Smith-Blair, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc.

201 F. Supp. 458, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 305, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5990
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedNovember 20, 1961
DocketCiv. A. No. 38462
StatusPublished

This text of 201 F. Supp. 458 (Smith-Blair, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith-Blair, Inc. v. Dresser Industries, Inc., 201 F. Supp. 458, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 305, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5990 (N.D. Cal. 1961).

Opinion

WOLLENBERG, District Judge.

This cause of action having come on for trial before the court after a pretrial, witnesses having been heard on behalf of both the plaintiff and the defendant during seven days of trial, documentary and physical exhibits having been introduced by both the plaintiff and said defendant and received in evidence, briefs having been filed by both parties, and the court being advised in the premises, the court hereby makes the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. The plaintiff, Smith-Blair, Inc., is a California corporation having a principal place of business in the City of South San Francisco, County of San Mateo, State of California.

2. The defendant, Dresser Industries, Inc., is a Delaware corporation having a principal place of business in the City of Dallas, State of Texas, and with a place of business in the County of San Mateo, City of South San Francisco, State of California; and with a duly designated agent in the State of California for service of process and on whom service was made.

[459]*4593. The patent in suit, United States Letters Patent to Hoke, No. 2,897,568, was issued on August 4, 1959 to the defendant, Dresser Industries, Inc. for “CONDUIT CLAMP,” and said defendant is the owner of all right, title and interest in said patent.

4. The defendant, Dresser Industries, Inc., on June 30,1959 (Exhibit B to Complaint) notified plaintiff that its accused device would infringe the Hoke patent when the patent issued on August 4, 1959. This action for a Declaratory Judgment that the patent was invalid and not infringed was begun the day the patent issued and was refiled on August 19, 1959.

5. Jurisdiction of this court is founded upon the existence of a question arising under the laws of the United States, to wit: the Patent Laws thereof, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 1338(a); 1400(b); and 2201.

6. The Hoke patent in suit No. 2,-897,568 relates to a CONDUIT CLAMP for supporting sealing gaskets, in one form or another, on the surface of a pipe to confine the contents of the pipe within the pipe. It was issued August 4, 1959 on an application filed August 20, 1957. Samples of defendant’s clamps made like the patent in suit are in evidence as defendant’s Exhibit C and plaintiff’s Exhibits 9 and 10.

7. The accused device of plaintiff is a conduit clamp for a like purpose. It is in evidence as plaintiff’s Exhibits 1, 2, 3, 95A, B and C, and as defendant’s Exhibit E.

8. The pipe clamp art is an old art. A pipe clamp is made up of a split band (sometimes called a split sleeve) and some form of a clamp to pull the ends of the split band towards each other to tighten the band around the pipe. The earliest form of clamp used since at least 1933 is made up of a pair of plain lugs, each with a hole to receive one or more bolts to draw the lugs toward each other. One lug is connected to one end of the split band and the other lug to the other end of the band, by any one of several expedients to be described later.

9. An operating characteristic of these prior art plain lug clamps is that as the bolt is tightened the lugs tend to tilt or roll and to bend the bolt. This is because the split band is secured to and pulls on the lug inside of where the force of the bolt is acting on the lug, thus producing a movement tending to rock the lugs toward each other.

10. The Hoke patent in suit had for its object to prevent the rocking of the clamp lugs and it describes lugs having arms or fingers which project from one lug across to the other lug where a bearing surface is provided. Thus as the clamp lugs are drawn together by the bolt, the arms guide the lugs and prevent the lugs from rocking.

11. Hoke admitted on cross-examination that mechanically all he did was to add the sliding arm or finger to the plain lug of the prior art and that this was the essence of his alleged invention. Newell, defendant’s expert, admitted on cross-examination that sliding fingers were old in the art of clamps and specifically, were shown to be old in a 1939 clamp to Lindsay.

12. The record is uncontradicted that every element or part combined in the Hoke patent claims in suit was old in the clamp art.

13. The 1939 Lindsay sliding finger clamp is shown in British Patent No. 512,406. Lindsay calls attention in his specification to the advantage of adding the fingers or “axial projections” to the clamp lugs, as he calls them, as lending support to the bolt and “to resist backward or outward bending thereof when the nut is being tightened up to make the joint.” The patent refers to the two sliding finger lugs and the bolt as “bolt adaptors,” but the witnesses on both sides were in full agreement that regardless of names used, the Lindsay clamp lugs and the Hoke clamp lugs were part for part and function for function identical one to the other. This was reviewed with great care in Exhibits 62 and 64 in the cross-examination of defendant’s expert Newell and no rebuttal evidence was offered. The Patent Office Examiner fail[460]*460ed to cite the Lindsay patent during prosecution of the Hoke patent.

14. The same clamp the Hoke patent described as supposedly novel with Hoke is found in the Lindsay 1939 patent,- — the clamp lugs with the sliding fingers, the clamping projection on the lugs to transmit the clamping force to whatever is being clamped, and the bolt to apply the clamping force. The Lindsay patent does not show the clamping projection on the lugs engaging the flanged ends -of a split band, but it does show them engaging the flanged ends of two pieces of pipe where they are functioning to compress a gasket between the two flanges. Defendant’s expert Newell admitted that flanged pipe is used in the waterworks industry thereby placing the Lindsay disclosure directly in the waterworks art.

15. Lindsay British Patent No. 512,-406 is not a paper patent. The Henry Lindsay Ltd. company of England has widely advertised in the U. S. A. the Lindsay clamp where it is known as the F series of clamps. Actual samples of these clamps obtained from the Henry Lindsay company are in evidence. Also in evidence are several large catalogs of the Lindsay company, one exhibit being the tenth edition. Also in evidence are several four-page brochures of the Lindsay company devoted exclusively to the Lindsay sliding finger F series of clamp.

16. The accused sliding finger pipe clamp bears a close kinship to the Lindsay sliding finger clamp as it is directly descended from the Lindsay clamp, which has been in the public domain since 1939.

17. The Smith-Blair company was founded in 1941 by Telford Smith and his wife and remains a small family-owned enterprise with Telford Smith the directing head. Telford Smith’s first contact with the pipe clamp business was in 1933 when he began an employment with his uncle, R. H. Baker in Los Angeles, which employment lasted until 1939, when Telford Smith came to the Bay Area to start the plaintiff company. From 1933 to date, the products with which Telford Smith has concerned himself have been various products for the waterworks industry, including the prior art pipe clamp described in Finding 8.

18. In late 1952 or early 1953, Tel-ford Smith received at his factory in South San Francisco a Henry Lindsay Ltd. brochure which advertised for sale the F series of sliding finger clamp. This clamp immediately appealed to Tel-ford Smith as one he could apply to draw together a split band around a pipe. This original brochure is in evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
201 F. Supp. 458, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 305, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-blair-inc-v-dresser-industries-inc-cand-1961.