Schwab v. Morgan

207 F. 107, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298
CourtDistrict Court, D. Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 2, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 207 F. 107 (Schwab v. Morgan) 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
Schwab v. Morgan, 207 F. 107, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298 (D.R.I. 1913).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The bill charges infringement of letters patent No. 1,008,694, November 14, 1911, to George W. Bryant, for spring contracting and removing device. Claims 1, 2, 3, 4, and 7 are in suit. Claim 3 is the broadest claim and will be considered first.

3. In a device of the character described, the combination of a stock piece having a cylindrical bore, a carrying’member to move in said bore and adapted to be inserted therein from either end, forked engaging members curried one by the stock piece and one by the carrying member, and means mounted on the stock piece for moving the carrying member to cause relative approaching and separating movements between the engaging members.

The invention pertains to clamps for compressing and holding springs, and the device is especially designed for use as an automobile tool, in removing or placing in position the valve springs of ex[108]*108plosion engines. The stems of such valves project outside of the engine casing, and each carries near its lower end a disc which is held up by a pin or key fastened through a hole in the valve stem. ■ A spiral spring surrounds the valve stem and is held under tension between the disc and a bearing on the valve casing. It is desirable at times to release the valves from the control of the spring, and this requires compression of the spring so that the disc may be raised and the key withdrawn, freeing the valve stem and valve.

The device of the patent in suit comprises a stock or body piece of cylindrical form and a carrying rod mounted to move endwise in the bore of the body piece. The carrying rod has at one end a spring engaging member, U-shaped or forked, so that its two sides may be pushed into- the spring on either side of the valve stem, being made sufficiently thin to enter readily between the coils of the spring; the prongs or forks being of sufficient width to enable the member to engage properly springs varying considerably in diameter.

The body piece in which the carrying member moves has a U-shaped or forked jaw. The spring may be compressed or extended by the relative movement of the jaw. In claim 3 the means for moving the carrying member to cause relative approaching or separating movements between the engaging members are claimed broadly; the 'only limitation being contained in the words “mounted on the stock piece.”

In none of the devices of the prior art to which the defendant refers is disclosed the combination of elements of claim 3. The feature of ■clamping jaws intended to enter between the coils of the spring is--claimed to be novel with the patentee. It is suggested that the device -of the Wickwire patent No. 875,761 might be used in this way, but Wickwire does not suggest such a use, and the device as described -in his patent does not seem adapted for this purpose.

Complainant says;

“None of these devices would-do what Bryant’s tool does and grasp only the spring itself, compress it, and hold it compressed, so that it could be removed and replaced. Bryant did this by inserting • the jaws of his tool between the coils of the spring. That has never been done before. And he not only did that, but he so constructed his tool that it could be used to (1) push up the bottom of the spring with the disc; or (2) push out. the disc; or (3) to draw the spring together with the disc; or (4) without the disc; and so that (5) its range of operation might be extended by reversing its parts to permit the jaws to be moved wider apart; (6) so that it would be locked against movement from its desired position.”

The adaptability for use in different positions, and with its parts in different relative positions, is a feature pointed out and illustrated in the patent. I find nothing in the prior art as cited by the defendant which invalidates claim 3. The means for moving the carrying members to cause relative approaching and separating movements between the engaging members shown in the patent in suit are a rack and pinion; the pinion being moved by a key. Because the operating-mechanism is a rack and pinion it is necessary, in order to retain the step by step, approaching and receding movements, to provide an automatic locking device whereby the parts may be held from movement under the load strains, which would tend to cause a movement [109]*109reverse in direction to that produced by the turning of the_ key. Bryant shows a stop pawl which serves as a detent and which is reversible to permit’movement in one direction and stop it in the other. As it is desired to cause the jaws to approach or recede, the pawl is set in one direction or the other. This feature of a stop pawl is contained in other claims but is no part of claim 3. Brom the history of the invention it is clear that Bryant well understood the equivalency •of the rack and pinion and the screw and nut as means for controlling the movement of the jaws. He made drawings both of the screw and nut and of the rack and pinion as equivalent mechanical means for causing the approach and separation of the jaws.

The defendant’s device is illustrated in the patent to Morgan No. 1,050,746, January 14, 1913. Instead of a rack and pinion Morgan uses a screw and nut. As the nut, by reason of the flat thread of the screw, ‘resists reverse strains, it is not essential to provide a detent for this purpose as in the rack and pinion construction, but the rack and pinion, with the detent or stop pawl, and a screw with a ratchet nut operated by a lever, are equivalent mechanical means for controlling relative movements of two parts. In view of Bryant’s knowledge of this equivalency, as well as of the expert testimony on this point, and in view of the adaptability of his tool to assume positions of which former tools were incapable, I am of the opinion that he was entitled to claim broadly means for controlling the jaws and to cover both of the well-known forms of appliances for this purpose.

■ It is objected that the expression, “means mounted on the stock piece for moving the carrying member,” is inapplicable to the defendant’s device for the reason that the nut rests upon and is sustained by the thread of the screw; but the means includes not only the nut but the means for engaging the teeth on the exterior of the nut, which include a lever handle, and a pawl which engages the teeth. This pawl is reversible, and the nut may he turned in either direction according to the manner in which the pawl is adjusted. The handle and the pawl may, with sufficient accuracy, be said to be mounted upon the stock piece.

The defendant says also that, because the removal of the nut from the screw is a slow process compared with the removal of defendant’s rack, his device does not have that adaptability for reversal which is a feature of the complainant’s device. By reversing the rack the jaws of the complainant’s device may be brought closer together, and this is a feature which is advertised by the defendant as a feature •of the Morgan device.

I am of the opinion that claim 3 is valid and infringed.

As to the other claims, the principal contention of the defendant is that he has no element corresponding to the elen ent described as a “reversible stop pawl.” The defendant doubtless has a reversible pawl whereby he can control the direction in which the carrying member will move, but the pawl is used by the defendant to perform a different function from the function performed in the complainant’s device. The complainant uses it as a detent to prevent movement of the pinion and of the rack.

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Related

Morgan v. Schwab
216 F. 595 (First Circuit, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 F. 107, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwab-v-morgan-rid-1913.