Slip Scarf Co. v. Church, Webb & Close, Inc.

232 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1626
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 17, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 232 F. 161 (Slip Scarf Co. v. Church, Webb & Close, Inc.) 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. Church, Webb & Close, Inc., 232 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1626 (S.D.N.Y. 1916).

Opinion

LEARNED HAND, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). I shall first consider the alleged prior use of C. Stern & Mayer, and then that of James R. Keiser, Incorporated. These in my judgment dispose of the patent.

On February 7, 1911, Ackerman, a salesman for C. Stem & Mayer, took an order for scarfs from Gaston Heilbroner amounting in price to $95.06, the order for which in Ackerman’s hand is in evidence and cannot be questioned. There were three separate forms of scarf specified in this order, “345,” “like shape,” and “320.” Nothing turns upon forms “345” and “320,” and as they were apparently stock. forms they may be omitted. The phrase “like shape” reasonably means made after some form then first submitted, and Ackerman says that Heilbroner gave him a form which he was to copy for that part of the order. This testimony fits in so closely with the written order as to be free from any reasonable doubt. Seven dozen “like shape” scarfs were ordered to be made up of .13 separate patterns of silk, indicated upon the order by 13 separate numbers. Each of these numbers indicates a separate silk pattern, and is contained in a swatch-book comprising the period of the order, February, 1911. The practice of tire manufacturer was to cut pieces off the various patterns of silk when he first received them, and to give each pattern a number, and paste the piece along with its number in the swatch-book. The appropriate entries from this swatch-book corresponding to the numbers of the silks contained in Ackerman’s order “like shape” were put in evidence without objection.

At the trial there was produced from the custody of C. Stern & Mayer a scarf made up of the same silk as was found in the swatch-book under No. 1146, which was one of the 13 patterns used to fill the [163]*163“like shape” part of the order of February 7, 1911. To the back of this scarf was affixed a label bearing the words, “Gaston Heilbroner, 302 Third Avenue, New York Smart Haberdasher.” The scarf itself is made in such a way as to anticipate the patent in suit. So far the proof is of such a kind as admits of no doubt whatever. The missing link is the proof that the scarf in evidence is made in accordance with the form submitted by Heilbroner and denoted by “like shape.” To supply this link the defendants produce the testimony of Stemsky, their manager of manufacturing, of Heilbroner, and of Ackerman. It may be granted to the plaintiff for argument that even the combined testimony of these three men, of whom Heilbroner, at least, must be held to be absolutely impartial, would not be enough to supply the degree of proof necessary in such cases. Is there anything else? Heilbroner swears that he had only one shop while in business, and that it was at 302 Third avenue, New York. This shop he gave up in June, 1911, and went into the employ of Weber & Heil-brouer, where he now is. It is true that we have no independent documentary evidence of the time when he gave up this shop, and if anything turned upon its being in June, 1911, the case might fail. We cannot suppose, however, that a man would be wrong about the season and year in which such a thing happened in his life, at least within the past five years. We may take it as established beyond a reasonable doubt that Heilbroner closed his shop during the summer of 1911.

How, then, are we to account for the existence of the scarf in evidence, Exhibit O, with the label, “Gaston Heilbroner,” etc. Obviously, taken alone, the scarf proves nothing; it could have been made up at any time. Yet every act must have a motive, and what possible motive could there be in making up such a scarf with such a label after Heilbroner had closed his shop? We have as the only alternatives either to suppose that the scarf, Exhibit O, was in fact one of those made for Heilbroner from pattern 1146, which we know to have been received at about the time of the order, or to suppose that it was made up after May 31, 1912. It may perhaps be admitted that it might have been made up afterwards, were it not for the label, securely sewed to the back, indicating that it was made for Heilbroner at 302 Third avenue. I lay aside the possibility of deliberate fabrication, which the plaintiff does not assert, and which is not to be assumed in the absence of proof. No other possibility occurs to me which would account for the presence of the label, if the scarf was made up after Heilbroner went out of business. The label is a separate piece of fabric sewed on with some purpose, and it seems to me most unreasonable that it should have been put onto a scarf made up for anybody else. If it was intended only as a sample to be kept in the factory for reference, why should any label at all be put on? Or if any label was put on, why should Heilbroner’s be selected a year after he had stopped business? The rule of proof does not require the exclusion of every conceivable whimsy of doubt which capricious ingenuity may invent. Short of some such mental exercise, I can see no explanation for this scarf, made as it is, except that it was one of [164]*164those made under Ackerman’s order and retained as a sample of the new form, “like shape,” which Ackerman says Heilbroner gave him and in following which the silk pattern found in the exhibit was with others to be used. The recollections of Stemsky, Ackerman, and Heil-broner, therefore, appear to be corroborated in such a way that nothing short of deliberate fabrication will account for the facts. Therefore I find that the prior use of C. Stern & Mayer has been proved.

As to the J. Keiser & Co. use the facts are as follows: Ruston, the manager of manufacturing, produced three scarfs, J1, J2, and J3, which had come from the possession of the manufacturer, and which Rusten recognized as of. the make of the company put upon the market in 1915 and 1916. He had got them from the foreman, whom he had told to search for them in the sample box in which the manufacturer kept samples of all new shapes as they were put out upon the market. Sarah Steele, the forewoman, also, recognized the scarfs as of the manufacture of the company, and she placed them by virtue of their silk at the same period. She had told the foreman where to get them.

The defendant insists that this testimony of Ruston and Steele has not been sufficiently corroborated by contemporaneous documentary evidence to put it beyond reasonable doubt. The link is the fact that the silks of which J1, J2, and J8 are made were issued once, and once only, all before January 1, 1907. This is proved beyond the least possible doubt as follows: Nellie Lees was in charge of a card index system for keeping track of silks. The factory, when it issued a new silk,.gave it a number as it came to Nellie Lees, which she put upon a new card in her index, cutting off a sufficient piece for identification and pasting it on the same card. When samples of the silk were issued to salesmen, Nellie Lees checked with the date against their names on the back of the card, and checked again in red when they returned the samples. If the silk was reported out, she noted it also upon the card. The cards show that the latest of these silks, L1, was issued late in December, 1906, and was reported out on January 29, 1907. If any second issue of the same silk was made, it .would be again checked upon the card.

The plaintiff says that, if the silk was duplicated at a later period, it would receive a new card and a new number. It is mistaken in so understanding-Nellie Lees’ testimony. She never made out a new card unless the factory sent her a new number with the silk.

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Bluebook (online)
232 F. 161, 1916 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slip-scarf-co-v-church-webb-close-inc-nysd-1916.