Standard Box Co. v. Winchester Carton Corp.

180 N.E.2d 315, 343 Mass. 572, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 523, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 848
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 180 N.E.2d 315 (Standard Box Co. v. Winchester Carton Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Box Co. v. Winchester Carton Corp., 180 N.E.2d 315, 343 Mass. 572, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 523, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 848 (Mass. 1962).

Opinion

Whittemobe, J.

The plaintiff (Standard) in this bill in equity for an injunction and damages contends that the making and sale by the defendant (Winchester) of a folding cardboard disposable food and drink serving tray, called Tote-M, violates an agreement of August 20,1957, between the parties which settled a patent infringement suit. Alternatively, Standard contends that Winchester owes it royalties on its sales of Tote-M trays. The judge in the Superior Court found for the defendant on both issues and the final decree dismissed the bill. The evidence is reported.

The Agbeemeht.

In the agreement of August 20, 1957, Winchester conceded the validity of Standard’s patent and acknowledged that a tray then made by it, the Jiffy tray, infringed at least claims 11, 12, and 14. Standard, in the agreement, gave Winchester a license to manufacture, use and vend “any tray which falls within, and the description of which would read upon, the said claims No. 11,12 and 14.” Paragraph 2 (c) provided: “In no event shall serving trays . . . manufactured by Winchester be identical in design to the Standard tray or embody the design features and description set forth in claims 1 through 10 inclusive and claim 13 of said patent.”

The case turns on paragraph 5 which, with a related clause, reads: “Whereas . . . the articles . . . manufactured [by Standard] under said patent . . . [are] known *574 as . . . ‘Aw To Mat’tray[s] . . . [or] ‘Standard’tray[s]; and "Whereas Winchester manufactures a serving tray substantially similar to the ‘Aw To Mat’ box, which it markets under the name ‘Jiffy’ . . . which tray, together with such other trays as may be manufactured by Winchester under the grant of license herein made, and trays referred to in paragraph 5 hereinafter, are sometimes hereinafter collectively referred to as the ‘Winchester Tray’ or ‘Winchester Trays’ .... 5. Eeference has been made hereinabove to the inclusion of the ‘Jiffy Tray’ within the definition of the ‘Winchester Tray.’ Without in any way limiting the meaning of the term ‘Winchester Tray’ as herein defined, it is of course to be understood that any tray which is substantially similar in structure, design and function, or otherwise, to the ‘Jiffy’ tray shall be deemed to be within the terms of this agreement even if, without in any way limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Winchester tray is improved to any degree in structure, design, etc. over that presently manufactured, it being the intention hereof that trays of any description which are reasonably close in structure, design and function which are manufactured from and after the date hereof shall be covered by the within agreement and the royalty payments contained herein.” Paragraph 3 (b) calls for royalties on “Winchester trays (as that term is defined herein).”

In determining the scope and applicability of the license and paragraph 5 we notice first the patent, in general terms, then the three trays, Aw To Mat, Jiffy and Tote-M, and then the licensed and the reserved claims.

Standard’s Patent.

Standard’s patent (Goldberg Ee. 24,233. October 30, 1956) shows use of the common device of grooving or scoring folds in the short sides, or ends, of an open cardboard box and collapsing the box so that the ends, folded on the grooves, lie flat under the sides of the box. Such a collapsed box may be reerected by lifting each end of the box. In commercial practice the cardboard is cut, scored, folded and pasted, sold flat, and erected for the first time when *575 used. The elaboration shown in Standard’s patent (see plate 1 herewith) puts into the erected box, lengthwise, a framework, with orifices in its top panel to hold paper cups or other containers of liquid, which is so attached to the box that the erection of the box by pressure on its sides also sets up the framework. The service tray, ready for use, has an open space, the length of the tray, for sandwiches and the like, and, also the length of the tray, the framework to hold cups. This framework is constructed from an extension of one of the sides of the box, which, as cut, if not folded, would rise much higher than the other three sides, but is in fact folded three times so as to bring the extra material down into the box. The first fold is at the level of the top of the other side and the ends; the second fold is so placed as to become the front edge of the panel; and the third fold is so placed as to be the bottom of the front or partition wall of the framework. This leaves a flap which is glued to the bottom of the box. A box constructed precisely as just stated could not be collapsed, for the ends of the front supporting or partition wall of the framework would bar the inward down-folding of the ends of the box. Standard’s patent overcomes this difficulty (and permits the box to be folded, or erected) by cutting away the lower corners of the front supporting wall. The full width of the front supporting wall at the top is retained to form shoulders which hold the box in the open position against unintentional pressures. The shoulders are, nevertheless, narrow enough, so that, being of flexible cardboard, the rising and descending ends of the box may be forced past them. The patent states that the “important advantages are the noncollapsible nature of the tray, the self-locking corners, the stiffness and rigidity, the adaptability to beverage receptacles of various size and its susceptibility to increasing its food capacity . . .

Appropriate cuts and grooves in the panel of the Standard tray define each of several cup-holding orifices and permit the down-folding of flaps within the erected framework by the pressure of a cup thereon.

*576

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Mirra v. Mirra
34 Mass. L. Rptr. 41 (Massachusetts Superior Court, Suffolk County, 2017)
Winchester Carton Corp. v. Standard Box Co.
294 F. Supp. 1207 (D. Massachusetts, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 N.E.2d 315, 343 Mass. 572, 132 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 523, 1962 Mass. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-box-co-v-winchester-carton-corp-mass-1962.