Standard Duplicating Machines Co. v. American Business Machines Corp.

174 F.2d 101, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 239, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4540
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1949
DocketNo. 4376
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 174 F.2d 101 (Standard Duplicating Machines Co. v. American Business Machines Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Standard Duplicating Machines Co. v. American Business Machines Corp., 174 F.2d 101, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 239, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4540 (1st Cir. 1949).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant, a Massachusetts corporation, brought the instant action in the court below for infringement of claims 19, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 32, 34, and 40 of United States Reissue Patent No. 19,951 for Apparatus for Duplicating Imprinted Matter which had been issued to it on April 28, 1936, sub. nom. Standard Mailing Machines Company, as the assignee of Frederick W. Storck. Seasonably after the complaint was filed the defendant-appellee filed a motion to dismiss, actually a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56(b), (c) Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S. C.A. on the ground that the patent in suit was “invalid on its face as to all its claims by reason of plaintiff’s failure to file a disclaimer of claims 7, 9, 12 and 15” in accordance with 35 U.S.C.A. §§ 65, 71, since those claims were not “definitely distinguishable” from claim 8 which the plaintiff had disclaimed on January 31, 1939, following previous litigation in this circuit. The court below after hearing on the motion granted it on the ground that claim 8 was not definitely distinguishable from claims 7, 9, and 12, although it was from claim 15, and entered a final judgment dismissing the complaint. The plaintiff thereupon took this appeal.

The Storck Reissue Patent, supra, covers a wet process duplicating machine — a type of machine well known before Storck. What these machines were and how they operated, and Storck’s contribution to the [102]*102art to which they appertain, are fully described in the opinions of this court and of the court below in previous litigation between the plaintiff, under its former name, Standard Mailing Machines Company, and Ditto, Inc., to which we shall later refer in some detail.

For present purposes it will suffice to say that machines of this type as their name implies are used to make copies of matter written or drawn on a master sheet, and use moisture in the process. The matter to be duplicated is first written, usually on a typewriter, on the master sheet, which, while- it is being written upon, is backed with a sheet of special carbon paper having soluble ink placed with its inked surface in contact with the back of the master sheet, so that the matter written on the face of the master sheet is reproduced in reverse on its back. This master sheet is then fastened reverse side out around a cylinder or platen in the duplicating machine, and the sheet to be copied upon, first moistened slightly with a volatile fluid capable of dissolving the soluble ink deposited by the special carbon paper on the reverse of the master sheet, is pressed against the back of the master sheet. This pressure is achieved by revolving the cylinder or platen on which the master sheet is mounted and another cylinder or roller in co-axial contact with it and revolving in the opposite direction, and passing the sheet to be copied upon through the .nip or bight of the rolls thus formed in registry with the master sheet.

Two major problems confront the designers of' machines of the type described —the problem of moistening the sheet to be copied upon evenly and to the proper degree, and the problem of presenting that sheet to the platen and its associated pressure roller in proper registry with the master sheet. For if the copy sheet is too moist an excess of ink will be dissolved from the back of the master sheet with the result that only a few copies of it can be made and they will be blurred, and if too dry the copies will be faint, and if the copy sheet is unevenly moistened both defects will appear upon a single copy. And if the copy sheet is not in registry with the master sheet, the matter copied upon it will not be centered. Storck solved both of the problems by presenting the sheets to be copied upon to the platen and its associated pressure roller through a pair of feed rollers one above the other. He used the lower of these rollers to moisten the copy sheet by placing the volatile moistening fluid in a tank underneath it, and drawing the fluid from the tank to the roller by the capillary action of a “wick or fibrous material” which incidentally also served to wipe or spread the moistening fluid evenly over the surface of the roller. He used the feed rollers to position the copy sheet by arranging for the intermittent rotation of the apparatus with reference to the hand crank with which it was operated. Thus as the hand crank of his machine is revolved continuously by the operator, the rollers, all of them, revolve intermittently, thereby permitting the operator of the machine to place the forward edge of the sheet to be copied upon in the nip of the feed rolls during their dwell period so that it will be picked up when they start to revolve again and fed to the platen at precisely the right moment to place it in registry with the master sheet.

We turn now to the previous litigation in this circuit to which we have already referred in passing.

In that litigation the plaintiff under its former name charged Ditto, Inc. with infringement of all of the claims of the Storck reissue patent now in issue plus claims 3 and 8. Following trial the court below found these last two claims- invalid for lack of invention and the othér claims (those now in issue) valid “in so far as they pertain either separately or in combination to the moistening provided solely by a wick and dampening roller as described in those claims”, but not infringed. Standard Mailing Machines Co. v. Ditto, Inc., D. C., 22 F.Supp. 722, 725. On appeal this court affirmed in part and reversed in part. It affirmed the district court’s conclusion that claim 8 was invalid, and it also- affirmed the district court’s conclusion that all the claims in issue then which are in issue now were valid. But it reversed as to claim 3, holding that claim valid, and it reversed on the issue of infringement, holding claim 3 as well as the rest of the claims in issue, except of course claim 8, infringed.

[103]*103This court’s previous conclusion with respect to the validity of claim 3 rested upon. its coverage of the use of the feed rolls for positioning the copy sheet. For although feed rolls had been used in duplicating machines before Storck, and although they had also been used before him in such machines for moistening as well as for feeding, no one before Storck had used rollers to perform the combined functions not only of feeding and moistening, but also of positioning in the way covered by the claim, and therein this court held, lay its patentable novelty. The patentable novelty of the other claims, both this court and the court below concluded, lay in the fact that they covered moistening a feed roll by means of a wick or fibrous material operating by capillary action to transfer the volatile moistening fluid to the roll from a tank, typically by drawing the fluid by means of a wick up to the lower feed roll from a tank underneath it.

But with respect to claim 8, the one with which we are here primarily concerned, the court had this to say: “In claim 8 the main feature is the means for intermittently rotating the printing platen or drum in connection with means for rotating the feed rolls in unison with the drum and its pressure roll, for pressing the clear sheet against the master copy. We think that the District Court correctly held that claim 8 was invalid. Intermittent stopping and starting of feed rolls and master drum in unison for positioning a clear sheet to register with the master copy on the drum was old, as was also means for bringing a small amount of moistening fluid to the face of one of the rollers.

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Bluebook (online)
174 F.2d 101, 81 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 239, 1949 U.S. App. LEXIS 4540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-duplicating-machines-co-v-american-business-machines-corp-ca1-1949.