Shawmut Engineering Co. v. Crompton & Knowles Loom Works

16 F.2d 685, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3621
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 1927
DocketNo. 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F.2d 685 (Shawmut Engineering Co. v. Crompton & Knowles Loom Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shawmut Engineering Co. v. Crompton & Knowles Loom Works, 16 F.2d 685, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3621 (1st Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is a bill in equity for infringement of United States letters patent No. 1,329,303, to Charles Lea, applied for December 9,1913, and issued January 27, 1920, for an improvement in tube frames used in weaving Axminster carpets, and No. 1,469,185, to E. E. Hathaway, applied for May 24, 1922, and issued September 25, 1923, for an improvement in suspension means for tube frames. Both patents are [686]*686owned by tbe plaintiff. Claims 13 and 14 of the first and claims 3 and 4 of the second patent are in issue. The claims read as follows:

“13. A supporting frame for a tuft spool and its co-operating tuft tubes, embracing a longitudinal tubular bar, spool-supporting brackets rigidly secured thereto, said spool-supporting brackets each being provided with a pair of offset retaining lugs projecting side by side from the arm and spaced apart to fit inside the open end. of the tubular bar, and means for securing said lugs firmly to the bar when so inserted, substantially as described.

“14. A supporting frame for a tuft spool and its tuft tubes, comprising a longitudinal hollow bar, and a pair of angularly disposed spool-supporting arms provided with laterally projecting holding members adapted to fit inside the ends of the tubular bar, and retaining screws passed transversely through the end portions of the bar into holding engagement with said supporting members, substantially as described.”

“3. In a tube frame for weaving, the combination with a longitudinal carrier bar, of a spool supporting suspension hanger' comprising a bracket rigidly secured to the end of the carrier bar to project vertically therefrom, and a coaeting chain-engaging hook arm mounted on said bracket to swing outwardly therefrom under spring tension to releasably engage a carrier chain, said bracket being provided with a recess arranged to receive the opposed upwardly extending portion of the hook arm when the latter is pressed inwardly by the transfer mechanism to release the hook-arm from engagement with said chain, substantially as described.

“4. In a tube frame for weaving, the combination of a vertical hanger rigidly secured to the end of the carrier bar, a co-operating chain-engaging hook arm mounted to lie outside of the vertical hanger when engaged with the chain and to be pressed inwardly, to lie partly in a longitudinal recess in the hanger when disengaged from the chain by transfer mechanism, substantially as described.”

As to the first patent the defendant concedes infringement, if the plaintiff's patent is valid, but among its defenses asserts that it is invalid for the reasons (1) that it is not new, being anticipated; (2) that it does not involve invention; and (3) that it is invalid, because the device of the patent was in public use or on sale more than two years prior to the filing of the application for the patent.

The defenses to the second patent are, among others, noninfringement, noninvention, and invalidity, due to the alleged invention-having been in public use or on sale more than two years prior to the filing of the application for the patent.

An Axminster carpet, in the weaving of which tube frames are used, comprises longitudinal warp threads,* transverse weft threads, and short yam tufts held between the interwoven warp and weft threads. The tube frame, to which these patents relate, is a device for inserting successive rolls of yam tufts between the warp threads to form the pile of the carpet. It consists chiefly of a carrier bar, somewhat longer than the width of the carpet being woven, on which is secured a roll of parallel tubular guides or hollow fingers, one for each yam tuft, which project an inch or more beyond the carrier bar, the projecting ends of which are narrowed to allow them to pass between the spaced warp threads in the loom to insert the ends of the yarn tufts which they contain. The yam tufts having been so inserted, one or two weft, threads are shot across behind the tufts, which (after being beaten up against the fell) hold the yarn tufts in place and permit them to he-severed by knives. The tube frame is then returned to the chains, when the process is repeated with another tube frame. The tube frames are supplied with yam wound on long spools mounted lengthwise on the carrier bar.

In weaving a carpet of one color without pattern, a single tube frame can be used until its yam supply is exhausted. But pattern effects require the use of successive spools-bearing yams of different colors. To permit this provisión is made for bringing the tube frames bearing the different colored spools of yam to a position where they may be taken one after another and carried into the loom, to insert a roll of yam tufts in the fabric being woven. As a great number of tube frames-may be required, they are suspended,lin proper sequence, from a pair of parallel chains,, which are moved step by step to transfer position, where they are gripped by transfer-clutches, which release the hook latches of a given frame from the chains, carry the frame-to a position to deliver its roll of tufts, and, after severance, return the frame to the chains. This operation is then repeated with another frame, and so on.

In the winter of 1909-10 Mr. Lea produced the device embodied in the first patent in suit. The problem was to provide a construction whereby the brackets would he securely attached to the ends.of the carrier bar, so as-not to work loose under the strains to which they are subjected in service. To accomplish this he devised brackets, the vertical arms of which at the attaching ends were provided with lateral lugs to be inserted in the ends of. [687]*687a tubular metallic carrier bar, aud held in position by machine screws passing through holes in the walls of the bar and the lugs of the brackets.

In the District Court the bill was dismissed on the ground that neither patent involved invention.

We agree with the District Court that the device of the first patent does not involve invention. We think the means disclosed in the patent for attaching the ends of the brackets to the ends of the carrier bar were only such as a mechanic skilled in the art would use, and involved no conception worthy of being dignified as invention; that, the carrier bar used being a tubular one, the obvious way of attaching the brackets to it was to provide the lower ends of the brackets with a lug, or lugs, that would fit the hole of the tubular bar and, having the lugs so shaped, to insert them into the ends of the bar and hold them there by ,a screw or bolt. It involved nothing more than telescoping one piece of iron into another and securing it there by bolt or screw.

As to the second patent, the specification states that “since it is necessary that the individual tuft tubes shall pass between the appropriate warp threads when delivering their tuft ends, it is important that there should be no bending, breakage or displacement of the parts in order that the tube may' be accurately gaged for proper positioning.”

After describing the tongue of the bracket which passes through the link of the chain to hold the tube frame in position on the chain and referring to the suspension hook co-operating therewith for suspending the tube frame on the chain, the patentee says: “Instead of the usual flexible spring hook arm commonly employed in the art, I provide a vertical hook arm 20 of sufficient rigidity or stiffness to resist bending or distortion .under service strains, and to secure the desired outward and inward movement the hook is fulcrumed at its lower end on a fuleral pin or axis

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F.2d 685, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawmut-engineering-co-v-crompton-knowles-loom-works-ca1-1927.