Standard Mailing Machines Co. v. Ditto, Inc.

100 F.2d 466, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 70, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2684
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 28, 1938
DocketNo. 3364
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 100 F.2d 466 (Standard Mailing Machines Co. v. Ditto, Inc.) 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 Mailing Machines Co. v. Ditto, Inc., 100 F.2d 466, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 70, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2684 (1st Cir. 1938).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is an equity suit brought in the federal District Court for Massachusetts by the Standard Mailing Machines Company against Ditto, Inc., for alleged infringement of United States Patent No. 19,951, issued to Frederick W. Storck April 28, 1936; it being a reissue of a prior patent (No. 1,-964,933) issued to said Storck July 3, 1934, on an application filed July 21, 1930. The application for reissue was filed December 10, 1935.

The District Court held claims 3 and 8 invalid for want of invention, and that claims 19, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 32, 34, and 40 were valid but, in view of the file, contents of the application for the original patent [467]*467(1,964,933), they should be narrowed in scope and thus narrowed, were not infringed. A decree having been entered accordingly, the plaintiff appealed.

The questions here involved are (1) whether claims 3 and 8 of the reissue patent are valid and, if valid, infringed, and (2) whether the remaining claims are infringed by the defendant’s machine (Exhibit 4), which question involves • a subsidiary one, namely, the scope to be given to the second group of claims in view of the file contents and the prior art. No question is raised as to the plaintiff’s ownership of the original and reissue patents.

The plaintiff’s device is known as a wet process machine for printing a substantial number of copies — from two to three hundred — of matter printed on an original or master copy. The master copy is printed in reverse on a typewriter, the carbon sheet being so arranged that it prints on the back of the first sheet instead of on the face of the next one. The carbon sheet is prepared with a special copying ink which is deposited in type form on the master copy. The amount of ink thus deposited is very slight, but it is a measurable amount. A clear sheet that has been moistened is then placed upon and pressed against the master sheet and a slight amount of moisture on the clear sheet is sufficient to soften the ink and produce a clear copy.

This wet process art for producing duplicate copies had existed for about thirty years at the time plaintiff’s patentee obtained his patent, but the District Court found that the duplicating machines of that art had not proved successful because no means had been discovered for applying a sufficiently minute and uniform film of moisture over its entire area. If too little moisture was applied to the clear sheet a faint copy resulted; too much moisture made the ink run and washed it off the master sheet so that no more' copies could be made. And if the moisture was not uniformly distributed throughout the clear sheet a faint copy resulted where there was too little moisture and a dark or blurred copy where there was too much, and both of these defects might appear on a single sheet.

Storck’s machine and mechanism applies a thin, uniform coat of moistening liquid over the entire surface of the sheet. In his machine for accomplishing this result a smooth roller made of glass or metal receives the liquid from a piece of felt or wick and deposits it in a sufficiently minute and uniform amount over the clear sheet on which the printing from the master sheet is to be made. The smooth surface of the roller takes from the felt or wick only so much moisture as will spread on its surface by the surface tension of the liquid and the attraction of the surface of the roller for the liquid. The result is that a very thin coat of moisture is spread over the surface of the roller and by it transferred to the surface of the clear sheet. In Storck’s mechanism the wick and roller are the essential elements. Either without the other would not function effectively-

The claims covering this combination of wick or fibrous material and the roller are 19, 20, 21, 22, 29, 30, 32, 34 and 40.

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. Ritzerfeld Patent (1927) No. 1,-645,930. Ritzerfeld discloses means for intermittent rotation of the feed rolls and drum in unison and means to bring a small amount of fluid to the face of one of the feed rolls. The claim is not sufficiently limited to escape the prior art.

In claim 3 Storck combined in general terms means for moistening a clear sheet, on which the copy was to be made, with a provision for positioning the advanced end of the clear sheet by the bight of the feed rollers, so that, when that end had passed through the feed rollers, the clear sheet, on being received by the master drum and its pressure roll, would register properly on the master copy on the dram. The main feature of this claim is the positioning of the forward end of the clear sheet by the bight of the feed rolls when they are under tension and are stopped. The means for positioning the clear sheet are the only specific means called for by the claim. All the others are general and are disclosed in the patent above cited to Ritzerfeld. The question as to this [468]*468claim, therefore, is whether it is valid by-reason of the specific co-operative positioning means which it discloses.

The nearest reference in the prior art that has been called to our attention bearing on this question is the British patent to Albert Eltzbacher of March 23, 1895. The machine of that patent, however, is one for making a copy of a letter, the letter being positioned face down upon the clear sheet upon which the copy is to be made and then passed through feed rolls B and D. The specification of the patent states: “The paper [thus positioned] is brought between the rollers B and D by means of the table K, which terminates shortly before the line of contact of said two rollers.” In other words, the bight between the rolls was not a positioning means in that machine. This device was a hand cranked machine. The clear sheet and the superimposed letter were put in registration before entering the rolls, and there was no occasion for further positioning the papers to register; and there was no master copy on a drum in that device to require registration.

The problem confronting the patentee of that invention was not the one which confronted Storck. Storck did not have his master copy and the clear sheet superimposed upon one another before they were passed through the feed rolls. He had only the clear sheet. The master copy was on the periphery of the printing platen or drum, and, to obtain registration of the clear sheet • with the master copy, it was essential that the advanced end of the clear sheet should be so positioned that it would register with the master copy on reaching the drum; and, to accomplish this he provided the bight formed by the feed rolls under pressure as his stop mechanism for positioning the clear sheets. In other words, he so arranged the feed rolls that they performed three functions — the positioning, the feeding and the moistening of the clear sheet. The prior art disclosed no such simple and practical mechanism for performing these combined functions.

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Bluebook (online)
100 F.2d 466, 40 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 70, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-mailing-machines-co-v-ditto-inc-ca1-1938.