R. E. Dietz Co. v. Burr & Starkweather Co.

236 F. 763, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1319
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. New York
DecidedJune 15, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 236 F. 763 (R. E. Dietz Co. v. Burr & Starkweather Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. E. Dietz Co. v. Burr & Starkweather Co., 236 F. 763, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1319 (W.D.N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

HAZED, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity to enjoin infringement of four letters patent — design patent No. 42,488, dated May 7, 1912, to Warren McArthur, Jr., and mechanical patents Nos. 962,114 and 1,072,688, dated June 21, 1910, and September 9, 1913, respectively, to Charles Bergener, and patent No. 962,135, dated June 21, 1910, to Charles F. Erb. These patents all relale to tubular lanterns of the cold blast type, having a base, an oil fount, a burner underneath the globe, which engages at its top a chimney extending into or through a round casing or dome supported at the sides by tubing; the upper [764]*764ends thereof being attached to the dome or chimney, while the lower ends are made to communicate with the air chamber under the burner. The globe is supported by a plate resting upon the burner and having perforations through which the cold air enters, while the chimney also has small openings for admitting current to the inside of the lantern.

McArthur Patent, No. 42,488.

[1] This is a design patent, in which the specification reads as follows :

“The accompanying drawing represents a perspective view of a tubular lantern embodying this design. The characteristic feature of this design consists of the upwardly contracted or downwardly flaring shape of the chimney A which extends from the globe B to the top G of the lantern frame. I claim: The ornamental design for a tubular lantern as shown and described.”

The patent, in my opinion, is limited to the shape or configuration of the chimney, or to that portion of the lantern extending from the globe to the apex of the lantern frame, and does not include the tubular lantern as a whole. The well-proportioned, bulbous globe was not an element of the design, and althoügh the lantern has a pleasing appearance and is readily distinguished from prior tubular lanterns using pear-shaped globes, still its distinctiveness is appreciably due to the mechanical changes required for use with the shorter globe. To adapt the tubular lantern to such shorter globe, it was necessary 4:o extend the chimney downwards, broadening it at the lower end to fit over the upper rim of the globe, at the same time retaining a narrow cylindrical top, which could be moved into or within the air chamber when the globe was raised or lowered by the use of the lifting device. To so change or alter the tubular lantern did not involve the exercise of the inventive faculty or of artistic ability. A skilled mechanic, having before him the Osborne patent, No. 248,878, and Defendant’s Exhibit P, Ham Fire Chief Eantern, with its tapering or flaring chimney, could readily extend the ordinary lantern chimney downward and flare it to fit the short globe.

[2] The tubular lantern art was crowded at the time the design patent herein was granted, and there was little room for originality in design. In design patents, as in mechanical patents, the test of invention is whether the new combination is within the province of the ordinary workman. Steffens et al. v. Steiner et al. (C. C. A., Second Circuit) 232 Fed. 862, - C. C. A. -, decided February 15, 1916, and Strause Gas Iron Co. v. William M. Crane Co. (C. C. A., Second Circuit) 235 Fed. 126, - C. C. A. -, decided April 11, 1916. It is believed that any one wishing to adapt a tubular lantern chimney to a short globe would at once set about' it by carrying the end of the chimney downward to bring it into juxtaposition with the top of tire globe. At tire trial I expressed the opinion that the design was not without merit, »and I credited the lantern with an appearance distinctive from those of the prior art; but this was owing to the fact that at that time I had in mind the tubular lantern as a whole.

[765]*765Erb Patent, No. 962,135, and Bergener Patent, No. 962,114.

[3] These patents describe improvements in tubular lanterns in which the frames are made of two stamped half tubes of sheet metal, in which are formed ribs for stiffening the tubes and for stretching the metal as it is being shaped in the dies, and which are then secured together by overlapping seams extending along the inner and outer edges of the half tubes. The single claim of the Erb patent reads:

“A tubular lantern having tubes composed, of stamped half tubes of sheet metal which extend in a continuous piece from end to end and are provided between their ends at intervals with hollow transverso stiffening beads, said half tubes being joined on opposite sides by overlapped seams, substantially as sot forth.”

Claim 1, relied upon in the Bergener patent, reads:

“t. A tubular lantern having tubes which are each composed of two substantially half-round half tubes, stamped of shoot metal and secured together by seams on the inner and outer sides of the tubos, and each half tube being formed between said seams with a hollow longitudinal rib thrown out on the half-round surface of the half tube, substantially as set forth.”

The proofs show that any novelty there may be in these patents resides in tbe adaptation of transverse and longitudinal beads to half tubes of lantern frames stamped from flat blanks to stiffen the tubes and prevent them from buckling. Of course, the use of beads, ribs, corrugations, or crimps, in metal or tin, for strengthening or stiffening, was an expedient as old as the art itself and had been applied to lanterns. The prior patents and publications in evidence show beads or ribs stamped into the metal for preventing the denting or injuring of the tube; but such two-piece lantern tubes often parted or buckled where they were joined together in the dies, resulting not infrequently in great wastage of tin plate.

The patentees herein were employes of the competing companies, which afterwards became complainant’s predecessors, at the time the patents were granted, and each inventor independently sought to overcome said difficulties. Previously the C. T. Ham Manufacturing Company sold side lamps or single tube lanterns in which a half-round tube section only had been strengthened by corrugations or beads formed in tbe tin blank, and the Buhl Stamping Company, manufacturer of the lantern sold by defendant, had also previously manufactured lanterns with transverse beads in upright tubes; but such prior constructions and patents (Betts patent, No. 340,274, and Ham patent, No. 628,461) are not anticipatory. The lanterns constructed under such patents were not composed of half tubes joined together at their seams and extending in a continuous piece from end to end with transverse or lengthwise beads, as in the Erb and Bergener patents. In the Betts patent the upright tubes were provided at their upper ends with beads; but the beads were used to connect the parts together, and not to accomplish the objects of the patents in suit. So, also, in the Ham patent the beads were not projected outwardly beyond the surface of the top; their purpose being to make a small joint, and not to stiffen tubular half sections.

[766]*766In the Orphy patent, No. 390,699, the half tubes are shown to have been made of single strips of metal, and not of two round half portions joined together.

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Related

Steffens v. Steiner
232 F. 862 (Second Circuit, 1916)
Strause Gas Iron Co. v. William M. Crane Co.
235 F. 126 (Second Circuit, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
236 F. 763, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-e-dietz-co-v-burr-starkweather-co-nywd-1916.