Smyth Mfg. Co. v. Sheridan

149 F. 208, 79 C.C.A. 166, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1906
DocketNo. 145
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 149 F. 208 (Smyth Mfg. Co. v. Sheridan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smyth Mfg. Co. v. Sheridan, 149 F. 208, 79 C.C.A. 166, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461 (2d Cir. 1906).

Opinions

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). The machine, of the patent is a complicated one, comprising many parts, and exhibit-: ing various combinations. The patentee sought to cover whatever fea[210]*210tures' they conceived to be novel by 16 separate claims, some of which deal with quite minute details of operative parts. Two claims only (3 and 15) are relied upon, and we are therefore concerned only with the particular combinations which they refer to. Whether invention may or may not lie in the combinations set forth in other claims need not be discussed; it is not charged that any of those other claims are infringed. The' specification is especially illuminative as to the main feature of the patent, and as to what the patentee understood to be its distinctive novelty:

“Machines have heretofore been made for sewing books in which the folded sheet or signature is laid upon an arm. or bar and presented to the sewing mechanism; hut such sheets vary in size according to the size of the'book to be produced, and, in addition to this, different characters of hooks of the same size require different kinds of sewing, and difficulty has heretofore been experienced in introducing the sewing at the desired point in' the back of the book. One of the principal features of the present invention relates to grouping the sewing devices and mounting the same upon adjustable supports, so that they can be placed at any desired point along the hack of the signature, and the groups of sewing devices can be associated at any distances apart, so that the sewing may be more or less closely together, according to the character of hook that is being sewed, and these sewing devices can be placed at the proper distance from the top and bottom of the signature. In carrying out our invention we group together a semicircular needle and the devices for supporting and moving the sanie, a loop-tightening mechanism, and presser-: plate, which come above the signature and sheet-holding mechanism, and we group together the perforator and the hoolc-pointed. needles that act within the fold of the signature, the perforators forming the holes through which the circular needle passes, and the hook-pointed needles drawing down the loops of thread through which the circular needle passes, and these groups of instrumentalities' are so supported that they can be moved, or adjusted to- any desired points, and the one is easily brought into the proper position to the other, and the actuating devices for the respective groups of instrumentalities do not have to be changed. Hence the machine can be adjusted by the party using the saiqe so ¿s to bring tbe sewing to whatever place or places may bo desired upon the folded signature, and we group together the spools and tension devices, so that they can he brought into proper position in relation to the groups of sewing devices as required from time to time.”

The specification then proceeds elaborately to set forth, in 13 columns, all the details of the “present invention.”

From the above excerpt it is manifest that the principal feature, or one of the principal features, is the making of the parts which do the’ sewing adjustable, so that upon.a single machine books of varying, length may be sewed. It is this feature which is characteristic of the two claims declared upon, which read as follows:

“(3) The’ combination, in a book-se'wiug machine, of the sheet-holder bar and two or more groups of sewing devices adjustable transversely of the machine,' one' part of each group of sewing devices being upon the sheet-holder bar and adjustable thereon, and' the other portion of the group being above the sheet-holder bar, which holds the signature that is being sewed, and also adjustable upon a stationary transverse bar on the machine, substantially as set forth.”
“(15) The combination, in a sewing machine,’ of sewing mechanism adjustable transversely of the machine, a spool-holder adjustable transversely of the machine, and a reel frame and reel for a tape or cord, also -adjustable transversely of the machine, whereby the instrumentalities for perfecting tlje book-sewing can be thrown in-the proper positions in relation to the signa-’ tures to be.sewed,- substantially as, set forth,”

[211]*211Referring to claim 3, the complainant’s expert says:

“The elements of this claim are expressed in terms which do not, and evidently were not intended to, confine the claim to the particular construction shown and described. It is evident, for instance, that the terms of the claim do not refer to the particular form of sewing devices illustrated in the patent, nor do they refer to the particular agroupment of the sewing devices shown in the drawings and specifically described in the specification.”

This conclusion of the expert is manifestly correct, and the fifteenth claim is as broad, if not broader, undertaking to cover any “sewing mechanism,” any “spool-holder,” and any “reel frame and reel,” which are adjustable, so that they can be thrown into the proper positions in relation to the signatures to be sewed.

The .specific construction of the group elements in defendants’ machine concededly differs from that of the patent, and the charge of infringement cannot be sustained unless these two claims, broadly phrased as they are, can be held valid. The specifications, the language of the claims, the concurring testimony of the experts, the laudations of counsel’s brief, all unite in showing that the distinguishing feature of the patented machine is its adjustability. By it, as counsel asserts:

“A practical way was devised of consl meting a book-sewing machine so that the position of the lines of stitches could he varied according to the character of tlie books to be sewn, tints enabling the placing of the independent lines of stitches across the backs of the books where they would be most effective and exercise the greatest holding power.”

Apparently the prior art showed some adjustable needles (Hall’s patent, 105,329), but only in a machine which did not make independent rows of stitches. But the citation of the Hall patent is unimportant. Mere adjustability of parts does not constitute invention. Peters v. Hanson, 129 U. S. 541, 9 Sup. Ct. 393, 32 L. Ed. 742; Doig v. Morgan, 122 Fed. 460, 59 C. C. A. 616; Sipp Electric & Machine Co. v. Atwood-Morrison Co. (C. C. A.) 142 Fed. 149. If we had the particular combination of complainant’s groups of sewing devices, spool-holders, and reels -with “one part of each group of sewing devices,” as its expert says, “arranged on a particular part of the 'machine, to wit, the sheet-holder bar, * * * and another part of the group upon another part of the machine, to wit, the stationary transverse bar,” but all rigidly affixed to their respective mountings, it would require no more than the ordinary ingenuity of the skilled mechanic to cut slots and arrange washers, set screws, etc., so as to give to each part of each group capacity for lateral adjustment.

In order to escape this result, two other features are referred to as giving validity to the combination of the third and fifteenth claims. It is pointed out that the separate groups of sewing devices are so arranged as to enable each group to form an independent line of stitches across the back. We concur with the finding of the Circuit Court that:

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Bluebook (online)
149 F. 208, 79 C.C.A. 166, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smyth-mfg-co-v-sheridan-ca2-1906.