Slip Scarf Co. v. Blanchard & Price

205 F. 921, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1612
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 10, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 205 F. 921 (Slip Scarf Co. v. Blanchard & Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slip Scarf Co. v. Blanchard & Price, 205 F. 921, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1612 (S.D.N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

MAYER, District Judge.

The neckwear art is narrow, and the improvements necessarily slight and simple, hence the difficulty of determining whether invention was shown in the “slip scarf” patent here under consideration.

. For some years the two-fold turn-down collar has been in vogue, and in connection therewith the four-in-hand tie has been much worn. After a tie made of rough or antifriction material has been plated between the folds of the collar, and the collar is in position around the wearer’s neck, it is something of a task to adjust the tie without injuring it, or, where the seam is caught by the rear collar button, without tearing it. In the ordinary manufacture of neckwear it has been the practice to fold the tie, and have the folds come together and then be secured by a row of stitching, which generally comes near or -in the center of the neckband on the inner side, and thus is likely to engage the collar button.

Keys, a well-known manufacturer familiar with the art and appreciative of the commercial possibilities of any improvement therein, sought to overcome these difficulties. In his application for letters patent filed January 7, 1909, he stated:

“I Rave found that by the application, on the inside of the neckband, of a strip of very smooth fabric, which in its relation to the material from which the necktie is made is a relatively antifriction material, it is possible to overcome many of these difficulties; and in conjunction with this I have found that it is preferable to cut away a portion of the fabric of the inner part of the neckband which is covered by this strip of relatively antifriction material, thereby making the tie thinner at that point than it would otherwise be.”

Fetters were issued on June 1, 1909; the plaintiff corporation having, meanwhile, become the assignee. It is contended that the defendant corporation has infringed four out of the seven claims as follows:

“1. In a necktie, the combination of a neckband and two tying ends, a portion of the inner band, only of the necktie cut away, and a strip of anti-friction fabric substituted therefor:
“2. In a necktie, the combination of a neckband and two tying ends, a portion of the inner face only of the neckband consisting of a strip of substantially antifriction fabric and independent interlinings in the tying ends.
“3. In a necktie, the combination of two tying ends and a neckband, a portion of the inner side only of the neckband being made of a relatively anti-friction fabric and an interlining in said necktie, substantially thinner in a portion of the neckband than in the tying ends.”
“7. In a necktie formed of a two-ply elongated fabric, a portion of the inner ply of the necktie cut away, and a strip of fabric substituted therefor.”

[923]*923A study of the prior art requires a close analysis of the claims. On January 11, 1909, while the Keys application was pending, the Patent Office made the following requirement:

“The following claims arc found (o bo patentable and are suggested to applicant for the purpose of interference. Applicant is rociuired to make such claims on or before January 23, 1909, under rule 96. " M *
“5. A necktie formed of an elongated two-ply fabric and a filling piece confined between the plies in which both the two-ply fabric and the tilling piece extend substantially throughout the length of the tie, and comprising relatively thick and soft end sections and a relatively thin and smooth intermediate section.
“6. A necktie formed of a two-ply covering fabric extending continuously throughout the length of the tie, and a filling piece confined between the plies in which an intermediate portion of the tie is substantially thinner and smoother than the end portions.
“7. A necktie comprising a cover and filling (interlining) in which the cover extends continuously throughout the length of the tie, and in which an intermediate portion of the tie is substantially thinner than the end portion.”

Promptly, on January 22, 1909, the applicant disclaimed the subject-matter set forth in these claims 5, 6, and 7. Pie thus recognized as part of the prior art a neckwear construction in which the filling piece (or interlining) in its intermediate section or portion (1) was relatively thin and smooch; or (2) was substantially thinner and smoother than the end portions; or (3) was substantially thinner than the end portions. It also appears that when Keys originally filed his application he made the following broad claim;

"7. in a necktie, the combination of a neckband and two tying ends, a portion of the inner face only of the neckband being nfade of a relatively anti-friction fabric of different material than the necktie proper.”

This claim was rejected on February 5, 1909, upon the patent to Faverty No. 238,406. That was a patent for cementing the label to the inner face of the neckband. In Faverty’s specification he points out that the then usual method of marking the titles on the bauds of neckscarfs was to form the title by printing directly upon the “silk or satin face” of the band. While the claims do not describe the fabric of the label, it is manifest that the label was of some smooth material, and that this was the ground of rejection of Keys’ original claim 7.

No ground for rejection was stated, but that was not necessary under the rule (66) of the Patent Office, where the pertinence of the reference is obvious as here. It is clear, then, that the use of antifriction material was old, and there are several exhibits in evidence (such as Complainant’s 8, Defendant’s O, N, and Q) with this feature, and I .suppose it may even be regarded as matter of- common knowledge that a smooth material will slip or move easily.

In addition to the effect of the disclaimer, reference to the Mitchell patent (No. 904,710) shows that there was no invention in employing independent interlinings in the tying ends. While Mitcheu s neckband was elastic and flexible, and the Keys’ neckband is inelastic and presumably strong, the idea of a thinner neckband and of independent interlining s must have been plainly disclosed to one skilled-in the art.

There is no mystery in an interlining. It is old in the art, and is [924]*924merely a lining ordinarily concealed between other plies of the structure.

It should be noted that there is not any cutting away feature in either of these claims, and with this interpretation the complainant’s expert agrees. (C. R. 280.)

From the knowledge available when Keys made his application, it follows that claims 2 and 3 are invalid for want of invention. Claim 1, however, does show patentable novelty. The question is close, but two considerations resolve the doubt in favor of complainant:

First. Notwithstanding several attempts, no one seems to have thought of cutting away a portion of the inner band of the necktie and substituting a strip of antifriction material therefor. Some of the previous patents show either a mutilation of the scarf or a device for the neckband which seems almost grotesque to the eye of a wearer of neckties, even though he may not be an expert. Powers in 1904 (No. 768,299), Pierce in 1906 (No. 833,083), Hoople in 1907 (No. 857,402), Reynolds in 1908_ (No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 F. 921, 1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slip-scarf-co-v-blanchard-price-nysd-1913.