Skelton v. Baldwin Tool Works

58 F.2d 221, 13 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4691
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1932
Docket3223
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 221 (Skelton v. Baldwin Tool Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skelton v. Baldwin Tool Works, 58 F.2d 221, 13 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4691 (4th Cir. 1932).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

The appeal in this case was taken from a decree of the District Court dismissing a bill of complaint which sought an injunction and an accounting for patent infringement. The patents in suit are United States patents to Skelton, No. 914,678 of March 9, 1909, and No. 1,240,503 of September IS, 1917. The defendant was estopped by a consent deeree in a prior suit from denying the validity of the patents; and the sole issue, therefore, was one of infringement. The validity of both patents has also been adjudicated by the Court of Appeals of the First Circuit in the unreported ease of Walter E. Skelton et al. v. Ames Shovel & Tool Co. (opinion rendered April 13, 1928 1 ), and the validity of the second patent by the District. Court of the United States for the Eastern District of New York in Skelton et al. v. Igoe Bros., 29 F.(2d) 837. In these cases, a number of the prior patents to be described later were considered.

The patents relate to wooden D handles for shovels, spades, and other tools. Such handles are of two general types, the old style or solid wooden D handles, and the so-called split D handles. Solid handles are cut out of a slab of wood; and the hand-grip is strengthened by a central transverse rivet extending through the grip and the sides of the handle. The handgrip runs crosswise of the grain of the wood, so that it is likely to split along the grain. The *222 cross rivet in the grip sometimes comes loose. The handle is somewhat heavy and clumsy; and it is wasteful in the making, because the block from which it is cut is of necessity as wide as the solid wood handle, although the stall or shank portion is much narrower.

Prior to the Skelton patents, a split D handle was devised to overcome the disadvantages of the old style. The upper end of the wooden handle was divided or split, and the bifurcated pieces or side arms were bent away from each other and forked. A handgrip was inserted between the ends of the prongs. The handgrip was strengthened as in the old style by a transverse connecting rivet which also extended through the side arm terminals. It was thus possible to have the grip run lengthwise of the grain of the wood. The handle was lighter, and there was a saving in the material consumed. Still, there were disadvantages. When' stress was applied to the handgrip in the use of the shovel, the stress was communicated to the side forks through the center rivet, and hence the handle was no stronger than the bearings at the ends of the rivet. The problem of a suitable connection of the handgrip with the upper ends of the side arms was introduced. The parts to be united are necessarily small because the hand-grip must fit the hand, and the side arms can only have half the cross section of the shank or stem. The handgrip must be fitted close to the extremities of the side arms, and they must not project above it. The whole must be capable of withstanding the rigors of severe use. .

Frederick Skelton, the patentee, had been engaged in Canada in manufacturing a shovel with a solid wood D handle. About 1907 he invented a split D handle, and secured United States patent No. 888,541, issued May 26, 1908, prior to the patents in suit. The construction consisted of a covering cap or ferrule made from a casting to be placed over the end of each prong of the fork. The caps were smaller at the top than at the bottom, and the prongs were tapered and driven into the caps with a wedged fit. The ends of the forks were not covered,' since ■ the caps were open at both ends. In order to provide for the attachment of the hand-grip, each cap was fitted on the inside with a ring integral with it, into which the corresponding end of the handgrip was placed. In this structure, the pressure of an inward thrust upon the handgrip was brought to bear upon the protecting caps through the rings around the ends of the grip. The strain on the cross rivet was thus relieved to a considerable extent, but, even if the fit was absolutely tight, the rivet would receive to some degree a thrust in either direction. This device, however, was never put upon the market, because it was not found to be entirely practicable. Weather conditions would cause the ends of the side arms to shrink and become loose from the caps, and when this happened, the rivet holes in the side arms would become enlarged and the prongs would work up and down, and sometimes protrude through the upper ends of the caps.

In order to overcome these defects, Skelton produced the device disclosed in his second United States patent No. 914,678, the first patent in suit, which has gone into extensive commercial use. In this construction the caps or ferrules are substantially cup shape in design, open at the bottom and closed at the top. The tapering ends of the branches butt against the closed tops of the caps and are enclosed therein. This fit is important because it relieves the cross rivet of the strain when an inward push is applied to the handgrip. Claim 2 of the first patent in suit, which is the only claim therein relied upon, illustrates this point. The claim is as follows:

“2. In a tool handle, the combination of a hand grip, a bifurcated shank providing arms, dosed cup shaped ferrules on the ends of said hand grip, adapted to receive and completely conceal the ends of the arms of said bifurcated shank, and a rivet passing through said ferrules, the bifurcated shank and hand grip.”

Although this construction had considerable practical success, it was still found to be somewhat deficient. The reinforcement of the first patent failed to relieve the cross rivet of strain in two respects. It did not eliminate the strain thereon of an outward pull on the handgrip, and it did not prevent a prying and twisting action of the handgrip, due to the fact that there was but a single rivet by which the grip was attached to the caps. Hence the caps would tend to turn, and eventually become loose. To offset these difficulties, Skelton designed the device which is the basis of United States patent No. 1,240,503, the second patent in suit. He added an extensipn of each cap integral therewith, which lies against the outer face of the fork arm projecting downwardly and is secured to the arm by a rivet at its lower end. This device strengthens the assembled parts against the twisting action of the *223 handgrip and against an outward pull, transferring it first from the grip to the cap and. then to the lower rivet. Thereby the long center transverse rivet in the grip is relieved from the greater part of the strain of an outward pull to which it is subjected in the construction of the first Skelton patent. Claim 1 of this patent, the only claim in suit, is as follows:

“1. A D-handle comprising a wooden stem having diverging arms and a grip-bar inserted therebetween, and a metallic reinforcement for each arm comprising a ring fitting over the end of the grip-bar, a cap-piece concealing the upper end of the arm and a reinforcing strip secured to the outer face of the arm.”

The Baldwin Tool Works, the defendant below in this suit, manufactured handles during the period 1920 to 1925 under the patents in suit under a license agreement of July 6, 1920. The plaintiff company gave to the defendant the benefit of its experience in the manufacture of the handle, and disclosed the methods employed in its factory.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 221, 13 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 97, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4691, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skelton-v-baldwin-tool-works-ca4-1932.