Smith & Griggs Manufacturing Co. v. Sprague

123 U.S. 249, 8 S. Ct. 122, 31 L. Ed. 141, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2167
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 14, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by194 cases

This text of 123 U.S. 249 (Smith & Griggs Manufacturing Co. v. Sprague) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith & Griggs Manufacturing Co. v. Sprague, 123 U.S. 249, 8 S. Ct. 122, 31 L. Ed. 141, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2167 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Matthews

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill in equity for an injunction and account based upon the alleged infringement by the appellant of letters-patent No. 228,136, dated May 25, 1880, and letters-patent No. 231,199, dated August 17, 1880, for improvements in machines for making buckle-levers, issued to Leonard A. Sprague, the appellee. The defences relied on are, 1st, a denial of the infringement alleged in respect to the fifth claim of patent No. 228,136 and the first and fourth claims of patent No. 231,199; -2d, as to all the other claims of both, that a machine embodying them was in public use for more than two years prior to the application for the patents. The application for patent No. 228, 136 was filed on November 11, 1879, while that for patent No. 231,199 was filed December 2, 1878, the two being divisions of an application based on the same model. The machines described in the two patents, it is admitted, are substantially the same in construction and operation, both patents being for different parts and combinations of a single machine. For the purposes of this case, therefore, the date of the application is to bo taken as of December 2, 1878, being the earlier of the two.

The machine is for making levers of buckles used almost exclusively on “arctic” overshoes. These levers are made from a single piece of brass, with slots through them near each end to fasten them to the strap of a shoe, and are bent by formers and swaged by dies so that they have what is termed a lip or bead, which bears upon the holding strap, two grooves within which lies the bar or pivot of the buckle, and two beads at the upper edge for a finish and to prevent the strap from cutting when it is fast through the slots and bears upon them when in use. There is no claim in these patents for the buckle-lever itself as a new article of manufacture, for which, *251 however, Sprague, the appellee, had a prior patent dated May-27, 1862. The levers are made from a strip of metal by a succession of operations in the patented machine. The first step is to produce the slotted blank; the next, to bend it by doubling it upon itself into a U-sliape; the next, to produce the central double bead forming the grooves; and the next, to produce the double beads between the slot and the edge of the lever. The machine is organized to feed a strip of sheet brass under punches which punch the slots in the blank, and then cut it from the strip; to feed this blank over a matrix where it is bent into IJ-fo.rm; to feed it on to a mandrel, on which, by a pair of dies, it is partially formed, and then along that mandrel to a second pair of dies, whore its form is completed. The machine is automatic, and while these successive steps take place in the complete manufacture of a single lever, all the various steps in the process, with respect to successive levers, take place simultaneously. So that as each lever is completely and finally formed on the mandrel it is pushed from the mandrel by another to take its place in that stage of formation.

The 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, and 6th claims of patent No. 228, 136, and the 2d, 3d, and 5th claims of patent No. 231,199, are those in respect to which the alleged infringement is admitted, and as to which the defence of two years’ prior public use is urged. These claims are as follows:

Of patent No. 228,136-—

“ 1. In combination with the mandrel M, provided at its lower edge with the rib m and with the short ribs vi? m2, the dies N N' O O, whereby, after the partially formed lover has been acted upon by dies N N7, the rib m serves as a support or guide over ivhicli said lever may be moved to a proper position relative to dies O O, substantially as set forth.
“ 2. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination of the mandrel M, the dies N N7, advanced on planes substantially .at right angles to the planes of the partially formed buckle-lever, and the tongue n2, attached to the die N, substantially as set forth.
“ 3. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, *252 with the mandrel, the punch which punches blanks from a continuous sheet of metal, and two or more dies which successively form the metal into the desired shape, of a carrier which moves a blank from the punches to the forming-dies and advances the partially formed levers against the preceding lever, substantially as set forth.
“ 4. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, with the matrix L and folder l2, of the dies N N', the mandrel arranged to receive the blank from the matrix, and the carrier, substantially as set forth.”
“ 6. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, with the folder, i2, of the pusher-pin oz, attached to and moving with the punch-stock C, and a returning-spring, which lifts the folder, substantially as set forth.”

Of patent No. 231,199 —

2. In a machine for making buclde-levers, the combination, with the die which punches blanks from a continuous sheet of metal, of two or more dies which successively form the metal into the desired shape, and a carrier which moves a blank from the punching-die to the forming-dies and advances the partially formed lever against the preceding lever, substantially as set forth.
3. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, with the mandrel M, provided with the rib m, of the dies N N' and a stop adapted to engage with the lower end of the lever and determine the length of the bit v. substantially as described.”
“ 5. The herein-described method of manufacturing buckle-levers — that is to say, by bending the blank into U-shape, then forming the bit u and seats u2 us, and subsequently forming the grooves u*, substantially as herein set forth.”

The claims in respect to which infringement is denied are as follows

Of patent No. 228,136 —

5. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, with the mandrel M and dies N N', of the springs N2 N2, to press the dies forward into proper position relative to the mandrel, substantially as set forth.”

*253 Of patent No. 231,199 —

“ 1. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination of the mandrel M, provided with the ribs to to3, of the dies N N' O O, and a support, which presses the part u of the lever against the rib to, substantially as set forth.”
“4. In a machine for making buckle-levers, the combination, with the mandrel M, having rib to, of the dies N N' and stops adapted to engage both ends of the partially formed lever, to regulate its position relative to the mandrel and dies, substantially as set forth.”

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Bluebook (online)
123 U.S. 249, 8 S. Ct. 122, 31 L. Ed. 141, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-griggs-manufacturing-co-v-sprague-scotus-1887.