Try-Me Beverage & Compound Co. v. Metropole

25 F.2d 138, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1054
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. South Carolina
DecidedMarch 24, 1928
DocketNo. 413
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 25 F.2d 138 (Try-Me Beverage & Compound Co. v. Metropole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Try-Me Beverage & Compound Co. v. Metropole, 25 F.2d 138, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1054 (southcarolinaed 1928).

Opinion

HALE, District Judge.

The plaintiff, owner of design patent of the United States No. 64,568, brings this snit alleging infringement of the patent by the defendant. The plaintiff holds his title to the patent by assignment from F. W. Schwenek, the inventor.

The defenses are that the patent lacks invention by reason of nonpatontability and of anticipation in the prior art, and that it has not been infringed by the defendant.

The plaintiff contends that the patent embodies these elements: (1) There are three distinct panels; (2) the upper panel tapering upwardly, with the middle panel inwardly curved, the two upper panels giving the appearance of a normal bottle superimposed upon the lower panel; (3) all three panels are provided with vertical ribs; (4) two distinct belts extending around the bottle, one of the belts separating the middle and top panels, and the other separating the middle and bottom panels; (5) a distinct belt extending around the bottle midway of the lower panel.

Testimony, is introduced in reference to the progress of, the art of bottling soft drinks, tending to show that the final step in that art has been to design a bottle having a distinctive appearance differing from those already known to the trade, and one having a pleasing effect on the eyes of the purchaser, making it attractive as to outward appearance.

The defendant brings before the court many patents claimed to be anticipatory of the patent in suit, and urges that, with these patents before him, any one starting to design a soft drink bottle would have no difficulty in making the plaintiff’s bottle, because there is no feature in it that has not been found in some prior patent. Upon careful examination of the prior patents, it is clear that none of these patents show the plaintiff’s combination of the upper tapering panel, the intermediate inwardly curved panel, separated by a band, and giving the effect of a complete bottle, sitting upon a pedestal; nor do they show the design of three distinct panels separated by bands; none of them give the general effect of the combination of the patent in suit. It is unnecessary to discuss in detail the several patents submitted in the prior art. The Miller patents, Nos. 64,124 and 64,125, present an example, coming as near anticipation as any of the patents brought before me; but in these patents there are found no distinct panels, but portions having varying diameters, and surface ornamentation consisting of grooves extending into the sides of the bottle. The effect upon the eye is, I think, different in these patents from that found in the patent in suit. The distinctive impression created by the plaintiff’s patented design is absent in the Miller patents, and in all the other patents brought before me.

The defendant further contends that the design in the patent in suit does not possess such beauty and such an appeal to the eosthetic sense as entitles it to patentability, but that it shows merely the work of an ordinary designer, citing Gorham v. White, 14 Wall. 511, 20 L. Ed. 731; Bolte & Weyer Co. v. Knight Light Co. (C. C. A.) 180 F. 412.

The courts have invariably held that a design patent appeals solely to the eye, The appearance is the essential consideration. It is not necessary for a design patent that all the elements of the design be new; it is essential that the elements, whether new or old, be grouped or combined in such a manner as to produce a pleasing appearance, different from what has preceded it. The fact that the elements of a design patent were old does not establish want of invention in assembling them. The decisive question is whether or not the design imparts a pleasing impression to the eye of ordinary observers. Gorham v. White, 14 Wall. 511, 20 L. Ed. 731, supra; Boyle v. Rousso (C. C. A.) 16 F.(2d) 666; Whiting Manufacturing Co. v. Alvin Silver Co. (C. C. A.) 283 F. 75; Zidell v. Dexter (C. C. A.) 262 F. 145; Knapp v. Will & Baumer Co. (D. C.) 253 F. 191.

Bearing upon the question of the novelty of the plaintiff’s design, certain testimony has been offered showing that the defendant, as early as 1924, applied by letter and otherwise for permission to use the “Try-Me?’ bottle of the plaintiff, and urged the plaintiff to permit him to use his design upon certain bottles which the defendant was designing.

In view of all the testimony found in the record, I am constrained to find that the plaintiff’s patent is valid and that its scope is not anticipated or limited by ,patents-found in the prior art.

The defendant’s bottle, alleged to infringe the plaintiff’s patent, is produced under patent No. 67760. This patent was issued subsequently to the plaintiff’s design patent; and it is contended by the defendant-that the action of the Patent Office is a substantial holding that the defendant’s design did not infringe the design of the plaintiff’s patent, citing North British Rubber Co., Limited v. Racine Rubber Tire Co. of N. Y. (C. C. A.) 271 F. 936. It is contended that, if a single element of the patented design . [140]*140is omitted, without the use of its equivalent, there can be no infringement. There is no merit in .these contentions. Gorham Co. v. White, supra, and Knapp v. Baumer Co. (D. C.) 253 F. 191.

The learned counsel for the defendant makes this comparison of the two bottles:

“The defendant’s bottle is more slender in appearance than plaintiff’s bottle. It is slightly smaller in diameter than plaintiff’s bottle. The shoulder of defendant’s bottle has the appearance of being practically straight, while the shoulder of plaintiff’s bottle is convex and bulges outwardly. The plaintiff’s horizontal rings are heavy and convex, while the rings on defendant’s bottle are produced by stopping the longitudinal ribs. The defendant’s ribs are slight in appearance, flat, and do not project beyond the surface of the bottle. The rings of the defendant’s bottle have the effect more of a flat belt while those of the plaintiff’s bottle have more of a rope effect. The defendant’s bottle has a swayed-in middle section, but it is longer than the middle section, in the plaintiff’s bottle. The defendant’s swayed-in middle section follows more closely the section of the Miller patent, No. 64,124, than it does the plaintiff’s middle section. One of the outstanding differences between the design patent of the 'defendant and the design patent of the plaintiff is that the design patent of the defendant has a name plate or panel as a part of. its center section of its design patent, whereas the plaintiff has no name plate or panel on the center section of its design patent. The wide, flat ribs in the center section of plaintiff’s design patent are continuous, and one can readily Count on the original design patent of the plaintiff six eontinuojis, longitudinal ribs, which are unbroken, whereas the bottle offered in evidence by the plaintiff has only two unbroken longitudinal ribs in its entire 'center section.

“The longitudinal ribs on the hwo bottles 'are entirely different,' and a casual observer of the design patents themselves could not possibly mistake one bottle for the other because they have an entirely different efféet upon the eye. The plaintiff’s bottle has longitudinal ribs which are relatively wide and 'sharply tapered at their upper ends and have the effect of parallel perpendicular panels, while the ribs on the defendant’s design are slender and apparently very numerous, and are not wide and flat as the ribs are on the plaintiff’s design patent.

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25 F.2d 138, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/try-me-beverage-compound-co-v-metropole-southcarolinaed-1928.