Mills v. United States

75 Ct. Cl. 256, 1932 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 347, 1932 WL 2104
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 6, 1932
DocketNo. D-145
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 Ct. Cl. 256 (Mills v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. United States, 75 Ct. Cl. 256, 1932 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 347, 1932 WL 2104 (cc 1932).

Opinion

Williams, Judge,

delivered the opinion:

This is a suit brought under the patent act of 1910, as amended July 1, 1918.

The suit involves the alleged infringement of two United States patents, numbers 1178092 and 1223598, granted to William Mills, a British subject, and, as sole and exclusive owner of the patents, plaintiff in the present action. It has been previously established that a British subject may maintain suit against the United States Government for infringement of his United States patents (see Brodie v. United States, 62 C. Cls. 29), and we pass directly to a consideration of the above enumerated patents and a comparison of them with the Government devices.

The subject-matter herein involved relates to what is known as hand-grenades. A hand-grenade is an ordnance missile of such a size that it can be readily grasped in the hand and thrown at the enemy. Hand grenades in general comprise a hollow corrugated metal casing filled with a [270]*270bursting charge which when it explodes causes fragmentation of the casing. The explosion of the bursting charge is initiated by the release of a firing-pin by means of suitable mechanism during the act of throwing the grenade. The released firing-pin explodes a cap which in turn ignites a fuze adapted to burn for a few seconds which in turn explodes the bursting charge at the approximate time at which the thrown grenade reaches its objective.

Both of the patents in suit relate to safety features designed to prevent a premature explosion of the grenade.

Patent No. 1MS598

The safety features which form the subject matter of this patent are directed to the release mechanism for «the firing-pin. The structure disclosed by the drawing and specification comprises a hollow grenade body adapted to be filled with a bursting charge ignited by a percussion cap in conjunction with a short time fuze. The percussion cap is located at the bottom of a central axial chamber, which also contains a spring-impelled striker or firing-pin held in a retracted position above the percussion cap. This spring-impelled striker is maintained in this position by engagement of its upper end with the short end of a pivoted release lever, the long end of which extends downward and is formed or bent to approximate the exterior contour of the grenade casing. The form and location of this extended portion of the lever are for the purpose of enabling it to be grasped and held against the exterior of the grenade by the hand of the thrower.

The lever is normally maintained in this position by an element defined in the patent claims as a “ retaining means.” As disclosed by the specification and drawing this element comprises a split pin of pliable metal inserted through perforations or lugs on the exterior of the casing and adjacent the lever.

When it is desired to use the grenade the thrower grasps the same in his hand in such a manner as to hold the release lever against the body of the grenade and then removes or withdraws the retaining means or the pin, thus leaving the release lever free except for the grasp of the hand. When [271]*271'the grenade leaves the hand of the thrower the lever is released and disengages the spring-actuated firing-pin or striker which then is impelled against the percussion cap and initiates the subsequent explosion of the grenade.

The patent monopoly, as expressed by the claims in suit, is directed in substance to the location of the retaining means in such position as to cooperate with that portion of the release lever in the vicinity of the firing-pin or striker, which it controls.

The claims in suit are as follows:

“ L A grenade or the like, • said grenade comprising in combination means for firing or exploding the grenade, an externally disposed lever adapted to control the firing means, and retaining means for said lever arranged in connection with the part or half of the lever in the vicinity of the said firing means which it controls.
“ 2. A grenade or the like, said grenade comprising in combination means for firing or exploding the grenade, an externally disposed lever adapted to control the firing means, and manually removable retaining means for said lever arranged in connection with the part or half of the lever in the vicinity of the said firing means which it controls, the half of said lever remote from said firing means being exposed to the grasp of the hand when said retaining means is being removed.
“ 3. A grenade or the like, said grenade comprising in combination means for firing or exploding the grenade, an externally disposed pivoted lever adapted to control the firing means, and manually removable retaining means for said lever arranged in connection with the part or half of the lever in the vicinity of the said firing means which it controls, the half of said lever remote from said firing means being exposed to the grasp of the hand when said retaining means is being removed.”

The plaintiff alleges infringement of these claims by the Government device termed the Mark II bouchon, the bouchon being a unitary assembly of the firing mechanism of a hand grenade.

The bouchon Mark II consists of a die-cast member adapted for threaded engagement into the top of a grenade casing, the lower portion of the die-cast structure comprising a fuze tube which extends within the opening provided for the same within the grenade. A percussion cap is mounted [272]*272at the top of this tube adjacent tbe upper end of the fuze, and a spring-impelled striker plate, carrying a conical firing-pin or point, is so mounted that under the actuation of its spring the firing-pin will strike the cap. This striker plate is normally held in a cocked position remote from the percussion cap by means of a release lever, the loAver end of which has a downwardly, projecting portion approximating the exterior contour of the grenade.

This lever is not pivoted to the bouchon portion of the grenade, but has its upper end hooked over a projecting lug so as to rock or fulcrum about the same. The release lever is maintained in a normal position by a pin acting as a “ retaining means ” and located to cooperate with the upper part or portion of the release lever in the vicinity of the firing means or striker plate which the lever controls.

The method of using a Government hand grenade equipped with a Mark II bouchon is practically identical with the operation previously described, in connection with the grenade of the patent in suit. The grenade is grasped by the hand of the thrower in such a manner as to hold the release lever against the exterior of the grenade, and the retaining means is then removed. When the grenade is thrown and leaves the hand of the thrower, the lever is released and thrown off, thereby disengaging the striker plate which then fires the percussion cap and initiates the explosion.

Defendant argues that the term “ retaining means,” as used by the patentee in the claims in suit, refers to- the fixed trunnions located on the body of the grenade on which the release lever is pivoted. The patent specifically refers to the means for retaining the lever in its normal position in relation to the grenade as “ a split pin h

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Ct. Cl. 256, 1932 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 347, 1932 WL 2104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-united-states-cc-1932.