McLaren Products Co. v. Cone Co. of America

7 F.2d 120, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1194
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedApril 14, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 7 F.2d 120 (McLaren Products Co. v. Cone Co. of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLaren Products Co. v. Cone Co. of America, 7 F.2d 120, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1194 (E.D.N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

INCH, District Judge.

This is a patent suit. The suit is brought by a trustee of the legal title for the benefit of Alexander Mc-Laren, the equitable owner, etc., and the McLaren Products Company, an exclusive licensee.

The defendant is a corporation organized under the state of Delaware, and having a regular place of business at Brooklyn, N. Y., Eastern District.

The complaint is in the usual form, except that it originally claimed that the defendant was infringing- three letters patent belonging to plaintiff, to wit, Abrahams patent, No. 841,211, dated January 15, 1907, a reissued patent of Lanier No. 14,651, dated May 20 1919, and the Bruekman patent, No. 1,071,027, dated August 26, 1913. By proper amendment and at the trial the plaintiff relied solely on the said Bruekman patent.

The claims of the patent of Bruekman, which plaintiff asserts are valid and have been infringed, are 2, 3, 7, 23, 25, 33, 34, 35, 36, 64, 66, 67, and 69. These claims are well stated as follows (I quote from plaintiff’s brief):

“Claim 2. In a machine of the class described (automatic pastry making machine adapted for making ice cream cones and other similar articles- — -patent specification, p. 1, lines 6 to 13, inclusive): A rotatable wheel (table 4); molding devices carried by said wheel (sectional female molds 13 and male molds or cores 20); means for loading said molding devices as they arrive at á predetermined place (batter tank 68a and pump mechanism 68a — Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 41-18, inclusive — which load the molding devices as the molding devices arrive opposite the same); means for discharging the molded product from said molding devices after said product has been molded thereby (the cam 33-31 which effects a preliminary lift of the core, the cam track 67 which unlocks the female mold sections and the butterfly cam mechanism 39 which opens the female molds while the cam 31 holds the cores well within the cones in the female cavities until the female mold sections are fully separated to strip the cones from the baking surfaces and permit the cones to drop from between the mold sections — see position of cores in the fully opened mold unit, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 45; see, also, Defendants’ Exhibit 42); means for trimming the product after it leaves the molding devices (the trimming mechanism 69a-69b — Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 44-A8, inclusive); means for delivering it— the product from the machine (chute 70a [121]*121that conveys the cone from the machine to the room below for packing).
“Claim 3. In a machine of the class described (same as claim 2) : A rotatable wheel (same as claim 2); molding devices carried by said wheel (same as claim 2); means for loading said molding devices as they arrive at a predetermined place (same as claim 2); means for baking the contents of said molding devices when loaded (the burners within the semicircular oven cover — see, also, Defendants’ Exhibit 45, A, B, C, and D); means for discharging the molded product from said molding devices after said product has been molded and baked (same as claim 2); means for trimming the product as it leaves the molding devices (same as claim 2); means for delivering it from the machine (same as claim 2).
“Claim 7. In a machine of the class described (same as preceding claims) : An automatically actuated step by step rotatable wheel (table 4 and the large cam adjacent 76 — Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 48 — and roller lugs 10 co-operating therewith to impart a step by step movement to the table); molding devices carried by said wheel (same as preceding claims); a stationarily held tank for the substance to be molded (tank 68a); means for transferring (conveying, passing over from one place to another — Century Dictionary) the moldable substanee from said tank to said molding devices as said molding devices pass said tank to load said molding devices (pump mechanism 68a above molds and the duet from tank 68a to the pump mechanism 68a and the means to operate the pump at intervals); means for discharging the molded product from said molding devices at a,predetermined place (same as preceding claims); means for applying heat to said molding devices during their movement between the position at which they are loaded and the position at which they are unloaded (same as claim 3).
“Claim 23. In a machine of a class described (same as preceding claims) : A rotatable wheel (same as preceding claim); molding devices carried by said wheel and each of said molding devices including a pair of half mold sections (sections 13) that include die members (the cavities having the filigree design shown in the photos), cores for said die members (cores 20), an arm for supporting said cores (arm 2, commonly called core bar); means for locking said half mold members together (mold locks 43 — 11); means for releasing said locking means at times (cam track 67); means for restoring said locking moans to their locking positions at times (gravity plus cam 46, plaintiffs’ Exhibit 53); means for lifting said cores in said mold sections before said half mold sections are opened (see Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 44 — 47) and for holding said cores lifted until the half mold sections have been opened and again elosod (cam track 33-31 — see Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 44 to 47, inclusive — cores are held projected into the molds until the sections have been fully separated and are not again let down to the^ molding position until after the molds are closed — see Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 46).
“Claim 25. In a machine of the class described: A rotatable wheel, molding devices carried by said wheel, and each of said molding devices including a pair of half mold sections that include die members, cores for said die members, an arm for supporting said cores; means for locking said half mold members together; means for releasing said locking means at times; means for restoring said locking moans to their locking position at times (all of the foregoing elements are the same as claim 23); means for lifting said cores in said mold sections (beginning of cam track 33-31 which is of relatively slight inclination); another means for wholly removing said cores from said mold sections and restoring said cores again to said mold sections (the remainder of the cam track, 31 which has an abrupt riso and fall to lift the cores out of the molds over the charging pump and lower them again into the molds after passing the charging pump).
“Claim 33. In a machine of the class described, a sectional mold, a core therefor (all of the foregoing the same as in the preceding claims); means for locking said mold sections together (locks 43-44); means for locking (holding tightly down) said core in said mold (rollers 73a, inner core bar presser track — Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 49 — and holding down track 74--Plaintiffs’ Exhibits 46-47); moans for first unlocking said core (core passes out of from under the influence of 73a, inner core bar pressing cam track and bar 74 before the core is or can be lifted to perform the initial step of the extraction function); means for subsequently lifting said core in said mold to disengag’e the molded product (cam track 31 which operates subsequently to the unlocking of the core).
“Claim 34.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 F.2d 120, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclaren-products-co-v-cone-co-of-america-nyed-1925.