Marks v. Fox

6 F. 727, 18 Blatchf. 502, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedDecember 10, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 F. 727 (Marks v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marks v. Fox, 6 F. 727, 18 Blatchf. 502, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717 (circtsdny 1880).

Opinion

BiiATcnroRD, C. J.

These suits are founded on re-issued letters patent No. 7,808, Division B, granted to the plaintiff July 24, 1877, for an “improvement in caps,” the original patent having been granted to him August 3, 1875. The specification of the re-issue, embracing what is' outside and what is inside .of brackets, and excluding what is in italics, says: “Figure 1 represents a side view when the [swinging] ear and neck protector is pulled down. Figure 2 is a vertical central section when the ear and neck protector is up. Similar letters indicate corresponding parts. This invention consists in an ear and neck protector connected to the back, part of the crown of a hat or cap by a tape [or cloth] and to its [the] sides [or near tho front of the hat or cap] by loops and buttons, or other equivalent fastenings, in such a manner that, whenever it may be desirable, said protector can be [728]*728drawn down to cover tbe ears and the neck of tbe person wearing tbe cap, and, when no such protection is needed, said protector can be raised, when it serves to impart to tbe cap a finished appearance. In tbe drawing tbe letter A designates a cap, to the rear part of which is attached my ear and neck protector, B. The protector is held in place by a tape, [or cloth,] a, in its middle, [at the back,] and by loops,, b, which are fastened to its ends and catch over buttons, c, secured to the body or crown of the cap, [at the sides or near the front,] said fastenings being so constructed that the protector swings up and down as far as the tape, [or cloth,] a, will allow, the buttons, c, forming the centers on which the swinging motion takes place. It is obvious that for loops and buttons other devices may be substituted without deviating -from my invention. My cap is ornamented in front by a band, G, and, if the protector, B, is raised, it forms a similar band on the bach part of the cap, and thereby a finished appearance is imparted to the article. In cold or inclement weather the person wearing my cap can draw down the protector, B, to the position shown in figure 1. In this position the lower edge of said protector hugs the neck of the person wearing my cap with a close fit, and at the same time the ears of said person are covered, so that those parts are carefully protected against cold air, wind, rain, or snow. My cap is exceedingly simple in its construction; it can be made and sold at a low cost, and it is of great convenience, particularly for [to] persons compelled to spend much of their time in the open air. ”

The claims, three in number, are as follows: “(1) As a new article of manufacture, the head covering, A, with a swinging ear and neck protector, B,vattached near the front by buttons and loops, or other equivalent devices, upon which the neck protector swings as an axis, and attached at the rear by a tape or cloth, which prevents the upper edge of the protector from swinging below the lower edge of the hat or cap, the said several parts being constructed and combined .substantially as described; (2) the swinging or sliding neck protector, B, constructed substantially as described, so as to swing or slide on fastenings at the sides or near the front of [729]*729tlie cap; (3) the swinging or sliding neck protector, B, constructed substantially as described, so as to swing or slide on fastenings at the side or near the front of the cap, and connected with the cap at the back by a tape or cloth to prevent it from swinging or sliding below the lower edge of the hat or cap.” Beading the foregoing specification, (excluding the claims,) by leaving out what is in brackets, and including what is in italics, gives the specification of the original patent, and shows the differences between the original and the re-issue. The claim of the original was in these words: “As a new article of manufacture, the head covering, consisting of the crown or body, A, band, 0, oar and neck protector, B, tape, a, and fastenings, b, c, said protector being arranged upon the exterior of the article, substantially as described, and adapted to move up and down thereon.”

.It is contended for the defendants that the re-issue contains now matter, and is broader than, and, for an invention, different from, that described in the original patent. Exception is taken to the introduction into the body of the re-issued specification of the words “or cloth, ” and of the words “or near the front,” and to the omission of the words “in its middle,” and the substitution of the words “at the back;” also, to the introduction into the first claim of the re-issue of the words “or cloth,” and of the words “which prevents the upper edge of the protector from swinging below the lower edge of the hat or cap.” It is urged that in the re-issue the location of the tape is undefined; that there is no warrant in the original patent for adding the words “or cloth;” and, that there is nothing by way of description, in the original or in the re-issue, suggesting that the tape prevents the upper edge of the protector from swinging below the lower edge of the hat or cap. It is plain, from the description in the original specification and the drawings, that a “cloth” substituted for a “tape,” in the same location and attached in the same manner, will perform the same office that a tape does. In fact, a tape is a cloth, and a cloth, quoad what it has to do, where it is to be, is a tape. The words “or near the front” are fully authorized by the original description and by the drawings. [730]*730The buttons, o, over which the loops catch, are not only at the sides, but. are near the front. They form centers for the swinging motion of the protector up and down, as the original specification states. The drawings show the buttons near the front, as compared with the position of the swinging protector. The original specification and the re-issue state that figure 1 represents a side view when the protector is down. In that side view the upper edge -of the protector is above the lower edge of the hat or cap. The original specification and the re-issue state that the protector swings up and down as far as the tape, a, will allow. The plain construction of the whole language is that the tape is not to allow the protector to swing so far down that the upper edge of the protector will be below the lower edge of the. hat or cap. Therefore the language of the first claim of the re-issue was warranted. According to the original specification the band, C, was no part of the invention, yet it is made a part of the claim of the original. Hence the re-issue was proper to change the claim, and nothing which can be called new matter was inserted in the specification of the re-issue.

The caps made by the defendants, Fox 1, Fox 2, Fox 3, Schwartz C, and Schwartz D, contain the same arrangement as that shown by the plaintiff’s patent. The fact that the defendants’ tape or cloth behind, in addition to being in the middle at the back, extends around towards the front on each side, makes no difference. The connecting tape is there, behind, where it is needed. It is flexible, and folds up, when the protector is raised, as in the plaintiff’s cap. The protector in the defendants’ caps cannot swing below the lower edge of the cap proper. The tape in the defendants’ caps is so attached that when the protector is down the tape or cloth is not visible. But that is, at most, an improvement.

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24 F. 276 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 F. 727, 18 Blatchf. 502, 1880 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marks-v-fox-circtsdny-1880.