Sander v. Rose

121 F. 835, 58 C.C.A. 171, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1903
DocketNo. 1,760
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 121 F. 835 (Sander v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sander v. Rose, 121 F. 835, 58 C.C.A. 171, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697 (8th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit for the infringement of letters patent No. 416,346, issued to Henry M. Rose, for an improvement in disk harrows, on December 3, 1889. Julius Sander, the defendant below, who is the appellant in this court, sold harrows that were manufactured in accordance with the specifications of letters patent No. 645,818, issued to A. Eindgren on March 20, 1900, for an improvement in disk harrows. Drawings or cuts representing the two kinds of disk harrows which are thus brought in conflict will be found on the opposite and succeeding pages. Referring to the Rose drawing, it will be observed that the rotary cutting disks, E,E, are mounted in the ordinary way, so as to revolve on an axle as the harrow is drawn over the ground. Each disk is provided with a scraper, C, which is a thin, elastic strip of steel, with a scraper edge that comes in contact with the concave side of the rotating disks, to which earth is apt to adhere when the ground is wet. The scrapers are attached to the bar, D, which is hinged to the frame of the harrow; one beam whereof, marked U, is disclosed in the drawing. By turning the hinged bar, D, by means of suitable mechanism for that purpose which is under the control of the driver, the scrapers are made to travel along the concave surface of the disks and remove the dirt which adheres thereto. The bar, D, has a longitudinal or endwise motion, to some'extent, as the scrapers move from the axle outwardly toward the rim of the disks, and a coiled spring, marked ds in the drawing, presses the bar in the reverse direction back into place as the scraper points or blades return toward the axle. Several of the claims in the Rose patent are said to have been infringed by the appellant, but we only quote two— the first and the sixth — which will serve to illustrate what the patentee claims to have been his invention.

“(1) The combination with .the disks, E, of the scrapers carried by a pivoted movable frame, and movable by the oscillation of said frame along said disks toward and from the periphery, substantially as set forth. * * *
“(6) The combination with a disk or series of disks, E, of a scraper carrier or support, and a scraper, or series of scrapers, whose free or scraping end, when at rest, is at or near the center of said disks, and which free end is adapted to be moved over and scrape the surface of the disks on a line crosswise to or at an angle with said scraper, substantially as set forth.”

Turning next to the Eindgren drawing, the following method of construction will be observed. From the beam of the harrow frame, indicated by the figure 1, two horizontal bars, 2, placed end to end, are suspended, each of which bars sustains a gang of concave cutting disks that revolve on an axle in the ordinary way. Bolted to these bars, 2, are brackets, 4, shown in figure 3 of the drawing, supporting a rocking bar which carries scrapers, one for each disk. This bar may be so rocked by suitable mechanism under the control of the driver as to cause the scrapers thereto attached to travel along the concave surface of the respective disks, and remove the earth therefrom as it [837]*837accumulates. The rocking bars, to which the scrapers are attached, have no longitudinal motion, but the end of each scraper is inserted in the socket of a holder (illustrated in figure 4 of the drawing), in which socket is a coiled spring, 13, that holds the scraper blade against the concave surface of the disk as the scraper travels outwardly or inwardly along said disk. By this arrangement each scraper has a lateral motion independent of all others.

The prototype of both of the disk harrows above described is found, we think, in a patent issued to J. S. Corbin on May 14, 1877, being patent No. 197,545. This was likewise a patent for an improvement in wheel or disk harrows, and certain drawings thereof, which are deemed sufficient to illustrate the method of construction, will be [838]*838found on the opposite page. It will be observed that in the Corbin harrow a rocking bar, carrying scraper blades, is attached to a beam, E, which beam, in turn, is supported by the frame of the harrow, and that by means of the handle or crank, I, the rocking bar can be turned by the driver, and the scraper blades made to travel along the concave surfaces of the disks, both inwardly, toward the axle, and thence outwardly. The scraper blades of this harrow are clearly shown in figure 2 of the drawings, which is a rear elevation of one gang of scrapers. We find in this harrow of Corbin rotating disks in combina[839]*839tion with scrapers carried by a movable bar or frame, which, when turned, moves the scrapers along the concave surface of the disks to and from the axle on which they turn on a line crosswise the surface, so as to remove the dirt therefrom.

[838]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 F. 835, 58 C.C.A. 171, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sander-v-rose-ca8-1903.