Markatos v. United Bootblack Supply Co.

52 F.2d 478, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1652
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 478 (Markatos v. United Bootblack Supply Co.) 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
Markatos v. United Bootblack Supply Co., 52 F.2d 478, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1652 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

COXE, District Judge.

These two suits are for infringement of patents relating to hat renovating devices, and have been tried together as one action. The first suit involves reissue patent 16,608, dated May 3, 1927, for an iron supporting plate for hot water boilers, and patent 1,-678.295, dated July 24, 1928, for a supporting iron plate for boilers. In the second suit, patent 1,646,098, dated October 18, 1927, covering an attachment for hot water boilers, is alleged to have been infringed. All three of the patents describe an improved construction for mounting a heating plate on top of a vertical steam boiler, and particularly the positioning of the plate in such a way as to minimize space and take advantage of whatever heat radiation there may be at the top of the boiler.

The boiler, heating plate, and burner are all stock parts, and invention is assei’ted for the manner in which they are attached and their relative positions in the organization. In each patent, the heating plate and burner are located directly over and concentrically with the head of the boiler; there is also an additional burner underneath the boiler for the purpose of generating steam.

In the reissue patent 16,608, dated May 3, 1927, the heating plate is attached to the boiler by a cylindrical clamping band. Patent 1,646,098, dated October 18, 1927, on the other hand, shows clamps for engaging the rivet heads of the boiler. Finally, in patent 1.678.295, dated July 24,1928, there is a central stud for securing the heating plate to the top of the boiler.

It is ádmitted that there is no proof of infringement with respect -to the second patent 1,646,098, and counsel concedes, therefore, that the bill of complaint in the second suit (Equity 51-184) may be dismissed.

The claims of the two remaining patents relied on are Nos. 1, 2, 4, and 5 of the reissue [479]*479patent 16,608; and Nos. 1, 2, 8,10, and 11 of patent 1,678,295.

The defenses are invalidity due to lack of invention and aggregation, prior public use, and noninfringement.

Claim 4 of the reissue patent 16,608, and claim 1 of patent 1,678,295, are fairly typical of the other claims, and read, respectively, as follows:

Reissue patent 16,608: “(4) The combination with a boiler and an iron holder including depending legs seated upon the top of the boiler and spacing the top of the holder from the top of the boiler, of a clamping device carried by the depending Rgs for detachable gripping contact with the boiler for holding the holder against displacement.”

Patent 1,678,295: “(1) The combination with an iron holder and a boiler, of means for supporting the iron holder in superimposed relation to the boiler to conserve space- and utilize heat arising from the boiler including a stud mounted in the wall of the boiler and secured to the iron holder.”

The prior patented art is well illustrated by the Flicker patent, 1,156,356, dated October 12, 1915, and the Bqnenati patent, No. .1,386,230, dated August 2,1921. The Flicker patent is for hat blocking apparatus for straw hats, and shows a vertical steam boiler with an underneath burner and a heating plate mounted on supporting legs on top of the boiler. No second burner is shown under the heating plate, but the specification states that “the heat from the boiler will in turn heat” the plate, and “the h.eat will be communicated to the rim of the hat which is held in proper position by the weight of the actuate irons.” The Bene-nati patent shows a heating plate for sadirons mounted on top of the boiler, to one side of the center, and heated by an underneath gas burner. The specification states that “the fuel of the boiler may also be used to heat a pressing table.”

Coneededly, these two- patents are- the nearest patent references to Markatos, and it is urged by the defendants that, in view of the disclosures made by them, it was not invention merely to move the Bonenati heating plate to a position directly over the top of the boiler. It is also insisted that it was old with Flicker and Benenati to utilize the- boiler heat to warm the heating plate, and that in any event there was no invention in the idea.

In addition to the patent references urged by the defendants, there has been testimony regarding an alleged prior use by one Rosenbaum, which, it. is contended, is -a complete anticipation of the patents.

The proof with respect to this alleged pri- or use consists principally of (1) memory testimony by the two Rosenbaums and Podolsky, a former employee of theirs, to the effect that for a considerable period prior to 1920 the Rosenbaum Company manufactured •and sold in quantity hat renovating machines-like Exhibit F, and that the plaintiff himself purchased such machines from the Rosenbaums as long ago as 1908 and 1910, according to the elder Rosenbaum, or “about 19.19' or 1920, 1921,” according to the younger Rosenbaum; (2) a drawing and a tracing (Exhibits B and E), both undated and bearing the name “E. Garcia”, and showing a machine substantially like Exhibit F; (3) a drawing of a circular heating plate (Exhibit G), dated March 16,1919, and containing the names in print of the Rosenbaum Company and “Geo. Beck,” a draughtsman of the Ro'senbaums; (4) memory testimony of one Saullas that he purchased Exhibit F from the Rosenbaums in 1920, and used it in his hat cleaning establishment in the Bronx until the business was transferred to Picciolo in 1928; (5) memory testimony by one Cannelis that ho purchased a machine similar to Exhibit F from the Rosenbaums in 1918.

In this entire mass of proof, there is-practically nothing to meet the very severe test of this circuit, requiring that “memory testimony” of an alleged prior use bo supported by contemporaneous records, verbal or structural, in order to be effective. A. B. Dick Co. v. Simplicator (C. C. A.) 34 F.(2d) 935, 940; Block v. Nathan (C. C. A.) 9 F. (2d) 311, 313.

According to the elder Rosenbaum, thousands of machines similar to Exhibit F were-manufactured and sold by the Rosenbaum Company commencing in 1914; and yet therearo no catalogues, circulars, advertisements, or contemporaneous records to prove the fact — nothing of any substance except the Garcia drawings (Exhibits D and E) and the Beck drawing, dated March 16,1919 (Exhibit G).

It is stated in answer that the books of the Rosenbaum Company have been destroyed and are no longer available; that Garcia has disappeared; and that Beck is dead. All that is left is the testimony of the Rosenbaums and their former employee, Podolsky, that the Garcia and Beck drawings were made before 1920, and that they illustrate the type of machine manufactured and [480]*480sold at that time. Obviously, this is not the kind of corroboration required in this circuit. Furthermore, the Beck drawing, which is the only one bearing a date, contains measurements different from the measurements of the heating plate on Exhibit F, indicating, that the drawing could not have been used in connection with the heating plate of that particular machine.

The testimony regarding the Saullas machine (Exhibit F) was not satisfactory. The older Rosenbaum stated that the machine was sold to Saullas “about 1918 or 1920,” but he was so vague and uncertain in his other testimony that little reliance can be placed on his recollection of dates. Saullas,«on the other hand, was more definite'with respect to’ dates, and testified that he purchased Exhibit F for $45 from the Rosenbaums in 1920 during the time he was in business at West Kingsbridge road in the Bronx.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 478, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/markatos-v-united-bootblack-supply-co-nysd-1931.