Stanley Works v. Twisted Wire & Steel Co.

256 F. 98, 167 C.C.A. 340, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 15, 1919
DocketNo. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 256 F. 98 (Stanley Works v. Twisted Wire & Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley Works v. Twisted Wire & Steel Co., 256 F. 98, 167 C.C.A. 340, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344 (2d Cir. 1919).

Opinion

MANTON, Circuit Judge.

Since both parties appeal from the decree entered herein, we shall refer to the parties as they were referred to in the district court, to wit, plaintiff and defendant.

[1] The plaintiff in this bill in equity charged infringement of re[99]*99issue letters patent granted to it July 7, 1914, No. 13,765, for an improvement in box strapping invented by Leon S. Howe. The bill further charged unfair competition. The District Judge sustained the patent, held that there was infringement, and dismissed the charge of unfair competition. The defendant denied that there was invention or infringement, but says that the patent in suit is invalid, because it claims, not a patentable combination, but a mere aggregation of old elements. It further claims that the reissue patent is invalid because it shows new matter. The defendant further contends that the District Judge correctly held that there was no unfair competition in the trade by it.

[3] Box strapping, used by manufacturers and merchants, consists of metal strips intended to reinforce the ends of heavy wooden packing cases, to prevent them from breaking open. Ordinarily, these strips are nailed around each end of the packing case, and made to tightly embrace the case, so as to perform the intended function. As packages are frequently pushed and hauled over and about the floors of -warehouses, railroad cars, or on the decks of ships, it is essential that the sharp edges of the strapping, and the nails which are used to hold it, be so guarded and protected as to avoid their catching in the floor, and thus prevent the strapping being torn from the case.

The patent in suit is intended to give practical effect to the idea that, by producing a strapping which could be applied by nails driven obliquely therethrough, the oblique driving of each successive nail would take up the slack between it and the last driven, and that such accumulative tightening would cause the strapping to hug tightly to the box, thereby avoiding the danger of the box breaking open. The inventor arranged to corrugate the median portion of the strap transversely, so as to form a central web portion having alternate ridges and furrows, the latter forming effective nail-receiving pockets, and the former constituting effective nail-holder shoulders or abutments; the idea being that a nail held obliquely could be safely driven without danger of glancing, the puncturing blows being utilized to take up the slack. The effect of corrugating the median portion is to increase the overall thickness of the web portion, so that, to the extent the overall thickness is increased, so also would the depth of the pockets and the height of the nail-liolding ridges or abutments be increased, without respect to the actual thickness of the metal employed. The corrugation of 1he metal maintains the initial thickness, and thus affords a sufficient resistance to puncture by the nail to enable the blows to perform the slack taking-up function before the strap is actually punctured, and it is claimed that by reason thereof comparatively thin sheet metal can be used for relatively wide strapping. By driving the nail obliquely, it enters the wood obliquely, and it is claimed that this, so driven, will continue further to take up the slack, insuring that the strapping will be caused to hug snugly lipón the box. The side border of the strapping is left uncorrugated transversely, and thus avoids the danger of the sudden taking up of the slack, which would be caused by the stretch of the strapping longitudinally, and thus defeat the whole purpose of the invention. The transversely corrugated central web, [100]*100with its uncorrugated and nonstretchable borders, comprise the central idea of the invention. The furrows thus formed and the raised bearings guard and protect against the nail heads striking the floor when they are driven fully down.

The plaintiff in his claims sets forth:

4. A metallic box. strap for packing cases and tire like, comprising a strip, transverse corrugations formed along tlie median, portion thereof to produce substantially roughened surfaces on each face of the strip, and to increase the overall thickness thereof along said median portion, the shoulders formed thereby being arranged to hold the point of a nail to prevent slippage thereof, whereby said nail may be driven at an angle relatively to said strip, to take up slack therein in the act of applying the same; that part of the strip at opposite edges of said corrugated portion being relatively smooth to prevent stretching the central corrugated portion of said strip.
5. A metallic box strap for packing cases and the like, comprising a strip, transverse corrugations formed along the median portion thereof to produce substantially roughened surfaces on each face of the strip, and to increase the overall thickness thereof along said median portion, the shoulders formed by said corrugations being arranged to hold the point of a nail to prevent slippage thereof, whereby said nail may be driven at an angle relatively to said strip to take up slack therein in the act of supplying the same; that part of the. strip at the opposite edges of said corrugated portion being relatively smooth and provided with raised bearings.
7. A metallic box strap for packing cases and the like, comprising a strip, transverse corrugations formed along the median portion thereof to produce substantially roughened surfaces on each face of the strip, and to increase the overall thickness thereof along said median portion, the shoulders formed by said corrugations being arranged to hold the point of a nail to prevent slippage thereof, "whereby said nail may be driven at an angle relatively to said strip to take up slack therein in the act of applying the same; that part of the strip at the opposite .edges of said corrugated portion being relatively smooth and provided with raised bearings, said bearings being sufficiently raised to extend above the adjacent corrugated median portion of the strip sufficiently to guard the head of a nail driven through said median portion.

Howe’s application was filed and the reissue patent granted before the acts of infringement began. The defendant does not charge the plaintiff with laches, and an examination of the application and the specifications, together with the claims of the reissue patent indicates that the patentee has been more definite in the reissue patent than what was disclosed by him in the original patent. The drawings are the same, except that in Figure 2 the transverse corrugations are illustrated definitely, instead of conventionally, as in the original patent. The object of permitting a reissue to be granted was intended to make the patent more specific, providing no new matter was introduced. There was no> new matter introduced in the reissue patent; the original patent embodying a rather full disclosure of the basic idea of this invention, namely, the transversely corrugated median portion or web, plus the nonstretchable borders. Box strapping seems to have been old in the art, and when the plaintiff entered the field, in order to meet with success, it was obliged to show trade advantages over the prior forms. For instance, box strapping with raised bearings on one surface formed by embossment one way, was old; the bearings being provided for the sole purpose of holding the sharp edges of the strapping away from the floor. The idea of providing a means fo?" preventing the point of the nail from glancing out of a vertical position is [101]

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Bluebook (online)
256 F. 98, 167 C.C.A. 340, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-works-v-twisted-wire-steel-co-ca2-1919.