Union Special Mach. Co. v. Metropolitan Sewing Mach. Corp.

279 F. 770, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 849
CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedDecember 31, 1921
DocketNo. 362
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 279 F. 770 (Union Special Mach. Co. v. Metropolitan Sewing Mach. Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Special Mach. Co. v. Metropolitan Sewing Mach. Corp., 279 F. 770, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 849 (D. Del. 1921).

Opinion

MORRIS, District Judge.

This is a suit in equity on final hearing for infringement of letters patent relating to sewing machines. The ■plaintiff, Union Special Machine Company, charges the defendant, Metropolitan Sewing Machine Corporation, with infringement of letters patent No. 1,123,576, issued to plaintiff January 5, 1915, as assignee of Eansing Onderdonk, upon an application filed August 29, 1904. The answer of the defendant sets up the defenses of invalidity and noninfringement, and by way of counterclaim alleges infringement by the plaintiff of 12 letters patent owned by the defendant, as to 7 of which the charge of infringement has been abandoned. Those now relied upon are No. 1,230,355, dated June 19, 1917, to J. P. and A. H. Weis; No. 1,026,839, dated May 21, 1912, to J. P. Weis; No. 1,025,552, dated May 7, 1912, to J. P. Weis; No. 1,155,533, dated October 5, [771]*7711915, to J. P. Weis; No. 1,155,534, dated October 5, 1915, to J. P. Weis. The answer of plaintiff to the defendant’s counterclaim also raises the defenses of invalidity and noninfringement as to each of the letters patent sued upon by the defendant.

[1] The art in question involves high-speed power sewing machines for use for manufacturing purposes in hosiery and underwear mills, and in skirt, overall, clothing, and similar factories. The branch of that art with which we are here first concerned is that pertaining to the mechanism for making what is commonly termed the Grover & Baker, or double-thread, looped or chain stitch. In making this stitch two threads are in concatenation. The upper, or needle thread, runs over the top of the fabric, and at each descent of the needle is driven through the fabric in the form of a loop. It is, of course, necessary that the thread thus driven through the fabric should not be wholly withdrawn with the needle. In the stitch in question such withdrawal is prevented by a looper carrying the under or looper thread. The looper is a reciprocating arm and blade located beneath the work plate over which the fabric passes. The blade is at the upper end of the arm and has an eye near its forward end or point, through which the looper thread reeves. The blade operates substantially at right angles to the needle. When the machine is put in operation, the needle descends, passes ¡hrough the fabric, and begins to rise. The advancing threaded looper blade then passes between the needle and the needle thread, and the latter is thus held beneath the fabric, although the needle rises above it. The looper blade, but not its thread, must, however, be withdrawn from the needle loop. To prevent the withdrawal of the looper thread from the needle loop with the looper blade, the needle in its next descent passes between the looper thread and blade at a point between the eye of the looper and the needle thread loop then encircling the blade. The looper thread is thereby retained, while the looper blade by a retrograde movement withdraws from the needle thread loop and leaves within the latter a double looper thread or loop. The cycle of stitch forming events then begins anew.

The result is that each needle thread loop passes through each looper thread loop, and is in turn passed through by the succeeding loop of the looper thread. Each thread is thereby anchored and retained in its proper position. This stitch is old. It has” been known and made for much more than a half century. Grover & Baker Sewing Machine Co. v. Williams, Fed. Cas. No. 5,847. Early mechanism by which it was made is shown in the Grover patent, No. 33,778, of 1861, and the stitch is well illustrated in the patent to Bigelow, No. 365,665. Little difficulty, comparatively speaking, seems 1o have been experienced in passing the blade of the looper into the needle thread loop. This was due, at least in part, to the fact that the thread is pressed by the needle tightly against the surrounding fabric. The thread is thereby prevented from rising with the rapidity of the needle. Since the bottom of the loop passes through the eye of the needle, the more rapid ascent of the needle causes the thread to bow out from the sides of the needle, and leave an opening between the thread and the needle that may be easily entered by the looper. The looper blade, however, does not pass [772]*772through the fabric. Its thread is, therefore, not retarded and bowed by the fabric during the retrograde jnovement of the blade, as is the needle thread in the upward movement of the needle. ■ Hence the more difficult problem has been to find means to cause the looper thread to be pulled or bowed out from the looper blade, and both to be so positioned just after the point of the needle at each descent passes through the work plate that the needle in its continued descent will invariably pass between the looper blade and the looper thread, and thus prevent the missing of stitches.

It was with this problem, particularly as applied to multiple needle machines, that Onderdonk in patent No. 1,123,576, here sued upon by the plaintiff, was dealing. Onderdonk’s scheme as set out in claim 16 (the one mainly relied upon) of that patent is:

“A combination of a feeding mechanism, of a plurality of needles arranged i:i a line substantially at right angles to the line of feed, a thread carrying looper co-operating with each needle, means for moving said loopers into and out of their respective needle loops, each looper moving-into the needle loop in a direction opposed to the direction of feed and in a line substantially jarallel with the line of feed, means for moving the loopers laterally while ia the needle loops and a spreader for engaging each looper thread for separating the looper thread from the body of the looper to permit each needle to pass between the looper thread and the body of the looper with which it co-operates.”

The looper used by Onderdonk, having a parallelogrammatic or elongated elliptical movement, is known as a four-motion looper. It advances on one side of the needle, shogs in a so-called “needle-avoiding” movement to the other side, retreats and shogs to the side of the needle along which it first advanced. Those movements are repeated with each stitch. Onderdonk’s looper advances against the direction of feed and co-operates with a stationary spreader finger to spread the loop.' The gist or substance of Onderdonk’s invention was stated by Mr. Browne, plaintiff’s expert, thus:

“It is the employment, particularly in a multiple needle machine, with.the needles abreast, of a looper co-operating with each needle, said looper carrying a looper thread, and moving substantially in the line of feed in its reciprocations, moving forwardly in opposition to the line of fabric feed as it advances to enter a loop of the needle thread on one side of the needle, and being at the opposite side of the needle when the needle enters the loop of the looper thread; and a device to provide a passage for the entrance of the needle between the looper and a strand of the looper thread, which passage otherwise does not exist because the looper reciprocation is substantially in •;he line of feed of the fabric, this device being a stationary spreader finger below the throat plate, located in front of the needle, and in such position :hat it holds on to the strand of the looper thread extending to the previously completed stitches as the looper moves sidewise to pass the needle on its .•etreat on the opposite side from that on which it passed the needle on its advance.”

The defendant contends, however, among other things, that claim 16 is a mere aggregation of old elements, and not a patentable combination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Heller Bros. v. Crucible Steel Co. of America
297 F. 39 (Third Circuit, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 F. 770, 1921 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-special-mach-co-v-metropolitan-sewing-mach-corp-ded-1921.