Palmer v. Jordan Mach. Co.

192 F. 42, 112 C.C.A. 454, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4833
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1911
DocketNo. 67
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 192 F. 42 (Palmer v. Jordan Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Palmer v. Jordan Mach. Co., 192 F. 42, 112 C.C.A. 454, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4833 (2d Cir. 1911).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge.

The judge of the Circuit Court has carefully described the objects sought to be attained by the Palmer patent in suit and the means for attaining them. It will serve no useful purpose to reiterate what he has said in this regard. Should anyone, besides the parties to this litigation, be interested in its previous history, he will find all the issues fully set out and discussed in the opinion below. The controversy, which involved eight claims in the Circuit Court, is now reduced to three — the first, seventh and eighth. We do not deem it necessary to consider at length the infringement based upon the sale of four machines of the so-called “Utica type.” These machines concededly infringed, but were not sold by the defendant, the Jordan Machine Company, but by Cornelius Jordan, as an individual, before December 21, 1908, when the company was incorporated. The judge so found and we are not persuaded that his conclusion in this regard is incorrect. Indeed, in view of the fact [43]*43that only four machines are involved, which were subsequently purchased by the complainant, and in view of the conclusion which we have reached as to the infringement of the first claim, the question regarding these four machines may almost be considered as a case of de minimis.

The same is true of the other machines which were not sold as the defendant insist and as the court has found, by the defendant corporation. It would leave the principal controversy undetermined were the court to find for the complainants based upon a sale of one of the machines made by Jordan at the outset, which concededly infringe the Palmer patent. The vital question is whether the patent is infringed by the machines made by the defendánt under the Jordan patent, No. 960,227, granted May 31, 1910.

The defendant’s brief contains the following statement:

‘'rainier Bros., witli all tlieir capital and advertising and prestige, have only sold twenty-five machines and have not sold any since the improved Jordan machines have been upon the market.”

It is obvious, therefore, that a finding of infringement based upon a sale of the machines made by Jordan, which are admitted to infringe, would settle no existing issue, except costs and a small claim for damages. The parties are entitled to our judgment upon the vital question at issue.

The specification states:

“In the manufacture of knit goods, the fabric is commonly knitted ill the form of a tube upon circular machines, in many cases with the rough or unfinished side of the fabric outermost. In such cases, and in other cases where the subsequent treatment of the fabric demands such a course, it is customary before cutting the garment from the web to invert or turn inside out the tubular web which is frequently many yards in length. The inversion of the tubular web is accomplished by drawing one end of Ihe web out through the other end preparatory to which the web is slid upon a metal tube. After the whole web has been thus slid upon the metal tube, one end of the web is inserted in the neighboring end of the tube and drawn therethrough and out from the other end. Sly invention relates more particularly to an improved means for depositing the web of fabric upon the tube, preparatory to inversion of the web. The principal objects of the invention are to facilitate the depositing of the tube of fabric upon the supporting tube preparatory to inversion and to prevent injury to the fabric while thus being placed upon the supporting tube.”

The claims in controversy are as follows :

“1. In an apparatus of the class described, the combination with the fabric supporting tube; of a pair of feed rolls adapted to engage the opposite sides ■of said tube; and yielding means for forcing said feed rolls against said tube.”
“7. An apparatus of the class described comprising a fabric supporting tube, a pair of swinging frames, means for normally drawing said frames towards each other, an upright shaft, carried by each of the frames, a feed roll connected with each of the shafts, said feed rolls positioned one at a time at each side of the tube, and means for operating the shafts.
“8. An apparatus of the class described comprising a fabric supporting ttibe, a pair of swinging frames, means for normally drawing said frames towards each other, an upright shaft carried by each of the frames, a feed roll connected with each of the shafts, said feed rolls positioned one at each side of the tube, means for operating the shafts, and means or maintaining said rolls out of engagement with said tube.”

[44]*44Of these, the first claim is the broadest and includes 'a combination having the following elements in an apparatus for inverting tubular fabrics:

First. — A fabric supporting tube;

vSecond. — A pair of feed rolls adapted to engage the opposite sides of said tube;

Third. — Yielding means for forcing said feed rolls against said tube.

Claim 7 contains the following elements in the aforesaid apparatus :

First. — A.fabric supporting tube;

Second. — A pair of swinging frames;

Third. — Means for normally drawing the said frames towards each other ;

Fourth. — An upright shaft carried by each of the frames ;

Fifth. — A feed roll connected with each of the shafts, the rolls being positioned one at each side of the tube;

Sixth. — Means for operating the shafts.

Claim 8 adds to the elements of claim 7 an additional element, viz., meaps for maintaining said rolls out of engagement with said tube.

The validity of the patent is conceded by the defendant, its contention being that the claims must be limited in view of the patent to Charles W. Gove, No. 769,648, and, as so limited, are not infringed by the machines manufactured by the defendant.

The entire controversy hinges, therefore, upon what construction shall be given to the complainant’s claims in issue, which are admitted to be valid. Whether they shall be construed broadly or narrowly depends upon the prior art and, in this respect, the case is exceptionally clear and simple. Palmer was not a pioneer, because Gove had conceived the broad idea before him, but the case is unusual in having a prior art consisting of a single patent. • •

Another patent to Dreman for a fabric twisting machine appears in the record, but it is not necessary to discuss it because the defendant bases his argument that the Palmer claims must be limited in scope upon the Gove patent alone.

The defendant insists that the “yielding” element precisely as described by Palmer, must be found in its machines, and if not so found, infringement is avoided. Gove had the broad idea, but his means for accomplishing the desired end were too complicated' to be commercially successful.

In Gove’s machine the fabric is stretched upon a spreader ax.J is then pulled in between the feed rolls which feed it forward over the spreader and onto the tube. The rolls cannot be placed, as in the Palmer machine, at any point along the tube, the interior of which is free from any obstruction to the passage of the fabric, whereas, in Gove, it is obstructed by the spreader support. Gove does not have the resilient pressure of the spring controlled rolls of Palmer.

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Bluebook (online)
192 F. 42, 112 C.C.A. 454, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4833, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-jordan-mach-co-ca2-1911.