Marvel Equipment Co. v. Merit Oil Equipment Co.

29 F.2d 308, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1792
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 27, 1927
DocketNo. 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 308 (Marvel Equipment Co. v. Merit Oil Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marvel Equipment Co. v. Merit Oil Equipment Co., 29 F.2d 308, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1792 (N.D. Ohio 1927).

Opinion

WESTENHAVER, District Judge.

This is the usual patent infringement suit. It is based upon United States letters patent 1,432,658, issued to C. J. Bellar October 17, 1922; 1,548,220 issued to Charles Spaeth August 4, 1925; 1,544,356, issued to Charles Spaeth June 30, 1925; and reissue letters patent 16,284, issued to Charles Spaeth March 9, 1926. Title in plaintiff is admitted. On this hearing, infringement was not denied. The defense mainly relied on as to each patent is invalidity. The device in controversy is an improved grease or oil pump particularly designed to deliver heavy liquids from a container to bearings, or other receptacles. It.is in common use around garages. Bellar’s patent covers the pump itself, and the three other patents cover special devices used in connection with the pump. As the main controversy involves the validity of Bellar’s patent, it will be first considered. It contains only one claim, the elements of which adequately set forth the invention. This claim calls for a pump for dispensing grease, oil, etc., comprising: (1) A cylinder having (a) a valved piston therein and (b) a head at the bottom of said cylinder having (c) a conical shaped chamber and (d) a valve seat and (e) a ball valve therefor centrally at the bottom thereof and below the limit of the stroke of said piston to provide clearance between said head and valve; (2) an intake pipe connected with the intake end of said head; (3) a rack shaft for said piston; (4) a hollow head fixed to the upper end of said cylinder having (a) a central depending guide for said rack shaft and provided with (b) oppositely disposed lateral journals; (5) a pinion shaft crossing the interior of said head engaging with said rack and mounted within said journals; (6) and a plurality of tie rods clamping said heads to said cylinder.

Two other useful features of the device are not included in the claims, i. e., a stand pipe or' column seated on the head of the cylinder, and an adjusting screw set in the cap of the stand pipe. The first performs the useful function of sealing the pump and protecting the pinion rack. The second serves to limit the piston stroke and is useful in measuring the quantity of oil delivered by one stroke.

The defendant contends that all the elements of the claim are old in the art and were used in the same combination to accomplish the same result. It is true that pumps for dispensing grease and oil are old devices. Obviously, pumps of this kind must have cylinders and pistons and valves. Obviously, cylinders must have heads and intake and outlet pipes. However, as showing the elements of the claim in issue in the same or similar combinations, numerous prior art patents are relied on. As disclosing a conical head and ball valves, Kohnz 408,183, Winterhoff 1,036-398, and Children 1,185,059, are eited. As disclosing a rack and pinion, Children, Haines 959,216, Holt 1,011,790, and Davis 998,281, are eited. As disclosing the closed head and guiding features for the piston rod and rack, Children and Winterhoff are cited. As disclosing the depending guide feature, Winterhoff and Wiehman, 937,198, are cited. As disclosing tie rods, Davis, Wiehman, and Gould, 1,391,104, are eited. Upon the basis of this art, defendant asserts that Bellar’s combination is a mere aggregation of unrelated elements, each performing its old function in the same way and not co-operating with the other elements to produce a new result. Defendant further contends that if a combination in a patentable sense were thereby produced, it is none the less invalid because each and every element is not only old, but was used in the prior art for the same identical purpose as the corresponding element in this patent, and operates in the same manner and performs only the same function.

In my opinion, Bellar is not open to the objection that it is a mere aggregation. Whether invention was required, in .view of the prior art, to produce his combination, is a different question; but his combination of elements is, I think,.what is known in the patent law as a true combination. Each of the elements of the claim is in active [310]*310co-operation -with the other elements and is necessary to accomplish the desired result, i. e., the efficient pumping' of heavy liquids from one container to another. If any one element were removed, without the substitution of an equivalent, the device would not function. Every element is in use and, actively co-operating whenever the pump is functioning. It is true that some of the elements are merely brought into juxtaposition with other elements and are performing here only the same function as they performed elsewhere. They are still valves, pinions, and guides, as they were before they were brought into the combination. In a general sense, this is true of every combination. But they are, none the less, merged and combined into a unitary device, and each and all are necessary to its functioning.

It is often difficult to distinguish between that juxtaposition of old elements which makes only an aggregation, and that which produces a true combination in the patentable sense. It is difficult to determine this inquiry by formula or definition. It is easier to determine what is and what is not an aggregation by looking at the facts in each case in which a patent has been held invalid on this ground. A typical instance is found in Reckendorfer v. Faber, 92 U. S. 347, 23 L. Ed. 719, known as the “Lead Pencil Case.” A sheathed lead pencil and a rubber eraser were joined together. Neither the pencil nor the eraser in the new combination performed any other or different function than each performed when they were separate. It was said that neither element in the new combination co-operated with or modified the action of the other so as to produce any new or different result, but the result was merely the sum of the two old results, and hence the patent was invalid as a mere aggregation. Another typical case is Grinnell Washing Mach. Co. v. Johnson Co., 247 U. S. 426, 38 S. Ct. 547, 62 L. Ed. 1196. In that case, a washing machine and a clothes wringer were combined, but one washed clothes and the other wrung them in the new combination just as they had previously done separately, and neither co-operated with nor modified the action of the other. It was held that the result was merely an aggregation and not a patentable combination. In Gas Machinery Co. v. United Gas Improvement Co. (6 C. C. A.) 228 F. 684, will be found a thorough consideration of these legal principles and a full review of the authorities. See, also, Waite, Patent Law, 46. In the light of the principles stated in the foregoing authorities, it is plain that Bellar is not an aggregation. If Bellar contained a claim merely combining his pump with the adjusting screw, some basis might exist for denying its validity on this ground, but sueh a contention eannot justly be made against the juxtaposition in the pump of the various old elements. ,

The controlling question here is whether, in view of the prior art, invention was required to assemble and organize these elements into a new grease or oil pump. Admittedly, Bellar’s invention is specific and was made in an old and crowded art. Pumps functioning in the same manner and accomplishing the same results are numerous and have long been in existence. Certain presumptions and considerations exist, making in favor of - invention. The first is the usual presumption of validity arising out of the issue of the patent.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 308, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marvel-equipment-co-v-merit-oil-equipment-co-ohnd-1927.