Minneapolis-Moline Co. v. Massey-Harris Co.

107 F. Supp. 673, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 252, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3871
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 30, 1952
DocketCiv. A. No. 3541
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 107 F. Supp. 673 (Minneapolis-Moline Co. v. Massey-Harris Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minneapolis-Moline Co. v. Massey-Harris Co., 107 F. Supp. 673, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 252, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3871 (mnd 1952).

Opinion

JOYCE, District Judge.

This is an action for infringement of Ronning et al. Patent No. 2,455,905, issued December 7, 1948 to • Minneapolis-Moline Power Implement Company upon an application filed by Martin Ronning and Kenneth M. Keith. Plaintiff is the owner of said patent by virtue of assignment from Ronning and Keith and a subsequent assignment and merger in which it was the surviving corporation. The defenses asserted are noninfringement, anticipation, lack of invention, and that the alleged invention was not in fact a joint invention.

The patent in suit is embodied in a grain combine of the self-propelled harvester-thresher type and relates to an improvement in the “mechanism for feeding and conveying the cut grain from the harvester cutter bar and platform laterally and thence rearwardly onto the conveyor which elevates the crop into the threshing machine.” The heart of the invention, according to plaintiff, “lies in providing a grain combine with a retractable finger feeder, located adjacent the juncture of right angularly disposed conveyors, where serious conges[674]*674tion has presented an age old problem, and being operative to positively engaging the grain as it is moved in by the transverse (auger) convejmr, converting the direction of movement to the longitudinal, and then with equal positiveness, will retract the fingers so that the grain can be carried back to the thresher and not be wound upon the feeder or carried forwardly to aggravate rather than eliminate the congestion.”

The combine containing the patented construction consists principally of two sections, a harvester section and a thresher section. No details of the latter are here involved and it suffices to state its function as being to separate the straw and chaff from the crop material delivered to it from the harvester. This section is carried in front of the threshing section and consists of a so-called platform or feed table at the front of which is a reciprocating cutter or shear bar extending across the entire width of the harvester. As the machine moves forward a conventional slatted reel divides the standing grain and pushes it against the cutter bar for cutting. The cut grain is received on a smooth steel platform and is conveyed from both sides towards a longitudinal conveyor disposed at the center of the harvester by means of two auger-type conveyors supported only at their outer ends. These augers terminate at opposite sides of the rearwardly moving or longitudinal slatted-canvas conveyor which extends all the way from the cutter bar rearwardly across the platform and thence upwardly toward the thresher to deliver thereto the severed grain which has been fed across the platform from both sides by the auger.

Since the lateral auger-type conveyors do not extend all the way across the feed table or platform, there exists a gap between the ends thereof. Spaced rearwardly and upwardly with respect to this gap and the axis of rotation of the augers, and above the lower inclined portion of the longitudinal conveyor, is a drum-shaped feeder or rotatable cylinder having apertures in its periphery through which steel fingers are extended and retracted as the cylinder rotates. These fingers are mounted or fastened at their inner ends on an offset shaft so that they will, it is claimed, as they are extended engage both the grain fed centrally by the augers and that cut immediately in front of the feeder drum, and move it rearwardly in cooperation with the longitudinal conveyor. As the grain passes on the conveyor under the feeder drum the fingers retract so that they will disengage from the grain and not carry it back or wind it around the drum.

The claims alleged to have been infringed and the validity of which are here questioned are as follows:

“ * * * 1. In a combine, having a harvester and a thresher rearwardly thereof, a conveyor for conveying crop material rearwardly from the harvester to the thresher, a rotary feeder device across the entire width of the convey- or, and cooperating with a rearwardly moving part of the conveyor to assist in moving the crop material from the harvester to the thresher, said feeder device having extensible and retractable crop engaging members, and means for extending the members as they rotate downwardly and thence rearwardly adjacent to and in conjunction with the rearwardly moving part of the conveyor.
“12. In a combine, a harvester part having a transversely operating conveyor, a thresher part rearwardly of the harvester part, an endless longitudinally arranged conveyor connecting the two parts to convey crop material delivered transversely by the harvester conveyor rearwardly to the thresher part, a rotary feeder disposed adjacent to the crop delivery end of the transverse conveyor and adjacent a crop receiving part of the longitudinal conveyor, crop engaging arms projecting from the feeder, means for rotating the feeder in a rearward direction at its underside, and means for alternately extending and retracting the arms as the feeder is rotated, said last mentioned means being operative to maintain the arms extended through the arc of feeder movement in a direction toward the longitudinal conveyer.
[675]*675“13. In a harvester, a transverse crop receiving platform, a longitudinal conveyor extending rearwardly from the platform to remove crop material therefrom, a transversely operating conveyor disposed over the platform to convey crop material therefrom to the first mentioned conveyor and in a direction substantially at right angles to, the feeding direction of the first mentioned conveyor, and a rotary feeder arranged adjacent a forward part of the longitudinal conveyor to engage crop material moved in by the transverse conveyor, said feeder including crop engaging members that are automatically movable with respect to the feeder proper, as the latter rotates, to effectively engage and urge the crop material toward the longitudinal conveyor and then disengage the crop material.
“14. In a harvester, a transverse crop receiving platform, a longitudinal conveyor extending rearwardly from the platform to -remove crop material therefrom, a transversely operating conveyor disposed lengthwise of the platform to convey crop material there-over to the first mentioned conveyor, and a rotary feeder arranged adjacent a forward part of the longitudinal conveyor and adjacent the delivery end of the transverse conveyor to directly receive crop material from the transversely operating conveyor and urge it into contact with the longitudinal conveyor, said feeder including a cylindrical element having extensible crop engaging projections, and means for extending and retracting the projections as the feeder is rotated.
“15. In a combine, a harvester part, a rearwardly disposed thresher part, a centrally and longitudinally disposed conveyor for conveying crop material from the harvester part to the thresher part, a pair of harvester part conveyors disposed one at each side of the first mentioned conveyor to move crop material inwardly from opposite • sides thereof, a feeder disposed adjacent the central conveyor and adjacent the inner ends of the pair of conveyors, said feeder comprising a rotatable drum and crop engaging arms slidably projecting from the drum for projection and retraction with respect thereto, and means for projecting the arms as they move in an arcuate direction toward the central conveyor.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 F. Supp. 673, 95 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 252, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minneapolis-moline-co-v-massey-harris-co-mnd-1952.