McKesson v. Carnrick

9 F. 44, 19 Blatchf. 158, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2451
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedApril 8, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. 44 (McKesson v. Carnrick) 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
McKesson v. Carnrick, 9 F. 44, 19 Blatchf. 158, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2451 (circtsdny 1881).

Opinion

Blatchford, C. J.

This is brought on letters patent granted to Pierre Cauhapé, January 8, 1871, for an “improvement in pill machines.” The specification states the invention to be an “improvement in the manufacture of pills.” It says:

“ Tliis invention relates to improvements in the manufacture of pills, and it consists in the employment, either in a combination with a moulding device for shaping pills, or other holder for them, of a comb-bar with pins or needles, adapted for inserting a pin in each mould cavity for taking the pills and dipping them in the coating solution, and a clamp and stripper for taking them from the needles and redipping them, for filling and covering the cavities formed by the pins, all as hereinafter described. Figure 1 is a transverse section of the mould and the device for taking them therefrom. Figure 2 is a side view of the device for taking tho pills from the mould and dipping them; also a sectional view of the bath, showing the manner of dipping them. Figure 3 is a perspective view of‘the clamp, stripper, and the device for taking them from the mould, showing the manner of stripping them. Figure 4 is a side elevation of the clamp; and figure 5 is a face view of the same. Similar letters of reference indicate corresponding parts.
“ The pills are to bo formed in a mould or flask, A, composed of two parts, either hinged together or not, each having a part of the cavities, of which there may be any convenient number, and from each cavity a groove extends to one side, so that where the two parts of the mould are closed together a pin may be thrust into tho pill for removing and holding it; and in connection with this mould a comb-bar, B, is used, having as many pins or needles, C, as there are cavities projecting from it, the same distance apart as the cavities, for inserting into said cavities and taking the pills therefrom. The mould is then opened, the pills removed on the pins, and inserted in the bath of glycerine, or other substance with which they are to be coated. Then, for holding and redipping the pills to fill and cover the cavities left by the withdrawal of the pins, I use a clamp composed of the two bars, E, hinged together as shown in figure 3, and the elastic frictional strips, F, of India rubber or other like substance, the latter being placed on the faces of the said bars, which come together, when closed, over cavities, G, made considerably longer than the pills, and opening out through the front edges of said hinged bars, as elearly shown in figures 3 and 5, in which the pills are inserted by opening the clamp, presenting them thereto coincident with the cavities while on the pins, and drawing the latter hack over the stripping-bar, H, placed in front of the clamp, and having the small grooves, I, in the upper surface, placed in front of the cavities, for guiding the pins of the comb-bar in placing the pills in the clamp. The pills are held by the soft, flexible, and elastic strips, F, so that the ends having the lióles project, as shown in figure 4, and may be dipped to cover and fill the holes, and then be discharged by opening the clamp?. In practice the moulds, comb-bar, clamp, and stripper may be made in any convenient length, and with any preferred number of holes best calculated to [46]*46effect a rapid operation, and any number of sets of apparatuses may be used, in ease it .may be required to retain tbe pills on the pins, or in the clamp, for drying' the substance with which they are coated. The pills may be taken on the comb-bar while in any suitable holder, after having been formed in other moulds, and I propose to use it in this way if found advisable.”

There are two claims, as follows:

“ (1) The combination of the comb-bar, B, clamp, E, and strippers, H, substantially in the manner described and for the purpose specified; (2) the combination of the moulds, A, with the comb-bar, B, substantially as and for the purpose specified.”

The only claim in question in this suit is the second claim. That claim relates to the combination of the comb-bar, carrying the needles, with the pill-holder, substantially as and for the purpose described. The pill-holder is to have a number of cavities, so as to secure rapid work. There are to be as many needles as there are cavities. The manner of the combination is to have a groove extending from each cavity when the two parts forming the holder are closed, so that the needle may pass through the groove into the pill, and the pill be retained on and removed with the needle when the two parts of the holder are separated, so that the pills on all the needles may be removed at once and be dipped, on the needles, all at once, into the coating solution. That is the purpose specified. The result of this rapid work is a greater number of pills created in a given time, and thus a reduction of cost.

It is objected that the specification states that the pills are to be formed in “a mould, A,” and that the needle is to be thrust into the pill while the pill is in the mould in which it is formed, and that the defendant does not form his pills in his pill-holder; also that “the moulds, A, mentioned in the second claim, are limited to moulds in which the pills are formed, and cannot include as holders, receptacles in which the pills are not formed or made or moulded from the raw material. But this view is contrary'to the tenor of the text of the specification, which states that the invention consists in combining the comb-bar carrying the needles with “a moulding device for shaping pills, or other holder for them,” and that “the pills may be taken on the comb-bar while in any suitable holder, after having been formed in other moulds.” That being so, the expression, “the moulds, A,” in the second claim, must be held to mean any suitable holder of the pills, whether the pills are formed in it or in another mould. It is also objected that a pill cannot be moulded, with prac[47]*47tical success, in the mould shown in the drawings of the patent, and that the specification is misleading in saying so. But no such defence is set up in the answer, nor does the answer allege any fraudulent or deceptive intention, nor is any such proved, nor is it shown that Cauhapé did not believe that he could mould pills in the mould, nor that he had not done so. Moreover, the second claim is good, even if the mould will not form the pill, provided it will act as a holder for the pill.

It is also objected that there is no combination between the comb-bar and needles and the pill-holders, but only an aggregation of parts. This is an erroneous view. The pill-holder holds the pill while the needle carried by the comb-bar is being thrust into the pill. The concert of action takes place when the needle enters the pill, and, although such concert of action continues only from the time the needle enters the pill until the pill is removed by the needle from the holder, yet the combination made by such concert of action continues as long as it needs to continue; and the concert of action could not exist at all, so as to impale the pill on the needle, if the pill were not carried by the holder and the needle were not carried by the comb-bar. So, when the needle enters the pill, there is a combination or concert of action between the comb-bar and needle and the holder carrying the pill.

It is also objected that the specification names glycerine as a substance to be used for coating, and that glycerine is not used as a coating and will not act as such. This is immaterial, and aside from the invention. No such defence is set up in the answer.

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Bluebook (online)
9 F. 44, 19 Blatchf. 158, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckesson-v-carnrick-circtsdny-1881.