Lyon Non-Skid Co. v. Edward V. Hartford, Inc.

247 F. 524, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 857
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
DocketNo. 152
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 247 F. 524 (Lyon Non-Skid Co. v. Edward V. Hartford, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon Non-Skid Co. v. Edward V. Hartford, Inc., 247 F. 524, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 857 (S.D.N.Y. 1917).

Opinion

MANTON, District Judge.

The complainants sue for infringement of patent, claiming that the defendant, in the manufacture of its automobile bumper, has infringed their patent No. 1,198,246, granted September 12, Í916. It will be referred to hereafter as the Lyon bumper.

There is a cross-action by the defendant claiming infringement by the plaintiffs of the Fageol patent No. 1,202,690, granted (October 24, 1916. The complainants rely upon claims 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 15, and 18. The Metal Stamping Company is the licensee under an agreement dated February 25, 1915, manufacturing the Lyon patent, which patent was granted to the complainant, the Lyon Non-Skid Company. The defendant is a licensee of the Fageol patent dated September 3, 1912, and claims infringement of claims 8, 12, 17, and 19. The subject of making a useful commercial automobile bumper has received considerable effort by inventors, as appears by the prior art. Considerable evidence, as well as copies of prior inventions showing the state of the prior art, have been received in evidence, and will be referred to later. The general type of bumper which is being manufactured under the Lyon patent by the plaintiff and the defendant indicates a useful invention, unusual in a number of respects, but serviceable and commercially profitable. The Lyon all-spring bumper is formed of flat spring strips so as to be adjustable in width and fit any make of car. Its metal is so constructed and so shaped that it will stand bumping, and its action in resiliency will stop an automobile going at 10 to 15 miles an hour, causing a rebound without damage to the bumper or the car itself, as [526]*526the evidence disclosed occurred on a number of occasions. Indeed, the evidence indicates that the bumper itself would spring back to its original shape with little or no damage to it. This, compared with the practical experiments of the behavior of prior commercial bumpers, is ample evidence of the claim made for it, not only of improvement in the art, but of substantial invention. The experiments with prior commercial bumpers, such as the one made of channel bar or rigid round bar type, resulted in the bar breaking and destroying or seriously damaging the part of the car which came in collision with the striking part. The result of this action of the Lyon bumper, as manufactured by the Metal Stamping Company, opened a profitable commercial field. Its usefulness is indicated by the extent of-its sales, for it is now said that the stamping company has an output of about 800 bumpers a day. In shape and contour, in the kind of metal used, in operation and efficiency, the Lyon and the Hartford bumpers are practically identical. They have both been favored by a well-patronizing public, and both have met with general success. Each now claims appropriation by the other, and the question for decision is which is right 'in its contention.

Considering the prior art, from the patents in suit, it appears that Simms was the pioneer in the bumper art. His application, filed September 26, 1905, disclosed-a structure consisting of pneumatic buffer bars placed in front of the vehicle and connected thereto by spring supporting members formed of flat stock set edgewise. Harroun filed his application on March 29, 1906, showing a tubular bumper bar connected to the vehicle by sliding rods or members, springs being provided to afford yielding resistance to the shocks sustained. February 21, 1908, Sager applied for a patent upon his bumper construction, which showed a tubular bar mounted to yield against spring tension, but different from the Harroun, in that the supporting members for the bar were pivotally connected to the car. He, too, used coiled springs to- take up the shock. These bumpers, while affording some spring movement, were greatly limited in their utility, and were not successful. The result of these efforts, and the efforts of others referred to hereafter, did not bring bumpers upon automobiles into considerable use. To be sure, other reasons have been ascribed for failure to use, such as the condition of the congestion of traffic and want of education of the public in the usefulness of bumpers, but the best reason for the inconsiderable use of bumpers was the failure to have an adjustable bumper, resilient in its action, which would accomplish the work of bumping successfully.

In these round bar or channel bar bumpers, as was exemplified by the type referred to, the bumper was extended across the front of the automobile, was relatively rigid, and was mounted on comparatively weak springs, resulting in a yielding to a limited extent only. This was insufficient to absorb a moderate collision impact, with the result that the bumper bar was easily broken or seriously distorted, with consequential damage to the colliding part of the automobile. Oftentimes the bar would bréale and go through the automobile radiator, resulting in damage or destruction to this delicate construction. And in the case of rigid bar bumpers, they too were unsatisfactory to the trade, for [527]*527riding on the automobile in rigid position resulted in a series of shocks, which ultimately caused loosening up and rattling as a result of this severe jolting.

These results indicated a failure to solve the bumper problem, for they failed to meet the requirements of a successful automobile bumper, namely, to absorb, without injury, the force of substantial collision impact. To accomplish this result, it became necessary to find a bumper which would be so constructed, in shape and material, as not to he permanently deformed or distorted by the blow, so that, if bent, it would return to its original condition, and be so resilient as to yield gradually over some considerable space whatever resistance it might meet when struck. So, also, the successful automobile bumper must he free from the objectionable and fatal vibration in loosening action, as became so pronounced in the bumpers tried out theretofore. The development of the bumpers involved in this action seems to have met with these requirements, and, therefore, with success. Another important consideration, for the success of a bumper, was to have one adjustable to all sizes of cars without sacrificing the other characteristics mentioned, and this, because the jobbers and auto supply houses need not keep a great variety of sizes of bumpers to fit the various makes of automobiles.

[1] The Lyon claims 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 15, and 18 are as follows:

“3. The automobile buffer consisting of two integral spring steel strips having considerably greater vertical width than thickness to render them relatively rigid vertically while resiliently yielding in horizontal directions, each of said strips having a rearwardly extending attaching member to be attached to the automobile, and having a transversely extending impact receiving member and an intermediate curved resilient member, the impact receiving members oC said strips overlapping to stiffen and strengthen this part of the buffer, and means adjustably connecting said impact receiving members and holding them against relative vertical movement and providing for the lateral adjustment of said strips so as to adapt the buffer for attachment to automobiles having supporting members located at different distances apart.
“4.

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250 F. 1021 (Second Circuit, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
247 F. 524, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-non-skid-co-v-edward-v-hartford-inc-nysd-1917.