Straight Side Basket Corporation v. Zapf Fruit Package Co.

26 F. Supp. 90, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 13, 1935
DocketNo. 2558
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 F. Supp. 90 (Straight Side Basket Corporation v. Zapf Fruit Package Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Straight Side Basket Corporation v. Zapf Fruit Package Co., 26 F. Supp. 90, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008 (W.D. Mich. 1935).

Opinion

RAYMOND, District Judge.

Plaintiffs have brought suit for infringement of claims 1 to 7, inclusive, claim 11 and claims 14 to 18, inclusive, of patent 1,752,856, to A. H. Schmidtke, issued April 1, 1930, for “method and apparatus for making baskets”, upon application filed March 25, 1926, and upon claim 2 of patent 1,895,586, to A. H. Schmidtke, issued January 31, 1933, for “basket” upon the same application. The title to the patents is in St. Joseph Iron Works, while the other plaintiff, The Straight Side Basket Corporation, has an exclusive license thereunder. Defendant contends as to both patents that the claims relied on are invalid in view of the prior art as well as of prior use, and that the claims, even if valid, are not infringed.

The basket patent was issued as the result of a divisional application required by the patent office, filed February 20, 1928. Claim 2 of the basket patent, claim 16, which is typical of the method claims of patent 1,752,856, and claim 18, which is typical of the apparatus claims of that patent, are as follows:

Claim 2 of Patent 1,895,586. “2. A container formed out of a plurality of veneer strips each comprising a bottom member and an integral pair of staves, each stave being bent up angularly to the bottom member, all of the bottom members crossing each other, and a plurality of spaced hoops secured to the outer sides of the staves one of said hoops being located adjacent the ends of the bottom members, said bottom members being bowed inwardly of the container and held from straightening out by the latter hoop.”

Claim 16 of Patent 1,752,856. “16. The method of reinforcing a basket bottom of crossed panels having integral upturned extensions at the ends forming the basket side walls, which consist in arching the basket bottom and securing the lower ends of said side wall extensions within a basket-bottom embracing-hoop to maintain the bottom in its bulged condition and under tension.”

Claim 18 of Patent 1,752,856. “18. In a machine for forming a basket with frusto-conical side wall and upwardly bulged bottom, the combination of co-operable basket shaping devices, one of which comprises a frusto-conical form with recess in the smaller end and the other of which has means for pressing the basket bottom into the recess of the form and holding the basket side walls against the periphery of the form, and means at the outer side of and cooperating with the smaller end of the form to secure a hoop around the basket side wall on the form substantially at the juncture of the bottom and side wall of the basket.”

.The common practice in manufacturing baskets, the obstacles sought to be overcome, and the principal objects of the invention claimed are stated in the application for patent 1,752,856:

“It has been the practice for a long time to make what are known as round stave baskets, using a mat such as I employ in my present invention, with the ends [92]*92turned up and secured to hoops to form the annular wall of the basket. Such baskets however, have a rounded bend of somewhat large radius where the side wall joins the bottom, and on account of this rounded bend and of the thinness of the panels which it is necessary to use, there is a tendency of the basket to yield or. crush under pressure and this frequently permits the contents of the basket to be damaged, particularly in shipping and storage, as it is customary to stack the baskets one upon another. In order to avoid this objection to baskets of the round stave • type above referred to, I bend the panels of the mat sharply at the juncture of the annular wall with the bottom so as to eliminate the undesirable rounded bend and thus provide a rigid straight sided annular wall which effectively resists yielding or crushing strains and protects the contents of the basket, and I also reinforce the lower end of the basket so as to hold the basket bottom rigidly in place and protect the corner or bend between the annular wall and bottom.

“The principal objects of my invention are to provide a light weight basket which is strong and rigid; to. avoid yielding or crushing of the basket under pressure; to avoid the rounded bend at the bottom which has been present in .baskets of the character heretofore formed from a mat similar to that used in the manufacture of my present basket; to form the bottom and annular walls from a mat which is bent abruptly at the juncture of the annular side wall and the bottom; to provide the basket with a straight sided annular wall; to form the annular wall with an abrupt bend around the lower edge affording inturned portions which are connected with or form a part of the basket bottom; to construct a straight sided basket with an integral bottom which is formed so as to elevate the contents of the basket above the supporting surface; to arch the bottom of the basket to afford strength and rigidity; to hold the basket bottom rigidly in place by a confining band; to confine the lower end of the basket and the basket bottom by means of an annular band while the bottom is arched or pressed inwardly so as to permanently retain the basket bottom substantially in the pressed in position; to protect the sharp bend around the lower edge of the basket; to simplify and improve the construction of basket; and in general, to provide an improved basket and method and apparatus for making same.”

Plaintiffs say that the inventive concept of the product, machine and method claims is concerned with applying a third or bottom hoop adjacent to and around the lower end of a straight side or tub basket for the purpose of holding panels to prevent the flattening out of the bottom which is held inwardly and strengthened and reinforced to undergo the severe service to which baskets of this kind are subjected. Plaintiffs concede that, all of the elements of the product are old; that basket mats are old; that forming a mat over a basket form is old; that putting hoops on baskets is old; that bending staves to make bottom and sides of baskets is old; and that stapling the hoops to the basket is old. They contend, however, that the combination of these old elements is new, resulting in a straight side basket formed from a single mat with top, bottom and middle hoops, and with arched bottom held under tension by the bottom hoop. Plaintiffs contend that this is the first basket made out of the old type of mat in which there is a bottom hoop which functions to preserve an even arch in the bottom of the basket, and that the result is great additional strength, and that these baskets supply the modern demand for containers in which perishable fruit may be shipped considerable distances by truck and thereafter stored under conditions that, in the interests of economy, require the piling of baskets on top of each other without injury to the contents.

Plaintiffs also urge that the bottom hoop strip of their product has a machine function during the process of making the basket, by bending the staves sharply over the corner of the basket form, as well as its ultimate function of maintaining the arched formation of the bottom, when the basket is loaded, thereby preventing the lower portion of the basket from bagging outward, and that no basket bottom hoop ever had this double function before — first, the function of serving as a part of the machine to bend the staves or thin splints sharply over the corner of the basket form, and, second, to form a circumscribing construction that prevents the arched bottom from sagging under the weight' of the load and the lower part, of the basket side wall from bagging outwardly.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. Supp. 90, 1935 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1008, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straight-side-basket-corporation-v-zapf-fruit-package-co-miwd-1935.