Mallon v. William C. Gregg & Co.

137 F. 68, 69 C.C.A. 48, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4539
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 17, 1905
DocketNo. 2,115
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 137 F. 68 (Mallon v. William C. Gregg & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mallon v. William C. Gregg & Co., 137 F. 68, 69 C.C.A. 48, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4539 (8th Cir. 1905).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge,

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

The machines to be considered in this case were devised for the purpose of unloading sugar-cane from cars. The patents which describe them are for combinations of old and well-known mechanical elements.

In the process of manufacturing sugar, the cane is brought upon open box cars along to the side of a continuously moving conveyor,, which carries and feeds it to the mill where it is crushed. When a car is to be unloaded, the side of it toward the conveyor, which is hinged at the lower edge, is turned down until its upper edge rests upon the floor or upon the top of the stationary wall by the side of the conveyor, so that it forms an inclined plane or chute down which the cane may be drawn from the car onto the conveyor. When the cut cane arrives in the car it varies in length from three feet to seven feet, and, while an attempt has been made to place it lengthwise of the car, some of it is crooked, and it forms an irregular, promiscuous, and confused mass. The stalks of the cane are heavy and slippery, so that a man can handle but a small quantity of it at a time, and that with much difficulty. As the conveyor feeds the cane to the mill to be crushed, it is- essential that it be so placed upon the conveyor that a uniform and proper amount of it shall be constantly borne forward to the rollers, and it may not be dumped upon the conveyor by the car load or in large and irregular lots. Prior to the introduction of the complainants’ machines to accomplish this purpose, this result was attained by the use of manual labor. Men with long-handled hooks were stationed on the side of the conveyor opposite to that upon which the car stood,-and they pulled the stalks of cane out of the car down upon the conveyor with their hooks. The services of from 7 men to 15 men were required to unload the cane with sufficient celerity to properly feed a mill which used 800 tons per day, and the work of these men is now performed by the machines under consideration with a single attendant. From this brief state-' ment of the method of handling and feeding sugar-cane to the mills it will be seen that the problem to be solved at the time when Mallon made his invention was to produce a machine which would draw the cane from the car with constant and yet controllable speed, so that a uniform and suitable amount of it would be continuously carried forward and fed to the mill by the conveyor. 'The nature of this problem will be fully understood only after a portrayál of the prior art. But the advances the machines of the respective parties evidenced may be most clearly disclosed by first presenting the solutions of this problem which they offer, and by then comparing them with the state of the art before they were presented.

Counsel for the appellants write in their brief that “it must be borne in mind that the complainants’ patent does not claim in and of itself an endless-chain rake provided with teeth. That element is recognized and admitted to be old and well-known prior to the invention of complainants’ patent.” Bearing this admission, which [71]*71is sustained by the record, in mind, let us consider the means by which the respective parties to this suit reached the result which they desired.

Mallon put rakes on two endless chains, placed these chains on a frame long enough to reach from a driving shaft on the opposite side of the conveyor from the loaded car to the farther side of the car, pivoted this frame on the driving shaft, and, haying raised its free end above, lowered it upon the load and raked it onto the conveyor.

Gregg put an endless chain supplied with teeth around a triangular frame, suspended this frame above the load, then gradually lowered it upon it, and, by actuating the chain, raked the cane onto the conveyor.

Mallon sleeved one end of his frame loosely on his driving shaft, so that the other end might be raised or lowered. To the free end he attached a bail and a rope or chain which ran over a drum above the rake-section, by means of which and its connection with proper mechanism the operator could raise or lower that end of the frame at will. He keyed a pair of sprocket-wheels to the shaft to propel the endless chains. On each side of these wheels a box suitable to hold the end of a tubular stretcher-rod was loosely sleeved upon the shaft by means of an eye. The end of a stretcher-rod was placed in each of these boxes, and there secured by clips and nuts. On the outer or free ends of these rods a short fixed shaft which bore two idler sprocket-wheels was secured. Two endless chains were stretched over the sprocket-wheels upon this shaft and over those upon the driving shaft, and were propelled by the latter. The ends of the tubular stretcher-rods in the pivotal boxes were adjustable therein. The under side of each box was open, so that a flanged bushing provided with internal screw threads could be introduced into the stretcher-rod, and so that a screw plug which had a bearing against a shoulder of the box might engage the threads of the internal screw. By loosening the clips and turning the screw plugs which bore against the shoulders of the pivotal boxes the rods could be forced outward and the chains made taut, and when this was done the rods could be secured in their places by again tightening the clips. On the under side of the stretcher-rods cross-bars were fastened upon which three boards, one at each side of the rake-section and one between and equidistant from these side boards, were secured, so that the under faces of the side boards furnished bearings for the endless chains as they slid over them. The center board was provided with a longitudinal groove in which projections or tongues upon the cross-bars which form the heads of the rakes ran to guard the rakes against lateral movement. Cross-bars provided with rake-teeth to engage the sugar-cane, and with tongues upon their backs to follow the groove in the center board, were fastened to and carried by the .two endless chains. A single rake-section has now been described. The patent portrays several placed side by side and driven by the same shaft.

[72]*72The operation of Mallon’s machine is simple. When out of use the free end of the rake-section is secured above the track upon which the loaded cars come to the mill so that, they may pass beneath it. When a loaded car has been placed upon the track and its side has been turned down preparatory to unloading, the endless chains which carry the rakes are driven by the sprocket-wheels upon the shaft. There is a brake and a lever upon the drum by means of which the operator may lower the free end of the rake-section as rapidly as he chooses until the rakes reach the bottom of the car. He depresses the free end of the section, and, as it descends, the rakes engage the cane and pull it over onto the conveyor until the car is unloaded, when, by the use of the drum and the actuating machinery with which the operator may connect it, the rakes and the frame which carries them are again raised out of the way of the cars. The claims of the patent of the complainants which are alleged to be infringed read in this way:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 F. 68, 69 C.C.A. 48, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mallon-v-william-c-gregg-co-ca8-1905.