Marshall & Stearns Co. v. Murphy Mfg. Co.

199 F. 772, 118 C.C.A. 362, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1767
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 28, 1912
DocketNo. 2,117
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 199 F. 772 (Marshall & Stearns Co. v. Murphy Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall & Stearns Co. v. Murphy Mfg. Co., 199 F. 772, 118 C.C.A. 362, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1767 (9th Cir. 1912).

Opinion

GILBERT, Circuit Judge.

From the decree of the court below, dismissing the appellant’s bill, on the ground that the appellees had not infringed the letters patent sued upon, the present appeal is taken.

[1] The appellant’s letters patent No. 892,668 were issued on July 7, 1908, to Charles R. Jordan, for an improvement in “apartment wall furniture,” the object of which is to provide a means whereby an ornamental article of furniture or other fixture may appear within an apartment during the day, and which may be reversed to present a bed or couch to be occupied at night. The structure consists of a door or panel centrally pivoted at the top and bottom, in the wall of an apartment, so as to be turnable upon a vertical axis. It carries upon one side a bed hinged at the bottom, so that it may be folded to stand vertically against one side of the door when not in use. On the other side is attached an article of furniture or ornament, such as a wardrobe, a mirror, a bookcase, or a mantel with a gas grate below. Such furniture will appear in the apartment during the daytime ; at night, upon reversing the panel, the furniture will disappear into a recess or small adjoining room, and the bed will appear in the room, there to be dropped into horizontal position for use. The peculiar features of the invention are the stops, which are described as follows:

“The door or carrying structure, 2, has a projecting stop, 15, which, when the door is turned in one direction, contacts with the corresponding edge, 16, of the opening in the wall, A. The opposite edge swings freely through the opening upon the other side to allow the device to be reversed; but, when in the position just described, the vertical joint may be concealed by a strip, 17. which is hinged as shown at 18, so as to he partially turned around, and [774]*774its outer face, when thus turned, forms a stop against which the part, 15, is arrested when the device has been reversed. 'This structure is locked in either position by-means of a foot lever, 19, having an upturned end furnished, which engages an opening in the bottom of the door, 2, and which is made to normally engage such an opening by the action of a spring, 21.” .

The structure which is alleged to infringe is covered by letters patent 1,007,596, issued October 31, 1911, to W. L,. Murphy, for “disappearing bed.” This invention makes use of an ordinary door in the wall of aii apartment, hinged at the side, upon the back of- which there is mounted, upon a panel attached to the door and spaced away therefrom a sufficient distance to allow proper clearance, a full-sized bed. The panel and the bed necessarily extend beyond the inner or hinged edge of the door, for upon a door three feet wide there is mounted a folding bed four feet wide. When the door is closed, it appears an ordinary door, or it may carry a fixed mirror or a picture. Obviously it cannot carry a mantel, or a bookcase, or a gas grate, or any bulky article to prevent the door swinging around against the wall when opened. When the door is thus opened, the bed extends about two-thirds of the way across the door opening. To close the space thus left open, Murphy uses a small swinging door, which is mounted on the bed panel. When the bed is down, and the small door is closed against the door jamb, it is at an angle with the wall. It furnishes a door which may be opened to allow passage into the adjacent closet or recess. ■

The appellant contends that the court below erred in finding that the Murphy invention does not infringe claims 2 and 8 of the Jordan patent. Claim 2 is as follows:

“A wall attachment for apartments, consisting of a door or structure having central pivots at top and bottom, and turnablg in an opening in the wall, stops by which a joint is formed with the edges of the door when turned in either position, and a latch by which the door is locked.”

Jordan was not the first to invent a reversible door mounted on centrally located pivots; nor.was he the first to attach a bed or other article of furniture to a door, reversible or otherwise. The patent to Elias Hines, of January 8, 1895, discloses a door turning upon pivots centrally located at the top and bottom, and furnished with stops. The patent to W. C. James, of July 10, 1906, describes a door pivot-ally mounted “to swing on a vertical axis midway of its width, so that it can be turned completely around, bringing the stove, which is supported on one side thereof, into either one of the apartments at will.” In the patent to W. C. James, of May 20, 1902, there is described a mantel and bed attached to opposite sides of a horizontally pivoted door, and also a gas stove and combination table and chair attached to a door hinged at fone side. The features in the Jordan invention, on which he obtained his patent, are the ingenious stops which he devised. These are stops, as described in claim 2, by which “a joint is formed with the edges of the door when turned in either position.” These stops are so constructed that the reversible door can be completely reversed in the opening, so that in either position it occupies the same space and forms joints with the edges of the opening. This [775]*775could not be done, but for the use of the foldable stop used at one of the sides of the opening. Without this foldable stop, the door could not be completely reversed, but would stand at an angle to the face of the opening, making it impossible to form joints with the edges of the door when reversed.

Now, referring to the language of claim 2, we find that the Murphy invention has no pivots, central or otherwise, at top and bottom, is not turnable in an opening in the wall, and has no stops by which joints are formed with the edges of the door when turned in either position. A hinge, it is true, is in a certain sense a pivot, and in most cases of infringement it would be unimportant whether a hinge or a pivot were used, and the substitution of one for the other in a combination claim would not avoid infringement. But the difference between the hinge and the pivot is important in the present case, as marking the distinction between the two inventions. The appellees, indeed, might use pivots, instead of hinges; but it is obvious that the complete reversibility of the appellant’s device could not be accomplished by the use of hinges. A hinge would not permit complete reversibility. Nor does the Murphy door or structure have central pivots at top and bottom. All of the door or structure which appears in the room in which the bed is intended to be used is hinged at the side of the door. It is only with reference to the door in connection with the bed structure attached to the opposite side thereof, and not to the door itself, that it may be said that the structure is not hinged at the side. But even then it cannot be said to be centrally pivoted, if regard be had to the ordinary use of words, for the hinges are at a substantial distance from the center. Nor is the Murphy structure turnable in an opening in the wall, in the sense in which the phrase is used in the claim. The structure turns through, rather than in, an opening in the wall.

But, whatever may be said of the other elements of the claim, it is clear that Murphy dispenses with the use of “stops by which a joint is formed with the edge of the door when turned in either position.’5 When the Murphy door is opened, to bring the folding bed into the room where it is to be used, joints are not formed thereby with the edges of the door.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Rip Van Winkle Wall Bed Co. v. Holmes
15 F.2d 950 (Ninth Circuit, 1926)
Vanmanen v. Leonard
248 F. 939 (Sixth Circuit, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 F. 772, 118 C.C.A. 362, 1912 U.S. App. LEXIS 1767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-stearns-co-v-murphy-mfg-co-ca9-1912.