Schwartz v. Housman

88 F. 519, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2815
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York
DecidedJuly 8, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 F. 519 (Schwartz v. Housman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartz v. Housman, 88 F. 519, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2815 (circtedny 1898).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

This suit is brought upon two patents, both issued to complainant. The first (No. 332,444), dated December 15, 1885, is for an improvement in embossing plastic material. The specification sets forth that the invention—

“Relates more especially to a new method of embossing paper, and it has for its object to prevent the surface of the raised portions of the paper from cracking, as with the ordinary method, which gives the work a ragged and unfinished appearance. The invention consists in incising the upper surface of the sheet or card to he embossed with the outline of the letters or figures to be raised; the incisions being made relatively to the dies, and of sufficient depth only to pass through the upper layer or surface of the sheet, so that, when the sheet or card is submitted to pressure between the dies, the stretching of the fibers will not break or tear the surfaces encompassed by the incisions. * * * The sheet to be embossed has a thin facing sheet, usually of ornamental paper. Before submitting the sheet of cardboard to pressure between the embossing dies, I outline with a sharp instrument on the facing sheet the figures or letters to be raised in embossing the sheet. By the use of the sharp instrument the facing sheet is cut through, so as to sever from the remainder of the sheet the portion of the sheet which will be raised in embossing. In this manner the stretching of the fibers at [the edge of the raised portions] when the sheet is-embossed does not break or tear the [raised] portions of the sheet, as by the old method, but leaves them flat and continuous, so that they form a perfectly smooth and continuous surface or finish for the raised faces of the letters or figures.”

The claim is:

“The method herein described of embossing paper and other plastic substances, which consists in incising the upper surface of the sheet to he embossed in outline of the figure to be raised; and then subjecting the sheet to pressure in embossing dies, and raising the material along the lines of incision, substantially as and for the purposes set forth.”

[520]*520# It is manifest that this patent does not cover any process for cutting letters or figures out of sheets of paper, the letters or figures being thereafter affixed to the surface of the card. On the contrary, the process of the patent is confined to cards on which the whole surface sheet had been applied before the process of embossing began. The very difficulty which the patentee sought to remedy arose because the surface sheet was already affixed to the card, wherefore the material was exposed to strains when letters or figures were embossed; the material forced outward by the bosses pulling away from the rest of the material rigidly fastened to the surface of the card, and thus producing cracks and tears. If the surface sheet were not attached to the card, no such difficulty would occur. Complainant’s patent therefore must be confined to a sheet or card already surfaced. It will be noted, also, that the process is twofold: first (“before submitting the * * * cardboard to pressure between the embossing dies”), the letters or figures are outlined with “a sharp instrument” (apparently not the embossing die) on the facing sheet, the facing sheet being cut through so as to sever the portion “which will be” raised in embossing from the rest of the sheet; second, the sheet to be embossed is “then” (i. e. after the incisions) subjected to pressure in the embossing dies. An alternative method is pointed out, whereby the letters are partly cut out of the rest of the surface sheet before such sheet is applied to the card. In both methods the letters or figures are cut in whole or in part, and the whole surface material, including so much as is embraced in the letters and figures, and also the rest of the surface sheet, is secured to the card before the embossing process begins. Or, in other words, the process is one whereby the surfacing or surface or upper layer of a card may be itself embossed, along with the card, without showing any evidences of distortion either on its flat or on its elevated surface.

Inasmuch as the claim is for a process of manufacture, infringement must be shown by satisfactory proof that defendant uses the process of the patent. Similarity or even identity of appearance in the product will not suffice. The evidence upon which the complainant relies to show infringement is as follows: The defendant admitted that a certain ornamental cardboard sign, known as the “Cartridge Sign,” was made by him. Complainant testified that his experience as a sign maker enabled him to say from mere inspection that it had been made by the methods described in his two patents. Cross-examination, however, deprives this testimony of any weight, since the witness admits, as to another similar sign, which he, in like manner, at first decided to be an infringement, that, when he was assured it was not made according to his process, he thought he must be mistaken. Finally he admits that the cartridge sign could have been made without the use of his process. John Schafer testified that since 1885 he has made for defendant both embossing and stamping dies for show cards, according to design, including embossing dies similar in design to the lettering of the cartridge sign; that he supposed the die was intended to be heated when in use, but that nothing was said about that; that all embossing dies have a cutting edge surrounding the outlines of the letter or figure; and [521]*521that he “thinks it likely” the embossing die used in the manufacture of the cartridge sign was used -hot, so as to melt the size, and cause letters or figures to adhere to the card. Lizzie Carroll testified that she worked in defendant’s factory. She seems to have had very little to do with anything outside of her own duties (putting on size), and evidently knew nothing about the cartridge sign. She said, however, that, in the making of embossed signs, they used to put the paper they used to stamp by on the cards, and then used to lake them, and put them into the press and emboss them; that there was a die in the press, heated by steam, and after the stamping was done in the press they “took them out, and pulled the papers off, and embossed them, and then would have the letters formed”; that she “thinks” they used paste on the paper (hey put in the press; that the die cut out the letters and applied them to the card at the same time; when the card was put in the press, there “was nothing only paper” between it and the die. This is not very clear, but it seems io indicate a process by which a letier or figure is embossed on the cardboard; and upon such letter or figure, as its surface layer, there is affixed a piece of paper which had been cut in the required shape out of a sheet of paper, which sheet, as a whole, never became a surface layer at all, within the terms of the patent. Jacob Klebausky, another employé of defendant, was either extremely stupid, or did not understand the English language sufficiently to answer intelligently. He was very positive that a certain sign, .known as the “Kubber-Shoe Sign,” was of defendant’s make, but gave absolutely no information as to how it was made. Julia Hart, another employé of defendant, called by complainant, testified: That the shew cards made by defendant were stamped in a press; paper and gold and silver leaf were put on the cards,- — “jusi pasted on.” Then, when the cards are sized ready for the leaf, they laid the leaf on, and then they were stamped. That the paper, which was of a different color from the color of the cardboard, was cut out by means of a chisel, and pasted on the cardboard by hand.

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Related

American Ball Co. v. Federal Cartridge Corporation
70 F.2d 579 (Eighth Circuit, 1934)
American Graphophone Co. v. Gimbel Bros.
234 F. 361 (S.D. New York, 1916)
The Anaces
93 F. 240 (Fourth Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 F. 519, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-housman-circtedny-1898.