Trussell Mfg. Co. v. S. E. & M. Vernon, Inc.

11 F.2d 289, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 11, 1926
DocketNo. 2037
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 F.2d 289 (Trussell Mfg. Co. v. S. E. & M. Vernon, Inc.) 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
Trussell Mfg. Co. v. S. E. & M. Vernon, Inc., 11 F.2d 289, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980 (E.D.N.Y. 1926).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, District Judge.

Plaintiff brings this suit in equity against the defendant alleging infringement of letters patent No. 880,053, for improvement in temporary binders, and No. 1,104,394, for temporary binder, issued February 25, 1908, and July 21, 1914, respectively, to Clarence D. Trussell, assignor to Trussell Manufacturing Company. The defendant challenges the validity of both patents and denies infringement. I will consider them in the order named.

Patent No. 880,053 has expired, and only claim 4 of the patent is in suit. It reads as follows:

“4. In a temporary binder, mating prongs; means to retain said prongs in open or closed position; and apertured metallic plates engaged by said prongs and adapted to open the prongs when pressed backward by the operator.”

The object of the patent is stated by the patentee in his application as follows:

“The object of my invention is to provide a binder of simple and cheap construction, which may be readily operated for the insertion or withdrawal of sheets.”

The metallic plates are placed between the covers of the binder and the inclosed sheets, and by bending baekwardly the plates with the covers they serve as levers, and cause the prongs, which are held by means of a yield-able nature,'to open.

The defendant offered in evidence six United States patents of the prior art:

No. 453,574, to Blineoe, for temporary binder, dated June 2, 1891.

No. 580,362, to Barrett, for binder, dated April 13, 1897.

No. 644,345, to Wiley, for letter file, dated February 27, 1900.

No. 712,077, to Krag1, for temporary binder, dated October 28, 1902.

No. 791,296, to Shepherd, for temporary binder, dated May 30, 1905.

No. 841,125, to Dawson, for loose-leaf binder, dated January 15, 1907.

None of the first four require further consideration, because in none of them are disclosed apertured plates adapted to open mating prongs, and none of them have means for retaining such prongs in open or closed position of a character adapted to co-operate with apertured opening plates. The last two, however, require more detailed consideration.

Patent No. 791,296, to Shepherd, discloses a binder having covers 17,18, hinged to a pair of back plates 2, 3, carrying the sheet-holding prongs 11, 12. These back plates are normally held rigidly closed, as indicated in Eig. 1, by means of a latch 5, shown in Fig. 5. -The plates 2 and 3 are hinged together, so that when not prevented by the latch 5 they may be turned back as indicated in Figs. 2 and 3, to permit the sheet-holding prongs or fingers to be separated. The forward surface of the part 6 of the latch is beveled at 9, so as to ride under the hook 10 of the part 7, and permit the two parts to be snapped together, thereby rigidly holding the back plates in a position such as to maintain the ends of the sheet-holding fingers in contact, as indicated in Eig. 1. Included in the Shepherd device is a pair of guide plates 14, the purpose of which is described in the' specification as follows:

“The guides 14 are made broad enough to [290]*290extend .over the part .of the cover which is flexed when the binder is opened or closed.”

“The plates 14 when the cover is partially open, as shown at the left in Fig. 2, rest against the back and cover and extend diagonally between them. This raises the pages 16 on the fingers until they assume their proper position when the book is closed. Should these plates be omitted, the pages would not be raised from the plate or back 1 and would bind between the fingers and the cover when the book was being closed, thereby tearing the pages and breaking the binder.”

The specifications say nothing about the plates 14 playing any part in opening the fingers 11, 12, but that would not detract from the effect of this patent as an anticipation, if the plates were adapted for that purpose. The opinion of the defendant’s expert that the stubs of plaintiff’s patented device and the device disclosed by Shepherd are alike in function and operation is not convincing, in the face of the testimony of the plaintiff’s president, who has had 23 years’ experience as a manufacturer of temporary binders, because I am convinced that it would not be practical to open the fingers 11, 12, of the device disclosed by the Shepherd patent by the use of the guide plates 14, in view of the resistance which would be offered by the latch 5.

No mention is made in the specifications of the manner in which the two parts of the latch 5 may be released, and the manner of separating the sheet-holding fingers does not appear to have constituted any part of the invention; neither does the device include any means whatever for maintaining the prongs in open position. The plates 14 of the Shepherd patent could not satisfactorily be substituted for the opening plates 20 of the patent in suit, particularly because the elongated holes or slots 15 in the guide plates 14 are not such as would be used in opening plates 20 of the patent in suit.

Patent No. 841,125, to Dawson, .also discloses a binder having perforated follower plates 17, 18, and the purpose of the invention is described in the specification as follows:

“The invention relates directly to the stiff fly sheet or follower used in devices of this kind Tor facilitating the movement of the leaves upon the arches as the book is closed, its object being to provide a fly or follower in a book of this character which will slide freely on the arches and will prevent the mutilation of the sheets.”

The plates 17,18, are each provided with oblong apertures for receiving the arches, as shown at 20, 21, and plates 17, 18, are each made of two thicknesses bound together by rivets. Dawson evidently did not contemplate using the followers 17, 18, as opening plates for the sheet-holding arches, nor does the specification show in what manner the sheet-holding arches are to be opened, nor any means whereby they may be maintained in either an open or closed position, and these features constituted no part of the Dawson invention.

The defendant’s expert expressed the opinion that the followers 17,18, of the Dawson structure, and the plates 20 of the patent in suit, are the same in function and mode of operation, but I am unable to agree with him because I believe the plaintiff’s president has had much greater experience in the manufacture of temporary binders and familiarity with the temporary binder art, and I agree with him that the structure indicated at the end of the binder back illustrated in the center of Fig. 3 shows that a key was intended to be used to turn the rod which opened the rings. „ •

While this part of the mechanism is illustrated, but not described, still I think more weight should be accorded to the testimony of the president of the plaintiff, with his long experience, than to the testimony of the defendant’s expert, who has no such familiarity with the art. In my opinion the pat-' ents cited do not anticipate the patent in suit.

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11 F.2d 289, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trussell-mfg-co-v-s-e-m-vernon-inc-nyed-1926.