Novelty Glass Mfg. Co. v. Brookfield

170 F. 946, 95 C.C.A. 516, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJune 1, 1909
DocketNo. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 170 F. 946 (Novelty Glass Mfg. Co. v. Brookfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Novelty Glass Mfg. Co. v. Brookfield, 170 F. 946, 95 C.C.A. 516, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777 (3d Cir. 1909).

Opinion

ARCHBARD, District Judge.

The patent in suit — or at least the one with which we are particularly concerned — was issued to Seraphin Kribs, July 9, 1895, for a press for making screw insulators for.use on telegraph and other electric lines to support and insulate the wires. These insulators are of glass, with an interior central screw thread impressed upon them while in a molten state, by which they are secured in place on screw pins affixed to the crossarms cf the supporting poles. The patent was sustained and found infringed by Judge Bradford ([C. C.] 134 Fed. 551); and, upon an account being taken profits, realized by the defendants, amounting to $39,910.48, were allowed to the complainants by Judge Lanning, but damages, additionally claimed to the extent of $54,701.08, were refused ([C. C.] 170 Fed. 830); and there is an appeal in consequence by both parties.

Infringement is conceded, and the liability of the defendants depends, therefore, on the validity of the patent. Its validity is denied on the ground that the device covered by it is a mere aggregation of old and familiar elements, which it involved no invention to put together; or if, notwithstanding this, invention be found, that the credit of it belongs not to Kribs but to Jordan, or to perhaps no one person in particular, being the combined idea of different parties at the Brook-field factory, where the patentee was a workman.

The making of glass insulators is beset with some difficulty, and requires considerable observation and careful management, due in large measure to the fact that the molten glass must be at just the right temperature at different stages of the operation; and the particular difficulty experienced in the production of the kind in question consists, while shaping them accurately, in keeping them free from superficial cracks and “shrends,” where water will lodge and form a conducting path for the escape of the electric fluid, which is liable to occur with the powerful currents at present carried. The object of the invention was to improve the character and quality of such insulators in this respect, and at the same time to increase and thus cheapen the otitput. And the success in both directions which it attained, which was quite marked, having completely monopolized the field until the introduction in 4903 of the Dufileld improvement, is one, if not the main, reason urged in its behalf.

The device consists substantially in a rotary table or movable support carrying a suitable number of molds in which the insulators are formed; a detachable screw plunger, which, by a single downward [950]*950thrust, is forced into the molten glass, by means of an actuating rod to make the screw thread, the rim or petticoat of the insulator being at the same time pressed into shape by a former and follower above the plunger, on the end of the actuating rod; a rotary spindle to withdraw the plunger, after it has remained a sufficient time to set the glass, the plunger being so arranged as to be easily and quickly brought into engagement with and attached to the actuating rod, and be easily detached therefrom and brought into engagement with the rotary spindle, by which it is removed; the different parts being so further ’coordinated and assembled that the molds shall be carried from the screw pressing mechanism to the removing spindle and back within a certain time, and in a fixed and predetermined path, so as to produce definite and desirable results.

The operation of'the machine conforms to the mechanism employed, and so proceeds that at every step the several workmen at each machine are simultaneously engaged upon different points in the process, the insulators, in consequence, being turned out with a minimum of imperfections, expeditiously and in complete form. Thus the gathering boy measures out the glass and pours it into the mold. The presser sees that it is brought under the actuating rod, and by means of a lever brings down the screw plunger, which he detaches and leaves in the glass, the edge of the insulator being at the same time, and by the same act, pressed into form by the former and follower, which are promptly withdrawn, so as not, by too long contact, to overcool and crack the glass. The mold with the screw plunger is then passed on by the revolution of the table to the boy at the rotary spindle, which is located a sufficient number of molds off to have the glass properly set; and the plunger is then screwed out, and, with another partial revolution of the table, the mold goes to another boy, who opens it and takes out the completed insulator, which brings the operation around to the beginning to be gone over again. This, however, is the mere mechanical side of the process, which calls for judgment as well, and can only be carried to a successful issue where due regard is had at all times to the relative temperature of the glass and the plunger at different points, which has therefore to be carefully watched. This varies not only on different days, but at different times of the same day, and necessitates the use of a greater or less number of plungers to correspond. And it is in the adaptability of the machine to this requirement that its chief merit, if not its real 'claim, to invention consists.

But as is well said in Brookfield v. Elmer Glass Works (C. C.) 144 Fed. 418, 421, a suit on the same patent against another defendant, the novelty as well as the virtue of the invention depends on the machine as a whole, or at least'on its predominant features, no one of which can be spared in the account. Invention does not reside, for instance, in the detachable screw plunger, however that may be an essential and distinguishing part (Brookfield v. Elmer Glass Works, 154 Fed. 197, 83 C. C. A. 180); nor in the actuating rod by which the screw thread is formed with a single downward thrust, although undoubtedly a point of great merit; nor in the separate rotary spindle, by which the plunger is screwed out after the glass has set; nor yet [951]*951in the molds adapted to travel from the one to the other in a carefully timed course, nor in the movable support by which this is brought about; but in the combination or united effect of them all in the one conjoined mechanism, with such additional incidental appliances as are necessary to produce efficient work. We arc not prepared, in view of this, to sustain any broad claim; nor, on the other hand, to sanction any which are merely differentiated by simple mechanical expedients which any one could supply, or by elements necessarily implied. But these things aside, taking the device as a whole, according to which it is entitled to be judged, invention, as we think, is disclosed.

Admittedly there is nothing which exactly anticipates it in the prior art. The separate features of it may be there, but not brought together into one machine. In the Brookfield (1871) patent, for instance, taken out by the original complainant, assignee of, the patent in suit, a detachable plunger was used, which was pressed, as here, into the molten giass, in a single downward thrust, by means of an actuating lever or rod. The screw plunger, being then detached, was also left in the mold until the glass had set, and was subsequently removed by any suitable means, as it is said, a screw spindle being among those named. Three distinctive features of the present invention thus appear: A detachable screw plunger impressed into the glass by an actuating lever to make the screry thread; movable molds in which the plunger remains until the glass is set; and a' rotary spindle by which, after a proper interval, the plunger is removed.

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Bluebook (online)
170 F. 946, 95 C.C.A. 516, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 4777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novelty-glass-mfg-co-v-brookfield-ca3-1909.