Perfection Cooler Co. v. Cordley

207 F. 769, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 26, 1913
DocketNo. 83 (C. C. 521)
StatusPublished

This text of 207 F. 769 (Perfection Cooler Co. v. Cordley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perfection Cooler Co. v. Cordley, 207 F. 769, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347 (D. Mass. 1913).

Opinion

DODGE, Circuit Judge.

This bill, filed by the defendants, has been answered by the plaintiff. The additional evidence tending to prove or disprove the additional fact's alleged in the bill has been taken. The question presented is whether it requires any modification of the conclusions arrived at by Judge Colt, upon which his decree, entered September 16, 1912, and adjudging certain claims of the patents sued on valid and infringed, was entered. See 199 Fed. 440.

The main defense before Judge Colt was that the patents sued on, being United States patents 895,781, August 11, 1908, and 895,782, of the same date, both to Isaiah Newell, were void for want of invention, in view of the prior art. 199 Fed. 444, 445. As to alleged anticipations, Judge Colt’s opinion refers only to the “Rose invention,” covered by United States patent 715,609, December 9, 1902, and to a so-called Estes cooler. 199 Fed. 445.

Under their supplemental bill, the defendants have undertaken to establish an anticipation of Newell by a water cooler apparatus said to have been devised by Charles R. Towle, of Haverhill, Mass., and to have been in public use at a factory in Haverhill from and after some time in June, 1900. Newell applied for his earlier patent July 22, 1902, and for his later patent September 26, 1903. Proof that the Towle cooler embodied the inventions covered by the Newell claims, which this court has sustained, and was in public use, as the supplemental bill alleges, from and after June, 1900, would entitle the defendants to have the decree of September 16, 1912, superseded by a decree dismissing the plaintiff’s bill, unless Newell can claim an earlier date for the inventions described in his first patent than July 22, 1900, two years before his first application.

Newell died in 1909, pending the litigation here and elsewhere in which the validity of his patents has been questioned. The plaintiff contends that his date of invention was in 1899. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, upon appeals from the Patent Ofce in interferences to which he was a party, affirmed decisions by the [771]*771Commissioner of Patents awarding priority to' him. In those proceedings Newell alleged conception and disclosure in the spring of 1899, and reduction to practice in the early summer of 1899. His adversaries alleged conception in August, September, or November, 1901, and reduction to practice in February, 1902. In the opinion of the court it was said:

“Taking, therefore, any date between the fall of 1899, or the early part of 3900, * * * as a date for the reduction of the invention to practice, wo think neither concealment nor abandonment can be charged against Newell.”

It was also said in the same opinion, regarding a large number of exhibits offered by Newell, that they show him to have been engaged constantly, from the summer of 1899 up to and after the date of his application, in experimenting on and improving his original invention. Rose v. Clifford, 31 App. D. C. 195, 199, 200.

Judge Colt’s opinion in this court contains nothing further in reference to these questions than the following:

“In view of the evidence in the present record and. the decision of the Court of Appeals in Rose v. Clifford, supra, it seems to me that the complainant has iixed the date of the Newell invention at a time prior to the Rose invention which was in interference in that case, and which is covered by his patent, No. 715,009, dated December 9, 1902.”

The defendants further assert, in their supplemental bill, the recent discovery by them of evidence to prove that an exhibit, claimed by Newell to be the first cooler embodying his improvements and to have been built by him in the spring or early summer of 1899, was not in fact built before 1902, and that other cooler exhibits claimed to have been made by Newell in 1899 were not in fact made until 1902 or thereafter. If these facts are established by their evidence, they also are sufficient to prevent Newell from being regarded as the first inventor, and will require the decree of September 16, 1912, to be set aside in the defendants’ favor.

A previous opinion in .this case, dated March 22, 1913, has stated the grounds upon which the defendants have been allowed, after the case had once been decided here, to introduce evidence for the above purpose; the record on their pending appeal having been returned here for that purpose.

1. Is the evidence taken since March 22, 1913, under the supplemental bill, sufficient to prove the Towle cooler to have embodied the sustained claims of the Newell patents, and to have been in public use from and after June, 1900?

The first question here is: Precisely what was the Towle cooler ? It has been described by several witnesses for the defendants, principal among whom are Charles R. Towle, who says he contrived it, and Charles H. Morse, who says he made it. Charles R. Towle has been associated with Fox, in whose factory at Haverhill the public use claimed to have been made of the Towle cooler is said to have taken place, since 1895, as foreman of a department in that factory. Charles H. Morse is a tinsmith in Haverhill, employed by W. C. Bennett & Co., of that place, from 1899 to 1907, and subsequently by their successor, O. F. Bennett. Towle says he made a rough sketch, [772]*772explained it to Morse, and got him to construct the device according to the sketch. The sketch is not produced, but what Morse is said to have constructed, or part of it, is made a defendants’ exhibit, marked “Fox Factory Cooler.” It consists of an outer wooden box, 27 inches long, 15 inches wide, and 15 inches high, with an inner metallic lining; a space being left between lining and box wherein is found an insulating packing. Within is a smaller metallic tank, 11 inches long, 5 inches broad, and of nearly the height of the metallic casing of the box. A pipe leads from this tank through the metallic lining and the box, provided outside the box with a faucet from which the handle is absent. Another pipe leads from inside the lining through the outside of the box. This appears to have been intended also to carry a faucet outside the box, but no faucet is now there. Morse says he constructed this apparatus according to Towle’s sketch and instructions; the wooden box being furnished by Towle.

This “Fox Factory Cooler,” as it stands, when first brought forth for use in litigation involving Newell’s patents, was taken in 1910, according to the defendants’ evidence, from under the sink in the making room of the Fox factory. It then contained rubbish, and had not been used as a water cooler since 1904. The witnesses Towle and Morse, above mentioned, say that it had, when originally constructed, two covers, now missing, a larger cover for the larger part of the metal-lined box, and a smaller cover for the smaller tank within ; the smaller cover being provided with a hole having beveled edges and adapted to receive the neck of an inverted water bottle or carboy. They say, also, that each of the two outlets mentioned was provided with a faucet. Upon completion, according to them, the device was put to use in the making room referred to; ice being placed in the box outside'the smaller tank, water for drinking being contained in that tank, supplied to it from bottles or carboys supported jn an inverted position by its cover, their necks' projecting downward through the cover below the level of the water in the tank beneath. From this tank the drinking water was drawn, as required, through the connected outlet and faucet.

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Related

Perfection Cooler Co. v. Cordley
199 F. 440 (D. Massachusetts, 1912)
Boston Towboat Co. v. John H. Sesnon Co.
199 F. 445 (W.D. Washington, 1912)
Emerson & Norris Co. v. Simpson Bros. Corp.
202 F. 747 (First Circuit, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
207 F. 769, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perfection-cooler-co-v-cordley-mad-1913.