Southern Textile MacHinery Co. v. United Hosiery Mills Corp.

33 F.2d 862, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 183, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 29, 1929
Docket5122
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 F.2d 862 (Southern Textile MacHinery Co. v. United Hosiery Mills Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Textile MacHinery Co. v. United Hosiery Mills Corp., 33 F.2d 862, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 183, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

HICKENLOOPER, Circuit Judge.

The bill for infringement of complainant’s patent No.-1,050,433, issued January 14,1913, upon application of Edwin O. Davis, for a machine for uniting knit fabrics, commonly called a looping machine, was dismissed in the District Court, on the ground that the invention which was the subject of claim 13 in suit was fully disclosed in a patent, No. 1,050,432, issued to the same patentee on the same date, January 14, 1913, but bearing an earlier filing date.

On February 22, 1909, Davis filed his original application which disclosed the invention in suit and claimed it both in the language of the claim in suit and in more comprehensive claims. Having some difficulties in securing allowance of the broader claims, Davis filed a second application May 14, 1910, likewise disclosing the invention, containing the claim in suit, which had been transferred from the first to the second application, and also containing the broader claims. On June 2, 1910, the claims of the present invention were withdrawn from the earlier application. Both patents issued January 14, 1913. The applications were thus copending, and the effect of the procedure taken in the Patent Office was that of a division. It is now practically conceded by the defendant that the mere fact that the invention was disclosed in the earlier application, from which claims therefor were canceled during copendency of the second application, will not of itself invalidate the patent issued upon the second application containing the claims canceled from the first. This is quite in accord with the almost uniform adjudications in this and other circuits. Toledo Plate & Window Glass Co. v. Kawneer Mfg. Co., 237 F. 364, 367 (C. C. A. 6); Higgin Mfg. Co. v. Watson, 263 F. 378, 385 (C. C. A. 6); Traitel Marble Co. v. Hungerford Brass & Copper Co., 22 F.(2d) 259 (C. C. A. 2); Ide v. Trorlicht, etc., Carpet Co., 115 F. 137, 145 (C. C. A. 8); Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Gibbs, 27 F.(2d) 466 (C. C. A. 4). The-apparently conflicting decision in National Electric Ticket Register Co. v. Automatic Ticket Register Corp., 15 F.(2d) 257 (C. C. A. 2), is in substance repudiated by the same court in the Traitel Marble Co. Case, supra, subsequently followed in Gibbs v. Triumph Trap Co. (C. C. A.) 26 F.(2d) 312, and Claude Neon Lights, Inc., v. Machlett & Son (C. C. A.) 27 F.(2d) 707.

Conceding that the bill was not properly dismissed on the ground taken by the District Court, defendant still insists that the dismissal was proper both for the reason that the record discloses anticipation and upon the ground of estoppel arising from the Patent Office proceedings in the cancellation of broader claims said to be of identical scope with that of the claim in suit if the latter be construed to read upon the defendant’s machine.

Upon the subject of anticipation we are convinced that the combination shown, the means used, and the results accomplished were nowhere fully shown in the prior art. In the manufacture of knit fabrics, such as hosiery, it is necessary to unite the edges after the completion of the knitting operation. Loops are left along the edges to be so united and one loop from each of such edges is ordinarily placed upon an impaling pin of the revolving dial of a looping machine in which a reciprocating thread needle passes beneath the loops, the stitch is completed by the loop-er hook, and the two edges to be united are thus joined by a seam or chain of loose stitches of sufficient elasticity and similitude to the knit fabric to provide the desired soft seam. Prior to Davis, it was generally considered necessary in looping machines that the dial be stationary while the thread needle was passing beneath the loops upon the impaling pins and during the formation of each stitch. All dials in general use were therefore of the intermittently revolving type driven by pawl and ratehet and in which upon the completion of each stitch the dial was moved one step forward in its course. These machines *864 were accordingly designated as the “jumping” type.

Two patents only are seriously relied upon as anticipations. In the patent to Bridges, No. 300,760, June 24,1894, the patentee was specifically interested in speeding the operation of the looping machine with the intermittently revolving dial. He accordingly provided his machine with easily removable dials of impaling pins, so that several operators might be engaged in placing the loops upon the impaling pins of separate dials while one was upon the looping machine. The patentee also conceived the idea that the machine might be operated at greater speed if the needle were passed beneath the loops and withdrawn while the dial was in motion father than during the intervals between revolving motion. Bridges, however, considered it still essential that there be a pause in the motion of the dial at the time the looper hook passed adjacent the needle and made the stitch. By the ingenious use of a single cam and an arm bearing thereon Bridges gave to the pawl actuating the pin ring, and to the needle, the same lateral movement whereby the ring and the needle moved laterally together while the needle was making its forward or downward stroke, paused at or near the end of such stroke for the looper hook to operate, and resumed the joint or common lateral motion until the needle was withdrawn from the loops. Both needle and pawl then moved laterally in the opposite direction to the next pin and ratchet tooth, the dial remaining stationary, to repeat the operation. In the patent to Bridges we thus find the conception of moving the needle laterally during part of the stitch-forming operation and in registry with the impaling pins, but the machine was of the intermittently revolving type, the stitch was completed while dial and thread needle paused in their lateral movement, and no problem of resuming registry with a moving dial arose because the dial remained stationary until needle and ratchet pawl returned to the initial starting position for the next forward movement. Bridges did not' apparently have the conception of a continuously revolving pin ring, nor did he realize the advantages arising therefrom.

The greater speed in operation arising from a continuously and uniformly revolving pin ring was recognized by the inventor Arnold in patent No. 543,795, issued July 30, 1895. Arnold, however, was an inventor of sewing machines, having devised such a machine for producing “back” or retrograde stitches during the continuous movement of •the work, in his patent No. 378,645. See also patents to Singer, No. 13,661, 1855; to Marble, No. 568,032, 1896; and to Sturtevant, No. 581,496, 1897. In his machine for sewing looped fabrics (patent No. 543,795), Arnold devised a sewing machine in which no attempt was made to place the loops in registry upon the impaling pins, but an automatic' feeding device was used whereby the edges to be united were fed by impaling pins during an ordinary sewing operation as distinguished from a looping operation. The rough edges were then trimmed off by a trimming mechanism provided.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F.2d 862, 2 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 183, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-textile-machinery-co-v-united-hosiery-mills-corp-ca6-1929.