Pattee v. Moline Plow Co.

9 F. 821, 10 Biss. 377, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2557
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJune 22, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 F. 821 (Pattee v. Moline Plow Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pattee v. Moline Plow Co., 9 F. 821, 10 Biss. 377, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2557 (uscirct 1881).

Opinion

Blodgett, D. J.

The bill in this case alleges the issue of the following patents by the United States patent-office:

[822]*822(1) Patent issued to J. Sehroeder, September 24,1867; reissued to complainants, February 6, 1877. (2) Patent issued to M. Eicbholtz, April 6, 1869; reissued to complainants, June 12, 1877. (3) Patent issued to C. P. Norton, October 18, 1870; reissued to I. P. Pillsbury, August 26, 1873. (4) Patent issued to James H. Pattee, March 5, 1872; reissued' to complainants, October 6,1874. (5) Patent issued to T. Poling, August 13, 1872.

—All of which patents were for improvements in cultivators, and have come by assignment into the ownership and control of the complainants.

It is further charged that the defendants, disregarding the exclusiye right secured by the aforesaid patents to the complainants, have made and sold, within this district, cultivators according to and in which are embodied devices and inventions covered by the said patents, as the same now stand reissued. The bill contains the usual prayer for an injunction, and an accounting for profits and damages. The defendants, by their answer, deny the validity of the complainants’ several patents—

First, for want of novelty; second, because the reissued patents are for different inventions than those shown by the original specifications and drawings ; third, they deny that the cultivators made by them infringe all or any of the complainants’ patents.

It appears from the proof, as part of the history of the patents in question, that James H. Pattee, one of the complainants, devised what he considered a valuable improvement in cultivators, involving what he deemed a radical innovation on the then mode of constructing this implement, which was to make a two-horse straddle-row cultivator without a tongue or pole — in other words, a tongueless cultivator. The Pattee model, which is in evidence, shows the general idea of his invention — a cultivator, with the ordinary device of an arched axle for straddling the rows of corn or other plants to be tilled; the axle, jointed pear the horizontal arms which form the journals for the wheels, and supported on wheels, with the plow’s beam hinged to the axle by joints which allow them to oscillate or swing vertically and laterally. For this device he obtained the patent of March 5, 1872, which was subsequently reissued on the sixth of October, 1874. After this patent was obtained the complainants procured assignments of the Sehroeder, Eichholtz, and Norton patents, — all of which were cultivators, provided with tongues as an element of their organism, — and secured reissues thereof, covering certain features which are assumed to be essential to the tongueless [823]*823machine, and they have also obtained an assignment of the Poling patent, which is a few months later in date than the Pattee patent. What may be called the Pattee cultivator has two characteristic features—

(1) It operates without a tongue or polo, the draft animals being attached in such a way as that each animal, within certain limits, draws his own plow, the draft being distributed to each animal by means of the joints in the axle; (2) it has a jointed axle or coupling yoke, by which the two plows are hold together and made to oporato at a certain distance apart.

It seems, for the purposes of this case, to be conceded that, in order to make this class of cultivators practical, there must be some provision for the flexion of the axle, so that each horse shall move its own plow, or the plow to which it is directly attached, independently of the other, to a limited extent. That is, if the two plows are rigidly coupled or connected together, and one horse moves faster than the other, or deflects from the line of draft, the machine will have a sideways motion, which will throw it upon or too close to the rows of plants it is intended to cultivate, or require extra effort on'the part of the plowman to keep it in line. A joint of some kind, then, which shall operate to prevent the sideways action spoken of, and also divide the draft between the horses, is deemed a special desideratum in this class of cultivators, and one of their chief merits. The flexion is obtained in complainants’ machine, under the Pattee patent, by means of two joints, one at each end of the axle, A, as it is termed in the specification. The joints are made by means of the side plates, A and B, and a spindle, as shown. Prom these side plates stand the horizontal arms which form the journals for the supporting wheels; the plow-beams being attached to the axle just outside the joints — that is, between the joint and inner end of the hub. These joints allow a free backward and forward motion, and the combined parts make the arched jointed axle described.

The principal defendant in this case, the Moline Plow Company,— the other defendants being officers of the corporation, and only charged with violating thése patents by their action as such officers, —makes a tongueless, straddle-row cultivator, which has an arched or bent axle, with wheels revolving upon the journals at the ends of the axle, and plows attached to the axle by a joint allowing the plows to swing vertically and laterally, and the axle jointed in the middle of the arch by a torsion joint, which is prevented by lugs from turning only a certain distance; but the joint is placed in the mid-[824]*824die of the axle, instead of having two joints at the spring of the arch, as shown in the Pattee patent.

It is insisted, on the part of the complainants, that it is by the use of this jointed axle, — that is, the axle jointed in the middle, — and in the peculiar two-way joint by which the defendants’ plow-beams are attached to the axle so as to secure the requisite lateral and vertical motion to the plows, that certain claims in all these patents owned by the complainants are infringed. In other words, the complainants insist that the defendants’ joint in the middle of their axle is but the equivalent of the two side joints in the Pattee axle, and is the same joint which is shown in.tbe Pattee, and at least anticipated in the devices of Schroeder, Eichholtz, and Norton. The Schroeder machine was a straddle-row cultivator with a frame, consisting of wheels, axle, and tongue, but with a peculiar device for securing the plows to the frame by means of what he terms an “arched beam-yoke, ” which was bolted or pivoted at its center to the tongue in such a manner as that “either end of said beam-yoke may be advanced or receded with its respective plow without disturbing the parallelism of the plow-beams, ” which are hinged or jointed to the yoke in such a •manner as to permit of their being oscillated laterally or vertically, and yet to- sustain the plows in their upright positions without rear connections.- The plows are attached to this vibrating bar or “arched beam-yoke” by a two-way joint, — this two-way joint allowing a vertical and lateral motion to the plow, — and at the same time the joint is so constructed as to hold the plows in an upright position. The arched beam-yoke' consists of the centrally vibrating beam, or evener, and the pendant side arms which drop from the end of the evener. The joint by which the beams are attached to the pendant consists of two flat pieces of metal, .one bolted to the top and the other to the under side of the end of the plow-beam, and bent so as to come together forward of the end of the beam.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Los Alamitos Sugar Co. v. Carroll
173 F. 280 (Ninth Circuit, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 F. 821, 10 Biss. 377, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pattee-v-moline-plow-co-uscirct-1881.