Robinson v. Tubular Woven Fabric Co.

225 F. 50, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1214
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedJune 29, 1915
DocketNo. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 225 F. 50 (Robinson v. Tubular Woven Fabric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Tubular Woven Fabric Co., 225 F. 50, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1214 (D.R.I. 1915).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The bill charges infringement of letters patent No. 652,806, July 3, 1900, to H. G. Osburn, for flexible electrical conduit.

The patentee states that his object is:

To provide a form of conduit which, while possessing the necessary rigidity and insulating properties, may be readily flexed or bent laterally to accommodate itself to the conditions of use, and, furthermore, to provide a conduit which can be manufactured at comparatively small cost.”

Conducting wires for electric lighting, prior to the invention of the patent in suit, had been run through straight, rigid tubes with suitable [51]*51fittings to turn corners. A flexible tube was also in extensive use, and 'was constructed according to the Herrick patent, No. 456,271, July 21, 1891.

Tlie specification of the Herrick patent sets forth the requirements of a flexible conduit or tube; that it shall protect and insulate the conduct or introduced therein; that it shall be flexible to such an extent that it shall be capable of being bent without injury to a desired angle or curve. His conduit was made of three parts—the inner part or lining, formed of a strip of suitable material, spirally wound, with the, turns slightly separated; the second part, a protective wrapping constituted by a tape or strip applied to the exterior of the lining in a manner to cover the narrow space left between the turns of the spiral, this protecting strip to be composed of some waterproof flexible material, such as oil paper or rubber-covered cloth (the patentee states that it may be applied in various ways, so as to cover the lining in'the line of lire separation between the turns of the inner spiral lining); and the third part is shown as “a seamless tube of threads interwoven.” This is applied outside the protecting' strip, or second part.

Herrick says concerning his outer covering that it is preferably:

•‘NonexteiisiMe in itself, in order that strain on the conduit in tlie direction of its length may not operate to separate further the turns of the spiral lining. To this end the said covering preferably is formed by weaving threads together around the lining and protect! ve wrapping m the form of a tube. A braided tubular covering having threads introduced therein in a manner to des’i íoy its examsibility would be the equivalent of the woven covering.”

He makes special reference to other means for rendering the conduit uonextensible in the following language:

“When the protecting strip is arranged as in Fig. 4—that is, extending longitudinally of the spiral lining and folded around the same, with its edges oy whipping—the said protective strip itself will nmder tlie conduit non extensible : and in this case an ordinary braided covering—that is, one without longitudinal threads—may he employed, if desired.”

Herrick clearly indicates that the whole conduit should be noucxtonsible, and in claim 2 of his patent makes express reference io a uonextensible woven or braided covering. He also indicates clearly in the language we have quoted, and as illustrated in Fig. 4, the use of his protective wrapping applied immediately to the spiral strip to render the spiral nonexiensible. He thus provides two ways of preventing further separation of the turns of his spiral: First, a nonexteusible outer covering; second, a protective strip applied longitudinally directly to the spiral strip.

This patent is a clear disclosure of two specific means for preventing extension of the inner spiral strip, as well as for making the enlire tube uonextensible.

After Herrick, therefore, there could be no broad novelty in providing means to prevent the separation of the turns of the spiral, and thus to prevent the extension in length of the conduit as a whole, and the consequent reduction of the interior diameter of the tube.

The plaintiff’s brief states that the commercial Herrick device employed paper board or fiber for the spiral strip, which constituted [52]*52the main body of the tube and the insulating protection for the conductor; that a rubber-covered, soft tape, spirally or helically wound, furnished the second member, or protective wrapping. No testimony is pointed out to indicate that in commercial practice under the Herrick patent the protective wrapping was applied in the manner indicated in Fig. 4 of the Herrick patent, and described in the foregoing quotation from the specification.

It is conceded that the Herrick conduit, popularly known as “circular loom,” or “loom,” solved the problem of a flexible conduit, if carefully made and honestly used.

It is alleged that a defect of the Herrick conduit was the separable character of its members, and that the spiral lining, which composed the main body of the conduit, was removable from the jacket, that workmen were tempted to remove it in order to facilitate the insertion of the conductor, and that the jacket then concealed the absence of the spiral member. It is also urged that the removal might be due to accident or careless use.

The Osburn patent in suit discloses a spiral member, described as a semiflexible element, corresponding in substance to the spiral member of Herrick. The convolutions or turns of this member are, in Osburn, bound together or locked in a longitudinal direction by means of flexible material interwoven therewith, to impart longitudinal strength to the tube; i. e., strength to withstand distortion or pull lengthwise of the tube. He describes the convolutions as forming, as it were, the woof threads or element of the fabrics, and the pliable material extending longitudinally as constituting the warp threads or element.

Referring to a covering for the tube thus constructed Osburn says:

“In flexible conduits of the prior art tbe structure lias been sucb that the covering has been relied upon to impart longitudinal strength to the tube, and it has therefore been necessary to employ for the covering threads woven together, with one series of threads extending circumferentially and another series extending longitudinally. Due to the fact that the tubelike skeleton of my construction possesses in itself longitudinal rigidity and strength, other forms of covering having little or no tensile strength may be employed—as, l’or instance, a braided covering—and the cost of the conduit may thus be materially decreased.”

Osburn’s departure from the Herrick patent, therefore, is not in the provision of means for joining or binding the turns of the spiral, but merely in the provision of special means differing from those pointed out by Herrick for that purpose. Instead of using Herrick’s longitudinal protective cover, pointed out in Fig. 4 and in the specification, Osburn uses interwoven threads or other pliable material for this purpose. Herrick clearly points out that with the construction shown in Fig. 4 the conduit is rendered nonextensible, and that in this case an ordinary braided covering without longitudinal threads may be employed if desired. Osburn’s statement that the tubelike skeleton of his construction possesses longitudinal rigidity, and thus permits the use of a braided covering, is substantially a copy of what is above quoted from the Herrick patent. This emphasizes the fact that Herrick clearly discloses that a conduit having a spiral protective [53]*53strip may be rendered nonextensible without the use of a nonextensible oilier covering.

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Related

Robinson v. Tubular Woven Fabric Co.
248 F. 526 (D. Rhode Island, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 F. 50, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-tubular-woven-fabric-co-rid-1915.