Neuberth v. Lizotte

32 App. D.C. 329, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 6104
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 5, 1909
DocketNo. 516
StatusPublished

This text of 32 App. D.C. 329 (Neuberth v. Lizotte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neuberth v. Lizotte, 32 App. D.C. 329, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 6104 (D.C. Cir. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the-Court:

The first question in order is Neuberth’s right to make the several claims embodied in the issue.

The difficulty in determining the meaning to be given the claims is complicated by the several amendments of Neuberth’sapplication before they were made. The testimony shows that,, while both applications were depending, and before any interference had been declared, negotiations were had between the United Shoe Machine Company (the substantial owner of Neuberth’s invention) and Lizotte, looking to the sale of his right to the said company. Lizotte had no knowledge of Neuberth’s. application, or of the construction of his machine. At the request of the company, he sent to it a copy of his application for the inspection of its counsel. The negotiations failed and th& papers were returned. The amendments thereafter filed by Neuberth made changes in the statement of the operation of his-machine in certain particulars, and revisers, among other things, the drawings of the original. Claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8 of the issue were then made for the first time. Those claims speci[333]*333fy a machine for covering eyelets. Claim, or count 7 originated with Lizotte and specifies a machine for covering studs which is another name for lacing hooks. When this claim was suggested to Neuberth by the Examiner, he first filed a claim in which the word “eyelet” was substituted for “stud.”

This claim 7 was first considered by the Commissioner. Neuberth’s construction as described and illustrated could not be used to cover studs, or lacing hooks, and he so admitted when testifying as a witness in the case. He claimed, however, that a lacing hook could be made by first using his machine to cover the head of a properly shaped blank, and then forming the blank into a hook. He does not point out in his description any modification of his machine by which it could be made to cover hooks or studs; and, as was said by the Commissioner: “As such modification would not be a matter of mere mechanical skill, it must be held that Neuberth is not entitled to make a ■claim in the terms of count 7 of the issue.”

It is sufficient now to say of the remaining counts of the issue ■that they involve devices for fastening the washer or disk of ■sheet celluloid to the top of an eyelet, bending it, and securing its edges to the other side of the eyelet flange, and thereby obtaining a complete covering of the same. On behalf of Lizotte, the contention is that the said claims, by their proper construction, specify means whereby the last step in the covering process is accomplished by bending over the part of the washer, which had previously been bent over the edge of the eyelet flange or ■other like article, and securing it to the under surface.

Neuberth disputes this limitation of the claims, and contends that they merely demand means for forcing the material, which had been bent at right angles to the flange, under the same, so as to secure a firm attachment. He argues that the novelty of the invention lies in the first step, which consists in bending the sheet celluloid down, and that it is sufficient that the bent-over portion be forced under the flange, thus securing the covering material to the eyelet. In his original application the machine is described as having means “provided for pressing a piece of covering material against the portion of the eyelet which [334]*334is to constitute the flange, and at the same time spreading or bending said portion whereby the flange is caused to cut into the-covering material and imbed itself therein. The covering material may, and preferably will, be moulded into the desired, form about the flange of the eyelet.” He describes the operation, of pressing the covering material against the flange of the eyelet and bending it at right angles to the flange, and says:. “Thereafter, as the movable die completes its stroke, the pressure of the covering material against the partially out-turned, flange of the eyelet and the wedging of the covering material between the enlarged portion 204 and the base of the eyelet flange bends or spreads said flange while at the same time the flange is caused to cut into the washer both by the direct pressure of the flange against the washer and by the spreading of the flange, which causes its edge portion to move radially outward and into the washer.

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“While the flange of the eyelet is being spread to cut into- and imbed itself in the washer of covering material, the covering material is being pressed between the co-operating surfaces 194 and 202 of the two dies to mould it upon both sides of the-flange of the eyelet.”

In some of his original claims he includes the feature of spreading the flange and covering it to cut into, and become-partially imbeded in, the washer or covering material.

An examination of Neuberth’s evidence in both direct and cross-examination supports the following statement in the Commissioner’s decision: “The description of the operation of the-machine as given in the original specification agrees with the testimony of Neuberth, who states that the upper part of the-washer does not go under the flange, but that the upper part of the celluloid is shifted upon itself so as to make it somewhat thicker on top, and the flange of eyelet spread so as to cut into the material.”

Neuberth used celluloid thirty thousandths of an inch thick, and the cutting into this was about five-thousandths of an inch. No portion of the bent washer was turned or bent over under [335]*335the flange, and it seems that all of it that got under the flange is through the spreading of the flange and the cutting in and partial embedding referred to. It appears from the testimony that several of Neuberth’s machines were constructed and put in operation in the factory of the Brook company, to which the-invention then belonged. Several millions of eyelets were made and many of them shipped to shoe manufacturers. It is claimed that no objection was made to the utility of these save in one instance, where a manufacturer complained that the covering would come off in fastening the eyelets in shoes. In January,, 1903, the manufacture was discontinued, and the machines were converted into use for striking out ordinary eyelets. No good reason is given for' suspending this manufacture if the eyelets so made were satisfactory in every respect. A number of these eyelets were produced in evidence.

In the course of Neuberth’s cross-examination, he said, upon examination of a cross section of the die, punch, and eyelet,, that there had been a material change in the shape and thickness of the celluloid covering, and that the inner part or throat of the eyelet had been reduced very much; “in fact brought down to a sharp edge by the pressure, and the celluloid had shifted on itself and made it somewhat thicker on the top. The exhibit also shows that the eyelet blank has slightly cut into the-washer, as you can observe by comparing the washer and the celluloid side by side.” He was then shown an eyelet taken at random from the mass, and admitted that it showed that it has-substantially preserved intact the striations produced in manufacture of the sheet celluloid upon the face of the eyelet. He added: “It also proves, in my estimation, that the celluloid was not in proper condition of softness to be moulded; if it had been, these would have disappeared.” Another was then taken from the lot manufactured in 1902, and 1903, in which he said the surface striations could be seen upon the outer surface of the celluloid.

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Bluebook (online)
32 App. D.C. 329, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 6104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neuberth-v-lizotte-cadc-1909.