Moloney v. F. A. Kuhnert Corp.

33 F.2d 954, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 439, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1370
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJuly 12, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 33 F.2d 954 (Moloney v. F. A. Kuhnert Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moloney v. F. A. Kuhnert Corp., 33 F.2d 954, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 439, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1370 (W.D.N.Y. 1929).

Opinion

HAZEL, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity for infringement of letters patent to Michael J. Moloney, No. 1,206,018, dated November 28, 1916, for a method of making welt shoes.

The plaintiffs acquired title by assignment and license, respectively, as hereinafter ruled.

Prior to the patent in suit, there was a desire for the manufacture of inexpensive welt shoes for small children’s .wear — a flexible, light, soft product having durability and strength and of fine material to supply the [955]*955existing demand. The patentee in his method of fabrication used a smooth insole of thin, lightweight, soft leather in making the welt shoes, without using nails, ribs, or other rough parts to vex the foot. The welt was of strip leather stretched to the shoe upper. The edge of the insole was thinned, and, after cementing around the edge, tacked onto the last; while the upper, after damping or tempering, was drawn over the last and insole and then tacked to the welt over the glued part. Upon drying the shoe upper, the tacks holding the parts in position are taken out, leaving the parts firmly glued in place. In this unfinished condition of the shoe, a filler of cork is put over the insole space caused by the welt and cemented to the insole within the space, imparting a smooth surface for sewing on the outer sole covering the filler material. It was necessary, to achieve the result, that the upper and welt, joined together, be accurately lasted and firmly held to the last while the shoe was yet to be finished. The shaping and positioning of the surface sole, and indeed the appearance of the entire shoe, depended upon the proper positioning and fastening of the upper and welt to the last and keeping them in place by tacking while the upper and welt were drying from previous tempering. To produce a shoe without tacks, one of the important features of the patent, all the attachable parts, through the entire length of the shoe, were cemented after they were shaped and before removal from the last, to enable placing the filler on the inner sole, and then sewing on the surface sole, as already stated. These combined steps were a departure from previous methods drawn to my attention, and produced a superior welt shoe for infants, to wit, a smooth, flexible, comfortable sole at reduced cost, without any tacks, as distinguished from what is known as the Goodyear welt or old turn methods of fabricating leather shoes. It is proven that plaintiff’s type of infant’s or baby’s shoes has become exceedingly popular and has found great favor in the shoe industry.

The patent has broad and specific claims, reading as follows:

“1. The method of making a shoe comprising securing an inner sole to the bottom of a last, inserting the last in a tempered upper having a welt secured thereto, securing the welt to the inner sole and the last, allowing the upper to dry, cementing the inner sole to the upper face of the welt and stitching an outer sole to the welt.
“2. The method of making a shoe comprising securing an inner sole to the bottom of a last, inserting the last in a tempered upper having a welt secured thereto, tacking the welt to the inner sole and the last, allowing the upper to dry, removing the tacks, cementing the welt to the inner sole and securing an outer sole to the welt.
“3. The method of making a shoe comprising tacking an inner sole to a last, inserting the last in a tempered upper having a welt secured thereto, tacking the welt to the last through the insole, allowing the upper to dry thoroughly, removing the tacks from the welt, cementing the welt to the inner sole, cementing a filler to the bottom of the inner sole, cementing an outer sole to the welt, and stitching the welt and the outer sole together.”

Each claim, it will be noted, stresses securing the shoe upper and welt to the inner sole and producing a nailless shoe, as heretofore mentioned. Although the invention belongs to a crowded art, showing that steps consisting of sewing the welt to the upper before lasting, tempering the leather to aid lasting, and cementing the shoe parts, were old adaptations, yet the different elements of the claims in suit, in combination, had not been assembled before to produce a new result. The patentee in an old combination introduced new elements; i. e., tacking the upper and welt to the insole after damping, and then allowing the dampened parts to dry to enable snugly securing the parts by gluing them together, and finally forming a pliable, integral entirety without nails. Such an innovation over prior methods, though slight, nevertheless, in view of the commercial success attained by the article and the advantages derived, was, I think, the result of skill beyond the ordinary skill of the cobbler. It was manifestly a subordinate improvement in a limited field, but, since it did not occur to fabricators of infant’s shoes that more lightness and softness of material might be especially desirable for babes, it ought not to be held devoid of patentable merit. The patent is analogous to the class of patents considered by the court in Frost Co. v. Cohn (C. C. A.) 119 F. 505, and Good Form Co. v. White (C. C. A.) 160 F. 661.

Defendant concedes that the combination has been used in its fabrication of a similar type of infant’s shoe, but claims that it has abandoned such use, and, after this action was begun, resorted to fabricating infant’s shoes under license, according to the patent to P. J. Byrne, granted March 17, 1925, which described method, plaintiff contends, is an infringement of the process in question. It is proven that an old employee of plain[956]*956tiffs, one, Cesteroa, was hired to come to defendant’s factory at night to teach its employees how to operate plaintiff’s method; and there is additional evidence tending to show that defendant finishes its welt shoes in the same way as described in plaintiff’s patent. It makes no difference that in manufacture there is and has been a slight variation of the practice as to the order of performing the steps especially relating to cementing the shoe upper and welt to the sole. The transposition was not material. It originally grew out of the inventor’s experience and hastened the completion of the shoe. Nothing is discovered in the prior art patents (though a large number were introduced in evidence) of anticipatory significance or to suggest plaintiff’s process.

Importance is attached to the Goodyear welt, which, however, is a stiffer and heavier shoe, evidently designed for older children. It is nailless, but in its construction a heavier insole is used than is used in producing plaintiff’s shoes. The steps of the process are not the same. Instead of forming the united upper and welt upon the last with tacks, the Goodyear welt requires a thicker and stiffer insole to hold the temporary nails, and also requires additional material for in-seaming grooves which tends to impart more stiffness to the insole, and, no doubt, causes discomfort to the infant wearer. The difference between the two methods is not great; still the essence of Moloney’s invention was to insure ease and comfort to the child wearing the shoe, which greater flexibility and softness of material in the fabrication of his shoes alone could supply. The patentee’s mode of treatment of the materials — gluing parts of the materials in lieu of tacking— were essential steps. Cochrane v. Deener, 94 U. S. 780, 24 L. Ed. 139.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F.2d 954, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 439, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moloney-v-f-a-kuhnert-corp-nywd-1929.