Morse Chain Co. v. Link-Belt Co.

189 F. 584, 110 C.C.A. 564, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4412
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 20, 1911
DocketNo. 265
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 F. 584 (Morse Chain Co. v. Link-Belt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morse Chain Co. v. Link-Belt Co., 189 F. 584, 110 C.C.A. 564, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4412 (2d Cir. 1911).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

[1] The reissued patent relates to an improvement in drive-chains for general power transmission “wherein the pintle consists of two parts bearing upon one another throughout their length along the line of bearing of the link upon the other in the joint.” One object of the patentee was to increase the bearing surface at the joint in chains wherein the links are made up of plates of which those in one link are interspersed upon the pintle with those [585]*585of the adjacent links and wherein each of the plates of one link engages its respective part of the pintle and turns therewith freely on the other part of the pintle.

Another object is the construction of the chain in such manner that alternate links only engage with the sprocket whereby the parts of the pintles having plain bearing surfaces may be mounted facing each other in those links which do not touch the sprocket and which bearing surfaces are substantially at right angles to the length of the links, any slipping tendency of the rockers upon the seat pins being thereby avoided. A third object is the formation of the seat pin with flattened or otherwise irregular sides throughout, whereby it will hold a fixed position in each of the plates with which it engages, the holes in the links sustaining the seat pin being made to conform substantially to said irregularities. The patentee says:

“One of the chief advantages of the two-part pintle in a plate-chain resides in the fact that a continuous bearing is provided throughout the width of the links, as clearly illustrated In Figure 11. Were the pintle a solid one, the links D would have a bearing in the joint for but one-half the length of the pintle and likewise with the links 0, whereas with a two-part pintle each of said links has a bearing extending from one outside plate V to the other along the line H, Figures 8 and 11. Thus for each link the bearing surface is doubled by the use of the two-part pintle, and the wearing away at the pintle is thereby very materially decreased.”

Again the patentee says:

“While the explanation of the invention above given has reference specifically to a structure in which the pintle Is described as composed of ‘two’ parts, it is obvious that the generic idea involved is applicable to a structure having a pintle made in ‘separate’ parts, whether there be two or any other number of parts more than one. A three-part pintle chain bt analogous structure is shown in one of the modifications of the applicant’s patent No. 736,999 which was copending with the original letters patent No. 757,762. I do not in this patent cover per se a pintle made In two' parts, or in separate parts (whether two or more) irrespective of the form, of links with which the pintle Is associated. On the contrary, all the claiiiss of this patent in which the pintles are elements are limited to the employment of such pintles in what are commonly known as multi-plate chains- or links, whereby the effective bearing surface is increased.”

The original patent contained no statement similar to the paragraph; last quoted and the description and claims were confined to a two-part pintle.

The claims of the reissue which are involved are as follows, Nd. 12 being a new claim:

“6. A drive-chain having each link composed of a plurality of plates, the plates of each link being interspersed upon the pintles with the plates of the adjacent links, and two-part pintles of which the seat-pins have flattened sides throughout their length whereby they hold a fixed position in each of the plates -with which they engage.”
“9. A drive-chain having adjacent links composed of a plurality of plates adapted to arch over the sprocket-teeth, the plates of each link being interspersed upon the pintles with the plates of the adjacent links, and pintle® formed in two parts, of which one part engages with the plates of one link only and passes freely through openings in the plates of the adjacent link, and the other part engages with the plates of said adjacent link and passes freely through openings in the plates of the first-mentioned link.”
“10. A drive-chain having adjacent links composed of a plurality of [586]*586plates adapted to arch over the sprocket-teeth, the plates of each link being interspersed upon the pintles with the plates of the adjacent links, and pintles formed in separate parts which bear upon each other throughout substantially the full width of the chain, one part of the pintle engaging with the plates of oue link only and passing freely through openings in the plates of the adjacent link.”
“12. A drive-chain having adjacent links composed of a plurality of plates adapted to arch over the sprocket-teeth, the plates of each link being provided with apertures at their ends and interspersed upon the pintles witn the plates of the adjacent liDks, and pintles, formed in a plurality of separate parts adapted to engage one with another to form a longitudinally extended bearing throughout substantially the full width of the chain one of the parts of the pintle being so engaged in the apertures of the plates of one link only as to turn therewith and passing freely through the apertures in the plates of the adjacent link, and another of the parts of the pintle being so engaged in the apertures of the plates of such adjacent link as to turn therewith, and passing freely through the apertures in the plates of the other link.”

The original was in litigation in the Seventh circuit where a decree dismissing the bill was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals in Morse Chain Co. v. Link-Belt Co. 164 Fed. 331.

In the Circuit Court the action was based upon two patents to Morse, No. 736,999 granted August 25, 1903, and No. 757,762 which was subsequently reissued. Judge ICohlsaat, in the Circuit Court, speaking of the complainant’s contention that No. 757,762 was the broad patent and No. 736,999 the specific patent, says:

“But upon what ground complainant at this late day seeks to set up the two-part pintle patent as generic I am unable to discover from the record. It seems to have no other foundation than its desire to show infringement. That patent is, in' all its terms, limited to a two-part pintle. Its other features are multi-plate links, and also some details in the adjustment of the parts. The multi-plate links were old. The two-part pintle was also old.”

The bill was dismissed because the defendant’s three-part pintle did not infringe the two-part pintles of the claims. The Court of Appeals in” affirming the decree said (164 Fed. 331, 333, 90 C. C. A. 650, 652) :

“It is earnestly insisted, however, that whereas in all the other claims of patent No. 757,762, the description is as of a two-part pintle; in claim ten there is no such limitation, the description being ‘and pintles formed in separate parts;’ the argument being that such description covers a three-part pintle, as well as a two-part pintle. But the fact remains, that the specific thing described in the patent is not a three-part pintle, but is a two-part pintle, and there is nothing in the descriptive portion of the patent indicating that anything else than a two-part pintle, either actually or potentially, was in the mind of the inventor.”

Although the court was clearly of the opinion that the invention of No.

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Bluebook (online)
189 F. 584, 110 C.C.A. 564, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-chain-co-v-link-belt-co-ca2-1911.