The Globe Tool & Engineering Company v. Ram Tool Corporation

403 F.2d 457, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 578, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4900
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 14, 1968
Docket16448
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 403 F.2d 457 (The Globe Tool & Engineering Company v. Ram Tool Corporation) 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.

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The Globe Tool & Engineering Company v. Ram Tool Corporation, 403 F.2d 457, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 578, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4900 (7th Cir. 1968).

Opinion

MAJOR, Senior Circuit Judge.

This action was brought jointly by Globe Tool & Engineering Company, an Ohio corporation (Globe), and Harry W. Moore (Moore), a resident of Ohio and president of Globe, against Ram Tool Corporation, an Illinois corporation (Ram), charging Ram with infringement of claims 3 and 11 of United States patent No. 2,627,379, issued to Moore on February 3, 1953, on an application filed February 1, 1949 (sometimes called the first Moore patent), and claims 1 to 14, inclusive, of United States patent No. 3,013,737, issued to Moore on December 19, 1961, on an application filed November 15, 1957 (sometimes called the second Moore patent).

At the time the suit was commenced Moore was the owner of the two patents and Globe the exclusive licensee, but prior to trial Moore assigned his entire right, title and interest in and to the two patents to Globe. At the commencement of the trial Moore was dismissed as a party plaintiff.

Globe for many years has been engaged in the development, manufacture and sale of special machinery for manufacturers of electrical equipment. Approximately 30% of its business constitutes the production of so-called “armature winding machines,” i. e., machines for winding coils of electrical wire onto a magnetizable structure or core which, when suitably wound and further processed to provide for connection of the coils of the winding to each other and to suitable external circuits, forms the armature or rotor of an electric motor or generator.

Defendant Ram is not a manufacturer of armature winding machines but uses *458 such machines in manufacturing armatures, and is charged with infringement by reason of its use of an armature winding machine manufactured by Possis Machine Corporation, a relatively new competitor of plaintiff. Possis, although not a party to this action, has assumed its defense.

The trial court, after a rather extensive hearing, announced from the bench that it was inclined to hold invalid the claims in suit, both those of the first and second Moore patents, and suggested that findings of fact and conclusions of law be submitted. On April 12, 1967, the court entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law, in the main as submitted by defendant’s counsel. On May 19, 1967, judgment was entered, holding all claims in suit of both patents invalid and void and not infringed by Ram. Presumably the court found non-infringement solely on the basis that the claims in suit were invalid. From the judgment thus entered, the appeal comes to this court.

The following description of the subject matter of the patents involved is taken from plaintiff’s brief. The two Moore patents in suit are directed to apparatus known in the art as armature winding machines. More specifically, they are directed to automatic armature winding machines in which the entire winding operation, except for the initial and final steps of placing an unwound armature core in the machine and removing the wound armature after completion of the winding operation, is carried out automatically.

As described by plaintiff’s witness Biddison, the type of armature with which the patents in suit are concerned constitutes the rotating part of an electric motor and consists of a substantially cylindrical body formed of magnetizable material such as soft iron, for example, which cylindrical body is provided with a plurality of axially extending slots in its peripheral surface for receiving the electric coils or windings. Each coil or winding consists of a number of turns of conductive wire which are wound into a pair of spaced slots that are disposed substantially opposite each other on the armature body so that the wire extends along one slot, across the end of the armature body, back along the second slot, across the opposite end of the armature body to the starting point and again along the first slot, which winding pattern is repeated until the desired number of turns have been wound into the pair of slots to form a completed coil.

Lengths of wire which respectively extend from the start of the first turn and from the termination of the last turn in the coil are commonly referred to as leads and serve to connect the coils into suitable external electric circuits. Specifically, these leads in the completed motor are electrically connected to circuit-completing devices known as commutators or slip rings which are carried by the armature shaft. In winding armatures, the coils are usually wound from a continuous supply of wire, and the leads are formed during the winding operation as loops extending between successive coils, which loops are later cut to form two leads. These loop portions of the armature winding are referred to in the art as “lead loops.”

The first Moore patent is directed to an automatic armature winding machine having correlated and interconnecting means and mechanisms which function to wind a coil of the proper number of turns into a pair of oppositely disposed slots in the armature core, to automatically shift or index the armature core to present successive pairs of slots for winding additional pairs of coils, to form lead loops between the last turn of each completed coil and the initial turn of the next succeeding coil, and to stop the machine when the armature is completely wound.

The second Moore patent is directed to automatic armature winding machines for carrying out substantially the same winding operations as the first M.oore patent, but incorporates hydraulic driving and control means that eliminate or minimize the complicated electromechani *459 cal relays, clutches, brakes, etc. of the first Moore patent, thus providing improved flexibility, ease and accuracy of control of the winding operation while permitting increased winding speeds and decreased maintenance problems as compared to previously known automatic winding machines.

Defendant on brief here, as it did in the court below, relies heavily upon the 1902 Schulz patent No. 709,179; the 1912 Pike patent No. 1,048,205; the 1921 Wood patent No. 1,375,745, and the 1940 Allen patent No. 2,348,948, in support of its contention, agreed to by the trial court, that the first Moore patent was invalid. The patents to Schulz, Pike and Wood were not cited in the Patent Office during the prosecution of the first Moore patent. The defendant relies upon Allen, No. 2,348,948; the 1951 Biddison patent No. 2,670,145, and the 1943 Vickers patent No. 2,326,184, in support of its contention, agreed to by the trial court, that the claims of the second Moore patent are invalid.

Plaintiff does not seriously question that the court’s findings support its conclusions, that is, that the patents in suit were invalid in view of the prior art. Plaintiff does contend that the court’s findings are not supported by substantial evidence, are clearly erroneous and should not be accepted by this court. Proceeding on this theory, plaintiff argues the matter here on brief as though this were a trial de novo. In this connection it states:

“The trial court in the ease at bar, by adopting Defendant's proposed findings, accepted blindly the opinion testimony of Defendant’s expert witness Kohls and rejected sub silentio the more competent testimony of Plaintiff’s expert witness Biddison.”

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403 F.2d 457, 159 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 578, 1968 U.S. App. LEXIS 4900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-globe-tool-engineering-company-v-ram-tool-corporation-ca7-1968.