Morley Sewing MacHine Co. v. Lancaster

129 U.S. 263, 9 S. Ct. 299, 32 L. Ed. 715, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1687
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 4, 1889
Docket165
StatusPublished
Cited by177 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 263 (Morley Sewing MacHine Co. v. Lancaster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morley Sewing MacHine Co. v. Lancaster, 129 U.S. 263, 9 S. Ct. 299, 32 L. Ed. 715, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1687 (1889).

Opinion

Me. Justice Blatcheoed

delivered-the opinion of the court;

This is a suit in equity, brought November 6, 1882, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District ofr Massachusetts, by .the- Morley Sewing Machine Company and the Morley Button Sewing Machine Company against Charles B. Lancaster, for the alleged infringement of letters patent Nq. 236,350, granted January 4, 1881, to James H. Morley, E. S. Fay and Henry E. Wilkins, on the invention of said Morley, on an application filed June 23, 1880, for an improvement in machines for sewing buttons on fabrics. • .The machine of the defendant is constructed in accordance with the' description contained in letters patent No. 268,369, granted November 28. 1882, to Joseph Mathison, William D. Alíen, and C. B. Lancaster, on the invention of said Mathison, for improvements in machines for securing buttons to material, on an application .filed August 1, 1882. '

The' specification of the Morley patent-says': “My invention consists in mechanism for automatically sewing shankrbuttons on to fabrics,, shoes, etc., and' the objects of my invention are to form a double-threaded- stitch on the top side of the material being sewed upon, transversely to the direction of feed, and on the reverse side of the material two parallel lines of stitches at right angles to the first, named ones,'to make alternately, long and short stitches, and to so feed buttons -to be sewed- by said machines as to present them at the proper time and in the proper place, to be operated' upon.” The specification then describes, by reference to twenty-four figures of drawings, the mechanical means used by the patentee"to perform the mechanical operations -described. ' The specification then proceeds: *266 “Having thus described the machine and constructions set forth in the drawings, I wish it to be understood- that the same is only one of different mechanisms which I have contemplated, and which may be effectually employed for carrying out the main feature of my invention, to wit, the automatic mechanical sewing of buttons to a fabric. Thus, different means may be adopted for carrying the thread through the eye of the button into the fabric, as, for instance, passing the' hooked needle through said eye to a position to seize the thread from the. straight needle, or form [from] a suitable carrier, and then draw the loop down through the'fabric to be secured beneath by a shuttle or needle thread, or the eye pointed needle may be used in connection with a loop-spreader and shuttle for carrying a thread through the loop, a- single thread or two threads being used. It will further be understood that wires may be sometimes substituted for threads, and that other feed mechanisms may be' employed, the needles moving with, but not controlling, the fabric, as in the construction described.”

' There are eighteen claims in the patent, only four of which are relied upon by the plaintiffs, namely, claims 1,'2, 8, and 13, which are as follows: “ 1. The combination, in a machine for sewing shank-buttons to fabrics, of button-feeding mechanism, appliances for passing a thread through the eye of the buttons and locking the,loop to the fabric, and feeding mechanism, substantially as set forth. 2. The combination, in a machine for sewing shank-buttons to fabrics, of a needle and operating mechanism, appliances for bringing the buttons successively to positions to permit the needle to pass through the eye of each button, and means for locking the loop of thread carried by the needle to secure the button to the fabric, substantially as set. forth.” “8. The combination, in a machine for sewing buttons to fabrics, of button-feeding and sewing appliances, substantially as set forth, and feeding appliances and operating mechanism whereby the feeding devices are moved alternately different distances to alternate short button stitches with long stitches between the buttons, as specified.” “13. The combination, with button-sewing appliances, of a trough, appliances for carrying the buttons successively from the trough' *267 to the sewing devices, and mechanism for operating said ap-qjliances and sewing devices, as set forth.” The defendant’s piachine is known ah the Lancaster machine.

The Morley machine contains and is made up of three main groups of instrumentalities: (1) mechanism for holding the buttons in mass, and delivering them separately,- in proper position, over .the fabric, so that they may be attached to it by the sewing and stitching mechanism; (2) the stitching mechanism ; (3.) the mechanism for feeding the fabric along, so; as to space the stitches and consequently the buttons when sewed'om

In the button-feeding mechanism, there is a hopper containing the buttons in mass. The principal rise of the machine is to sew buttons on to the uppers of buttoned boots, and the button designed to be used is one having a round ball affixed to a shank, which terminates in an eye. ' On the bottom of the hopper is a hopper-valve, which picks out the buttons one by one and delivers them into an inclined trough. This, trough has a Y-shaped groove along its bottom, midway .between its,sides, and the buttons enter the'upper part of the trough with their shanks iif all directions, and it becomes necessary to turn them over, So that the eyes will lie in the groove while the "bodies -of the buttons occupy the trough. The contrivance for accomplishing this consists of a flexible, corrugated strip of metal, lying over the top of the trough, and oscillated by proper machinery, which, by contact with the bodies of the buttons, will roll them over so that their, eyes will lie in the groove. After the buttons are thus arranged, they,slide down the trough, being aided to do so by a jarring motion imparted to the latter. When they arrive at its lower end,, which i-s bent so as to be nearly vertical, they lie with their heads towards the front of -the machine, that'is, the side farthest from the driving pulley. In one modification of the machine-, the buttons are held in the trough by a button-wheel, which is mounted on a vertical axis, and is provided with pockets, each capable of receiving a button, and '.admits of -being • intermittently-revolved at proper times. This button-wheel is used (1) to close the bottom of the trough; (2) to receive buttons into -its pockets; and (3) by its own revolution, to turn *268 the buttons around, so that their eyes will lie towards the front of the machine. , In order to prevent the buttons from falling out of the pockets, the button-wheel rests upon a stationary table, which closes the bottoms of all of the pockets but one. When.a button arrives' over the notch in the table, it has been turned around, on a vertical axis, 180°; but, as a plane passing through its eye is then vertical, it must be. turned on a horizontal axis, through 90°, so. that its eye may lie flat, in order that the needle, which ascends from beneath, may pass through the .eye. Therefore, when a button arrives over the notch in the table, a plunger or punch descends into the pocket and drives the button into a button-carrier, which lies at that time immediately under the notch, and under the’ pocket, into which the punch enters.

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Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 263, 9 S. Ct. 299, 32 L. Ed. 715, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1687, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morley-sewing-machine-co-v-lancaster-scotus-1889.