Millie Patent Holding Co. v. Joseph Tetley & Co.

53 F.2d 871, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedNovember 4, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 53 F.2d 871 (Millie Patent Holding Co. v. Joseph Tetley & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millie Patent Holding Co. v. Joseph Tetley & Co., 53 F.2d 871, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825 (S.D.N.Y. 1931).

Opinion

GOXE, District Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of three patents owned by the plaintiff; namely: (1) The Hirschhom patent, No. 1,496,-537, dated June 3, 1924, for a tea cartridge; (2) the Hirschhorn patent, No. 1,497,276, dated June 10, 1924, for a method of manufacturing tea cartridges; and (3) the Allatt reissue patent, No. 16,897, dated March 13, 1928, being a reissue of patent No. 1,637;509', dated August 2, 1927, on an application filed September 26, 1922, for a bag-elosing machine.

The defendant Pneumatic Scale Corporation, Ltd., is the manufacturer and seller, and tho defendant Joseph Tetley & Co., the user, of a tea-bagging machine alleged to infringe all three of these patents.

The claims relied on are Nos. 1 and 2 of the two Hirschhorn patents, and Nos. 18, 19, 20, 21, and 22 of the Allatt reissue patent. The defenses are anticipation, prior use, lack of invention, and noninfringement.

Tho idea of tho individual tea bag originated in 1910 with Louis Hirsehhom, now president of the plaintiff company; and during the years immediately following he succeeded, with the help of his father and three brothers, in laying the foundations of a large and prosperous business devoted entirely to producing, filling, and packing individual tea bags. From 1910 to 1920 these bags were tied with a string, and made entirely by hand, except for the stitching of the seam on a sewing machine. The business grow steadily from its inception, and by 1916 the yearly production had reached a total of from five to seven million bags. It then became apparent that machinery would be neeessai-y to take care of the increasing volume, and a machinist named Suren was engaged to design a bag-making machine. Ho was unsuccessful, and thereupon another machinist named Kleidman was employed to take his place.

Kleidman’s efforts resulted in the production of a bag-elosing machine, for which he obtained a patent on October 28, 1924, No. 1,513,464, on an application filed May 28, 1919. This machine was, however, technically imperfect, and proved a failure. Then in 1919 Allatt was engaged to make a fresh start, and on October 11, 1920', he delivered his first bag-elosing machine, for which ho subsequently obtained reissue patent No. 16,-897, now in suit. Tho Allatt machine immediately proved successful, and additional machines of the same type were quickly added by the Hirschhoms to take care of the growing business.

In the meantime, and on November 9, 1918, Benjamin Hirschhorn applied for a patent on a tea cartridge having its mouth closed with a metal strip; arid on July 22, 1919, patent No. 1,310,796 was issued to him therefor. He testified that it was during this period of 1918 and 1919 that he conceived and prepared working models of the inventions of the two Hirschhorn patents now in suit, No. 1,496,537 and No. 1,497,276. The applications for those patents were not, however, filed until October 26, 1923, and February 3,1923, respectively.

In 1920 the Hirschhoms produced twelve to fifteen million tea bags prior to the delivery in October of the Allatt machine; and these bags were all hand made, machine [872]*872stitched, and string tied. After the delivery of the Allatt machine in October, 1920, the bags continued to be formed and seamed on a sewing machine, but were then finished in the .Allatt machine, the neck of the bag being closed with a metal ring instead of a string, as formerly. Later improvements were added to the machine, making it fully automatic; but these additions are not involved in the present suit. ■

In 1923 the operating end of the Hirsehhom business was incorporated under the name National Urn Bag Company, and in 1930 that company made and packed about two hundred and thirty-five million tea bags. The patents in suit are, however, owned by the plaintiff, which is a holding corporation for the patents; the members of the Hirschhorn family being the only stockholders of both companies.

The defendant Pneumatic Seale Corporation, Limited, is a manufacturer of packaging 'machinery, and Ralph N. Doble, one of its officers, designed the alleged infringing machine, which it manufactures and sells, and which is covered by patent No. 1,726,-060, issued August 27, 1929, the application therefor having been filed March 10, 1924. The first machine manufactured in accordance with Doble’s design' was completed in October, 1923; and by 1927 there were a number of such machines in use by the large tea distributors of the country.

The Hirschhom patent, No. 1,496,537, is for a die-shaped bag as distinguished from a stitched or seamed bag. The patentee states that in his earlier patent, No. 1,310,-796, dated July 22,1919, the bag was formed on a sewing machine, and closed with a metal ring; and that the object of his present invention is to do away with the “sewing operation and the ring forming machinery.” He proposes to accomplish this by shaping a piece of fabrie in a die “so as to form a bag-like container,” and then, after charging the container with tea or coffee, “puckering the mouth” and tying it with a string having “a handle attached." The claims call for “a die-shaped,” “bag-like,” “seamless” container, having its mouth “drawn into folds,” and tied with a string having one end “around the mouth portion,” and “a handle attached to the other end of said string.”

The Hirsehhom patent, No. 1,497,276, is for a method of manufacturing seamless tea bags, such as described in the foregoing patent, No. 1,496,537, except that it contemplates the use of a metal strip to close the mouth of the bag, instead of a string, as' sh'own in patent No. 1,496,537. The idea of the patentee is to draw the excess material into “substantially vertical loose folds” by the use of two co-operating corrugated dies, and then to pucker the mouth of the bag and apply a closure. It is this feature of the uniform distribution of the excess material into “substantially vertical folds” that characterizes both claims.

There was nothing new in the idea of the individual tea bag when the patents in suit, Nos. 1,496,537 and 1,497,276, were applied .for in 1923. The Hirschhoms themselves had produced such tea bags as early as 1910, and they are clearly shown in the “Cauchois Caterer’s Companion” published in 1915. Did it then constitute invention to make such tea bags “die-shaped” and “seamless,” with the mouth “drawn into folds,” and tied with a string having “a handle attached?” And, further, did it involve something more than the skill of the calling to draw the fabrie through corrugated dies in such a way as to distribute the excess material into “substantially vertical folds?”

The mere statement of these questions should, I think, be sufficient to indicate negative answers. Manifestly,, it required no inventive genius to substitute a seamless bag for a stitched bag in the manufacture of tea balls. And the closing of the mouth by means of a string with a handle attached was not only old in the art but involved only mechanical skill. Moreover, the mere shaping of dies to form the material into bags was not invention. Butler v. Steckel, 137 U. S. 21, 11 S. Ct. 25, 34 L. Ed. 582; Anderson & Writer Corp. v. Hanky Beret, Inc. (C. C. A.) 40 F.(2d) 196. I do not think, therefore, that either of the Hirsehhom patents discloses patentable invention.

It is insisted, however, that the plaintiff’s conspicuous commercial' success is “a powerful piece of evidence” in favor of invention. Kurtz v. Belle Hat Lining Co. (C. C. A.) 280 F. 277, 281.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F.2d 871, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millie-patent-holding-co-v-joseph-tetley-co-nysd-1931.