patent does not anticipate, the remaining question is whether it required invention to substitute a clasp made of round wire> for the clasp “of wrought-iron, malleable iron or other suitable material,” of the Smith patent. It is, perhaps, an improvement to present rounded pinching edges to the hand-wire, hut it required only mechanical skill to do this. Ko new function is performed. There is no proof regularly before the court that the Smith clasp will break or cut the wire of the hand. Assume that it would. A workman of ordinary capacity, on discovering the defect, would know enough to round off the sharp edges which injure the wire. Again, Kilmer was not the first to use a clasp of round wire larger in diameter than that of the band. Such a clasp is shown in the Lowber patent of 1868, the Trowbridge patent of 1869, the Knipsclieer patent, of 1878 and the Griswold patent of March, 1883. Indeed, wire was the most natural material to use. I cannot avoid the conclusion that the fundamental principle underlying the Kilmer patent of 1883 is disclosed by the Smith patent — the idea is all there. Smith describes a hale-tie, having a wire hand, a clasp of larger gauge than the hand and a Y-shaped recess in the clasp Into which the hand-wire is pressed by the expansion of the hale. Grant that Kilmer has embodied this idea in a more practical and perfect device, did it require in[122]*122vention to do this? The defects which, it is suggested, are found in the Smith clasp would develop immediately, upon the proper test being applied, and the remedy would at once occur to the skilled workman, especially when the prior art abounds with clasps made of large round wire. The Smith patent was not discovered until after the final hearing, but counsel have had full opportunity to examine and discuss it. The other references offered by the defendants when aggregated show all that the Smith patent shows, but in the opinion of the court no1 other reference shows so many of the features of .the Kilmer patent in combination. The court is constrained to hold, therefore, in view of what the prior art discloses, that, if sustained at all, the second claim of No.

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Bluebook (online)
62 F. 119, 1894 U.S. App. LEXIS 2846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilmer-manufg-co-v-griswold-circtndny-1894.