Textile Mach. Works v. Louis Hirsch Textile Machines, Inc.

87 F.2d 702, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2559
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1937
DocketNo. 163
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 F.2d 702 (Textile Mach. Works v. Louis Hirsch Textile Machines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Textile Mach. Works v. Louis Hirsch Textile Machines, Inc., 87 F.2d 702, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2559 (2d Cir. 1937).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decree holding valid and infringed claims 1, 3, 14, and 15 of a patent for an attachment to a “full-fashioning” knitting machine by which parts of the web may be reinforced with an extra thread, or varied by an insert of “split seam work.” In “full-fashioning” ma-' chines the width of the web depends upon the traverse, or “throw,” of the thread carrier which brings the thread to the needles; “fashioning,” which means narrowing or widening the web, is accomplished by changing this distance. The mechanism by [703]*703which this is made automatically to conform with the desired pattern, need not concern us except to say that the width of the web is the distance between two stops at the ends of the machine, less the length of “carrier bar” upon which the thread carrier is fixed. This difference measures the traverse of the "carrier bar,” and thus of the thread carrier. The patented attachment is to control the “throw” of secondary thread carriers, feeding other-threads to the needles and fixed upon their own bars. The “throw” of these carriers is limited by stops fastened upon the carrier bars and engaging other stops carried by two nuts, which are in turn threaded upon a reversibly threaded screw shaft. When the “throw” of the secondary thread carriers is to be changed in any way these nuts must move along the screw shaft; and if the “throw” is to be widened or narrowed their distance apart must be increased or diminished, which can be done by rotating the screw shaft. The patent is concerned for the most part with the mechanism which rotates the screw shaft at the proper time and in the proper direction. It is impossible to give a complete description of it without the aid of drawings, but enough for the purposes of this controversy may perhaps be made to appear verbally. The screw shaft is actuated by the main power shaft and its proper periodicity and rotation are secured by two endless belts carrying buttons, set at intervals corresponding with the desired pattern. One of these belts determines when and for how long the screw shaft shall rotate; and the other, its direction. At one end of the screw shaft are oppositely toothed ratchet wheels, each actuated by a pawl normally kept in contact with its wheel by a spring. The shaft is rotated by the oscillation of these pawls through a system of rods, levers and cams, leading from the power shaft. As one of the buttons on the belt comes into position, by this train both pawls begin to oscillate, and if each remained in contact with its ratchet, the shaft would merely idle back and forth through’ an angular variation of one notch. In order to throw one pawl out of engagement and gain any increment of rotation, a separate train is necessary, controlled by the second pattern belt, which lifts the proper pawl off its wheel when the right time comes. In this way the screw shaft separates or brings together the nuts whose stops engage the stops upon the carrier bars, and limit the “throw” of the secondary thread carriers.

The four claims in suit need not be set out. Numbers fourteen and fifteen are the most detailed; they specify as elements the screw shaft (“spindle”), with its nuts, pattern control for rotating it, and another pattern control for selecting the direction. The defendant’s attachment, which is used upon “full-fashioning” machines, is in general of the same character, and all the claims will read upon it without any undue extension, although the trains employed are different. Verbally the only question that could arise is because the defendant used a single pattern belt, on which one row of buttons rotates the screw shaft and the other selects the direction. That would scarcely avoid infringement; at any rate for argument we will assume that it does not, becajise we think the claims invalid anyway.

Schletter filed his original application in June, 1922, and though he abandoned it later, his invention stands as of that date. Some ten years earlier the art had devised an attachment to a “full-fashioning” flat knitting machine for the construction of a pointed heel; that is, the reinforcement of the heel by an added thread beginning at a point at either edge of the web and extending inward until it reinforced its whole width. As there are no re-entrant angles in such a pattern, obviously it was only necessary that the nuts should approach during the reinforcement. This was done by mounting them on a reversely threaded screw-shaft, and when the web was finished they were “racked out” by hand to their original position. We shall call this machine the “Gotham”; it would not have been available for Schletter’s purpose as it stood, and it did not therefore literally anticipate his invention. But it certainly pressed very closely upon it, and left at best a slim margin for invention; nothing indeed but the train automatically to reverse the rotation of the screw shaft by the pattern belt.

In 1917 at the Nusbaum Knitting Company of Glendale, Long Island, an attachment was made and publicly used which supplied this element lacking in the Gotham machine, though it happened to be attached to a knitting machine for making sweaters, which was not “full-fashioning,” because the web for a sweater is not narrowed from top to bottom. Therefore [704]*704the stops of the rod of the main thread carrier could be fixed, for the “throw” of that carrier does not change. Nusbaum made over an old “full fashioning” machine, using the existing nuts as variable abutments for stops on the bars which carried the secondary thread carriers, and supplying a new thread carrier and bar for the main thread. This bar he supplied with fixed stops at the ends of the machine, so that its “throw” was constant. The result was substantially the same thing as the defendant’s attachment. The single reversibly threaded screw shaft was made into two shafts, it is true; but each of these had twin ratchets oppositely toothed, and a pawl for each ratchet. A separate train led to each of these pawls from one of four rows of buttons upon a single pattern belt. When a button passed beneath the bell crank leading to any pawl, the crank moved a rod which in turn threw a lever into the path of a cam upon the power shaft. The rotation of this cam oscillated a second lever which in turn raised and lowered the pawl and effected a notch by notch rotation of the screw shaft. As each pawl had its own train and was out of engagement when not in motion, no other selective mechanism was necessary. For symmetrical patterns only two trains would have been necessary.

The claims in suit do not incorporate the train which connects the pawls with the power shaft, and there are many differences between the defendant’s train and that of the specifications; as many perhaps as between that and Nusbaum’s. The patent cannot stand upon any detail of these connections, and indeed the plaintiff does not suggest that it should; if it is valid, it is either because of the novelty of the conception of putting Nusbaum’s attachment upon a “full-fashioning” machine, or because of the technical difficulties of executing that conception. Of the second possibility we can dispose at once. It is indeed quite possible that there were in fact obstacles enough to call for substantial inventive capacity; but if so, Schletter did not show how they were to be overcome. With a single exception, to be noted in a moment, he said nothing at all about how his attachment was to be put on. Thus he is involved in a not infrequent dilemma of inventors, who seek to incorporate a new element into an old combination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Honeywell International Inc. v. United States
81 Fed. Cl. 514 (Federal Claims, 2008)
Minton v. National Ass'n of Securities Dealers, Inc.
226 F. Supp. 2d 845 (E.D. Texas, 2002)
Keller v. American Sales Book Co.
26 F. Supp. 835 (W.D. New York, 1939)
Pick v. Coe
99 F.2d 985 (D.C. Circuit, 1938)
Universal Winding Co. v. Abbott Mach. Co.
43 F. Supp. 647 (D. New Hampshire, 1842)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 F.2d 702, 32 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 471, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 2559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/textile-mach-works-v-louis-hirsch-textile-machines-inc-ca2-1937.