Standard Computing Scale Co. v. Computing Scale Co.

126 F. 639, 61 C.C.A. 541, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 20, 1903
DocketNo. 1,211
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 126 F. 639 (Standard Computing Scale Co. v. Computing Scale Co.) 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
Standard Computing Scale Co. v. Computing Scale Co., 126 F. 639, 61 C.C.A. 541, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4353 (6th Cir. 1903).

Opinion

SEVERENS, Circuit Judge,

having given the foregoing outline of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant is charged with the infringement of the following patents: A patent to J. A. Pitrat, No. 385,005, issued June 26, 1888; a patent to Ozias, No. 316,348, issued December 20, 1898; a patent to Sanderson & Ozias, No. 451,075, issued April 28, 1891; a patent to Culmer, No. 486,663, issued November 23, 1892; and a patent' to Mellinger, No. 11,738, reissued May 2, 1899. All of these patents were for improvements in “weighing and price scales,” more commonly called “computing scales,” the special purpose of which is to ascertain the whole price of the thing bought or sold, without any computation by the person using it; the whole price being designated by the scale itself when manipulated. The utility of these scales consists in the certainty and readiness by which the total price is ascertained. The essential principle on which they rest is the variation of the leverage on the beam- given to the load which is the subject of the operation; the extent of the leverage being governed by the price per pound or other unit, suitable graduations being marked on the short arm of the beam, and corresponding graduations on the opposite arm of the beam beyond the pivot.

The first patent granted for scales of this kind shown in the record was one to- Tilly and- Warren Flint, issued March 20, 1849, a patent to which we shall have occasion to refer hereafter. Several patents were subsequently granted for various improvements in organization, but depending upon the same general principle. Among these, three patents had been issued to Pitrat prior to the one .here in question, the first bearing date March 31, 1885. To- some of these we shall also refer later on. In the early patent to the Flints the thing to be weighed or estimated was suspended on a pan by a connecting rod running up to the short arm of the lever or beam, and there pivoted to the lower end of the loop or knife-edged saddle, the lower edge of the upper portion of the loop resting in the notches on the lever which marked its graduation. Eater on the scheme was transferred to platform scales in which the platform and its supports took the place of the pan. In one form of platform computing scales (the one to which the appellee’s patents relate) the connecting rod (in-[641]*641eluding the head-block between the platform and the price-indicating member of the beam did not move laterally — indeed, pains were taken to prevent such motion — but the beam was moved through the head-block to reach the proper place on that arm to designate the price per unit. This was the adjustment.

The other organization, to which class the appellant’s scale belongs, retains the beam, the pivot, and their supports rigidly in place; and the connecting rod (or the parts which perform its office) and the head-block are shifted laterally to reach the proper place for the head-block on the price-beam. The details of construction of the two forms vary to suit the differing requirements. Recognizing these differences and the obvious difference in their mode of operation, we were led to remark upon them in a former suit between the same parties (118 Fed. 965, 55 C. C. A. 459), where the question was whether one form would be likely to be taken for the other by the public; and the marked mechanical difference was one of the grounds upon which we held that such mistake was not likely.

The patent having the most extensive scope of those in suit is the Pitrat patent, No. 385,005. It was the fourth of those issued to him, and was granted for “certain new and useful improvements in weighing and price scales” which he claimed to have invented, having the following objects: To' take off from the platform levers the load of the beams and weights required in this kind of scale, to adapt the platform to use either with or without a scoop, and to provide means for holding the connecting rod in a fixed position while the beam is shifted through it, and simultaneously effecting such shifting of the beam. Only the first and last of these objects are here involved. Figure 2, here shown, is a front view of the scale.

[642]*642Figure xo shows the platform levers and the counterbalancing lever and poise designed to take off the weight of the platform levers and other parts employed in the operation of the scale.

In Fig. 2 there is seen a sub-base, h, resting on two pillars. The connecting rod passes from the platform levers up through the left hand pillar to the head-block resting on the lower beam. The base; i, which carries the supports of the beam, is moved on the sub-base either to right or left by means of a pinion set on a shaft extending back from the thumb-piece, U, and meshing with cogs set lengthwise of the bottom, of the base. By turning the thumb-piece, U, the beami is carried through the head-block at the upper end of the connecting-rod until the head-block reaches the proper distance on the lower arm of the beam from the pivot, o, to indicate the price per unit. Simultaneously with this movement of the thumb-piece and shaft, the latter is pushed back against a spring until it engages the lower arm of a lever, V, which, turning back on its pivots, v' v', engages the head-block by a pin at its upper end which enters the slot, g2, in the head-block. By this means the head-block, and of course the connecting rod, are held in rigid relatidn to the sub-base while the beam is adjusted through the former to the right or left.

In Fig! io, b is the counterbalancing lever and C is the poise. This lever is pivotally connected at e with the platform levers and the lower end of the connecting rod so as to neutralize the weight of those parts and the parts above directly associated therewith. The combination of this counterbalancing lever with the other enumerated parts constitutes the substance of the first claim, which reads as follows :

“The combination, with the platform levers and the price-beam, of the head-block, and the connecting rod interposed between and connecting the platform levers directly with the head-block of the price-beam, substantially as and for the purpose described.”

The patentee, after mentioning the platform levers, a and a', which are ordinary platform levers, says:

“In addition to the said levers (and unlike any of the other platform scales), I provide an extra lever, b, carrying a weight, C, at the one end, while the opposite end engages pivotally with the rod, e, which connects the lower lev[643]*643ers, aa', with the left branch of price-beam, E, above. The object of this weighted, lever, b, is to act as a counterpoise to levers a a', the platform A', the removable lid, y, the connecting rod, e, and the cross-head or block, g.”

And we think the weighted lever, b, was intended to be included in this claim as one of the “platform levers.”

The appellant’s scale has means for counterbalancing similar parts of its structure. The appellee, in order to maintain the charge of infringement, claims for its patent that, though not a pioneer, it is one of a broad and fundamental character, having limitations wide enough to include generally any means operating to effect a similar purpose. At least, it is necessary to attribute to its patent a scope substantially as broad as this in order to establish the charge of infringement of this patent. But, although we do not deny to it the merit of invention, it is impossible to recognize in it any such scope as is claimed for it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 F. 639, 61 C.C.A. 541, 1903 U.S. App. LEXIS 4353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-computing-scale-co-v-computing-scale-co-ca6-1903.