Page Mach. Co. v. Dow

238 F. 369, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1140
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 238 F. 369 (Page Mach. Co. v. Dow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page Mach. Co. v. Dow, 238 F. 369, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1140 (S.D.N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

LEARNED HAND, District Judge.

[1] I think that there is no gain in repeating the general outlines of this litigation, which sufficiently appear in the master’s report. The most orderly way to approach the accounting is to take up the several phases of the defendant’s telegraphs, with a view to seeing just which of the claims have been violated at the different periods. The total period between January 24, 1905, for patent 780,664, and April 4, 1905, for patent 786,294, until that machine appeared in 1912, which avoided the patent altogether, may itself be divided into three subperiods, during which the infringement differed. The first division is from 1905 until September, 1907, during which time the defendants have been held to infringe all the claims of 780,664 which were then in suit and the two claims of 786,294, and during which they are therefore liable for all the profits or damages arising from their use of the positively disengaging clutch of 786,294, the continuous paper feed without feeding the type-wheel of claim 12, of 780,664, and the constant stress on the paper feed of claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 5„ 6, 23, and 30.

A change was made in September, 1907, about which there is only a little testimony and that only the testimony of Conger of April 8, 1914 (XQ228), who says that in September, 1907, the constant stress and the positively disengaging clutch were eliminated. As to the con[370]*370stant stress, we have only his word that the “paper-feeding shaft was not under constant stress, but was operated at the proper time by a clutch which was thrown in when the paper was to be fed.” As to the positively disengaging clutch, we know what was substituted, because of the diagram in evidence, “Drawing of Defendants’ Present Clutch.”

To take up the last detail first, I am quite clear that it does not infringe patent 786,294, because there is no such means of positive disengagement as is called for by the claims. In figure 3 of that patent it appears that the disk J¡, will be drawn to the right pn the thread until the pin 8 clears the ratchet on the disk 8, and then it will stop. The disk will be wholly disengaged. In figure 1 it is not so clear that the disengagement will be absolute. In that case, after the disk 0 moves to the right on the thread and abuts on the stop R, it will still continue and pull away the friction disk G of the clutch, from its other disk A. The disk G will cease rotating when the further tension of the spring balances the remaining friction between P and G. It is true, therefore, to say that “positively disengaging” of the claims may include a slip between the faces of the clutch. However, it is equally true to- say that it necessarily involves some positive diminution of that friction, and it is just this that the defendants have not used. They have used figure 1 about as it stands, but with the stops, R, R, removed, and the result of their removal is to leave the friction always constant between the disks. This is to avoid the very heart of tire invention. I therefore find that there was no infringement of patent 786,294, after September, 1907.

Coming now to the constant stress element, which is the only other factor, in the case, besides claim 12, it is concededly absent in the “con-^ tempt” machine, and the question is of its presence from September, 1907, to January, 1909. All we have is the statement that the shaft was not under constant stress, but was thrown in by a clutch. Obviously, this does not answer the words of the claims 1, 2, and 3, or of claims 23 and 30, as Judge Hazel construed them. (C. C.) 166 Fed. 479, 480. I am in some doubt as to his meaning touching claims 4, 5, and 6; but, taking the. claims as they read, I think that they can include only “constant stress,” no matter what the patentee may have tried to cover. A shaft, which is out of connection with the driving shaft by an open clutch, certainly seems to me quite without the language of those claims. Indeed, if not, I cannot see how the Wright patent, 466,-858, is avoided. I conclude therefore that, so far as we have any evidence in.the case, there is not enough to bring the second machine and the “contempt” machine, within any claims of the patent but claim 12. Although upon such an accounting the plaintiff may bring in any other machines than that used as an infringement, of course, the burden of proof lies with it to show that each new machine is an infringement. At least, I must hold that the plaintiff has not shown that .the second machine infringes any claim but claim 12.

Since for the period between September, 1907, and December, 1912, only claim 12 is infringed, the next question is whether that claim can be the basis of any damages or profits. I shall, of course, assume that [371]*371both the second machine and the “contempt” machine violate that claim, since that is the law of the case; but it by no means follows that the advantage given by the feature involved in the claim had any pecuniary value. The defendants’ position is that the claim is for a combination which could not in fact be made to perform what it purported to do. It was for “means for continuously feeding the paper without feeding the type-wheel,” and there were no such méans, at least none which were capable of any commercial exploitation. The truth of this is certainly established beyond any question; one cannot in practice safely feed the paper in either the plaintiff’s or the defendants’ machine without advancing the' type-wheel. If therefore the claim were for a function, it could not, indeed, have been infringed, and for the matter of that the disclosure would have been insufficient to support it. But, if the claim were functional, it would be invalid anyway; that question is not open before me, though, indeed, it may be thought to be invalid in the Circuit Court of Appeals. As it stands, I must read it as referring to a certain co-ordination of mechanical elements, comprising a definite part of the machine. Whether it will work as the patentee supposes is another matter. The only question is whether, taking it to mean what I must take it as meaning, that combination of parts exists and is of service to the defendants. That it exists I must assume; whether it was profitable is a question having very little relation to the question whether it would perform the function, ascribed to it by the patentee. I conclude that, having organized their machine in direct imitation of that feature covered by claim 12, the defendants cannot so easily escape as by calling attention to the error of the patentee in the functions he thought his machine would perform.

Now, the elements comprised'in claim 12, so understood, had not existed before, and there were no standards of comparison which could have been successfully substituted. It makes no practical difference whether under Columbia Wire Co. v. Kokomo, 194 Fed. 108, 114 C. C. A. 186, the time be taken as the date of the patent or the date of the infringement,, because nothing appeared in the art from January 24, 1905, to January, 1909, which offered any substitute better than the Essick machine, or Joy, 676,137, or Merritt & Joy, 558,506. Neither of these would have answered. As to the Essick machine, it is quite obvious that the defendants were not disposed to deal with it after the spring of 1900. See their letters of May in that year. They wanted something faster to compete with the new Western Union machine about to be introduced.

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Bluebook (online)
238 F. 369, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-mach-co-v-dow-nysd-1916.