Klein v. American Casting & Mfg. Corp.

87 F.2d 291, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 210, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 45
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 291 (Klein v. American Casting & Mfg. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. American Casting & Mfg. Corp., 87 F.2d 291, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 210, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480 (2d Cir. 1937).

Opinions

AUGUSTUS N. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This is the ordinary patent suit brought for infringement 'of United States patent No. 1,789,236 issued to the complainant-appellant, Samuel Klein. The invention relates to devices for securing or sealing the cords by which tags bearing price marks are fastened to garments in such a manner that the tags cannot be removed without mutilation of the seals, cords, tags, or garments.

[292]*292The complainant, Klein, is the proprietor of a garment store on Union Square in New York City where .he sells millions of women’s dresses each year. The customers may select their own garments from those on- display, pay to a cashier the prices marked on tags which are attached and take home their selections, hut they are allowed to return them within five days, provided the goods with the attached seals and tags are found intact when returned. It is obvious that for the satisfactory operation of such a system seals are vital for the vendor’s protection, yet they- must be inexpensive and readily attachable to the garments while remaining irremovable therefrom unless destroyed or mutilated.

Klein had found trouble with the seals he had been able to secure prior to the time when the seal covered by the patent in suit was designed.

The design for a one-piece seal known as the Lox seal (Exhibit 6) is said to have cost from $4.50 to $5 per thousand and to have proved unsatisfactory. In this seal a small metal tip had to be inserted in the eyelet of the casing after the flanges that locked the walls of the casing had been fitted together. Sometimes this tip would not be pushed far enough into the casing to hold; on other occasions the end where it was inserted would open up. There was also waste of time and trouble with this seal by the entangling of the cords. In the hope of obviating the above defects Klein used a two-piece seal (Exhibit 7) such as is described in the United States patent No. 1,727,754 to Dessauer. The two parts had to be carried about by the operatives, picked up separately, and matched together. All this involved delay and expense. The evidence indicates that these seals cost $2.80 per thousand and that the matching and insertion of the knot in the seal required the use of both hands and delayed the work. Moreover, some of the pieces would not fit properly and had to be discarded.

Seals made in accordance with the teaching of the patent in suit cost only $1.10 per thousand. These seals can be applied at the rate of 320 per hour, and they have superseded others in the plaintiff’s business. About 100 operatives are employed solely to affix seals, and only about half as large a force is required to apply seals made in accordance with the patent in suit as was necessary when the Lox seal was used. Millions of seals have been used by Klein and sold by licensees under his patent which has had a remarkable commercial development because the device is the first employing a one-piece seal that has proved satisfactory to the trade.

The seal of the Klein patent is made out of a single piece of metal. It is formed with two pivotable jaws adapted to sandwich the ends of the tie member between them and has a mechanism for locking- them together after the tie member has been inserted. Each jaw has a substantially flat body portion and marginal flanges, the flanges of one jaw being telescopable with respect to the flanges of the other when the jaws are closed. A hinge upon which the two jaws pivot is made by bending the metal at their junction. The side walls in conjunction with the end walls form a chamber wherein the locking parts which consist of two metallic lips doubled back upon the end walls are so inclosed as to be incapable of manipulation. The marginal flanges are generally wedge-shaped in order to give the seal a form tapering toward the hinge so that a small cord can be grasped firmly while at the same time adequate room is provided internally for effective locking elements.

All three of the claims of the patent are in issue. The trial judge held the first claim not infringed because of the different structure employed by the defendant. He held the second claim anticipated by United States patent No. 1,160,034 to Bell and the third claim infringed, but he dismissed the bill because he thought that Klein and Kasanof, who applied for the patent in suit, were not the sole inventors but had had assistance from one Behrman. We think that the claims are all valid and infringed. They read as follows:

“1. A seal for a tie member comprising a pair of tapering jaws hinged together at their tapered ends and forming complementary telescopable portions of a chamber when brought together with the portions of the jaw adjacent the hinge in close association, the jaws being adapted to receive the tie member between them when open and to clamp said member along the lines of the hinge and between the adjacent portions of the jaws, and means within said chamber for automatically locking the jaws together in an inseparable manner.

[293]*293“2. A seal for a string or the like comprising a pair of hinged jaws, each tapering toward the hinge and having portions adjacent the hinge which, when brought together, will grasp the string therebetween, and means on said jaws and spaced from said hinge and positioned in the wider portions of the jaws for automatically locking said jaws together in an inseparable manner and for holding the portions adjacent the hinge in a grasping relation to the string therebetween, said means being inaccessible against manipulation when the jaws are brought into their predetermined locked position.

“3. A seal for a tie member comprising a pair of jaws hinged together, each jaw comprising a body portion and triangular flanges depending from opposed sides thereof, each of the flanges of each jaw tapering from the free end of the body portion thereof to the hinged and thereof whereby to give each jaw a generally wedge-shaped conformation, the two jaws being movable relatively about the hinge to bring them into nested relation to form a chamber closed at the top by the body portion of one of the jaws and at the bottom by the body portion of the other jaw with the flanges of one jaw each in laterally overlapping relation to the corresponding flange of the other jaw to form side closures of the chamber, an interlocking element on one of said jaws, an end wall carried by the other of said jaws for forming an end closure for the chamber at the end remote from the hinge, said end wall having an interlocking element cooperating with the first mentioned interlocking element for locking said jaws together when they are brought into nested relation and holding said jaws against separation.”

Defendant’s counsel argue that an examination of the prior art shows that the claims are all invalid, particularly in view of United States patent No. 1,160,034 to Bell; United States patent No. 1,028,253 to Murray; and the British patents No. 16,004 of 1906 to Adler and No. 9285 of 1910 to Fusa.

The most formidable reference is the patent to Bell. One of the great merits of the Klein patent is that the locking means are inaccessible to manipulation, whereas the confining lip of Bell is not disposed like Klein’s flanges within the side walls but is at the outer surface of the seal. Dessauer, who was thoroughly versed in seals, testified at the trial that the strip 12 of Bell, which was intended to confine the cords, could be readily pried open by a needle sufficiently to extract the cords. No attempt, was made to disprove Dessauer’s testimony.

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298 F. Supp. 1389 (E.D. Wisconsin, 1969)
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Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 291, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 210, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-american-casting-mfg-corp-ca2-1937.