Package Machinery Co. v. Johnson Automatic Sealer Co.

246 F. 598, 158 C.C.A. 568, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1384
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 15, 1917
DocketNo. 2987
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 246 F. 598 (Package Machinery Co. v. Johnson Automatic Sealer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Package Machinery Co. v. Johnson Automatic Sealer Co., 246 F. 598, 158 C.C.A. 568, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1384 (6th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

Suit by appellant for infringement of United States patent No. 1,066,193, to Ferguson, applied for February 5, 1909, issued July 1, 1913. The patent relates to a machine for sealing the flaps and overlapping ends of a package-wrapper impregnated with paraffine or other readily fusible substance. The operation consists in melting the wax at the overlapping parts by heating, and causing them to adhere through pressure. The defense assails the’validity of the claims in suit, as well as Ferguson’s inventorship.

[1] The alleged invention grew out of the construction by Thomas F. Condon & Co., of New York, of a package-wrapping and sealing machine for one of the Chicago factories of the National Candy Company. Both Plate, who was the Candy Company’s factory manager, and Ferguson, who was Condon & Co.’s mechanical engineer, applied for a patent. Upon an interference, there was concession of priority in Ferguson, under an arrangement between the parties by which the Candy Company was given a shop right to use the machines in the factory in question. The patent had previously been assigned to Con-don & Co., and was later assigned to appellant.

When hearing was first had below, the correspondence relating to the order for the construction of the machine was not to be found. In its absence, the District Court credited Ferguson’s claim to inven-torship as against Plate, found invention, and directed entry of inter[599]*599locutory decree in plaintiff’s favor. Before the decree was entered the correspondence was found in the office of the attorneys who had represented Ferguson in the interference proceeding, and by motion and stipulation the case was reopened for the admission of the correspondence and certain other testimony. Upon a reconsideration of the case decree was entered finding the claims in suit void [or the reason that “the patentee did not conceive the idea embodied in the improvement.”

The argument here has covered a wide range, embracing not only the subject of inventorship, as between Plate and Ferguson, but also questions of anticipation and invention. Reference to the prior state of the art and to the circumstances attending the ordering and construction of the machine should be helpful.

The Candy Company had been putting out rectangular packages of popcorn wrapped in paraffine paper. The wrapping was done by hand; the sealing also by hand — by rubbing first the upper side and then the ends, one by one, upon the upper surface of a steam chamber laid flush with the surface of the table at which the wrapping was done. A temperature of 135 to 140 degrees was enough to fuse the wax. The air of the room cooled and hardened it.

Condon & Co. had been putting out an automatic wrapping machine - — a complicated, but successful, mechanism. Plate learned of the machine through its use by certain leading soap manufacturers, and it occurred to him that it would be an easy matter to have the wrapping machine also seal the packages. He accordingly wrote Condon & Co. that the Candy Company (in whose name he wrote) was “looking for a machine which will wrap the inner package in paraffined paper, and, after wrapping the same, continue the operation under and between surfaces heated by means of steam, in order that the par-affine may melt, and the package, being continued under gentle pressure through a covered chute, will come out at the end hermetically sealed, through the paraffine being melted during the period that it took to pass between the heated plates.” The writer inclosed one of the Candy Company’s packages, which the letter stated illustrated “just what we want to do and wliat we are now doing by hand”; called attention to the fact that “one side and both ends are sealed,” that contact with heat was necessary on but one side and the two ends, and that Condon & Co. would thus doubtless understand “just what we mean when we say that this package, after being wrapped, is to pass under and between hot plates.” Then followed this statement:

“As, no doubt, the cakes of soap, or packages, or whatever your machine is wrapping, pass into a trough, or on a belt, it would be a very easy matter to have this belt, or trough, convey the wrapped package in question to, between, and through such heated plates, and then, by a continuation of this trough, the sides of which would iitfmly hold the ends of the package and the lop, by the trough being covered with either metal or wood, would only require a very gentle pressure to hold the paper firmly together until the paraffine has an opportunity to set.”

A visit by Ferguson to the candy factory was had, to enable him, as stated in Condon & Co.’s letter, “to get some additional information in reference to the wrapping of your packages that will help him to [600]*600decide whether an attachment to our1 wrapping machine for sealing the package can be perfected.” There, for the first time, Ferguson saw paraffine wrappers placed around cartons; Plate’s letter had given him the first information of their use. He had, however, seen carton-sealing machines for pasting packages, with passages and conveyors to carry off the cartons. He had himself employed an endless belt running in a channel for delivering the wrapped soap from the machine; the sidebars, and the bars supporting the belt, being of wood. Indeed, a walled passageway or chute for such delivery was at that time common everyday experience in wrapping machines. When Ferguson saw how Plate was sealing the sides and ends of the par-affined package, it was perfectly clear to him that the same work could be accomplished by heating the surfaces'of the channels. There was built a standard wrapping machine, with an attachment at its discharge end consisting of a table composed of four angle irons, a chain conveyor with flights, for carrying tire wrapped packages under and. between-steam boxes, intended to be attached to the sides of the table; the cooling of the top sealing being effected by a cold plate which held the top flap in position, that of the ends by contact with the angle bars. It differed from the ordinary soap conveyor only in using a chain with flights for carrying the package, instead of a belt; in having metal side rails the full height of the channel (instead of wooden sidebars), together with provision for the attachment of heaters and the top cooling plate. As furnished to the Candy Company it lacked the steam boxes and the pipes therefor, which were to be, and were, supplied by the Candy Company, and for which no patterns were furnished— their location being indicated on a drawing furnished by Ferguson. The regular price of the wrapping machine alone was $1,800; the price charged for the wrapping machine plus the sealing attachment (and minus the heating appliances) was $1,900.

The machine disclosed by the patent in suit (developed in connection with a later construction for another customer) departed in some respects from the Chicago construction. Its differences, however, so far as here important, were principally in providing a hot roller and cold pressure rolls, instead of hot and cold upper plates, and lateral pressure devices in the form of blade springs (to keep the end flaps in position), instead of direct contact with the metal, side rails. But it is clear that unless the construction of the Candy Company’s machine involved invention, there is none in the broad claims in suit. Those involved are the first, second, third, seventh, ninth, and tenth. The first and ninth claims are printed in the margin;1

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Bluebook (online)
246 F. 598, 158 C.C.A. 568, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/package-machinery-co-v-johnson-automatic-sealer-co-ca6-1917.