Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Royal Typewriter Co.

224 F. 477, 140 C.C.A. 163, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1909
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMay 12, 1915
DocketNo. 261
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 224 F. 477 (Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Royal Typewriter Co.) 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
Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Royal Typewriter Co., 224 F. 477, 140 C.C.A. 163, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1909 (2d Cir. 1915).

Opinion

COXE, Circuit Judge,

[1] The record shows that the typewriting art has been developing for at least 40 years, during which period, although the general principle of operation remained unchanged, innumerable changes have been made and minor improvements added. At the dates of the Manning, Wagner and Kunath patents there was no opportunity for a broad generic invention in typewriters and it cannot be successfully contended that the claims in issue cover such an invention. They, must be strictly construed and limited to the precise improvements claimed. There is no room for the doctrine of equivalents.

The main questions involved are whether the claims in suit are valid and if so whether they are infringed. The court below found the [478]*478claims invalid and those of the Wagner and Kunath patents not infringed.

We are clearly of the opinion that the prior art as shown in the record renders it impossible to predicate invention of the minor improvements covered by the claims in issue and, if held valid at all, they must be so limited as not to cover the defendant’s machine.

It is wholly unnecessary to enter upon a minute description of the many parts forming the combinations which are the-subject of this controversy. Judge Hough, so far as the issues in this action are concerned, has done this so clearly and succinctly that extended description- is unnecessary. Speaking of Manning’s contribution to the art as embodied in the claims in controversy (Nos. 1 and 3) he says:

“What Manning did was to affix in an extremely simple manner to a platen carriage, a piece of metal marked as a scale. His appliance necessitated no change' in the structure of the typewriter or any substantial part thereof. Every part of the machine operated in the same way for the same reason and with the same results after Manning’s addition was put on as it did before.”

As to the Wagner and Kunath patents Judge Hough says:

“If there is anything in the Wagner patent at all, since the Manning patent was prior art for Wagner, there was nothing left for the latter to invent but the details of mechanism, and he does not claim that. The same may be said of Kunath. As combination patents I think they are worthless in view of the prior art even if they are not aggregations. But if one is to turn frord, the mere language of the claims to a study of the thing exhibited in court as the perfect fruit of Wagner and Kunath, then the two last named paten-tees invented nothing but certain details of mechanism which must be very narrowly viewed and are not infringed by defendant.”

The main features of the typewriters here in issue were present in all the machines of the prior art but these features were embodied in different mechanisms, operating upon substantially the same principal, each showing, perhaps, some minor improvement over its predecessors but all attempting to accomplish the same result. The typewriter depends for its efficiency upon the careful construction of its various parts and the accuracy of their interdependent action precisely as does a clock or a watch. We can take judicial notice of the fact that- the art of clock and watch making is centuries old and yet, in essential features, horology is the same to-day as it was 500 years ago. The modern watch contains many improvements over the watch in use 50 years ago and yet both possessed the same essential features — -the mainspring, the balance spring, the train of wheels, etc. No one would seriously contend that by changing the size or location of these parts or by adding new ones he could secure a patent which would prevent others from making improvements on similar lines.

This is what the patentees attempted to do in thé present case. • Manning’s object was to determine where a character or a line of characters “will appear upon the paper before the same are written so that the paper may be shifted to the exact' position to receive the impact of the type on the line or point indicated.” In other words, his object was so to locate the paper that it would be printed upon [479]*479at the desired point — not a very difficult problem, in view of what the prior art disclosed. Wagner’s problem was equally simple. In the prior structures the feed-rollers were separately mounted marginal rollers separately moved and maintained out of action when it was desired to straighten the paper on the platen. Wagner’s object was to provide a simple mechanism for simultaneously throwing the feed-rolls which co-operate with the paper platen out of operation by a single movement of a hand actuated lever.

Kunath’s problem also was not difficult, his object being to provide an easy means for moving the platen scale to and away from the writing line. It. seems to us, that all of these improvements would suggest themselves to an ordinarily intelligent workman in a typewriter factory the moment the operator of the machine complained that it was inconvenient for him to do the work by hand.

Manning’s first claim, which is sufficient, for our present purpose is as follows:

“1. In a typewriter, the combination of a reciprocating paper carriage, a platen carriage which is vertically movable to bring the printing point into the path of the upper or lower case characters, an indicating bar carried by said platen carriage and means for moving the indicating bar to and away from the printing point when the platen is in either the lowered or elevated position.”

It will he observed tliat the first member of this combination is “a paper carriage” and the second is “a platen carriage.” The defendant does not use such a platen carriage or an indicating bar carried by a platen carriage. The complainant seeks to avoid this omission of one element of the combination by the contention that the paper carriage rises and falls. Such a construction seems inadmissible and especially so in an art where a broad construction of the claim is out of the question.

[2] In an overcrowded art, where a broad generic invention is not possible, a defendant who. omits altogether one element of a combination cannot be held as an infringer, even though he makes another element do the double work.

The patent to White and the patent to Barron disclose, substantially, all that is shown in the Manning patent as exemplified by the claims in controversy. In the Manning patent the platen carriage moves vertically while in the prior patents it moves horizontally. In other words, the claims of the Manning patent, if construed broadly, are invalid in view of the prior art and if construed narrowly the defendant does not infringe them.

Wagner’s claims Nos. 16 and 18 are as follows:

“16. In a typewriter, the combination of a reciprocating carriage, a platen carriage which is vertically movable to bring the printing point into the path of the upper or lower case characters, an indicating bar carried by said platen carriage, feed rollers co-operating with said platen and means Cor moving the indicating bar to and away from the printing point when the platen is in either the' lowered or elevated position and for simultaneously conveying the feed rollers into and out of contact with the platen.”
“18.

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. 477, 140 C.C.A. 163, 1915 U.S. App. LEXIS 1909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-typewriter-co-v-royal-typewriter-co-ca2-1915.