Ohl v. Falstrom & Tornqvist Co.

166 F. 898, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5327
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 28, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 166 F. 898 (Ohl v. Falstrom & Tornqvist Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohl v. Falstrom & Tornqvist Co., 166 F. 898, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5327 (circtdnj 1909).

Opinion

CROSS, District Judge.

The bill of complaint is founded upon two patents owned by the complainant, the first of which was issued April 29, 1890, to James White, assignor to the Vulcan Company, for a brake for cornice machines, and is known as No. 427,025. The second, No. 679,031, for a power-press, was issued July 23, 1901, to George A. Ohl. Sr., George A. Ohl, Jr., Frederick W. Theberath, and August A. Berg-hof, assignors to the complainant. The first of the patents contains the following claim only:

“The combination, with the pulley-shaft, and clutch-pulley, of a treadle to actuate the clutch, a spring to hold the clutch normally disengaged, a friction-wheel upon the pulley-shaft, the carrier, c, mounted movably in the socket, d, and holding the brake-block, b, adjacent to the friction-wheel, and the cam, e, and lever, p, connected with the treadle by the rod, q, and operated as shown and described.”

This patent, which it is claimed is infringed by the defendant’s machine located and in use in its business at Passaic, N. J., expired four days after this suit was commenced. The application as originally made contained two claims, the first of which, containing no reference to the cam, e, was stricken out because as to that claim the examiner found no invention over prior patents No. 278,601, to Rohde, and No. 365,439, to I&sey. The action of the examiner in that respect was acquiesced in by the applicant, and the patent as allowed contained but the one claim above set forth. The claim stricken out and the one allowed were so much alike, except for the presence of the cam, e, in [899]*899the claim allowed, that that element must be taken as its distinguishing feature, and the one which procured the allowance of the patent. This conclusion, moreover, is in accord with the testimony of defendant’s expert. Such being the case, the defendant’s device, because it has no cam, does not, in my judgment, infringe the patent in question. This, however, is a disputed point. It is true that a certain diagram of the defendant’s brake, prepared by one of the complainant’s witnesses, shows mechanism not unlike a cam, but in rebuttal the defendant produced and offered in evidence the brake-lever itself, which upon inspection discloses nothing of the kind. As the defendant’s expert says:

“Tlie movement of a cam Is always around or partially around, a center. * ⅞ * A piece of mechanism having this rotary or partially rotary motion, and which by its rotary or partially rotary motion transmits motion to another element by decreasing or increasing the distance of this other clement from the axis of the cam, acts like a cam, and is a cam.”

The defendant’s brake is substantially like those in the prior art, which were cited as anticipations of the patent in suit. An inspection of the defendant’s brake-lever and of the adjustable screw-head against which it acts discloses no cam movement. A worn place, constituting a very slight depression, appears on the upper edge of the lever bar where it engages the head of the screw, and at one side of this depression, for a limited space, the metal has a bright appearance, showing that the head of the screw had not at all times contacted with the edge of the lever at precisely the same point, although the depression shows that for the most part it had; but whether the contact took place at the point of depression or by its side, the screw-head was always, at the time of contact, at a right angle to the plane of the lever. The lever of the brake of the defendant's machine, as also of that shown in the Kasey patent, was not placed horizontally, hence the head of the adjusting screw, standing perpendicularly as it did, could not contact therewith at a right angle. To remedy this, a slight wedge-shaped cut was. filed in the upper edge of the lever, so that the base-line of the cut would present a horizontal surface to the screw-head. This cut toward the pivoted end of the lever terminated in an upward curve, and this it is that gives whatever plausibility there may be to the allegation that there is a cam in the defendant’s device. Had that exit terminated in a right angle, as it might just as well have done, all appearance of cam-action would have been avoided. This curve at tlie end of the cut on the edge of the lever, were it brought in contact with the rounded screw-head, might justly be claimed to impart a cam movement, but it does not, as a matter of fact, engage at all with the bead of the screw; on tlie contrary, tlie lever at that point, because of the cut. presents a horizontal surface to the screw-head. The diagram offered on behalf of the complainant, and intended to show cam movement in the defendant’s device, is, when compared with the device itself, so exaggerated as to be misleading, and serves to draw in question the fairness and reliability of the witness who made it. It should be added that the Rohde patent shows a brake-lever contacted with a round-headed screw for the very purpose, as therein expressly stated, of avoiding friction, so that in this respect also the defendant merely fol[900]*900lowed what was old in the art. The patents cited against the claim of the patent in suit, which was disallowed, would unquestionably have barred the defendant from procuring a patent 011 its brake, had it so attempted.

Turning now to patent No. 679,031, the second in suit, we find the following general description of the invention set forth by the patentees in the specifications: ■

“This invention has reference generally to improvements in that class of power-presses which are employed for the purpose of bending metal, or for the purpose of corrugating, crimping, or squeezing together sheet metal, or for the working of other materials.
“The present invention, therefore, has for its principal object to provide a power-press of a novel design which is especially adapted for bending metal, embodying in the construction of the machine features which will admit of a very wide range of work to be performed on the machine, the press being especially constructed for the purpose of making metal cornices.
“A further object of this invention is to provide a large and powerful press which shall be very simple in its construction and operation, the operating mechanism thereof being controlled by a foot-treadle and link-motion working a friction-clutch for rotating the main or pinion shaft of the machine and having a brake upon the pinion-shaft which effectually places the slide or hammer of the press under perfect control of the operator at all times, whereby the slide or hammer can be stopped at any part of its stroke.
“A further object of this invention is to provide an improved and quick adjustment of the slide or hammer by means of a ‘frog motion,’ which is actuated from a hand-lever and a pulley arranged upon the shaft or spindle bearing the frog motion, whereby two or more pitmen and eccentrics, which produce a reciprocatory motion of the slide or hammer, can be simultaneously adjusted and the movable parts of the machine still maintained in their perfect alinement.”

The patent contains 21 claims, but it is unnecessary to set them forth. The answer admits, as did counsel upon the argument, that the defendant’s power-press in many respects embraces features like those of the patent.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F. 898, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohl-v-falstrom-tornqvist-co-circtdnj-1909.