Premier Register Table Co. v. West

21 F.2d 762, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1464
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 28, 1927
DocketNo. 2732
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 F.2d 762 (Premier Register Table Co. v. West) 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
Premier Register Table Co. v. West, 21 F.2d 762, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1464 (D. Mass. 1927).

Opinion

BREWSTER, District Judge.

This is an infringement suit involving letters patent No 1,343,600, issued June 15, 1920, to the plaintiff as assignee of Elbert L. West and the defendant James West.

The patent relates to a printer’s alining or register table, which is equipped with a transparent top, with lighting means thereunder, with means for clamping and alining sheets, with an alining bar mounted for movement across the table top, and with means for preserving parallelism of the bar with the alining edge.

The purpose sought to be accomplished with the table is best stated in the patent as follows:

“This invention relates to furniture for printers’ uses adapted for inspecting proof sheets to determine the alinement thereof, such as large sheets on which are arranged series of printed units such as a number of pages of a book which are to be printed simultaneously, and which it is required to arrange in precise alinement with one another so that "when cut and trimmed the marginal edges of all the pages will be uniform.”

After application had been filed, but before the patent had issued, the defendant West and the coinventor Elbert L. West assigned their interest in the rights secured by the application to the plaintiff corporation, which the inventors had caused to be organized under the laws of Massachusetts. The capital stock was all issued in equal shares to the assignors for the patent rights.

Subsequent to the date of the patent, the defendant West severed his connection with the plaintiff and proceeded to organize the defendant corporation, the National Printers’ Supply Company. He is principal stockholder in the corporation, is active in the management of its affairs, and has acted as president and treasurer, or assistant treasurer, since the corporation was organized.

The defendant corporation has acquired rights in a patent issued September 28, 1926 (No. 1,601,461) covering a printer’s line-up table with transparent top equipped with lights underneath, with means for alining and holding sheets, with a movable alining bar and means for keeping it always parallel with the alining stops.

The table is being manufactured upon the order of the National Printers’ Supply Company by the defendant Wade. The plaintiff contends that the table manufactured by Wade for the defendant corporation constitutes infringement of its letters patent.

The defendant West, as assignor, is es-topped to deny the utility or validity of the invention. Westinghouse Electric & Mfg. Co. v. Formica Insulation Co., 266 U. S. 342, 45 S. Ct. 117, 69 L. Ed. 316.

In view of the privity between the defendant West and the other defendants, each of them must be held likewise to be estopped. Continental Wire Fence Co. v. Pendergast (C. C.) 126 F. 381; Mellor v. Carroll (C. C.) 141 F. 992; Siemens-Halske Elec. Co. v. Duncan Elec. Co. (C. C. A.) 142 F. 157.

The only question, therefore, open to the defendants is whether the patented line-up table manufactured for the defendant corporation infringes upon one or more of the claims of the patent in suit. The claims involved are as follows:

“1. A printer’s table equipped with a transparent top and with means for projecting light upward therethrough, said top having an alining edge at one side thereof with sheet-clamping means arranged to clamp a sheet alined by said edge, and an alining bar mounted for movement transversely across the table toward and from said alining edge.
“2. A printer’s table equipped with a transparent top and with means for projecting light upward therethrough, said top having an alining edge at one side thereof with sheet-clamping means arranged to clamp a sheet alined by said edge.
“3. A printer’s table equipped with a transparent top forwardly inclined with an alining ledge at the lower edge thereof and with sheet-clamping means arranged to clamp a sheet alined by said ledge and an alining bar mounted for movement transversely across the table toward and from said alining ledge and equipped with means for preserving its parallelism therewith.
“4. A printer’s table equipped with a transparent top with moans for projecting light upward therethrough, and an alining bar mounted for movement transversely over said top and equipped with means for preserving its parallelism with an alining edge of said table.
“5. A printer’s table, comprising a plane surfaced inclined top with a transparent portion through which light may be projected upward, said top having an alining lodge at the lower edge thereof equipped with sheet-[764]*764clamping means formed as spring clips, and an alining bar mounted for movement over said top toward and from said alining ledge having depending cheek members carried thereby and equipped with anti-friction members engaging said top, and means for presei*ving parallelism of movement of said bar with respect to said alining ledge of the table top.”

It will be observed that these claims are for combinations of mechanical elements brought together in a printer’s register table. These elements are (1) a transparent top; (2) means for projecting light upward through said top; (3) an alining edge or ledge; (4) sheet-clamping means arranged to clamp the alined sheet; (5) an alining bar mounted so as to be moved across the table top; and (6) means for preserving the parallelism of the bar with the alining edge.

The first claim is for a combination of the first four elements; the second for a combination of only the first three elements; the third for a combination of all of the elements except that it does not include, lighting means; and the fourth claim does not include in .the combination the alining edge or the sheet-clamping means.

These several elements of the different combinations are claimed in broad general terms. They are claimed not specifically but generically. It is conceded that all the elements of plaintiff’s patented combinations are old in the prior patented art, not only generically but specifically; The claims were allowed on the broad ground that the combinations were new and patentable. The file wrapper so indicated. Defendants’ table, as disclosed in the patent and as sold commercially, combines in a printer’s register table (1) a transparent top; (2) illuminating means beneath the top; (3) and (4) sheet stop and grippers arranged at the forward edge of the table; (5) an alining bar disposed parallel to a line connecting the forward end of the sheet stops; and (6) means for maintaining the parallelism of the alining bar (claims 1, 5, and 6 of West, 1,601,-461). These mechanical elements perform the same functions as the corresponding elements in plaintiff’s table. The defendants seek to escape the charge of infringement by pointing to certain structural differences and basing thereon the argument that their table does not embody, the combinations protected by plaintiff’s patent, or that the substituted e’ements do not fall within the range of equivalents which may be accorded a patent of a secondary character. That plaintiff’s patent is not a pioneer patent covering a primary invention cannot be successfully disputed.

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21 F.2d 762, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/premier-register-table-co-v-west-mad-1927.