Kuhl v. Mueller

21 F. 510
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 F. 510 (Kuhl v. Mueller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kuhl v. Mueller, 21 F. 510 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Sage, J.

The complainant is the owner, for Hamilton county, Ohio, ■of reissued patent No. 4,364, granted to John J. Schillinger, May 2, 1871, for improvement in concrete pavements. The patent has been so frequently sustained by decisions of the United States courts that it is not necessary to state the reasons for holding it valid in this ■cause. It is sufficient to refer to the following cases:, Schillinger v. Gunther, (Oct. 1878,) Blatchford, J. 14 O. G. (U. S. Patent Office,) 713; Same v. Same, (May, 1877,) Shipman, J. 11 O. G. 831; Same v. Same, Blatchford, J. 16 O. G. 905; California Artificial Stone Paving Co. v. Perine, Same v. Molitor, (May 7, 1881,) Sawyer, J. 20 O. G. 813; S. C. 8 Fed. Rep. 821.

The invention relates, as is stated in the specification of the patent, to a concrete pavement which is laid in sections, so that each section •can be taken up and relaid without disturbing the adjoining sections. The pavement is formed of concrete, of cement mixed with sand and gravel, or other suitable material, to form a plastic compound, and laid in sections so as “to allow the blocks to be raised separately without affecting the blocks adjacent thereto.” The method stated by the inventor in his specification is to place between the points of the adjacent blocks strips of tar paper, or other suitable material, in the following manner: After completing one block he places the tar paper along the edge where the next block is to be formed, and puts the plastic composition for such next block up against the tar paper, and proceeds with the formation of the new block. He proceeds in this manner until the pavement is completed, interposing tar paper between [511]*511the several joints, as described. The paper does not adhere to the blocks. It forms a tight, water-proof joint, allowing the several blocks to heave separately, from the effects of frost, or to be raised or removed separately without injury to adjacent blocks. The claim is “the arrangement of tar paper, or its equivalent, between adjoining blocks of concrete, substantially as and for the purpose set forth.” This was the second claim, but the patentee, before making the assignment to complainant under which he sues, filed a disclaimer,, disclaiming the first claim, leaving only the claim above quoted.

The patent was at once recognized as valuable. Infringements were numerous. Judge Blatchford states that the first infringers cut joints and fitted the spaces with pitch or asphaltum. Cement also was used to fill the joints. Joints were cut, while the material was yet plastic, with the trowel. It was held that, although the cutting was not entirely through the pavement, it was an infringement, and that it was not material whether the cut was of greater or less depth, provided that it was sufficient to prevent the irregular cracking of the pavement, which had not been accomplished prior to Schillinger’s patent.

In the case of California Artificial Stone Paving Co. v. Ferine, supra, Sawyer, J., said:

“One of the great objections to tho solid concrete pavements made before Scliillinger’s invention was that they cracked irregularly, and one of the chief advantages of his invention, as shown by the testimony in these eases, is that the openings resulting from shrinkage come along the line of joints, and the blocks themselves do not crack, although that advantage is not set forth in the patent. In the pavements constructed by the respondents this result lias been attained, and it has been admitted by the respondents in one case in this court, in which this Schillinger patent has been in question, that the object of running the trowel through at the joints was to so weaken the pavement along these lines as to control the cracking and leave the blocks as marked oif unbroken. This is clearly an infringement, for the patentee is entitled to all the benefits which result from his invention, whether lie has specified all the benefits in liis patent or not. So, in heaving from frost and in taking up the pavement, the breakage would be likely to be along the same line.”

The defendants, Mueller and Dietrich, have submitted testimony that they have not constructed concrete pavements laid in detached sections having tar paper or the equivalent between the adjoining sections, but that they have laid their pavements in a solid mass, and while they were yet plastic marked the surface with a fish-line one-sixteenth of an inch in diameter, the depth of the impression made by the lino not in any case exceeding the diameter of the line; that the object in marking the pavement is to relieve the monotony of a plain surface, and to give to the pavement the appearance of having been constructed of freestone blocks. They insist that the material is not thereby divided; that none of it is removed; and that the pavement at the point of impression is actually strengthened, the par-, tides of the material being pressed closer together by the impression [512]*512made by the string, which is stretched across the pavement and then pressed in,—generally by the use of the trowel.

The complainants submitted testimony tending to prove that the defendants cut joints with the trowel, and that the line marks were coincident with the cuts, which had been at least partially closed by cement or other material; also that the line marks, which fill with sand or dirt almost immediately, are the equivalent of the tar paper, for the reason that they control the cracking of the pavement, and limit it to the space within the line marks where it originates. The conflict in the testimony is irreconcilable, but there is in the testimony that which furnishes a means of arriving at a satisfactory conclusion, as will presently appear.

The defendants cite the case of California Artificial Stone Co. v. Freeborn, 17 Fed. Rep. 735, decided by Judge Sawyer. He says:

“It is insisted by complainant that marking off the blocks on the surface, at the time of laying the pavement, with a, marker about one-sixteenth of an inch in depth, is an infringement. I am unabló to perceive that the mere running along the surface of that blunt and rounded marker one-sixteenth of an inch in depth, there being no cutting elsewhere, is making a joint. I fail to see that it is an infringement.”

This clearly indicates the true test. If the marking with the line be, as the defendants claim, merely ornamental, and effecting no other result than to give to the pavement the appearance of being laid in blocks or sections, it is plainly not an infringement. In the case cited, after a line of blocks had been formed and become solidified, a new block was formed, between scantlings and the block or blocks before formed, without interposing anything whatever between the new and the old blocks, and no cutting was made in the joint between the old and the new blocks. The marker was then run along the line between the old and new blocks, upon the surface. The forming of the new block against the block before formed, in the manner above stated, was according to the specifications and claim in the reissue subsequently disclaimed, and the court properly held that the marking along the line of the joint thus formed was not an infringement.

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Related

Schillinger v. Gunther
21 F. Cas. 690 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1877)
Burr v. Cowperthwait
4 F. Cas. 801 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut, 1858)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuhl-v-mueller-uscirct-1884.