Progressive Engineering, Inc. v. MacHinecraft, Inc.

273 F.2d 593
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1960
Docket5492_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 273 F.2d 593 (Progressive Engineering, Inc. v. MacHinecraft, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progressive Engineering, Inc. v. MacHinecraft, Inc., 273 F.2d 593 (1st Cir. 1960).

Opinion

ALDRICH, Circuit Judge.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment in which appellants sought to have two patents declared invalid and not infringed, and two other patents, of which appellants were, or stood in the title of, assignors and hence estopped from asserting invalidity, not infringed. Appellants are Swanson and his present company, Progressive Engineering, Inc. Appellees are Cotchett and his connected company, Machinecraft, Inc. At the time the patents were applied for Swanson was an employee of appellees. The district court held the first patent invalid, but found against appellants on the other issues. Progressive Engineering, *594 Inc. v. Machinecraft, Inc., D.C.D.Mass. 1959, 169 F.Supp. 291. The three patents involved in this appeal are No. 2,-644,202, issued to appellee Cotchett on July 7, 1953; No. 2,716,780, issued to appellant Swanson on September 6, 1955, and assigned by him to appellees; and No. 2,755,515, issued on July 24, 1956, to Cotchett and Swanson, and assigned by Swanson to appellees. No. 2,716,780 was the last applied for. These patents all related to ball-bearing top rolls to be used on spinning frames employed in the textile industry to manufacture yarn or thread. There was a need for such improvements. Satisfactory operation of top rolls calls for the application of heavy weight through the rolls, and rotation at high speeds, requiring lubrication. Frequent oiling has manifest disadvantages. On the other hand, ball-bearing rolls, although long known in the industry as rarely needing lubrication, require adjustment. Also, they are susceptible to invasion by cotton fibers, or lint, known in its finest form as fly. Both of these factors, if unremedied, cause such rolls to operate unevenly, to the detriment of the product, or even to bind altogther. While ball-bearing top rolls had been in use since Campbell patent No. 628,521 of July 11, 1899, because of these failings they had found little acceptance for fine work. Appellees’ rolls were designed to correct this.

The district court found, “This is an outstandingly strong case of a valid invention and a clear infringement * * * [T]he efficiency and economy of Cotch-ett’s invention in overcoming difficulties theretofore experienced was at once appreciated. The most experienced and sophisticated suppliers of machinery saw its novelty and utility. From 1948 to 1958 2,000,000 rolls embodying Cotch-ett’s invention were manufactured.” 169 F.Supp. at page 293. After finding that Cotchett’s earlier attempts to solve the problems discussed were unsuccessful, and accordingly holding patent No. 2,-525,591 invalid as inoperable, the court stated that the ’202 patent “mastered the theretofore intractable difficulties.” Id., at page 295. It concluded, “Without consideration of other claims, claims 13, 15, 17, 18, 19, 25, 26 and 32 of patent No. 2,644,202 are adjudicated valid. These valid claims were infringed by plaintiff Progressive.” Id., at page 297. Later in the opinion the court said, “Progressive has infringed claims 13, 15, and 32.” Ibid. The judgment recited, “Claims 13, 15, 17, 18, 19, 25, 26 and 32 of the Cotchett patent No. 2,644,202 are valid and claims 13, 15 and 32 have been infringed by plaintiff.” 1

The court did not need to deal with the question of validity of the ’780 and ’515 patents because of the estoppel against appellants. Its only finding with respect to infringement was contained in one sentence. “The evidence shows that the accused Progressive top rolls infringe all the claims of patent No. 2,716,780 and the fourth claim of Cotchett and Swanson No. 2,755,515.” Id., at page 298. Whatever evidence there may have been on this subject, however, is not to be found in the opinion.

Before discussing appellees’ ’202 patent, it would be well to describe Campbell’s patent No. 628,541 issued in 1899, of which it was an improvement. This consisted of two rolls or cylindrical shells revolving on a fixed shaft from which, to reduce friction, they were radially separated by ball-bearing races, hereafter, because of their shape, called cones. There were two rolls, as all top rolls are made in tandem, with a central shaft space between them. Hereinafter, reference to a roll will mean one of the pair. In Campbell the rolls were kept apart by reducing the diameter of the ends of the shaft on which they turned so that the original diameter remained *595 as a shoulder or butt preventing inward movement of the total assembly. There were inner shoulders within the assembly against which the balls could ride, so that axial movement could be prevented with a minimum amount of friction. If the balls were kept too tight against the shoulders, creating what is sometimes called bearing tension, there would be excessive friction and wear. If they were loose, there would be lateral motion, or end play. Excessive end play may cause the rolls to “wobble,” which has a deleterious effect on the product. 2 3 Even if originally properly adjusted, excessive end play will eventually develop, requiring further adjustment. To care for this Campbell showed a thread on the end of the shaft, along which the outer cone could be adjusted laterally, and fixed by a set screw, so that the amount of end play could be properly regulated when the rolls were assembled at the factory. In order to exclude lint Campbell had an annular indentation or ring outside the shoulder against which the balls ran. This ring in effect provided a double rim or guard inside the assembly, with a grooved space between the rims in which lint which had passed the first rim could accumulate rather than seek to pass the second.

The Campbell construction was not highly successful. Adjustments after the ball-bearing units wore could be made only at the factory. Also, lint would eventually accumulate in such quantities in the annular ring as either to jam against the shell, or to pass by the second guard or shoulder into the race. This, too, required the return of the rolls to the factory, and even there disassembly and reassembly apparently needed skilled personnel. In order to meet these difficulties Cotchett, after considerable experimentation, designed end caps for the shafts with adjustable grub screws (sometimes called by the parties set screws), moving axially to determine the space inside the assembly for axial movement of the cones, and thereby regulating end play. These end caps were easily removable, and the parts taken out for cleaning or lubrication, after which readjustment by means of the grub screw could be affected. 3 Although appellees seek to show that this could be done readily in the mill, the great weight of the evidence, including the recitations in the application for appellees’ ’780 patent, is that mill personnel were usually insufficiently skilled to make this adjustment. The court’s finding on this subject is confusing, because it states that the rolls could be disassembled for “repair and lubrication in the factory and then reassembled in the textile mill.” 169 F.Supp. at page 297. There is no suggestion in the record that this operation was not intended to be a single one, to be performed in one place, wherever that place might be. Nevertheless we are not pre *596

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