Standard Computing Scale Co. v. Lincoln Scale Corp.

57 F.2d 334, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 246, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2029
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 9, 1931
DocketNo. 2468
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 57 F.2d 334 (Standard Computing Scale Co. v. Lincoln Scale Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania 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. Lincoln Scale Corp., 57 F.2d 334, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 246, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2029 (W.D. Pa. 1931).

Opinion

MeVTCAK., District Judge.

In the bill it is alleged that plaintiff is the owner of patent 1,Í85,675 and that defendant has infringed the same after notice. The prayer is for injunctive relief and an accounting. In the answer defendant alleges invalidity and noninfringement of said patent. The following findings of fact and conclusions of law are made:

Findings of Fact.

1. Plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under "the laws of the state of Michigan, and having its principal office at Detroit, Mich. It is engaged extensively in the manufacture of scales.

2. Defendant is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Delaware, having a regular and established place of business in the city of Latrobe, West-moreland county, Pa. It is engaged in th8 [335]*335manufacture of scales under patent 1,646,151 owned by it.

3. January 15,1916, Louis Jaenichen filed in the Patent Office of the United States an application for a patent for improvement of scales which he subsequently assigned to the Standard Computing Scale Company, Limited, a limited partnership. June 6,1916, Letters Patent on said application were granted to the Standard Computing Seale Company, Limited, being No. 1,185,675, and being' the patent in suit,

4. The Standard Computing Scale Company, Limited, was reorganized as a corporation under the name of the Standard Computing Seale Company. The corporation has taken over all of the assets of the partnership including the patent in suit.

5. There is no competent evidence of any assignment in writing, of the patent in .suit, from the Standard Computing Seale Company, Limited, to the Standard Computing Company.

6. Plaintiff manufactured between January 35, 3916, and January 15,1919', approximately thirty scales under the patent in suit. On the later date it ceased t-he manufacture thereof for the reason it was commercially unprofitable. Since said date it has not manufactured any of said scales.

7. In the specification of the patent in suit, it is stated: “This invention relates to computing scales in which the relative lengths of the lever arms are varied by means of thermostats, and its object is to provide a movable connection between the load-resisting springs and the main lever of the scale which connection shall involve a minimum amount of friction.”

8. In the specification it is further stated: “This invention consists, in combination of a load receiving lever, a load resisting member connected thereto, a thermostat for shifting one member relative to the other and novel connecting mechanism between the lever and the load resisting member provided with knife edge pivots whereby the friction between said members is kept down to a minimum.”

9. In the specification it is further stated: “In all spring scales, the springs become slightly weaker with increasing temperatures, and henee a given load on the load receiver will cause slightly greater expansion of the springs at high temperatures than at low, usually resulting in ‘short weight.’ On the other hand, if the scale is sealed at high temperature, the scale will weigh ‘long during colder weather. The relative lengths of the two arms of the main scale lever can be so changed as to counteract this action of the springs, but devices for such purpose must operate with a minimum of friction at all times. I propose! to provide a thermostat to vary the effective length of the arm of the main lever to which the spring is attached, the load arm remaining constant.”

10. In the specification it is further stated: “Any other desired form of thermostat, lever, and platform support may be employed as the parts thus far described form no part of the present invention.”

11. The claims upon which plaintiff relies are claims 1 and 2, which read:

“1. In a weighing, scale, the combination of a main lever, a spring to resist the movement of the lever under a load, a thermostat mounted on said lever, a member pivotally connected to said lever and to said spring, and means connected to said thermostat and said spring for varying the effective length of the lover.
“2. In a weighing scale, the combination of a main lever, a spring to resist the movement of the lever under load, a link to which the spring is connected, a thermostat mounted on the lever, a rod connecting the thermostat to said bar whereby the thermostat may move the end of the spring toward and away from the fulcrum of the lever, and a connecting member extending between and pivotally engaging the lever and said link at the end of the spring whereby stresses may be transmitted from the lever to the spring with substantially no friction.”

12. Claim 2 is too uncertain, ambiguous, and indefinite to be understood by those skilled in the art involved.

13. Every element of claims 1 and 2 of the patent in suit is shown in Hopkinson patent No. 770,807, and Iiapgood patents Nos. 804,947 and 903,083.

14. The file wrapper of the patent in suit discloses that the Examiner did not consider the Hopkinson and Hapgood patents.

15. It was old prior to the alleged invention of Jaenichen to connect the main lever and the nose iron of spring weighing scales having thermostats thereon by means of ball bearings, which ball bearings functioned to space the parts without friction.

16. It was old prior to the alleged invention of Jaenichen to provide a substantially frictionless connection between the nose iron and the main lever of a spring weighing scale.

17. Ball bearing connections are the equivalent of the knife-edge structure of the patent.

[336]*33618. The use of knife-edge pivots fox’ obtaining substantially frictionless connections between elements was old in the scale industry prior to the alleged invention of Jaeniehen.

19. The various devices which have been used for the purpose of cutting down friction, as between the nose iron and the inain lever, differ from one another merely in degree, and the question of friction as between the parts is merely a question of degx'ee.

20. The Dayton Seale Company prior to 1914 manufactured and sold a satisfactory spring weighing scale containing a thermostat similar to the thermostat of defendant’s structure.

21. Any ordinary mechanic working in the scale industry would know that in order to overcome any additional friction in the movement of the nose iron it would merely be necessary to increase the power of the thermostat. i

22. No new result was obtained by Jaeni-chen in connecting the main lever of the scale with the nose iron by means of a knife-edged member.

23. Jaeniehen merely brought old devices into juxtaposition and allowed each to work out its own effect and operate in its own way without the production of something novel. He substituted old and well-known knife-edge pivots for the ball bearings of the prior art, which knife-edge pivots are the equivalents of ball bearings. He used known equivalents for some of the elements of former structures to reduce the amount of frietioix between the nose iron and the main lever.

24. The conneetioix between the main lever and the nose iron of defendant’s structure is not a knife-edge connection.

25.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.2d 334, 11 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 246, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-computing-scale-co-v-lincoln-scale-corp-pawd-1931.