Star Ball Player Co. v. Baseball Display Co.

8 F.2d 46, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedJuly 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 46 (Star Ball Player Co. v. Baseball Display Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Star Ball Player Co. v. Baseball Display Co., 8 F.2d 46, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563 (D.N.J. 1925).

Opinion

RUNYON, District Judge.

The plaintiff above named has brought suit herein alleging infringement by the defendant, during the year 1922, of letters patent No.'1,321,-940, issued to Paul C. Oscanyan, bearing date November 18, 1919, the application for which was filed April 28,1917.

The device in question represents a baseball field, arranged on a vertical plane, and is designed to vizualize for spectators the various plays in a game of baseball, being manually operated for that purpose by attendants standing in the rear, and acting upon detailed information conveyed to them from the playing field by telephone or telegraph.

While a miniature representation of a baseball in action forms part of the display, and is moved over the surface of the board to various positions to illustrate the plays as they occur, the present suit has nothing to do with that feature of the mechanism, but is concerned only with that portion thereof which shows the progress of the runners about the bases, or the fate which befalls those who are unsuccessful in their attempt to complete the circuit.

The plaintiff’s board has openings or slots, in the paths leading from base to base; and behind these, but showing through such open spaces, is passed a white object representing an individual runner. At the intersection of the various base paths, and representing, respectively, first, second, and third base, and home plate, are other openings, and the subject of the combinations of the claims is the means provided for obscuring these openings as desired, so that the white object representing the runner will pass behind such contrivance and out of sight, and in so doing portray the player as put out.

Another point of advantage claimed by plaintiff is the presence of so-called stops for the base runner, located at points adjacent to the base openings, and so designed as to allow the operator to set the stop and shield at the base opening in such fashion as will cause the base runner, without further manipulation, to perform his part as the operator has designed, thus affording the operator, after arranging the base runner’s part, an opportunity to attend to some other play which may have occurred simultaneously on the playing field, and which consequently demands simultaneous representation on the board.

The claims in suit are Nos. 11, 12, 21, 23, and 24, and are as follows:

“11. A bulletin board comprising a member representing a field, said member having [47]*47runway openings representing base positions at the intersections of the runway openings, a plurality of radial runner members adaptable to project across said runway and base openings and movable behind and visible through the same, and means for obscuring the runner members at the base openings.

“12. A bulletin board, comprising a member representing a field, said member having runway openings and openings representing bases at the intersections of the runway openings, a plurality of radial runner members adaptable to project across and movable behind said runway and base openings so as to be visible through the same, and slides movable over the base openings for obscuring the runner members at the base positions.”

“21. The combination with a member representing a baseball field, of a movable runner member and means including manually operable shields at the ‘bases’ over the path of the runner member and manually operable stop devices adjacent to the ‘bases/ whereby a runner play may be set before it is executed.”

“23. The combination with a member representing a baseball field having its diamond portion spaced from the remainder of the field to provide runway and base openings, of radial runner members disposed behind the field member and movable past said openings, a plurality of adjustable stop pins movable into the paths of the runner members, and means for supporting the stop pins.

“24. The combination with a member representing a baseball field having its diamond portion spaced from the remainder of the field to provide runway and base openings, of radial runner members disposed behind the field member and movable so as to be visible through said openings, a frame disposed behind and spaced from the field member, and adjustable stop pins mounted on said frame and movable into the paths of the runner members when the latter are moved behind the runway and base openings.”

It may be well to refer briefly to certain earlier inventions as illustrating the prior art, in order that the plaintiff’s contribution to the work of Ms predecessors may be better understood.

The Grozier and Anderson^patentNo. 427,-508, usos slotted base paths, and also representations of base runners in tile forms of buttons which are moved around the baseball diamond by means of tapes so arranged as to indicate the players’ progress. The means used to work these buttons, however, are so largely at variance with the means adopted by plaintiff as to discourage any thought that they anticipated plaintiff’s methods; and, with that element eliminated, there is left but one feature of plaintiff’s arrangement, viz. the slotted base paths.

The Chapman patent is No. 546,003, and presents a device using an electric motor, together with a number of radial arms having a runner member arranged in the slotted base path. These arms are independently geared to a common shaft, and the plays are indicated by lights turned on and off, and the runner representations are not “obscured,” but taken off from the face of the board.

In the Mattoni patent, No. 1,044,679, are seen manikins moving in the slotted base path, which manikins are operated by radial arms rotatable about a center and each one equidistant from the preceding and succeeding arm. TMs one appears to have served little purpose beyond that of furnishing a game for children.

The Brylawski patent, No. 1,149,021, omits the slotted base path as utilized in the patent in suit. It has radial arms, and these arms operate little carriages which carry electric lights and run behind a translucent portion of the board. It uses neither shield nor stop, and apparently has never come into use for any purpose.

The Baker patent is No. 1,171,830, and in this patent the base runners are represented by targets set at the rear of the board, but visible at the front, and made to move from base to base as desired, by means of cords, chains, or other carrying means on which the targets are detachably mounted.

There are also two prior Oseanyan patents, Nos. 1,071,080 and 1,127,498, but the construction and manipulation thereunder is so largely at variance with the features of the patent in suit that the idea of any illustrative application may be dismissed.

The earlier of tile two employed neither shields nor stops, and a relay system of base runners was used; ho one representation availing for any longer journey than that between two bases. So far as the second of the two patents is concerned, it also made no use of radial members as they exist in the present patent, and omitted the employment of shields and stops.

In reviewing the various features of the patents above enumerated, it becomes apparent that the plaintiff’s contribution to the art was largely in the nature of improve[48]*48ment, and was in no sense a basic or pioneer patent. Tbe prior art had known the open or slotted base path, the movable runner, the radial arms, and certain means for indicating the putting out of the runner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 F.2d 46, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/star-ball-player-co-v-baseball-display-co-njd-1925.