Shaw Stocking Co. v. Weierman

154 F. 67, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5145
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 6, 1907
DocketNo. 10
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 F. 67 (Shaw Stocking Co. v. Weierman) 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
Shaw Stocking Co. v. Weierman, 154 F. 67, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5145 (circtedpa 1907).

Opinion

ARCHBALD, District Judge.1

The patent in suit is for a stocking of a certain designated structure, produced, as it is said, by a novel method of knitting; the claim which is relied on being as follows:

“2. A stocking having the top or upper part of its foot composed of one yarn or set of yarns and the bottom or sole part of the foot composed of another and distinct yarn or set of yarns, the said upper and sole parts being united in the form of a tube by the reciprocal interloopment of the loops of the opposed edges of said upper and sole at the sides of the foot, substantially as described.”

The usual defenses are made that the device has been anticipated and that it is not infringed. It is also suggested that there is nothing patentably inventive in it, but apparently not with the same confidence.

Among the things to be desired in a stocking is that it shall be seamless, so as to avoid a ridge or wale to press upon and chafe the foot. This is easy to arrange by hand, but no machine has yet been devised to do so; the best that can be accomplished being to reduce the seam to a minimum. Machine-made stockings, therefore, are either knit in a flat web, the edges of which are afterwards sewed or crocheted together their full length; or in a tube with pouches or pockets at proper distances for heels and toes, the tube being cut into lengths and sewed in various ways; or, sometimes, as in the “English cut” stocking, there is a straight tube, without more, reliance being had for the heels and toes on the way it is cut and sewed. The advantage of a flat web is that it can be shaped to conform to the leg or foot, and the finest grade of imported German or French foot stock[68]*68ings are so made. But the seam is harsh to the feet, and they aré also expensive to make on account of the hand labor involved, so that stockings from tubes are the most general.

Another desirable feature is that the sole of the stocking shall be undyed. At first it was merely the heel and toe that were made this way, being so knit by our grandmothers. But of late years the idea has been extended to the entire bottom, and hence the so-called split-foot effect, in which the top or upper part of the foot is of one color or character, and the sole of another; the latter being also sometimes reinforced or made heavier. This style came into vogue somewhere about 1884, and has grown in favor until the demand is almost beyond the supply. To many people it may not matter; but to some, with sensitive feet, a full-dved stocking is almost unendurable. The .wear on the bottom of the foot being also- the greatest, an unbleached sole is not only nonirritant or sanitary, but more durable. It so happens, also, that those with tender feet, who want an undyed sole, for the same reason are disturbed by a seam, and hence it has been found desirable to combine the two features. This has been done by the device in suit, making possible, as it is claimed, what was not possible before, a practically seamless, split-foot stocking. It is accomplished by having the top of the foot knit of one yarn or set of yarns, and the bottom of another, each being separate and distinct, and carried along, independently of the other, on its own set of needles, the edges of the two webs at the same time being interlooped and fastened together, as they are knit, by intermediate suture or seaming needles, arranged for the purpose, completing the tube. It is this special structural character, and the possibilities growing out of it, as it is claimed, that constitute the invention.

The first question is as to its novelty. As already stated, the seamless idea was not new, being suggested by the same inventor in an earlier patent (1867), and long since adopted and developed in various ways. Neither was the split foot, whether confined to an undyed sole, as understood in the trade, or including everything in which the sole and upper are different. But the same cannot be said of the two together, which combination, whatever the previous possibilities, is not to be directly found in any of the references cited. The German or French foot stocking, for instance, while as early as 1886 showing a split-foot structure — consisting of a fiat web, made up of three strips, the center being black or colored and the two sides white, with the edges knit together by sutures — had still to be sewed the same as ever down the back of the leg and along the middle of the sole, making it far from seamless. Neither is there anything of the kind in the Bickford (1872) patent. By the method which is there described the leg of the stocking is knit in the usual manner until the lower part of tire calf is reached, from which point it proceeds as a flat web down to the ankle, when it is again knit as a tube until it comes to the heel and foot, where one half of the needles, more or less, are thrown out, and the other half, carrying the front or upper part of the foot, knit on, back and forth, until the top of the foot is complete. There is then a narrowing and a widening for the toe, after which the sole is knit, in the same way and with the same needles as the upper, ex[69]*69cept that the selvage loops of the latter are picked up, with each reciprocation, and knit or interlocked with the web which is being formed, so as to join top and bottom together. Just before the heel is reached, there is a slight widening to make, a gore and get a better fit about the ankle, following which there is the usual narrowing and widening for the heel, which finishes the operation. An edge at the top of the heel, corresponding with a similar edge at the unfinished end of the back half of the leg, having been left, open in the process, the two are brought together by hand, and the stocking is complete. As must be reasonably evident, saving that both are seamless, there is nothing in common in this, either in structure or method, with the complainants’ stocking. It is true that, by changing the yarn at the toe, the sole may be given a different cast from the top of the foot, an undyed yarn being introduced where that is the effect to be produced, or a heavier yarn where a reinforced sole is wanted. And there are thus apparently much the same possibilities in it as in that of the complainants’ stocking, which is the point, of course, for which it is cited. But the difficulty is that it is only as we supply and import something from without that this can be said of it, whatever of the kind there is there being latent and undeveloped. Bickford plainly had nothing in mind beyond the production of a form of so-called seamless stocking, particular stress being laid upon the method of uniting the selvage edges of the top with the sole, as knit; and, taking it as it stands, that is all that can be made out of it. This, as he says, he effects “without any separate binding yarn or any seaming device other than the needles”; “the entire seamed goods, including its seam,” as he is careful to add, being made “from a single unbroken yarn.” There is no hint in this of any change of yarns at any point, or of two different and distinct yarns or sets of yarns, one for the top of the foot and the other for the bottom, according to the possibilities now claimed for it, corresponding with the patent. And, on the contrary, this is distinctly negatived; the asserted virtue of the process consisting in the use of a single thread of yarn for top and bottom, knit on the same set of needles, throughout.

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Related

Kilbourn Knitting Mach. Co. v. Liveright & Davidson
159 F. 494 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1908)
Weierman v. Shaw Stocking Co.
157 F. 928 (Third Circuit, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
154 F. 67, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 5145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-stocking-co-v-weierman-circtedpa-1907.