Stover v. Halsted

23 F. Cas. 190, 13 Blatchf. 95, 2 Ban. & A. 98, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1532

This text of 23 F. Cas. 190 (Stover v. Halsted) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stover v. Halsted, 23 F. Cas. 190, 13 Blatchf. 95, 2 Ban. & A. 98, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1532 (circtsdny 1875).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill In equity, praying for an injunction and an account, and is founded upon letters patent for an “improvement in planing machines,” which patent was issued to Henry D. Stover, one of the complainants, on July 23d, 1861. The other complainants, J. A. Fay & Co., are a corporation, and the assignees and owners of an undivided half interest in so much of the patent and of the invention covered thereby as is embodied in the third claim of said patent. The assignment was executed September 14th, 1868. The answer admits that said patent was issued to said Stover, and puts the complainants to proof of their present title thereto, and alleges that the patent is void for want of novelty. The defendants deny that they have infringed, by averring that the only machines which they use, or have used,. for planing or matching lumber, are machines made un■der letters patent which were granted to Rufus N. Meriam on November 5th, 1867, and which patent is alleged to have been for a “different invention from that claimed by said Stover in his patent.” The answer also avers that the complainants are equitably estopped, by their own acts, from any recovery in this suit. The fact that J. A. Fay & Co. are a corporation, is, in effect, admitted by the pleadings.

The machine to which the alleged improvements in each of the patents relate, is a machine for planing and matching lumber. Machines for planing the surface of boards, and at the same time for planing or grooving and matching the edges of boards, have been long in use, and were well known prior to the date of the Stover patent. In these machines, the boards were planed by means of a cylinder, which occupied a horizontal and transverse position above the bed or platen upon which the boards were placed, and the edges of the boards were, at the same time, grooved and matched by means of matching cutters. These cutters were attached to spindles which were supported in a vertical position, so as to project through and above the bed, and thus enable the knives to operate upon the edges of the lumber as it passed between the knives after leaving the planing cylinder. The machines were also provided with mechanism, by means of which the space between the matching cutters could be increased laterally, so that stuff of different widths could be matched upon the same machine. Although, in the machines which were in use prior to the Stover patent, there were devices which caused a slight vertical adjustment of the matching cutters upon their spindles, so that lumber of different thicknesses could matched, yet there was no machine in which the matching apparatus could be entirely removed, by mechanical means, below the surface of the platen, when the surfacing of wide boards only was desired. Oftentimes there was a necessity for planing, without matching, boards of greater width than would pass between the matcher heads, and, in such case, it was necessary to detach and to remove, by hand, the spindles from the machine. It was thus impossible to surface wide boards upon a machine of ordinary dimensions, without incurring the labor and delay which were incident to a removal of the matching mechanism by hand. One object of the machines of Stover and of Meriam was to obviate the difficulty, and each patentee adopted the same general mode of accomplishing the desired result. The matching spindles are so attached to each machine that they can, at the pleasure of the operator, be simultaneously dropped •below the surface of the platen. In the Stover machine, the platen is movable or stationary. When boards are to be both planed and matched, the platen is stationary, and the lumber is passed under the cutting cylinder, by feed rolls, to be planed, and thence between the matching cutters, to be matched. When boards are to be planed without being matched, they can be placed and secured upon a movable platen, which, with the lumber upon it, is passed under the cutting cylinder. But the platen cannot be moved without previously removing the matching spindles, which would, if not removed, prevent the progress of the platen. The objects of the Meriam machine are described by the patentee, in his specification, as follows: “In that variety of planing machines designed not only for planing the surface of lumber but also for matching the edges thereof, much inconvenience has resulted from the necessity of lowering that portion of the-bed of the machine which supports the upper ends of the vertical shafts which carry the matching cutters, whenever it is required to adjust the said cutters for matching lumber of different thicknesses, or to move the said shaft out of the way in using the planes for surface planing only. The object of this invention is to remedy this defect.” One result which was intended to be accomplished by each machine, was the lowering of the shafts.beneath the surface of the bed, when it was desired to use the machine for surfacing and not matching.

The defendants place their defence upon three grounds: (1st) That the third claim of the Stover patent, which claim alone the defendants are charged with infringing, describes a mechanical impossibility and a machine destitute of utility; (2d) that the Stover patent is void for want of novelty; (3d) that the Meriam machine is not an infringement of the Stover patent.

(1) Is the 3d claim of the plaintiffs’ patent valid? The claim is as follows: “I also claim the arrangement of matching cutters, to be adjusted both laterally with each other and vertically upon the bed piece, essentially as described, in combination with the platen, so that the planing and matching of the piece may both proceed at the same time, or [192]*192either the planing or matching may be done separately, whether the platen be made movable with the piece secured thereupon, or the platen be fixed and the piece be made to move thereon.” The defendants contend that the patentee is confined, by this language, to a mechanism whereby the lumber may be both planed and matched at the same time, or planing and matching may be done separately, either upon a movable or a fixed platen. It is obvious, that the lumber cannot be matched upon a movable platen by the Stover machine, because the matching spindles pro.ieet through apertures in the platen, and the spindles, when in a position for matching, would prevent a forward movement of the platen; and it is also obvious, from the description of the machine, that no such mechanical impossibility was contemplated.

The specification is as follows: “To the platen A' is secured a guide D\ which may be removed at pleasure; this correctly guides the board, in connection with the spring E', to be matched by cutters, which may be raised up through holes Vs and W*, formed through the platen for that purpose, and adjusted at the desired elevation, they being driven by pulley S from pulley Q', on a drive shaft L'. The platen may thus be used sta-

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23 F. Cas. 190, 13 Blatchf. 95, 2 Ban. & A. 98, 1875 U.S. App. LEXIS 1532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stover-v-halsted-circtsdny-1875.