Stuebing Truck Co. v. Olson

291 F. 63, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2822
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1923
DocketNo. 3207
StatusPublished

This text of 291 F. 63 (Stuebing Truck Co. v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stuebing Truck Co. v. Olson, 291 F. 63, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2822 (7th Cir. 1923).

Opinion

EVAN A. EVANS, Circuit Judge.

The patent in suit (No. 1,160,-666, to Stuebing) covers an improvement in trucks, concerning which patentee, says:

“My invention belongs to that class of trucks in which powerful mechanical devices are employed to assist in lifting the load to be carried; thus the load! can be readily loaded or unloaded; and in connection with which supplementary platforms are einployed, which have been previously loaded or upon which goods have been placed regularly in the course or process of manufacture.”
“It consists essentially in providing a frame or body portion and an elevating platform working up and down thereon, to lift or lower the load; a series of pawls and levers being the means for elevating and lowering the platform. The handle of the truck is so swiveled that it can be turned around in a circle, either when the truck is empty or loaded, so that the truck can be pulled at any angle. The handle must first be pulled down to raise the platform and put up to lower it, in order to force the operator to gain control of the load at all times, before raising or lowering the load.”

The chief defense relied upon, and the only one we will consider, is noninfringement.

Claims 3, 4, S, 6, and 9 are in issue, but consideration of them may • be limited to the last claim, which most completely and fully supports appellant’s position. The claim reads:

“In a lifting truck, a lower frame having forward and rear wheel members, a lifting platform mounted on said lower frame, and capable of moving up and down thereon, the forward wheel member connected by a swivel to the front part -of the said lower frame, a handle lever for raising the lifting platform, said handle lever being pivotally connected to the upper end of the swivel, and means operated by said handle lever for elevating the lifting platform, means for locking the lifting platform in its elevated position, and means for releasing the lifting pla,tform from its locked position in order that the lifting platform, map he lowered, the handle lever capable of being revolved around in a circle, carrying the front wheel member with it, said handle lever capable of being moved up and down during its revolution.”

Appellee asserts that the italicized words described the element that distinguishes the patent from his truck. In explaining the workings of the combination, patentee in his specifications said:

“In lowering the load or platform (2), it is necessary to first bring the handle down as shown in fig. (1). * * * When the platform (2) is elevated and held elevated by pawls (12) and (17), the pawl (13) is thrown back on the handle as shown by dotted lines in Fig. (1), thus forcing the operator to gain control of the load hy dropping said pawl (13), if he desires to lower the ' platform (8).”

Appellee’s urge is that the claim is limited to the structure thus shown, notwithstanding the language “means for releasing the lifting platform from its locked position in order that the lifting platform may be lowered” is broad enough to cover other structures. In support of its position, attention has been called, not'only to the language [65]*65in the specifications heretofore quoted, but to the argument made in the patent office in support of the claim and upon which it was allowed. Answering certain 'citations confronting him in the Patent Office, particularly Miller, No. 1,104,533, patentee’s attorney said:

“In the second place, he releases his locking means automatically; I release mine manually, for the following reason: When the elevated platform is up with the load and the operator wishes to turn the truck by using the handle, he throws the pawl out of connection with the pawl on the platform, the locking pawl having, of course, locked the platform and load in an elevated position. After the operator has turned the truck and wheeled it to its desired position, and wishes to lower it, he is compelled to throw the pawl on the handle back in position with the pawl on the elevated platform, and to do this he lowers the handle to its lowest position and then manually releases the loalcing pawl. He has now complete control of the load and can lower it with safety. This maimer of operating the (lower)

After certain amendments to the specifications and claims had been made, the Patent Office was again urged to allow the patent and the argument was repeated. The patentee says:

“I release my locking means manually; he does not. By my construction, after the platform has been elevated with a load, the means for holding up the load between the handle and the lifting platform are releasd, and in order to again control the load the operator is forced to again connect the handle with the lifting platform, thus avoiding any accidents or premature dropping of the load; he has no such construction.”

The claims as presented were thereupon allowed. Thereafter appellant added claim 9. It is insisted that this claim was presented after appellant had seen appellee’s truck, but this charge may be passed. As originally drawn, the element under consideration in this claim read:

“And means for releasing the elevating platform from its elevated position, independent of the hand lever."

The Examiner—

“recommended that the amendment be not entered, because the matter set forth in lines 9-11 of the amendment is contrary to the operation of applicant’s device as set forth in the specifications commencing in line 4 from the bottom of page 3 and ending in line 9, page 4.”

Patentee acquiesced in this ruling, and the claim was amended by striking the words “independent of the hand lever.” With the specifications slightly modified thereafter, the claim was then allowed. That this was appellee’s conception of the novelty of its truck is confirmed by its advertisements. From its catalogues we quote:

“The load cannot release itself by shock or jar, as it is automatically locked by means independent of .the lever which lifts it. It is compulsory for the operator to get control of the load before he can open the lock to let the load down, thus avoiding accidents.”
“Safety First With or Without Hydraulic Check.
“On the three-wheel B models (without hydraulic check) the load is automatically locked by means independent of the lever which lifts it and can [66]*66not release by shock or jar. When lowering the load, it is compulsory for the operator to get control of it, by means of the lever, before he can disengage the locking means. 'After he disengages the locking means, he is in easy position to lower the load slowly under control.”
“The Stuebing B model trucks are the only trucks on the market that can be operated safely without hydraulic checlcs.”

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Bluebook (online)
291 F. 63, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stuebing-truck-co-v-olson-ca7-1923.