Thomas French & Sons, Ltd. v. Krauss

19 F. Supp. 889, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJuly 2, 1937
DocketNo. 8193
StatusPublished

This text of 19 F. Supp. 889 (Thomas French & Sons, Ltd. v. Krauss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas French & Sons, Ltd. v. Krauss, 19 F. Supp. 889, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768 (E.D.N.Y. 1937).

Opinion

GALSTON, District Judge.

This is a patent infringement suit. The pleadings present an' unusual situation. On December 11, 1936, the complaint was filed alleging the infringement of letters patent No. 1,980,048, granted to George F. French on November 6, 1934. On February 9, 1937, it was stipulated by the parties that reissue patent No. 20,257, dated January 26, 1937, to George F. French “be substituted for and in place of the original patent, no. 1,980,048, of which the first mentioned patent is a re-issue, with the same force and effect as if the bill of complaint had been filed based upon said re-issue patent no. 20,257.”

The patent, in suit is concerned with the reeling of a ladder web, more generally known as Venetian blind ladder web, in such manner as to avoid distortion of the material. The application recites that ladder web is required to be reeled so that the web when used shall support the laths or slats of a Venetian blind with all such laths parallel and equidistant from one another. Accordingly the relationship between the two outer thicknesses and between the cross-tapes must be maintained undistorted if the whole' of the web is to be usable. Certain imperfections in the reeling of ladder web resulted in failure to maintain “the original relationship between the outer thicknesses and the cross tapes for the whole length of the web, portions of the web from the inner end being distorted and permanently damaged with consequent waste of material.” The object of the invention, therefore, was to reel the ladder web without damage to any portion of its length and to avoid waste. The discovery that the difficulties of the earlier practice were due to the reeling of the web on a smaller diameter core is stated to be the act of invention, though all but one of the claims of the original patent related to the patentee’s apparatus for reeling Venetian ladder web. It may be observed that ladder webbing in its present form has been in use for years. Claims 7, 8, and 9 were added by the reissue application. They are so-called product claims. So that now three classes of claims are presented by the inventor to cover his invention. First there is the process claim; secondly the special apparatus for the operation of the process; and thirdly the three product claims. The specification recites: “According to the invention, instead of reeling the web upon a relatively small centre block, it is reeled upon a relatively large block, or ring, both prior to and after cutting the superfluous threads to allow the separation of the webs, the diameter of the block or ring being equivalent to the size of coil at which, using the % inch spindle, the layers or thicknesses of the web cease to coil in other than a regular (non-distorted) relationship.”

Claims 1, 7, 8, and 9 are in issue. The first claim relates to the process of reeling the Venetian blind. The other claims refer to the product. The defendant is in the' business of selling ladder web. -Since it appeared that he was not a manufacturer and that he did not in any way control the manufacturing process, I held at the conclusion of the trial that no infringement had 'been proved of claim 1.

Claims 7 and 8 are substantially alike and it will be sufficient, therefore, to consider either one. Claim 7 réads: “A Venetian blind ladder web or the like having two similar broad main tapes and provided with inter-connecting cross-tapes between the main tapes at intervals in its length a ring, said ladder web being reeled on said ring, the diameter of said ring being such that the difference in. length of the two main tapes of the web in proximity to said ring is within the elastic limit of the web, whereby the web may be reeled and re-reeled without permanent distortion of the parts of the web, and the parts -of the web when the latter is removed for use, will automatically resume their normal initial relative positions.”

To increase the size or degree of an element or thing is not invention. Here then we have broadly stated that the alleged invention consists in meeting the difficulties described by increasing the ■ diameter of the core on which fabric is rolled or reeled from 1% inches to approximately 5 inches. Certainly it was not unusual to wind fabrics around a core long before the date of this alleged invention. Moreover, it is certainly obvious to any one who seeks to reel or wind fabric around a core and avoid wrinkling or dis■torting the fabric that he can achieve his purpose by winding the fabric tightly. Equally obvious, it would appear, that the use of a large diameter would facilitate the specific object sought by this inventor. [891]*891Finally it should be observed that the sort of experiment required for determining the preferred diameter of the core calls no inventive act into play. It would seem that if necessary the prior art would have revealed a great deal more than that which was proved at the trial. However, we are limited to such proof.

Murdock, testifying for the defendant, said that he was a manufacturer of webbing and that he was employed as early as 1916 in the textile field, having at that time been associated with the Buffalo Weaving & Belting Company. That company made medium and heavy cotton weavings and white cotton belting. It was their practice to wind white cotton belting of various plies, from two to ten, on cores about 4% inches in diameter. A typical wooden core, such as was used, was produced.

In the latter part of 1923, in association with J. S. Burnett, Murdock organized the Southern Weaving Company and was associated with that company until December, 1935. H.e also organized and was associated with the Southern Friction Fabric Company of Charlotte, N. C. That company sold asbestos brake lining.. It was put up in rolls without a core but wound on a mandrel of between three and four inches.

The Southern Weaving Company also made medium and' heavy webbings and tapes, using cotton, linen, jute, and other fibers. These were wound in rolls. In 1925 it made hood lacing. At first this was wound on a 1-inch square spindle wind. Trouble was encountered, the material was found creased and marked at the inside and the rolls distorted. To overcome the difficulty a stock machine was used for winding the material around a 3-inch outside diameter core. The machine was identified as having been purchased from the Universal Winding Company some time in 1926 or 1927.

The Southern Weaving Company in 1927 also made shock absorber webbing. Originally this was wound on a core or reel % of an inch square. Distortion of the thick web resulted from the use of a small core. . This was eliminated by using a 2-inch square mandrel and later by employing a 2%-inch round mandrel. A mandrel used by the Southern Weaving Company in 1928 was introduced in evidence.

Corroboration of the practice in the Southern Weaving Company was given by Burnett. He said that they began manufacturing hood lacing and shock absorber webbing in 1925 or 1926. Tape such as Exhibit O was first wound on a 1-inch core. Complaints were received from customers because of the badly crimped condition of the material. Then they adopted a wooden roll, approximately 3% to 4 inches in diameter. It was found that the wooden roll crushed in transit and thereupon the Universal Winding Company machine was obtained and the material wound on a core similar to that shown in Defendant’s Exhibit U.

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Bluebook (online)
19 F. Supp. 889, 1937 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-french-sons-ltd-v-krauss-nyed-1937.