Stokes Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Heller

96 F. 104, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3218

This text of 96 F. 104 (Stokes Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Heller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stokes Bros. Mfg. Co. v. Heller, 96 F. 104, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3218 (circtdnj 1899).

Opinion

KIRKPATRICK, District Judge.

The bill of complaint in this cause charges the defendants with infringement of certain patents owned by the complainant, and prays for an injunction and account. The answer denies infringement, and sets up want of novelty by reason of prior patents and publications. The patents sued upon are as follows: No. .’>7(5,400, dated January 10, 3888, to James and George Stokes; No. 883,999, dated June 5, 1889, to Philip Stokes; No. 397,254, dated February 5, 1889, to Philip Stokes; No. 408,936, dated August 13, 1889, to Philip Stokes. Two of these patents (No. 876,400 and No. 397,254) relate to rasp-cutting machines, one (No. 888,999) to the improved article produced, and one (No. 408,936) for the method of forming teeth on a rasp blank. The most satisfactory method of forming rasp teeth prior to the time of Stokes, the com pla inant in this case, was by hand. The teeth were punched up from the rasp blank by means of a punch struck with a hammer and held by the hand of the operator. Each tooth was punched separately, and was entirely dependent for its regularity upon the skill and care of the eye and hand of the operator. Consequently the. teeth varied greatly in size, and shape, and the depth of the indentation from which each tooth was cut was also variable, and often too deep for the best working of the rasp. It is true that before the Btokes inventions efforts had been made, with more or less success, to obviate the necessity of using the hand-punching method, and to construct machines for punching rasps automatically, and a number of patents granted for rasp and file cutting machines have been cited to show that the art was well advanced, and that Stokes was not a pioneer; but for the most part the Inventions related to means for cutting flies. Stokes’ patent relates to rasps as distinguished from flies, and his machines are essentially rasp-cutting machines. The improvement was one which looked to the better formation of rasp teeth. The apparatus was not that adapted peculiarly to cut-ling by an angularly inclined chisel the teeth of a lile each of which is but a burr extending entirely across the surface of the file at an angle, and raised therefrom by the impact of a, cutter moving in a practically straight line, but was expressly for the purpose of punching up (he metal from a blank, and forming rasp teeth thereon, which are distinctly different both in their formation and uses. In cutting flies, the cutter is forced into the body of the metal in a nearly straight line, inclined to the surface of the file blank. In cutting rasps, the operation differs as much from this as does the rasp tooth differ from the file tooth. In forming rasp teeth, the cutter point enters the metal at a small angle, but upon the continued application of the pressure tending to force the punch into the rasp blank the angle changes, and the cutter takes a curvilinear gouging motion, [106]*106an! digs out, as it were, the metal from the body of the blank, and forces it up into the form of a rasp tooth, leaving a furrow indicating the path of the cutter directly in front of each tooth. The line of motion of the -file cutter is nearly straight, and at an angle with the surface of the blank. The line of motion of the rasp punch is that of a curve something like a parabola, and differing entirely from the motion necessary in an apparatus for cutting files. File-cutting machines operating automatically in the manner above suggested do not anticipate the Stokes device for cutting rasps. There are also several patents for rasp-punching machines which are relied upon by the defendants as being anticipations of the patents in suit, but neither in the specifications nor drawings is there found evidence that the patentees either conceived the same necessity for improvement in the art as did Stokes, or embodied in their mechanisms the same combination of elements for the attainment of similar results. The combinations forming the machines set out and described in letters patent Nos. 376,400 and 397,254 were new and useful inventions. So far as the record shows, they were not conceived by any other person at an earlier date, but were, for the purpose he designed them to accomplish, new additions to the art of making rasps. They were the successful result of an attempt to make new and useful improvements in the art in a new and practical manner. The purpose accomplished by these machines of Stokes was the production of a rasp having certain distinct peculiarities and new features different from the hand-punched rasp or those automatically punched by other devices. The teeth are now perfectly formed, are more uniform in shape and size, and are of greater length, though raised from recesses of less depth than rasps made in the usual manner. They possess great strength, being re-enforced by the surplus metal forced into them by the curvilinear motion of the rasp punch, and can be brought to a very sharp point without curling or breaking. The shallow recesses from which they are punched are curved, and do not, therefore, so easily clog when in use. The rasp was an improved new article, and therefore patentable. In my opinion, the patents No. 376,400, No. 397,254, and No. 383,999 are valid, as new and useful inventions. There is, however, the patent No. 408,936, dated August 13, 1889, granted to Stokes for the method or process used in forming the particular kind of rasp teeth claimed by him as an invention. The process is simply the mechanical operation of a combination of mechanical elements. There is no chemical or other similar elemental action involved in producing the desired result. This being true, we find that the operation as described is simply the function of the rasp-cutting machines, and as such not the subject of a patent. Locomotive Works v. Medart, 158 U. S. 71-84, 15 Sup. Ct. 745.

It remains to be considered whether the defendants infringe the claims of these valid patents. It is apparent that the body of Stokes’ invention lies in the peculiar appliance which he devises for holding the rasp punch so that it may take on the particular movements necessary to form that kind of rasp teeth he undertakes to produce. The importance of having the proper adjustment and freedom to the punch-holding apparatus is very great. Without it, a Stokes-shaped [107]*107rasp tootli could not be formed. This is so because the character and form of the rasp tooth is almost entirely dependent upon the shape of the cutter, the number of blows given to it, and the angle at which it is held during the operation of cutting it. It is upon this freedom of movement of the punch holder, and consequently upon the construction thereof, and its relation to the other elements of the machine, that the angle and line of motion of the punch depend. In considering the question of infringement by the defendants it will be sufficient to confine ourselves to a comparison of that part of complainant’s and defendants’ apparatus which has to do with holding the punch and controlling its movements" during the operation of forming the rasp tooth. Let us observe what a comparison of the devices shows. Claim 5 of patent No. 376,400 is as follows: “In a rasp-cutting machine,, the combination of a punching hammer head, E, the adjusting screw, 33, the fiat spring, and the punch, 34, substantially as set forth;” and claims 1, 2, 3, 6, and 10 of patent Ao.

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Related

Risdon Iron & Locomotive Works v. Medart
158 U.S. 68 (Supreme Court, 1895)

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Bluebook (online)
96 F. 104, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stokes-bros-mfg-co-v-heller-circtdnj-1899.