Samuel J. Miller & Co. v. A. Schreter & Sons Co.

246 F. Supp. 737, 147 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 245, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9605
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedOctober 19, 1965
DocketCiv. No. 13999
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 246 F. Supp. 737 (Samuel J. Miller & Co. v. A. Schreter & Sons Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel J. Miller & Co. v. A. Schreter & Sons Co., 246 F. Supp. 737, 147 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 245, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9605 (D. Md. 1965).

Opinion

THOMSEN, Chief Judge.

Now before the Court is plaintiff's motion for a partial summary judgment declaring invalid defendants’ U. S. Patent No. 2,813,273 for a “button-down necktie”.

Patent ’273 was issued on November 19, 1957, to the late Abraham Schreter, the father of the individual defendants 1, pursuant to an application filed by him on November 28, 1955. The corporate defendant (Schreter, Inc.) manufactures and sells neckties made in accordance with the teaching of that patent. Plaintiff, a competitor, also manufactures and sells button-down neckties.

The complaint contains three counts: (1) for treble damages and injunctive relief under the antitrust laws; (2) for a declaratory judgment that Patent ’273 is invalid and for other relief; and (3) for assessment of the statutory penalty for unlawful patent marking. Defendants’ counterclaims assert (A) infringement of Patent ’273 by plaintiff, and (B) unfair competition by plaintiff through [738]*738improper representations to the public of the scope and effect of Patent '273.

Plaintiff's motion for partial summary-judgment is limited to the question of the validity of Patent '273. Plaintiff contends that the patent is invalid on two grounds: (1) that it was anticipated by the prior art and was unpatentable over existing patents; and (2) that the alleged invention described and claimed in Patent '273 was in public use and on sale in the United States by Schreter, Inc. and others more than one year before November 28, 1955, the date of the application for that patent, and was described in printed publications in the United States more than one year before that date.2

There is no dispute about any material fact. The only disputes shown by defendants’ markings of plaintiff’s state•ment of facts3 deal (a) with details not essential to the decision of the pending motion or (b) with plaintiff’s use of the term “button-down neckties” to describe certain ties which were manufactured and sold by Schreter, Inc. and others more than a year before the application for Patent ’273 was filed, as well as the ties now being manufactured and sold by Schreter, Inc. However, Patent ’273 itself shows that the term “button-down neckties” had been applied to some neckties manufactured and sold before the application for that patent was filed; e. g., Patent ’273 recites in column 1 certain “deficiencies” in “button-down neckties of the prior art” and “in prior types of button-down neckties”. Moreover, various advertisements published by Schreter, Inc. more than a year before November 28, 1955, show that some ties manufactured and sold by it before November 28, 1954, were referred to as “button-down neckties”.

At all material times from 1953 to date, Schreter, Inc. has been manufacturing and selling neckties under the trade-names “Smoothie” and “Prince Consort”.

As a result of a suggestion by a friend that he manufacture a tie that would not flap in the wind, Abraham Schreter, assisted by his wife, placed three buttonholes in a conventional necktie one evening at home late in 1953. Shortly thereafter, Schreter, Inc. began production of button-down neckties having three buttonholes and a loop label.

It is coñ'Céded that neckties having a loop label on the back of the wide (top) end to “removably receive” the narrow end had been made and sold for many years; and patents had been issued for neckties with buttonholes in or attached to the narrow end of the tie, so that it could be buttoned onto the shirt. See, e. g., Ratajack U. S. Patent 1,798,432, issued March 31, 1963, and Glazier U. K. Patent 359,097, dated October 22, 1930. The latter patent embodied both the loop and the buttonholes. See also the discussion in column 1 of Patent ’273 itself.

Nevertheless, on February 9, 1954, Abraham Schreter filed a patent application, Serial No. 409,095, directed broadly to a button-down necktie, but that application was later abandoned.

On February 12, 1954, Hochschild, Kohn & Co., a Baltimore department store, advertised the “New Smoothie Button-Down Tie” in the Baltimore Sun. The tie shown in the Hochschild, Kohn advertisement had a loop and three buttonholes, similarly placed to those later shown in Patent ’273.

On February 17, 1954, Hochschild, Kohn wrote to Schreter, Inc., stating that it had sold some 38 dozen button-down neckties following publication of the February 12 advertisement.

[739]*739On March 2, 1954, a full-page Schreter, Inc. advertisement in the Daily News Record, a trade publication, reproduced the Hochschild, Kohn letter of February 17, 1954, and listed more than three dozen stores throughout the United States which had already ordered button-down neckties from Schreter. The tie illustrated in the Daily News Record advertisement was similar to the tie later described in Patent ’273. The description of the tie in the advertisement will be set out in the discussion below.

On April 9, 1954, Schreter, Inc., in a Daily News Record advertisement sought salesmen through the midwest to sell “our sensational patented ‘BUTTON-DOWN’ TIE”, which had by then been “ordered and reordered” by stores “from coast to coast”.

A Prince Consort button-down tie, manufactured by Schreter, Inc. was pictured in an advertisement by K. Katz & Sons in the Baltimore Evening Sun on June 17, 1954, and described in the following manner: “Short end of tie is equipped with 3 button holes * * * so spaced that when tie is tied, one button hole matches position of button on shirt. Hidden loop keeps big end of tie in place.”

On July 8, 1954, a Schreter, Inc. advertisement to the trade pictured its “button-down neckties” and stated that those ties had been sold by more than 2200 different stores in the United States.

All of the foregoing items were published more than a year before the filing, on November 28, 1955, of the application which resulted in the granting of Patent ’273.

Button-down neckties similar to the tie described in Patent ’273 were attached to the depositions of several witnesses who testified that they purchased the ties before November 28, 1954. Defendants deny that the ties attached to the depositions were actually made by Schreter, Inc. Whether they were made by it or by someone else is immaterial if such ties were in fact being sold to the public more than a year before November 28, 1955. It is not disputed that some at least of the ties attached to the depositions were sold before November 28, 1954; indeed there was correspondence about some of them before that date.

Patent ’273, after reciting the “deficiencies” of “prior types of button-down neckties”, states:

“A specific object of the invention is the provision of a button-down necktie of the type mentioned which requires only a minimum number of button holes, namely, three, and which is, therefore, relatively simple and inexpensive to manufacture.
“Another object of the invention is the provision of a necktie of the type mentioned in which the button holes are oriented and arranged in relation to each other and in relation to the buttons of a man’s ordinary or conventional shirt, so as to insure the fact that one of the button holes under any condition can be brought into registry with one of the shirt buttons within the limits of stretch of the small end portion of the necktie.”

Claim 1 reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
246 F. Supp. 737, 147 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 245, 1965 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-j-miller-co-v-a-schreter-sons-co-mdd-1965.