Smokador Mfg. Co. v. Tubular Products Co.

27 F.2d 948, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1404
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedJuly 18, 1928
DocketNo. 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 27 F.2d 948 (Smokador Mfg. Co. v. Tubular Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smokador Mfg. Co. v. Tubular Products Co., 27 F.2d 948, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1404 (D. Conn. 1928).

Opinion

THOMAS, District Judge.

This is the usual patent suit, brought by the plaintiff, a corporation organized under the laws of Delaware, against the defendant, an Ohio corporation, for infringement of letters patent No. 1,646,086, issued to Robert G. Fleming, assignor to plaintiff. The patent in suit issued October 18,1927, on an application filed December 22, 1926. Claims 1 to 6, inclusive, are in issue. In addition to the suit for patent infringement, plaintiff alleges infringement of a common-law trade-mark “Ashless Ashstand,” and unfair competition by defendant in the use of said trade-mark.

The patent in suit relates to ash stands and particularly to that type of stand that is supported upon the floor, with the ash tray elevated to a point within convenient reach of the user. The stand is so constructed that ashes, burnt matches, butts, and similar waste received by the tray will fall into a waste-receiving receptacle in the base of the stand, to be there accumulated and retained in a sanitary manner, without contaminating the surrounding air with objectionable odors.

Claim 4 may be taken as typie.al. It reads as follows:

“4. In a device of the character described, an ash-receiving tray having a waste dischargee outlet in the lower part thereof, a relatively long waste-conducting conduit depending therefrom, a one-piece skirt adjacent the lower end of said conduit, forming a relatively enlarged cavity for wholly receiving within the same a waste-receiving receptacle insertible through the lower end of said skirt, and means within said cavity for detachably holding a waste-receiving receptacle therein in position to receive waste falling through said conduit.”

The defendant admits infringement of each of the claims in suit, but denies that its device is either a slavish or Chinese copy of plaintiff’s article. The sole question, therefore, is whether the patent is valid, and the defendant relies upon invalidity as its sole defense.

Ash stands of the general type shown in the patent in suit have been known in the art for many years. Of the many prior art patents offered by the defendant to show the state of the art, three, at least, show ash stands generally similar to that described in the patent in suit. Patent No. 1,237,014, issued August 14, 1917, to Botty and Prior, patent No. 1,364,892, issued January 11, 1921, to Schulte and Weite, and patent No. 1,559,234, issued to Fleming, the patentee of the patent in suit, each show a stand comprising an ash tray having a waste discharge outlet in the lower part, a relatively long waste-conducting conduit depending therefrom, and a waste-receiving receptacle formed in the base of the stand. In each of these prior patents, and in the patent in suit as well, the ash-receiving tray and the waste-[950]*950conducting conduit are so similar as to be considered substantially identical. Differences, if any, in tbe devices, must reside in tbe construction of tbe waste-receiving receptacle, tbe means employed in attaching it to the waste-conducting conduit, and the method of supporting the ash tray as a unit.

Botty and Prior show as a waste-receiving receptacle a removable drawer located in the base of the stand. Their stand is supported by a metal skirt having a heavy bottom plate, in order to give stability. Schulte and White show as a waste-receiving receptacle a chamber integral with the base of their stand. The waste is removed by opening a shutter in the base of the stand, which is supported upon four feet, so that the base of the stand may be sufficiently elevated to permit the shutter to properly function. In Fleming’s earlier device, the waste-receiving receptacle is the base of the stand, which is removably attached to the conduit. This base is weighted to give stability; the weighted base forming the support for the stand as a unit.

In the patent in suit, the stand is supported by a metal skirt at the bottom and attached to the waste-conducting conduit at or near its lower end. This skirt, in addition to its supporting function, acts as protection for the waste-receiving receptacle, which is removably attached to the lower end of the conduit, and which may be easily removed through the opening in the skirt and then cleaned.

The advantages claimed by the patentee for his new construction are reduction of the number of parts necessary to a complete stand and ease in removing and attaching the waste-receiving receptacle. An obvious advantage arising from the adoption of the protecting skirt support is that a glass receptacle may be employed. The patentee suggests the use of a standard glass fruit jar, which may be readily replaced, if broken. If a glass receptacle is used, the necessity for removal of the waste may be determined upon inspection, without the removal of the receptacle. Glass also has some considerable advantage over the use of metal in the ease with which it may be cleaned. None of the claims of the patent in suit is limited to a glass receptacle, nor, in fact, to a receptacle of any material, and this limitation should not be read into the claims, except where such narrow interpretation is necessary to distinguish the claims from the prior art. International Banding Machine Co. v. American Bander Co. (C. C. A.) 9 F.(2d) 606.

Defendant has offered no single prior patent as an anticipation. The defense of invalidity is based upon the contention that, in view of the prior art, the Fleming disclosure amounts to nothing more than a mere mechanical improvement, void of that spark of genius found in true inventions.

In addition to the - patents to Botty, Schulte, and Fleming, referred to supra, defendant has introduced a number of patents from remote arts, particularly the lamp and oil stove arts, to show that skirt supports were old generally in many arts, and that the skirt, in addition to its supporting function, protected inclosed vessels. I do not consider these patents particularly relevant to the question here to be determined, primarily because both the Botty patent and the patent to Gardner, No. 185,439, issued December 19, 1876, for a cuspidor, in a closely analogous art, show skirts. Botty’s skirt is used for support, and Gardner’s for protection.

Defendant has also introduced a few patents showing types of ash-receiving receptacles used in connection with tables, armchairs, and automobile dashboards. While these patents show various types of removably attached waste-receiving receptacles, they are not, in my opinion, as close to the disclosure of the patent in suit as the patents to Botty, Schulte, Gardner, and Fleming, No. 1,559,-234. I am satisfied that the question of validity must be determined primarily upon the advance made by the patent in suit over the devices of the four patents just mentioned.

During the pendency of the application for the patent in suit, the claims as originally filed were rejected, and the Examiner cited, among others, the patents to Botty, Schulte, and Fleming, No. 1,559,234. After written argument, the rejection was reconsidered and withdrawn, and the claims in suit were passed to issue as originally filed, with the exception of claim 1, to which was added a relatively unimportant limitation. It thus appears that the most relevant prior art was considered by the Patent Office and disregarded. Under these circumstances, the presumption of validity arising from the grant of the patent is considerably strengthened. MacClemmy v. Gilbert Corset Co. (D. C.) 221 F. 73.

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Bluebook (online)
27 F.2d 948, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smokador-mfg-co-v-tubular-products-co-ctd-1928.