Reece Buttonhole Mach. Co. v. Globe Buttonhole Mach. Co.

54 F. 884, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 29, 1893
DocketNo. 2,938
StatusPublished

This text of 54 F. 884 (Reece Buttonhole Mach. Co. v. Globe Buttonhole Mach. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reece Buttonhole Mach. Co. v. Globe Buttonhole Mach. Co., 54 F. 884, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515 (circtdma 1893).

Opinion

CARPENTER, District Judge.

This is a bill to enjoin an alleged' infringement of claims 5, 11, 12, 13, and 18 of letters patent No. 240,546, granted April 26, 1881, to John Reece, for a buttonhole sewing machine. The machine made by the respondents is described in general and essential features in the specifications and drawings of letters patent Nos. 450,844 and 450,950, both issued April 21,1891, to James H. Reed and Charles A. Dahl, for a buttonhole stitching and barring machine. The only issue here is whether the respondents have infringed.

In constructing a machine to make buttonholes there are two classes of elements to be taken into account; First, the cloth or leather in which the buttonhole is to be made; and, secondly, the various devices (1) to support and clamp the work; (2) to cut the buttonhole; .and (3) to stitch the buttonhole. At the time the Reece invention was made, the known machines for this purpose, none of which were entirely automatic, were divided broadly into two classes. In one class, the cloth being supported on the cloth plate and there clamped, the cloth plate remained at rest, and the cutting and stitching mechanisms were moved with relation thereto; in the second class, the cloth being in like manner supported, the cloth plate moved so as to present the work in the proper [885]*885relation to the operating mechanism for cutting and stitching. The machine shown in the patent to J. A. and H. A. House, Ho. 39,442, dated August 4, 1863, is an example of the first class; while the machine known as the “Humphrey” or “Union” machine, first patented to Daniel W. Gf. Humphrey, October 7, 1862, and the m achine shown in the patent to J. A. and H. A. House, No. 36,932, dated November 11, 1862, are examples of the second class. The Humphrey machine_required the work to be turned half way around at each buttonhole, while the House machine moved the work forward to the extent of the length of the buttonhole, and laterally to the extent of the width of the eye of the buttonhole. The Humphrey machine may be said to turn the work, and the House machine to move the work.

I come, then, to consider what construction shall be given to the Reece,patent, or, in other words, what is the extent of the Keece invention? This, I take it, is to be determined by ascertaining what is the new function conceived by Eeece as embodied in his machine. For the purpose of this case the question may be solved, in one view, by ascertaining whether the new function of the Reese machine was conceived bv Mm as applying to both the general methods oí operation above described, or whether it was confined to one. alone. This question appears to be significant when attention is turned to the machine of the patent and to the alleged infringing machine. They differ in nearly every detail of construction, and nearly every operation is performed by different devices. For the purpose of the present discussion, however, fchesé different devices may be assumed to be equivalents for each other. But there is a broad distinction between the patented machine, as literally described in the patent and as_ actually built by the complainant, on the one hand, and the machine of the respondents on the other. The first machine moves the cutter and the stitcher to and over the cloth clamp and the cloth, while the second machine moves the cloth clamp and the cloth to and under tic cutter and the stitcher. This broad difference not only characterizes the machines, as wholes, but also evidently determines many of the differences in detail between the two, in respect to which differences in detail the Dahl machine, being the junior machine, mav be said to vary by the substitution of what may be assumed, as before said, to be equivalents. The question, then, recurs whether the fixed cloth plate type of machine described in the patent is intended by the Reece patent to be the best machine in which Ms invention may be embodied, or whether it is intended to limit the field of his invention to machines of that type. I confess that the preamble of this specification, although not, of course, conclusive, seems to me very persuasive on the question as to what was the real invention. He says:

“This invention relates to sewing machines for stitching buttonholes, au# is an improvement upon that class of the said machines wherein the stitching mechanism is made to travel first along one side of the buttonhole slit, then about the eye, and along the other side of the slit.”

It might be said that this language imports that the machine is one which shall cause the presentation of the needle to the cloth [886]*886in a certain way, without reference to whether this he effected by the motion of the needle or by the motion of the cloth. But this suggestion is met by the consideration that there were previous machines in which the needle — in an imperfect way, indeed — traveled, but still traveled in this same path, as appears by reference to the machines to which I have already referred. The statement seems to me strongly to suggest that the machine as conceived by the inventor was not a machine in which, for example, the needle at successive points of time was to be found at successive points of space over the surface of the cloth, but rather a machine in which the needle reached those points successively by its own motion as distinguished from the motion of the cloth. If this be so, of course the statement qualifies and is to be read into each claim, and limits them all, so as to exclude all machines constructed like those built by Dahl.

I think the reading of the claims, taken in connection with their history, strongly confirms this view. In the fifth, eleventh, and thirteenth claims the framework which carries the cutting and stitching mechanism is literally described as “moving.” The eleventh claim, as originally drawn, was as follows:

“(11) In a buttonhole sewing machine, a clamp and bed to hold the material, the framework, a, the buttonhole cutting device connected therewith, combined with a cam disk to operate the said buttonhole cutter to cut a slit in the material held, by the clamp, and then to [change the relative positions of the frame and bedplate longitudinally,] to remove the blade of the cutter from above the clamp, substantially as described.”

The examiner objected as follows:

“In the first claim the inclusion of means for changing ‘the relative positions of the bedplate and framework longitudinally’ must be objected to, as no means is shown and described for moving the bedplate relatively to the framework, as the claim would seem to imply. The eleventh claim must be objected to for the same reasons as were- urged to the first claim, no means being shown for changing the relative position of the bedplate with respect to the frame, as the claim would seem to imply.”

The petitioner thereupon amended the eleventh claim by striking out the words above included in brackets, and inserting in their place the words “move said framework longitudinally upon said bedplates.” The first claim was amended in similar terms. Words of the same import were inserted in the twelfth and, thirteenth claims, in response to objections of the examiner, but under circumstances which make these changes less persuasive than that above quoted.

I now pass to a consideration of the question whether this change operates to limit the scope of the patent to the literal terms of the inserted words, in so far as they differ from the terms of the words for which they were substituted.

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Bluebook (online)
54 F. 884, 1893 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reece-buttonhole-mach-co-v-globe-buttonhole-mach-co-circtdma-1893.