Marshall v. Pettingell-Andrews Co.

153 F. 579, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMay 7, 1907
DocketNo. 201
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 F. 579 (Marshall v. Pettingell-Andrews Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Pettingell-Andrews Co., 153 F. 579, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111 (circtdma 1907).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The bill charges infringement of letters patent No. 78-1,695, issued March I t, 1905, to Norman Marshall, for an insulating lining. The claims in suit are:

“(5) An insulating-lining consisting of a paper tube having its diameter reduced for a portion of its length, substantially as described.”
“(9) The combination with a metallic shell, of an insulating-sleeve consisting of an elastic, compressible paxier tube held in frictional engagement with the shell by its own resiliency.”

Each claim uses the term “paper tube,” upon which are based the principal distinctions from the prior art.

The patent to Painter, No. 718,378, dated January 13, 1903, shows an insulating lining of the same form. It is contended by the complainant that this insulator was constructed of material such as fiber, hard rubber, etc., which does not possess the peculiar properties of a paper insulator in respect to frictional engagement with the shell. It is established that, as ati insulator, paper was a well-known equivalent for fiber.

The defendant contends that the patent in suit shows merely the substitution of paper for vulcanized fiber. The complainant does' not deny that, considered merely as an insulating material, this is true, but insists that the insulating lining of the patent in suit is differentiated from the prior art by a—

"new function, depending upon a previously unused capability of paper, absent, in vulcanized libre, to exercise under atmospheric changes a slight but contiu[580]*580.nous grip upon a metal shell, ensuring always its normal retention, hut per■mitting its easy withdrawal, as desired.”

It is not' denied by the defendant that the substitution of paper, which is more flexible than vulcanized fiber, permits a closer adherence of metallic shell and insulating lining.

The complainant offers evidence to show that commercially it was desirable that the lining should be so securely attached to the metallic shell that it would not drop_ out, and yet that it should not be attached so firmly as not' to be easily removable. Because of its compressibility and resiliency, a paper tube may be somewhat larger in diameter than the metallic shell. Therefore, when the paper lining is pressed firmly into the shell, it remains so closely attached that it will not drop out, and yet is capable of being readily withdrawn.

The advantages which the specification of the patent in suit claims over vulcanized fiber are (1) that the paper lining will be retained in the shell at all. times and under all conditions, without danger of dropping out, and without offering undue resistance to its removal; and (2) a reduction in the cost of manufacture.

The defendant contends that cheapness is the only true reason for the adoption of paper linings, and that the other advantage is of very minor importance, and is merely a “talking point.” In support of this, reference is made to the testimony of complainant’s witness, Mr. H. R. Sargent, the engineer of wiring supplies of the General Electric Company, complainant’s largest customer in the use of these linings, who testified, in reply to the cross-interrogatory:

• “Cross-Int.' It is a fact, is it not, that the only real reason why your company has adopted the use of these so-called elastoid paper linings is that they are cheaper than the vulcanized fiber linings?
. “Ans. It is.”

The defendant also refers to a statement by Marshall in the speci.fication of his letters patent No. 750,873, dated February 2, 1904:

"As heretofore manufactured insulating-sleeves of this shape have usually been formed from sections of fiber tubing by subjecting the tube-section to the action of dies which draw down the tube to a smaller diameter for about one-half its length. Sleeves thus formed meet the structural requirements for a satisfactory socket-lining; but owing td the comparative high cost of the fiber tubing and the waste in cutting the same into sections the sleeves or linings formed by this method are comparatively expensive.” .

On the other hand, Mr. F. E. Cabot, secretary of the Boston Board of Fire Underwriters, and chairman of the Electrical Committee of the National Board of Fire Underwriters, testified as follows:

“Int. What is the practical reason that paper linings have superseded the hard fiber linings?
“Ans. Because they overcame the objection which was constantly found to the fiber linings, that they did not remain in position when the socket was taken apart, either to be refinished or attached to a fixture.
“Int. What occasions are there for removing such linings from the shell?
“Ans. More particularly when the shells are to be refinished; that is, to have the outer surface retreated so as to correspond with the fixture to which they are to be attached.
“Int. Is there any practical difference between the fiber linings and the paper linings, as to their becoming fixed in the shell, so as not to be removable?
[581]*581“Ans. The fiber linings sometimes, though not invariably, are stuck to the outer shell so that they are not easily removable.”

There is testimony showing that mechanical devices were used to prevent the fiber lining from dropping out of the shell. Mr. Cabot states also:

“It is a requirement of a successful commercial socket that the lining should be easily removable.”
“As a commercial article, a socket without a removable lining is not as salable as one with a removable lining.”
“It was the usual commercial practice to put a mark on boxes containing sockets with removable linings.”

It has not been made to appear that it was impractical to make a fiber lining of such size that, when introduced into the shell, it would not drop out. On the contrary, the evidence shows that nonremovable fiber linings were well known. The substantial feature of the patented lining, therefore, must be that it shall be easily removable, and this, so far as appears from the testimony, is desirable principally in case it is desired to refinish the shell.

The defendant contends that the difference from the lining of the' prior art is simply a question of degree; that vulcanized fiber is paper that has been chemically treated to harden it; that it is thus rendered mechanically stronger, but as a substance less compressible. But it is said that the paper which the defendant uses has been made quite hard by mechanical compression. It is said that the case does not involve even the substitution of one material for another, but involves simply the substitution of material in one condition of relative softness for the same material in another condition — one of relative hardness.

Claim 5 is clearly too broad, if read to cover the substitution of paper for fiber without a limitation to the relation between the lining and the shell. The mere mechanical advantage of removability, if this be the invention, is not enough to give the complainant the sole right to use paper as an insulating lining.

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18 F.2d 317 (N.D. Illinois, 1925)
Marshall v. Wirt
232 F. 606 (First Circuit, 1916)
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185 F. 499 (First Circuit, 1911)
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169 F. 426 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
153 F. 579, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-pettingell-andrews-co-circtdma-1907.