New York Scaffolding Co. v. Liebel-Binney Construction Co.

254 U.S. 24, 41 S. Ct. 18, 65 L. Ed. 112, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1231
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 8, 1920
Docket22
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 254 U.S. 24 (New York Scaffolding Co. v. Liebel-Binney Construction Co.) 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
New York Scaffolding Co. v. Liebel-Binney Construction Co., 254 U.S. 24, 41 S. Ct. 18, 65 L. Ed. 112, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1231 (1920).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the court.

Suit for infringement by the Construction Company of a patent dated May 24, 1910, and numbered 959,008, for new and useful improvements in “Scaffold-Supporting *25 Means,” granted to Elias H. Henderson. Petitioner is assignee of the patent.

An injunction was prayed, accounting of profits and damages.

The patent is in the usual form, but a special manner of use of the invention is alleged. It is alleged that, since the acquisition of the patent, petitioner has been largely engaged in different cities of the United States in putting the invention into practice, and the mannér thereof has been to Construct and lease for use to builders and others at a specified royalty or price per week, the scaffolds embodying the invention, petitioner retaining the ownership of and title to the scaffolds, they being returned to petitioner upon the completion by the lessees of the work for which the scaffolds had been required.' •

The answer of the Construction Company directly put in issue certain of the allegations of the petition. It admitted, however, the use of scaffolds which it purchased from the Eclipse Scaffolding Company of Omaha, Nebraska, but alleged that'such scaffolds did not contain or embody the invention protected by patent No. 959,008, in any way or manner..

It is also alleged that petitioner, sometime prior to February 21, 1914, brought suit in equity in the United States District Court for the District óf Nebraska, against one Egbert Whitney, predecessor in the title of the Eclipse Scaffolding Company to the scaffolds sold by the latter company to the Construction Company, in which shit infringement of patent No. 959,008 was alleged..

In that suit a patent of one William J. Murray was pleaded, but the Scaffolding Company withdrew its case as to that patent and relied on claims 1 and 3 of the patent to Henderson, and the court decreed that the claims were void for want of invention, and it is alleged that the Construction Company “is entitled to the protection of said decree.”

*26 On the issues thus made by bill and answer proofs were taken and the court decreed against the patent, saying, in its opinion, that “the Henderson patent has not supplanted others, nor has the influence of its owner been exerted to that end. It barely represents a step in the art. It does not disclose invention.” And further, “In view of the conclusion reached by this court that claims 1 and 3 of the patent in said suit are invalid, it is unnecessary to do more than touch upon the matter of infringement. The evidence of infringement is meagre, and yet, if the claims of patent in suit were to be held valid with a range of equivalents, infringement would be found.” The decree was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. 243 Fed. Rep. 577.

The" Construction Company pleaded in defense, as we have said, the decree of the District Court of Nebraska in the suit of petitioner against Egbert Whitney, but that decree was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 224 Fed. Rep. 452. The reversal and the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals thereon are much relied on in this suit, and we may say constituted the inducement to issue certiorari. It is seemingly antithetical to the opinion and judgment under review, and the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit felt and expressed the embarrassment of “disturbing the force of a decision of a court of coordinate jurisdiction,” formed “upon precisely the same issues and upon substantially the same facts.” The court, however, felt constrained to an “opposite judgment” and decided that Henderson made but “formal changes” in the prior art which involved no invention, and affirmed the decree of the District Court.

Necessarily, for an estimate of Henderson’s patent we must consider the prior art. It is detailed by witnesses, explained by counsel, and illustrated. Specific descriptions are not necessary. We may refer to our own observation of the first forms of scaffolding. To quote *27 District Judge Orr, “Originally, scaffolding was made to rest upon the ground and was increased in height as the building of the structure demanded.” The first forms of scaffolding which constituted the prior art are described by a witness as “the thrust out scaffold, the pull scaffold, the timber scaffold; that they were built right up to the front of the building.” In 1900, he testified, “a new device came on the market, or a new structure, and, in place of building up from the ground, they hung a rigid iron, frame from the upper stories of the building. That could be used on three or four stories sometimes. It was heavy, inconvenient to handle, and did not. meet with very great success, although it did seem to be an improvement; over the old poles. Then there came another form of scaffolding, which'was a suspended wire platform scaffold, suspending the wires from the top of the building. . . . Then there came the Cavanagh overhead scaffolding machine, . . . That machine became fairly well used, after being introduced, and was apparently a great improvement over any other. Then Murray came in the market with his platform machine; a machine operated from the platform, the fastening of the wire that supported the platform being from above, the wire being secured to the out-riggers from the upper part of the building. Then the Henderson machine, supported by cables from the upper part of the building, and similar in a great many respects, except that the machines were placed in the opposite position, enabling you to make a scaffold of any width, which would seem to be the latest.”

The Murray patent, therefore, is the step in the prior art preceding that made by Henderson and a comparison of the latter’s patent with it, the Murray patent, is immediately indicated.

Murray describes his invention to be of “new and useful Improvements in Adjustable Scaffolds.” The object of it, he said, was to provide such a scaffold as would *28 “permit of adjustment at any height during the construction of a building or the repair thereof.” And he claimed, “The combination with two bars having means for detachably securing them to a building, of a platform, frames on said platform carrying means operable from the platform and having connections adapted to be connected to one of said bars for raising the platform, and supporting means on said frames extending above the said bar when the platform has been fully raised and adapted to detachably engage said bar and rigidly support the platform therefrom, whereby, the platform may be connected to one bar by the raising means and raised to a level to engage the supporting means with said bar and may then remain supported by said bar while the other bar is placed at a higher level and the raising means secured to the latter, the bars thus becoming alternately points of raising support and of rigid support for the platforms.”

On page 29 is the illustrative diagram of the claim.

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254 U.S. 24, 41 S. Ct. 18, 65 L. Ed. 112, 1920 U.S. LEXIS 1231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-scaffolding-co-v-liebel-binney-construction-co-scotus-1920.