McCaslin v. Link Belt Machinery Co.

139 F. 393, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4690
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedMay 30, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 139 F. 393 (McCaslin v. Link Belt Machinery Co.) 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
McCaslin v. Link Belt Machinery Co., 139 F. 393, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4690 (circtsdny 1905).

Opinion

HAZ EE, District Judge.

This action involves the construction of claims 2 and 4 of United States letters patent No. 503,870, dated August 22, 1893, relating to endless chain conveyors, issued to George McCaslin, inventor. The conveyor consists of a series of gravity buckets pivoted in a chain which has wheels running on a track; each bucket being provided with extended lips, which, when the buckets move along a path or track in a horizontal position, •overlap in such a manner that the lip on the one bucket overlaps the lip on that next adjacent. The buckets are maintained in a normally upright position by the general action of gravity, irrespective of the vertical and winding character of the track upon which they are mounted or moved. By the general arrangement of the track and buckets, the material being transferred is carried continuously in one direction- — that is, from the lower to the upper horizontal track, where it is dumped into bins or chutes — and after discharging the same the buckets move along towards the downward path or starting point. The specification states:.

“The object of the invention is, in the main, to provide the buckets of the conveyor with plates or lips which project out and overlap in such a manner that .the lip on one bucket overlaps the lip on that next adjacent, whereby, when the buckets are moving along a horizontal or slightly inclined track at the loading point, the coal or other material running into the conveyor frqjrj [394]*394a chute will not fall between the buckets. Means have before been devised and employed to attain this desirable end, but I find it important to confine the means used to the buckets themselves, for the sake of economy in construction, in space occupied, and in power, and in order, also, to increase the durability of the conveyor. But in order that such conveyor may be adapted for general purposes, and not be confined simply for use as an elevator, it is essential that means be provided for turning the empty buckets on their return so that the lips or plates thereon may properly overlap, and my present Invention includes such means.”

The drawings attached to the patent show three forms of the apparatus. ‘Figure 1, which is the form alleged to be infringed by the defendants, shows a lower and upper horizontal track, on which the buckets are to be loaded and unloaded, respectively, and ascending and descending tracks, which apparently are integral with the horizontal runs; ■ thus forming an oval-shaped loop or cycle. The specification disclaims the feature for driving the conveyor, and declares that various forms of drivers may be used. In practice the entire structure employed may be rectangular or tortuous. Different materials, including liquids, may be carried by the conveyor, which is so constructed as to enable tranference from the loading point, which may be outside of the building, to the place of unloading within, or from one room to another in a factory or building. The system of conveyors is chiefly employed for handling coal in power houses and other large factories and modern industries, and may also at the same time be used to remove ashes from the boiler room. The carrying capacity is measured by the size of the buckets employed. The- claims of the patent relied upon are as follows:

“(2) In an endless chain conveyor, the combination with the track, track-wheels and endless chain, of the gravity buckets suspended at intervals in the chain, and provided with overlapping lips as described, and means substantially as described for preventing the collision of the loaded buckets at the point where they pass from the lower track to the ascending track, as set forth.”
“(4) In a conveyor, the combination with an endless track, the track-wheels-thereon for carrying the chain, and the endless chain, of gravity buckets, c, pivotally suspended at equal intervals in the chain, and each provided with dumping lugs, and lips, e, x, one at each end, the lip on the rear end of a bucket overlapping the lip on the front end of the following bucket when the buckets are moving along a horizontal track, and means substantially as described for tilting the buckets and shifting the lap of said lips when the buckets move onto the descending track, as set forth.”

The features of claim 2, describing means to overcome the collision of the buckets, and of claim 4, for tilting the buckets and shifting the lap of the lips so that the buckets may pass freely from a-, horizontal to a vertical track, or vice versa, are claimed to possess-novelty. The elements of claim 2 are for a combination of an endless chain, track, track-wheels, buckets, with overlapping lips at their ends, suspended in series on the chains, and means to facilitate the movement of the buckets from the lower horizontal track to* the ascending track, and thence along the upper track toward and down the descending track to the loading point. In the fourth claim the essential feature of the combination claimed is dumping-lugs on each bucket, together with means for tilting or shifting [395]*395(Fig. 1) or turning (Figs. 3 and 4) the lap of the lips when moving from the upper track to the downward path.

Neither the utility nor the validity of the patent is questioned; the contentions being that the scope of the claims is limited by the prior art, and that the defendants are not infringers. The patent has never been adjudicated, and the interference proceeding in the Patent Office entitled “Hunt v. McCaslin” dealt with the date of the invention, and not with the question of prior devices. Complainant claims to have conceived the invention in August, 1886, and to have then disclosed it to others. The date of the application in suit is April 8, 1893. The interference proceedings, for reasons sufficient to the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, terminated in complainant’s favor; and his application was found to anticipate Hunt’s date of filing, which was September 10,. 1892. That decree is not binding upon the defendants, they not having been parties or privies to the proceeding nor claiming under the patent issued to Hunt. Edward Barr Co. v. N. Y. & N. H. Automatic Sprinkler Co. (C. C.) 32 Fed. 79; Western Electric Co. v. Williams-Abbott Electric Co. (C. C.) 83 Fed. 842; Wilson v. Consolidated Store Service Co., 88 Fed. 286, 31 C. C. A. 533. The patentee gave testimony tending to show that the date of his invention was prior to the Davidson British patent hereinafter mentioned, and in support of his testimony a sketch made by him of the machine was produced. This showing, however, is not persuasive, and accordingly the Davidson patent must be regarded as a proper citation to acquaint the court with the state of the art.

The desideratum of McCaslin was to produce a practical construction which would enable loading from a running hopper or chute while the buckets move along the track, without spilling or wasting any of the material, and also to prevent collision by the interlocking of loaded buckets in passing from' the lower to the ascending track. It is undoubtedly true that complainant’s overlapping system prevents spilling between the buckets. But a comparison of the several conveyors of the prior art (especially that of' McCaslin’s earlier patent, No. 486,809, dated November 22, 1892) with that of the patent in suit leads to the conclusion that the claims of the latter must be strictly construed, and that complainant is not entitled to a range of equivalents sufficiently broad' to include defendants’ method of accomplishing the same result.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 F. 393, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaslin-v-link-belt-machinery-co-circtsdny-1905.