Steiner Sales Co. v. Darman Mfg. Co.

33 F. Supp. 422, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 253, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3096
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedApril 15, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 F. Supp. 422 (Steiner Sales Co. v. Darman Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steiner Sales Co. v. Darman Mfg. Co., 33 F. Supp. 422, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 253, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3096 (N.D.N.Y. 1940).

Opinion

COOPER, District Judge.

This is a patent infringement suit in which the plaintiff, the Steiner Sales Company, is a corporation having its principal place of business in Utah and having an office and place of business in Chicago, Ill., and the defendants are the Darman Manufacturing Company, Inc., having its principal place of business at Utica, N.Y., and Joseph Darman of Utica, N.Y., who is the president of the corporate defendant.

The complaint charges the defendant with infringement of four patents relating to continuous towel, cabinets.

These patents are:

1,479,864, Martin, January 8, 1924.

Reissue, 17,031, Steiner, July 10, 1928.

1,735,516, Steiner, November 12, 1929.

1,959,938, Tyler, May 22, 1934.

The claims of the Martin patent charged to have been infringed are claims 1 to 14 inclusive and 20.

Claim 13 has been selected by the plaintiff as the typical claim of the Martin patent.

As to the Steiner reissue patent, it is alleged that claims 6 to 10 inclusive have been infringed but claim 10 has been selected as the typical claim.

In the Steiner Patent No. 1,735,516, the claims asserted to have been infringed are claims 3, 4, 5, and 7, of which claim 3 has been selected as the typical claim.

In the case of the Tyler patent the charge of infringement is confined to claims 9 and 10, and claim 10 has been selected for the purpose of proving infringement.

The defense is that all these patents are invalid in view of the prior art and that in any event they have not been infringed.

Defendants also contend with reference to the Steiner reissue patent that the reissue was invalid and without authority of law.

The plaintiff and its predecessors have been in the linen supply business since 1887, a large part of which business consisted of furnishing towels.

The individual defendant Darman has been in the towel supply business beginning in 1926, first as an individual until a short time before March 27, 1936, then as partner with another person, which partnership became the corporate defendant on March 27, 1936.

Ordinary roller towels were first used in public places, but because such towels came to be regarded as a menace to public health, it became necessary to devise a cabinet or other means through which clean toweling could be dispensed, or brought out for use and the soiled toweling taken without any contact with the clean toweling, so as to prevent contamination of the clean toweling, by the soiled toweling, so called.

The so-called .continuous towel cabinet accomplished this purpose and came into popular use.

[424]*424The plaintiff, or its predecessor, began the manufacture of continuous towel cabinets in 1917 or 1918.

During a portion of the time plaintiff used Steiner Patent No. 1,426,121, issued August 15, 1922.

The defendant began the manufacture of a towel cabinet about 1926 on a small scale. The individual defendant Darman also obtained certain patents which are not important here.

Paper toweling came on the market and, since the price was reduced and since no laundering was required, became a serious competitor of the cloth towel whose laundering was expensive.

To compete with paper towels it became necessary to have a device which involved a minimum of expense for laundering towels and to have a mechanism which could not easily be gotten out of order and which could be refilled by persons of ordinary mechanical skill, and more especially which would limit the amount of toweling which a user could obtain for use at one time from the cabinet.

The Martin patent and the Tyler patent involve time control stop mechanisms for continuous towel cabinets, which do limit the amount of toweling which may be withdrawn at one time.

The idea is that a person may withdraw at one time only a predetermined length of toweling, whereupon the feed rolls are locked to prevent further withdrawal of toweling until the time mechanism releasés the lock.

It is contended by the plaintiff that the Martin patent is for a new and basic conception by which the towel user locks the mechanism by withdrawing the predetermined length of toweling and means for releasing the lock after the lapse of the predetermined time, and that the Tyler patent is for an improvement on Martin arising from the use of a dash pot as the timing and releasing element together with certain connections to the feed rolls and the lock therefor.

The Martin Patent.

The .typical claim 13 reads as follows : “A towel cabinet comprising a towel supply roll, a measuring roll actuated by the toweling, means for arresting the measuring roll after the withdrawal of a predetermined length of toweling, a timing device, means controlled. by the measuring roll for setting said timing device and means actuated by said timing device for releasing said arresting, means after the expiration of a predetermined period of time.”

The patentee Martin says that the object of his invention is:

“This invention relates to a towel cabinet which is more particularly adapted for use in public wash rooms and the like. One of these objects is to so construct the cabinet that only predetermined lengths of toweling may be drawn therefrom by the user at certain time intervals to avoid waste in the use of the same.
“Other objects of - the invention are to provide simple and reliable means for automatically locking the towel feeding mechanism for a fixed period after a given length of toweling has been withdrawn and for automatically releasing said mechanism after the time interval has elapsed to enable another length of toweling to be drawn out for use.”

The inventor says his timing device is a suitable clock mechanism or equivalent timing device (Page 2, Line 75).

Martin speaks of two ways of applying a timing- mechanism to the towel cabinet. In figures 1 to 9 of the drawings he employs a separate measuring roll (30) to which the stop mechanism is applied. In figures 10 to 11 he applies the stop mechanism and the timing device to one of the feed rolls.

Martin shows’and describes a towel cabinet in which a stop mechanism is provided which prevents rotation of the feed roll (prevents further withdrawal of toweling) after a predetermined length of toweling has been withdrawn and in which the stop mechanism is released (and another predetermined length of toweling may be withdrawn) after the lapse of a predetermined time interval.

No prior art and no prior use showing such a conception of a towel cabinet is disclosed in the evidence. A prior art patent relating to another subject is relied upon by defendants and will be referred to later.

The defenses to this patent are these:

1. The patent is inoperative and merely represents a dream.

2. That it is anticipated by the patent to Graser (relating to withdrawal of toilet paper in connection with a bath room seat).

3. That even if valid it is not infringed.

[425]*4254. The broad claims of the Martin patent, such as claim 2, are broadly anticipated by the prior automatic stop.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. Supp. 422, 45 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 253, 1940 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3096, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steiner-sales-co-v-darman-mfg-co-nynd-1940.