Norton v. Cary

39 F. 544, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2342

This text of 39 F. 544 (Norton v. Cary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norton v. Cary, 39 F. 544, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2342 (circtndil 1889).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a bill for an injunction and accounting by reason of the alleged infringement of patent No. 131,089, granted September 3, 1872, to Horace Everett for an “improvement in cans for paint;” patent No. 136,575, granted March 4, 1873, to Job A. Williams for an [545]*545improvement in cans for oil and paint,” and patent No. 298,018, granted May 6, 1884, to Edwin Norton for a “paint-can.” The invention in the Everett patent is described by the patentee in Ms specifications as follows:

“The object of my invention is a can so stiffened as to retain its shape in the absence of the cover, and, at the same time, constructed for the ready and secure attachment of the cover, and for the ready withdrawal of the entire contents. A ring, B, is soldered to the upper edge of the body, A, of the can, this ring serving the twofold purpose of stiffening the said body, A, and of receiving the cover, D, the flange e of which is interlocked with the flange/ of tiie ring, as shown in Tig. 2, by the application of pressure. * * * I rely upon the ring, B, as a means of stiffening the can and retaining it in shape, the ring being so narrow as to leave a large opening for the ready removal of the entire contents. After the paint has been deposited in the can the cover is fitted over the flange of the ring, a suitable instrument is then applied, under pressure, to the top of the cover, at and near the edge of the same, until the flange / of the ring is contained within the folded and compressed flange e of the cover, the body of the can being so stiffened by the ring as to resist this pressure.”

The patent also contains a disclaimer in the following words:

“I am aware that the can for which letters patent were granted January 29, 1867, to me as assignee of 1). W, Pepper, lias an internal-flanged ring, to which, however, the flanged cover could not he secured without the aid of special rollers; whereas, in my improvement the cover is secured by direct pressure oil the top of the same, the stiffening ring being so narrow, and its flange, as well as that of the cover, being so curved or bent, that this simple external pressure tends to compress and interlock the said flanges without anything to resist the pressure except the sides of the can.”

The patent contains but one claim, which is:

“A can, having at its upper edge a stiffening ring with a flange formed to be interlocked with tlie flange of the cover by direct pressure on the top only f the same, as set forth. ”

The Williams patent is described by the patentee in his specifications as follows:

“My invention consists of a can designed principally for holding paint, though it may be used with advantage for other materials or substances, as oil, fruit, etc. The object of my invention is to make a tight can, one which may be easily and cheaply constructed, and which will not leak at the seam. My improvement consists in providing a solid breast for the can, which is constructed and applied as hereinafter fully described.”

The solid breast described in this patent consists of a seamless ring of tin, with an inwardly turned flange at the top, and an annular groove below the top of the breast. This solid or seamless section is firmly attached to the top of the can with solder. A seamless cap or cover for the can is also constructed, which fits closely over the breast or seamless ring, so that if made to fit close enough the can, so far as the top or cover is concerned, will be made air-tight, or tight enough for the purpose for which it is intended. Provision is also made in the patent for an annular groove below the top of the breast, into which, if desired, [546]*546the edge of the cover may he beaded or tucked. This patent contains but one claim, which is:

“A solid seamless breast for cans, constructed and applied as shown, and made either with or without an annular groove, as described.”

Patent No. 298,018 to Edwin Norton is described in the specifications as follows:

“This invention relates to paint and other cans, the heads or covers of which are double-seamed on after the can is filled. In double-seaming heads on filled cans no internal mandrel or support can of course be used, and therefore the flanges of the head and body forming the seam have heretofore always been folded or turned outwardly, so that the seam, when completed, lies on the outside wall of the can-body. * * * It is the object of the present invention to provide a can, the head of which may be double-seamed on after the can is filled by folding the flanges of the head and body inwardly, so that the seam, when formed, will lie on top of the can, and within the circumferential. line of the can-body, and thus not interfere with the application of a slip-cover to'the can. This result I accomplish by (and herein my invention consists) providing the can with an interior shoulder, against which the flanges of the seam may be folded, and which thus serves, so to speak, as an interior mandrel or support in forming the seam. This interior shoulder I form by turning a flange in at the top of the can-body and folding over it a seamless ring, so that the shoulder is composed of three thicknesses of tin and the solder uniting the same. The seamless ring has an upturned flange, which is folded with the flange of the can-head into the double seam. As in this invention the seam rests snugly on the shoulder, the seam and shoulder together give the can or its coyer great strength and rigidity.”

The patent contains two claims, which are as follows:

“(1) The combination, with a can-body provided with an interior shoulder to support the seam while it is being formed, of a can-head, secured thereto by a double seam, folded inwardly, and resting upon said shoulder, substantially as specified. (2) The combination of can-body, A, provided with in-turned flange, a, with seamless ring, B, folded over said flange, and can-head, C, having upturned flange, c, folded with said seamless ring inwardly into a double seam, substantiaiiy as specified.”

The defenses set up are want of novelty as to each patent, and non-infringement. As to the Everett patent, No. 131,089, the patent granted to Horace Everett July 30, 1867, and the patent granted to Daniel W. Pepper, January 29, 1867, are cited as anticipating this device. The Everett patent of July, 1867, is for an “improved paint-can,” and shows a paint-can made of sheet-iron or tin, with a light cast-iron ring tightly inserted in the top of the can, said ring having a flange extending outwardly, over which a tin cover is bent or folded so as to close the can.

Waiving all question as to whether this patent shows a practical device for constructing a can, on account of the increased expense of the cast-iron ring, I do not see that it meets the function of the ring shown in patent No. 131,089, nor is it there for that purpose. In the Everett patent, now in suit, the tin ring, or reinforcement of a single additional strip of tin at the top of the can, reinforces or strengthens the can so far as to permit the cover to be double-seamed on, thereby effecting a tight closure of the can. This was not done, or is not, claimed to have been [547]*547done, in the old Everett patent of 1867.

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Bluebook (online)
39 F. 544, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norton-v-cary-circtndil-1889.