Krajewski v. Pharr

105 F. 514, 44 C.C.A. 572, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4030
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 4, 1900
DocketNo. 849
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 F. 514 (Krajewski v. Pharr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krajewski v. Pharr, 105 F. 514, 44 C.C.A. 572, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4030 (5th Cir. 1900).

Opinions

SHELBY, Circuit Judge,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

There has been in use for a great many years what is known as the “three-roll mill” for compressing the juice from sugar cane. It consists of three rolls, mounted and framed, rotated by gear wheels. The rolls were made sometimes with and sometimes without grooves. The purpose of the grooves was to firmly hold, the cane as it was drawn between the rolls. Cane of full length was passed between the upper and front lower rolls, and the crushed mass was then made to pass between the top and rear lower rolls. The juice pressed out was caught in a pan, and the bagasse removed by a belt. The mill was sometimes so constructed .as to plape the rolls upright in the [517]*517frame, and then, when the rolls contained grooves or chaiinels,. their function was not only to firmly hold the cane, but also to receive and carry the expressed juice to the pan or collecting trough below. In the use of these mills, unaided by any machine or process to prepare the cane, there was great loss, on account of the failure of the, mill to express all of the juice. This is shown by the evidence, and seems to have been 'a matter of common knowledge. To secure better results, it was evident that the cane must have preliminary treatment. The record shows that several attempts preceded Krajewski’s to make a machine to prepare the cane for the mill. The British patent, No. 2,586, of 1882, is a device for splitting and partially crushing the cane. Faure’s patent, No. 250,720, Ferron’s patent, No. 279,235, Chapin’s patent, No. 321,007, Newell’s patent, No. 186,-100, and the Hungerford patent, No. 346,817, are all devices intended to prepare the cane for the mill. Each of them may briefly be described as a cane shredder. They are devices for tearing or shredding the cane. The result was usually produced by toothed rolls; geared to rotate at different speeds. The result of the work of the shredders is to break or tear or split the stalk longitudinally, and so reduce the work of the three-roll mill. None of these machines was constructed to cut or break the cane in short lengths transversely. The shredders did not cut the cane in short lengths, so as to secure a uniform feed of it to the mill. The Krajewski machine is not a shredder, but a machine for breaking or cutting, cane. It is not made to tear, shred, or split the cane, but to cut or break it transversely in short pieces, so that the three-roll mill may be fed with it in a uniform manner. It does not tear the cane longitudinally. or lacerate the fibre, so as to produce a mass of shredded stalk, irregular in volume. The result produces pieces transversely cut or broken. The fact that the Krajewski machine produced re-' suits so different from the shredders indicates a difference in its, parts and mechanism. The Krajewski machine contains two rolls having teeth which are zigzag and intermeshing, and when inter-meshed equidistant from each other, and of such sharpness that they can transversely cut or break cane into short pieces. The rolls áre maintained in position and proper relation by gear wheels, so that' the teeth of the two rolls do net come in contact side to side, but pockets or spaces are left between them. Each roll with its teeth is different from the shredders. The two, being used together, are wholly unlike the shredders in the result produced. The Krajewski machine is much used in connection with the three-roll mill. When so used the function of the mill is to press the cane which is already cut and broken by the machine. The evidence shows that the use of the machine greatly increases, and probably doubles, the output or capacity of the three-roll mill. The machines have been on the market since 1886. They have been sold and are in use in Texas, Louisiana, Cuba, Mexico, Hawaiian Islands, and British West Indies. It has been introduced into nearly all sugar-growing countries, notwithstanding the fact that the cost of establishing a plant, including the three-roll mill, is from $8,000 to $13,000, according to the size of the rolls and the conditions under which the plant is erected.

[518]*518The Krajewski patent contains the following claim:

“The combination of rollers provided externally with more or less sharp teeth having a zigzag trend' in the direction of the length of the rollers, said teeth intermeshing but not coming in contact with each other, and when inter-meshed being equidistant from each other, said rollers being geared together in order to maintain their relative positions toward each other, substantially as specified.”

) A brief comment on some of these words and phrases is required. The patent does not require the rolls to be formed in sections. The specification provides that the rollers are “preferably composed of a number of collars keyed to or otherwise fastened on the shafts.” Features described as preferable do not constitute a limitation of the claim. “When the inventor says, ‘I recommend the following method,’ he does not thereby constitute such method a portion of his patent. His patent may be infringed, although the party does not follow his recommendation, but accomplishes the same end by another method.” Sewall v. Jones, 91 U. S. 171, 186, 23 L. Ed. 275. It will be observed that the teeth of the two rolls are to intermesh, but not come in contact with each other. This language does not mean that the teeth of one roll may not come in contact with the other roll. The phrase “more or less” has been commented on as being vague and uncertain. The rollers are provided with teeth “more or less sharp.” If the word “sharp” had been used alone, it would have been subject to the same criticism. The phrase “more or less sharp” is indefinite, and necessarily so, because of the limits and imperfection of language. Taking the words in connection with the context and the specification (the only . fair way to consider them), they mean sufficiently’ sharp for the purpose sought (the cutting of the cane). The phrase is in current use to describe or qualify. Mr. Justice Field, in Glue Co. v. Upton, 97 U. S. 3, 6, 24 L. Ed. 985, uses the phrase: “But to render the article new, in the sense of the patent law, it must be more or less efficacious, or possess new properties by a combination with other ingredients.” No word, perhaps, exists, that the learned justice could have selected, that would show with certainty how efficacious the article must be. And no word .can be selected to show exactly how sharp the teeth must be. It seems to us sufficient to say “more or less sharp,” and that this means sufficiently sharp for the purpose shown by the specifications. The question of infringement, which will be considered later,, has, in some of the arguments presented, been made to turn on the meaning of the word “equidistant” as used in the patent. The teeth when “intermeshed being equidistant from each other,” — what is meant by these words? We must, of course, look to the connection in which a word is used, to get its intended meaning. The drawings and specification show that the teeth of one roll fall between the teeth of the other, and in the depressions between them. The purpose of this adjustment is, in part, to leave spaces on opposite sides of the teeth, adapted to receive the pieces of cane cut or broken off by the teeth. Was it material that these spaces should be of the same size on each side of the teeth? If slightly different in' size, they could still receive the’, cane. This fact indi[519]

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Bluebook (online)
105 F. 514, 44 C.C.A. 572, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krajewski-v-pharr-ca5-1900.