Lewis v. Cronemeyer

29 App. D.C. 174, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5441
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 5, 1907
DocketNo. 407
StatusPublished

This text of 29 App. D.C. 174 (Lewis v. Cronemeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Cronemeyer, 29 App. D.C. 174, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5441 (D.C. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McComas

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The three tribunals of the Patent Office concurred in awarding priority of invention in this case to Ernest L. Oronemever, and we must affirm the decision of the Commissioner of Patents appealed from. Such unanimity relieves us from a prolonged discussion of the case. The issues are:

“1. A catcher for tinning machines, comprising a pair of positively-driven rollers having gripping portions provided with soft material to prevent marking of the plates.
“2. A plate-catcher having positively-driven catcher-rolls, said rolls having separated registering gripping portions of soft material.
“3. A plate-catcher having a pair of driven rolls with soft gripping portions, a deflector above them, a raised support below the deflector, and an inclined chute for the sheets as they leave the deflector.
[176]*176“4. In a plate-catcher a pair of driven feed-rollers above the tinning machine, and having soft gripping portions, and means for yieldingly pressing at least one of said rollers toward the other.”

It thus appears that the invention in issue is a catcher for tinning machines. It is the office of this catcher to take hold of the tin plate when it emerges from the rolls of the tinning machine, and discharge it from the machine. Cronemeyer is the senior party, to whom was granted a patent six months before the application of William Price Lewis and Thomas Peese Williams, the appellants, was filed. In this interference, therefore, the burden of proof is upon them in an unusual degree. Mechanical catchers for tinning machines were in use before Cronemeyer filed his application. In February, 1899, a patent was issued to Burson for a metal plate-catcher, which consisted of two steel rolls similar to the tinning rolls; and, as the tin plate emerged from the tinning rolls, Burson’s machine caught it up by these steel rolls and discharged it from the machine.

In the invention in issue instead of the rolls of Burson’s patent, shafts are employed, having a series of pairs of disks between which the tin-plate sheet is caught when it emerges from the tinning rolls. In Cronemeyer’s patent these disks are formed of a number of linen disks clamped between sleeves on the shaft. In the application of Lewis and Williams it appears that the disks are made of tin and clamped in position on the shafts by threaded sleeves, or cast on the shaft. Burson’s steel rolls, mounted over a tinning bath, successfully seized and discharged freshly tinned plates; but in practice it was found that these steel rolls greatly marred the polished surface of the plates. It was the purpose of the invention of each of the parties to produce a catcher which would receive and discharge plates without marking or defacing their polished surfaces. Therefore the important feature of the invention of this issue is the “gripping portions” on the feed rollers, “provided with soft material to prevent marking of the plate.” Expedients for guiding the plates as .they are discharged from the rollers are incidental in the more limited counts of the issue.

[177]*177Cronemeyer sought to avoid the defect in Burson’s catcher by the use of the linen disks described. Lewis and Williams tried to avoid Burson’s difficulty by the use of tin disks, which they claim, are relatively soft, and at least not hard enough to mark the freshly tinned surfaces of the plates.

Lewis was the superintendent, and Williams was a foreman, of the Morewood works of the American Tin Plate Company, at Gas City, Indiana. They jointly conceived this invention before July 1, 1902, and about that date they disclosed it to Smith and Hook, who, under the instruction of Lewis and Williams, built a test machine, which when completed was tested in the tin house of the Morewood works on August 23, 1902, in the presence of four or five persons. Because they wished to keep secret their invention, after a few hours’ testing Lewis and Williams had this machine broken up. Soon after, Williams departed from Gas City, and became a superintendent for the Carnahan Tin Plate & Sheet Company, at Canton, Ohio. Lewis joined him there in the same employment in July, 1903. Lewis and Williams discussed with Blecker, the secretary of the company, the merits of their tin-disk catcher, and soon completed and put into operation a catcher, about the 1st of October, 1903. It remained in use until the middle of November following. Its use was discontinued for a long time, and it was again in operation in September, 1904.

It is clear that Lewis and Williams were the first to conceive the invention in issue. All the tribunals of the Patent Office agree that the construction and testing of the machine at Gas City was not a reduction to practice of the invention in issue. As we have said, the Burson catcher with its steel rolls successfully caught the plate, but it marred them in so doing. Lewis and Williams testify, and they are corroborated by Smith and Hook, that a number of sheets were run through the machine at Gas City, and there were no marks upon the plates. Thornburg says these plates had a little oil but no marks on them. Blackburn says the plates showed some abrasion, but after they passed through the dusting and polishing machines this abrasion was not noticeable.

[178]*178At the time the appellants secretly tested their machine at Gas City, the plant was shut down, and there is no satisfactory evidence that the particular tin pot on which the new catcher was mounted contained molten tin. On the contrary, the evidence is most persuasive that tin plates no longer fresh were used in the experiment, and there is no evidence that the sheets used were retinned at the time. This experiment continued only for an hour or two, and none of these sheets were preserved. The positive opinions of witnesses that these sheets showed no marks after passing through the cleaning and polishing machines would be more weighty had the test not occurred two days after the tin house had shut down for the season, at which time the tin ordinarily would have been removed from the pot. Undue importance is given to the statement that the light in the tin house was poor. It was the building in which tin plates were dipped, and we infer there was light enough from the windows for the business therein conducted. This machine at Gas City was tested and dismantled on August 28, 1902. We are not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that this test was a successful reduction t.o practice.

The machine built in the Carnahan plant, at Canton, was installed on the 5th of October, 1903, and taken off on November .18, 1903.. .Williams says none of the sheets run through this catcher were marked, and Thornburg says it worked well. No plates then produced appear among the exhibits. Lewis testifies that another machine was built and put in operation in the Carnahan works on February 14, 1905, and this machine was later made to conform to the construction of the first machine tested at Gas City, and he insists that the machine worked as well after this ..change as before.

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29 App. D.C. 174, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-cronemeyer-dc-1907.