S. A. Cook & Co. v. Heywood Bros. & Wakefield Co.

131 F. 755, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4948
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 1, 1904
DocketNo. 43
StatusPublished

This text of 131 F. 755 (S. A. Cook & Co. v. Heywood Bros. & Wakefield Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. A. Cook & Co. v. Heywood Bros. & Wakefield Co., 131 F. 755, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4948 (circtedpa 1904).

Opinion

HOEEAND, District Judge.

The complainants allege and set forth in their bill for a preliminary injunction that the defendants have infringed claims 1 and 4 of letters patent granted to G. A. Bowen, No. 667,162, January 29, 1901, for improvements in chairs, and claims 5 and 6 of letters patent granted to said Bowen, No. 678,219, July 9, 1901, for improvements in furniture, which patents are assigned to and owned by them. Defendants claim they are using a device shown in patent to Joseph Euppino, No. 11,919, reissued July 2, 1901. The defense set up and relied upon by the defendants is (1) that the claims in suit are invalid and void by reason of anticipation by the prior art; and (2) that defendants’ patented device does not infringe any claims of the patents in suit. The bill of complaint alleges that the improvements in question are of great utility, and that complainants have manufactured and supplied to the trade articles of furniture, and particularly chairs, made according to the aforesaid letters patent, and have uniformly securely affixed to such articles of furniture plates bearing the word “Patented,” together with the dates of issue of such patents, respectively. The answer denies the utility of the said improvements, and any manufacture thereof for the trade by the complainants. Mr. Melville E. Dayton, the only witness called by the complainants as a mechanical expert, himself an inventor of an adjustable chair, who is acquainted with the sale and kind of chairs in the market for the last five years, failed to find any Morris chairs employing the back-adjusting device of the Bowen patents in suit prior to his connection with this case, so that as the complainants, in their cáse thus presented, are [756]*756standing on their naked rights, there simply is involved the construction of the patents in suit.

In the first patent, claims 1 and 4, alleged to be infringed, are <*£ follows:

“(1) The combination with the seat-frame and the hinged back, of a pivoted pawl carried by one of said parts, a catch or ratchet plate carried by the other, and provided with two tracks separated by a dividing rib or projection, which is provided with projections to be engaged by the pawl upon one side, the two tracks being connected, whereby the pawl may pass from one to the other, substantially as set forth.”
“(4) The combination with a seat-frame and swinging back, of a pawl, D, having a pin, d, projecting therefrom at its free end, a ratchet-plate carried by the seat-frame in rear of the hinge connection of the swinging hack, the said ratchet-plate being provided with a circumferential flange and a separating-strip or central rib, 4, which is provided with projections or ratchet-teeth upon its upper and rearmost face, the said circumferential flange and central rib being constructed substantially as shown, whereby there are formed two curved ways, 5 and 6, connected at their ends, in which the pin, d, of the pawl travels as the back is swung from one position to another.”

In order that the device defined in these claims may be understood, it is only necessary to quote from the description, where the device, its manner of construction, and mode of application are fully explained:

“My invention relates to chairs of the type having swinging and adjustable backs, and has for its object to improve the means whereby the back is held in a more or less inclined position. In drawings, A represents the seat-frame of the chair; B represents the swinging back, hinged at its lower edge to the seat-frame, the back being supported between the rear portions of the arms. Each side bar, C, of the back is provided with a swinging pawl, D, which is provided with a projection or pin, d, adapted to engage with a catch-plate or retaining device carried by the frame of the chair on either side of the said frame. The plate is surrounded by a circumferential flange, 3, within which flange and projecting from the plate is a stationary rib or parting-strip, 4, in figure 5, substantially parallel with the opposite sides of the flange, 3, so that there are formed two tracks or ways, 5 and 6, between the circumferential flange and the central rib, one way on either side of the latter. The circumferential flange and central parting rib or piece, 4, are so shaped that tbe ways, 5 and 6, are curved, the concave or inner sides of the curves being toward tbe base or hinged end of the back. The lower or rear side of the rib, 4, is plain and concentric with the portion of the flange, 3, which is opposite thereto, while the opposite outer or upper edge of the rib is serrated or provided with a series of projections, 7, with which the pin or projection, d, may engage. The pawl, D, is pivoted to the side bar of the swinging back at such a point that this pivot is always above the projection or pin, d, when the device is in operation; and the construction of the catch or ratchet device is such that when the back is swung forward and into an upright position, carrying the pin, d, to the upper forward end of the ratchet device, the hinge of the jjawl is forward of the pin or projection, d, and, when the back is swung to the other extreme of its movement, then the hinge connection of the pawls, D, is in rear of the pins, d, as they lie at the lower rearward end of the catch or ratchet-plate. The reason for this construction and arrangement is to cause the pawls to readily swing by gravity at the end of each movement of the back, so as to freely clear the central ribs or projections, 4. To secure the action of the pawl just described, it is necessary that the arc through which the pivoted end of the pawl moves as the hack is being swung from one extreme of position to tbe other should be different from that through which the free ratchet-plate-engaging end moves, and this is secured by constructing tbe ratchet-plate so that the part which unites the two ways at one end (the lower end in the form of invention shown) is nearer to the hinge or fulcrum of the swinging back than are the opposite connected ends of the ways. It will be seen by referring to Fig. 3 that when the chair-back is swung forward into a sub[757]*757stantial upright position the pins, d, are drawn forward and out of engagement with the ratcheted sides of the ribs, 4, and then fall therefrom into the upper forward ends of the ways, 5. As the chair-back is moved rearward the pins on the pawls travel without obstruction down and backward along the ways, 5, until they pass the lower ends of the ribs, 4, at which time the hinge-line of the pawls, D, will be rearward of the projections or pins, d, so that as soon as the pins or projections on the pawls escape the lower ends of the ribs the pawls will swing rearward by gravity, and opposite the lower ends of the ways, 6. If now the chair-back be lifted, the pins, d, will be carried upward into the ways, 6, and, by the time the first projections or ratchet-teeth upon the upper faces of the ribs are reached, the hinge-line of the pawls will have passed forward of the pins, so that the latter will freely engage with the said projections, and, as the chair-back is moved further forward and upward, the pawls will engage with the ratchet-teeth one after another, holding the chair-back in the angular position to which it may be adjusted.”

The claims of the second Bowen patent alleged to be infringed are 5 and 6, as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 F. 755, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 4948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-a-cook-co-v-heywood-bros-wakefield-co-circtedpa-1904.