Neva-Slip Shirt Waist Grip Co. v. Marcon Mfg. Co.

215 F. 117, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1672
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJune 22, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 215 F. 117 (Neva-Slip Shirt Waist Grip Co. v. Marcon Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neva-Slip Shirt Waist Grip Co. v. Marcon Mfg. Co., 215 F. 117, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1672 (E.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

CHATFIELD, District Judge.

Letters patent No. 1,065,297 were issued upon June 17, 1913, on an application filed July 9, 1912, by Guy H. Crawford, duly assigned to the Neva-Slip Shirt Waist Grip Co.,. Incorporated, for what is called a waist grip.

Suit was brought for infringement of this patent, and at the close of the trial the following findings were made:

“Brooklyn, March 10, 1914.
“The Court: I think I will make a preliminary decision so as to narrow the ground for argument. As I indicated at the outset, the Marcon Manufacturing Company, Inc., was never organized sufficiently to do business in such a way that Mr. Connell could successfully separate his own actions from-those that were done by him in the name of the corporation. We need not consider at all the financial responsibility of any one, either as stockholder or as subscriber for what was done, but, assuming that the use of the corporate name was something for which Mr. Connell and Mr. Geary were personally responsible, rather than as officers of the corporation, and also assuming that they had filed a certificate under which they could do business as individuals in the name of the Marcon Manufacturing Company, throughout this entire period, nevertheless, the responsibility was such that if Mr. Geary or Mr. Connell, or either of them, dealt with any one in the name of the corporation, and if the corporation was held out as a party qualified to do business, there is ground for charging the corporation (in so far as it. existed) with infringement, if there be any infringement.
“There is jurisdiction therefore for considering the validity of the patent and the defenses, urged against the patent with respect to the defendant, Marcon Manufacturing Company, as a corporation. It is unnecessary to-consider whether the plaintiff could join Mr. Geary and Mr. Connell as individual defendants upon the record here presented; and it is also unnecessary to determine whether—if Mr. Geary and Mr. Connell could show successfully that any act in the name of the Marcon Manufactruing Company, Inc., was accidental or incidental—the present action should be dismissed, without costs, and an action against the individuals substituted in its place. All those questions have been removed by the way in which the case has been presented by both parties,, and through 'the fact that the corporation is nom- • inally associated with the acts, charged to be infringing, to a sufficient extent to enable us to take up the questions of patentability and infringement
“As to those questions the principal issue is raised through the use of the Rival fastener, and with respect to the construction of the claims of the patent in suit.
“The defendant’s form of device and the form used by Mr. Geary at present would both be infringements if the patent to Crawford is valid, and covers the use of a single tape passing through an eyelet attached to one end of the tape, and carried back for fastening around a cleat of such form as to bring the pressure of one part of the tape, or of the cleat, over the loose end.
[119]*119“The prior art patents relating to skirt supporters, or belts, or methods of fastening, have little to do with the question, except in so far as they show ability to hold a loose strap or end of tape by friction applied through some other portion of the tape; and the idea of fastening a loose end by means of a cleat, either by pressure of the other strands or by binding through the angle of the return, is old.
“The only element of patentability would seem to be in the employment of a cleat upon the single strand, or in using a cleat in connection with a single piece of tubular tape, so arranged as to hold the cleat, to furnish the reinforcement and to give an end for the fastening, in a way which, tested by either the prior art or the Rival style of belt, would seem to show patentable improvement.
“The Rival fastener shows a reinforced or duplicated section with an eyelet at each end, and with these eyelets fastened by riveting a strap or gusset through the eyelet and into the main portion of the belt.
“It would not seem to bo an invention to substitute an extended or integral portion of the tape through the eyelet so as to do away with the extra piece in making the gusset; and therefore the question of novelty or patentability in the plaintiff’s device depends upon the arrangement with reference to the method of applying and fastening the belt, rather than to the method of attaching the eyelets, or affixing the rivets.
“The defendant’s device, as well as that now in use, makes no use of the folded or turned back part of the tubular tape, so as to hold the so-called cleat in one position; but does use the same method of fastening the loose end of the belt, by means of the cleat, and uses, as has been said, an equivalent (or method in which no novelty is involved) in attaching the eyelet
“The claims of the patent, however, seem to relate to a method, or a device constructed according to a method of arranging a single piece of tape, so as to hold the cleat in a fixed position, and to make the different parts of the device with one piece tape.
“If that be the proper interpretation and construction of the claims, and if the patentee has either assumed that the use of the cleat itself is old or has given to the world the idea of using the cleat in this way, for this purpose, then the patent in suit, like the Rival belt, would not cover what would seem to be a i>atentable idea, but has merely protected a particular combination, which is not that of the defendant.
“I think that is the question in the case: Whether the patent means anything more than a particular arrangement of what was patentable but not patented. If the patent claims cover only one combination of parts so arranged that the tape shall be doubled on itself, that the same tape shall come back through the eyelet and shall be fastened around the cleat which is to be held in one spot by a loop of the tape itself, then the defendant is not infringing.
“I will take briefs on the question of moaning and construction of the claims.”

[1] The court, having considered the prior art, reached the conclusion that none of the patents cited showed a device like that of the plaintiff or the defendant in this case, and it was apparent that a patentable novelty was described in the Crawford patent, unless the so-called Rival belt, which had been developed from the Koch and other older devices, was an anticipation of the idea, except as limited to the exact combination shown in the claims.

The testimony shows that the Rival belt has been upon the market for some time and is not patented. It, in general, consists of a belt or tape, with a ring at each end, and with two strings or tapes fastened to one of these rings, by means of which the two rings are drawn together and a knot tied, in the general method of the Koch patent, No. 644,557 of February 27, 1900. .

[120]*120In the Koch patent, however, one of the two ends is attached to each of the rings at the ends of the belt.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mills v. United States
75 Ct. Cl. 256 (Court of Claims, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 F. 117, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neva-slip-shirt-waist-grip-co-v-marcon-mfg-co-nyed-1914.