Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Typewriter Inspection Co.

184 F. 329, 106 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3867
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1911
DocketNo. 119
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 F. 329 (Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Typewriter Inspection 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. Typewriter Inspection Co., 184 F. 329, 106 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3867 (2d Cir. 1911).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge.

The patents have to do with means for locking the key-levers of a typewriting machine instantaneously at a predetermined point in the travel of the carriage to prevent the operator from printing superposed letters at the end of a line, whose length is predetermined by the adjustment of the carriage. The locking is effected by the engagement of a locking-bar with hooks on the tops of the keys near their forward end, and does not involve any straining, locking, or otherwise manipulating the universal escapement bar or any portion of the escapement mechanism. Provision is also made for sounding a warning bell to apprise the operator shortly before the keys are locked. The junior patent further provides means for releasing the keys after they are locked so as -to allow the operator to print two or three more letters if needed to' complete a syllable.

The patents are very fully set out, the alleged infringing machines described and the claims recited and analyzed in the opinion below, where will also be found a sufficiently full review of the prior art. The claims involved are IT, 18, 19, and 20 of the senior patent, and 25, 27, and 28 of the junior patent. We shall undertake to do no more than indicate briefly the reasons which induce us to modify the decree.

The Circuit Court held that utility and novelty cannot be denied, and that there was no anticipation. Nevertheless the art was a crowded one, which circumstance and the action of the Patent Office', requiring amendment of some of the claims, preclude any broad range of equivalents. We may turn at once to the claims themselves. Of the senior patent claim 17 is for—

“17. A paper-carriage and an actuating-key provided with a catcli or shoulder located at the forward or power-receiving portion of the key, combined with a forwardly-oscillating bar adapted to engage or lock said catch, a forwardly-oscillating actuating-arm for said bar normally free from said bar, and an actuating-shoulder for said arm, said carriage being provided with a lip adapted to engage said actuating-shoulder to actuate said arm substantially as described.”

We concur with the Circuit Court.in the conclusion that infringement is not avoided by oscillating the bar backward to lock and forward to unlock. We find a fair equivalent of the forwardly-oscillating arm in the bell-crank lever of defendant, one arm of which, carrying a forwardly-projecting extension, reciprocates forward and backward pushing a pin against the depending tail which communicates motion to the oscillating locking-bar. The circumstance that there are connections between the arm and the source of motion and between the4 tail and the locking-bar seems unimportant. The claim, however, expressly provides that the actuating-arm shall be “normally free from said bar.” It must equally be normally free from the connections through which motion is imparted to the oscillating bar. Whether in defendant’s machines it is thus normally free or not is a question which is in dispute upon the evidence, and we find it difficult to reach a conclusion as to what is the correct solution. Inasmuch, however, as the defendant owns the Schneeloclc patent, in general conformity to which its machines are built and that patent [331]*331shows the pin on the arm and the part with which it engages normally apart and states in the specifications that the “pin is moved forward to engage the tail,” we may infer that some of defendant’s machines have been thus constructed. If defendant is correct in the contention that its machines are so organized that they will operate when this arm, or rather the pin or its extension, is not normally free from but is coupled to the tail so that as soon as the extension arm begins to move forward it will press upon the tail, they are free to sell such machines; they will not come within the language of this claim. We find in the shoulders 86 and 87 on the swinging lever of defendant a fair equivalent of the “actuating-shoulder” of the claim; and in the dog or pawl 78 of defendant’s machine a fair equivalent of the “lip” on- the carriage.

Claim 18 reads as follows:

“IS. A paper-carriage and an aetuating-key, combined witli a bar adapted to engage or look the key, a swinging arm having its free end placed in proximity to and normally out of contact with the bar, a bell-hammer placed in advance of the bar in the path, of the free end of the arm, and a lit) on the carriage for actuating the arm so as to make, its free end successively strike the bell-hammer and the bar substantially as described.”

Defendant's device has in reality two forward extensions of the reciprocating or oscillating arm of the bell-crank lever, one to engage the hell-hammer, the other to engage the “tail,” and they "come successively into operation. This seems to be a fair equivalent of the single oscillating arm of the claim striking the two other parts successively. Since we are satisfied that some of defendant’s machines have been made with the end of the extension “free — in proximity to and normally out of contact with” the tail it strikes — we conclude that infringement of this claim is shown.

Claim IS) reads as’follows:

“19. A paper-carriage and an aetnating-key, combined with a bar adapted to engage or lock the key. an aetuating-arm for the bar, a rock-shaft for said arm, a shoulder on said rock-shaft:, said carriage being provided with a. lip to engage the shoulder for actuating the shaft, and a bell-hammer provided with an inclined movable projection along which the arm rides in its forward stroke to actuate the bell-hammer, said arm on its return stroke being made to 3mbs under or lift the projection independently of the bell-hammer substantially as described.”

This is a very specific claim. We find in defendant’s structure no inclined movable projection along and on top of which the arm rides on its forward stroke and under which it passes on its return stroke. We cannot read these qualifications of the inclined movable projection out of the claim, and with them in there is no. infringement.

Claim 20 reads as follows:

“20. A paper-carriage and an aetuating-key, combined with a bar adapted to engage or lock the key, an aetuating-arm for the bar, a rock-shaft for said arm, a shoulder 011 said rock-shal't, a lip on the carriage for engaging the shoulder, and a bell-hammer actuated l>y said arm, said shoulder being step-shaped so as to be intermittently actuated by the carriage lip for separately actuating the bell-hammer and the locking-bar substantially as described.”

[332]*332Defendant seeks' to differentiate its device from this claim by the circumstance that it does not have a rock-shaft for the swinging arm, but we find in its upper lever a fair equivalent for such rock-shaft. It is conceded that in defendant’s machine there is a step-shaped part, but it is contended that it does not infringe because it is not located on a rock-shaft. Since, however, it is located on the equivalent of the rock-shaft, infringement is not thus avoided.

In finding noninfringement of the claims of the senior patent the Circuit Court relied on the self-imposed limitations of the claims, especially such as were written in after rejection by the Patent Office. Judge Ray says:

“I think the claims! in issue call for a forwardly-swinging arm having one end free to engage and carry 'forward and hold the locking-bar or rod under the hooks and consequently in locking position.

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Related

Underwood Typewriter Co. v. Fox Typewriter Co.
227 F. 446 (Sixth Circuit, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 F. 329, 106 C.C.A. 359, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 3867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-typewriter-co-v-typewriter-inspection-co-ca2-1911.