United States Hat Machinery Corp. v. Boesch Mfg. Co.

108 F.2d 417, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 26, 1939
DocketNo. 120
StatusPublished

This text of 108 F.2d 417 (United States Hat Machinery Corp. v. Boesch Mfg. 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
United States Hat Machinery Corp. v. Boesch Mfg. Co., 108 F.2d 417, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2580 (2d Cir. 1939).

Opinion

L. HAND, Circuit Judge.

The appeal is from a decree holding invalid and not infringed Patent No. 1,-533,351, issued to Homer A. Genest. The invention was for “felting, shrinking and crozing” felt hat “bats”. “Bat” is the name for the felt fabric out of which hats are made; felt is rabbit fur, the separate hairs of which, when agitated in hot water, congeal, as it were, into a seamless fabric. At first this is very flimsy and must be handled with great care, but, as the barbs upon the hairs interlock more and more ‘completely, it becomes more closely knit and stouter. This process is called the “hardening” stage; it always was and still is done by hand. Then follows an initial “shrinking” stage, at the end of which the “bat” is a fur cone, tough and hard, but still too big; this stage too has always been manual. The final stage is called “sizing”; it consists of still further shrinking the “bat” till it gets to the proper size for !a hat; it is the most troublesome of all, and with it the patent-is concerned. Although all the claims in suit are for a method, they are not intelligible except in terms tof the machine disclosed. It consists of a knuckled belt supported by power driven “guide rolls”, set at substantial intervals, between each pair of which another roll is hung from above and set below the line of the “guide rolls”; these are the “deflecting rolls”. When “hardened” and “shrunk” “bats” are -laid upon the belt, they will pass down and between the belt and the “deflecting rolls”, and up and over the “guide rolls” in a sinuous course, which is called the “to and fro” movement, and this, coupled with an agitation transversely to, and in the plane of, the belt, is the practical equivalent of hand “sizing”. The machines are driven fast, the rolls are numerous, and the “bats” are put through them several times in different positions to the line of the belt. This is all that is necessary for the “sizing” of flat pieces of felt. However, “bats” are cones, as we have said, and therefore have two folds, when laid flat, as they must be; and when the folds pass through “deflecting rolls” they become creases which show in the finished hat. Indeed, even in the hand process the workman from time to time must open out the “bat” and fold it in a new line; this is called “crozing”.

The claims in suit, 10, 14 and 19, are especially directed towards automatic “crozing”, which the machine accomplishes in the following way. On each side of each “deflecting roll” is a so-called “pressure roll”, which presses upon the belt at a point just above a “guide roll”, so that the belt is grasped between the two. These “pressure rolls” may be idlers, or driven like the “guide rolls”, and when driven they must be at a slower speed. (Page 4, lines 34, 35.) It is the driven form which the defendants have adopted. When the “bat” reaches the first of the “pressure rolls” the approaching edge lifts the roll against the pressure of the spring, and there develops a little “ripple”, “tuck” or “wave” in the upper ply, because the belt has a stronger grip upon the lower ply than the lower ply has upon the upper. As the bat moves through the machine, this “wave”, “ripple”, or “tuck” passes from the entering edge of the “bat” along the whole upper ply till the “bat” -passes beyond the “pressure roll”; the “wave” is always just behind that roll, and when it reaches the further edge of the “bat”, it follows around the fold, making a new fold upon a slightly different line; what was before the fold becomes a part of the lower ply. Each “pressure roll” adds its increment to this process, and the “bat” is “crozed” at the same time that it is “sized”; which merely means that the fold is changed .progressively, so that at each grip between “guide” and “pressure rolls” there shall be a new fold.

Since at least 1854 the art had known an automatic “sizing” machine, called the “multi-roller” (Cowper’s British patent No. 1795 of that year). This was made of two banks of rolls, one above the other, each roll touching, or nearly touching, its neighbor of the same bank, and always touching under pressure two neighboring rolls of the opposite bank, for the banks were so set that the rolls in opposite banks were staggered. As both banks were positively driven at the same speed, when a “bat” was put through the machine, although it was effectively “sized” by kneading it “to and fro” in a sinuous course, it [419]*419came Out with the fold just where it had been when it went in; each passage between the bite of two rolls helped 'to form a crease; it was not “crozed”. There is some evidence that at times the driving belts on the rolls of these machines would get loose, and the two banks would vary a little in speed so that the “bats” came out “mussed”. That was thought a disadvantage, and was never regarded as “crazing”; and it was always necessary for a workman to take the “bats” after one or more runs, and “croze” them by hand, so as to prevent repeated runs on the original fold. This was troublesome and expensive. In 1910 two inventors, Stocker and Stacy, invented an elaborate machine, and applied for a patent upon it, which issued five years later — Patent No. 1,156,949, — and which was intended to “size”, “shrink” and “croze” at the same time. The defendants argue, and the judge found, that the method of this machine was an anticipation of the claims in suit. In it the “bat” was held between an upper and a lower segmental plate, revolving in opposite directions. Were it not that the operating faces of these plates had “the slats, 40”, upon them, it would have been plain beyond question that the machine was not intended to .operate like Genest’s. The plates touched the upper and lower plies of the “bat” at every point, and would allow no slack, ruffle, “tuck”, “wave” or “ripple” to gather upon either top or bottom. If the machine was operative at all — none was ever built — the “bat” was rolled upon itself quite like a caterpillar tractor; and that this was in fact the conception, is indubitably shown •by figure 9, which disclosed a flat triangular plate, to be inserted in the “bat”, “around which the body may roll instead of having its inner sides rubbing directly against each other” (page 3, lines 8-11). The defendants argue that the presence of “the slats, 40”, on the faces of the plates necessarily set up “waves” or “ripples” in the plies, but that is nowhere suggested, and is at best much too doubtful to serve as an anticipation. Indeed, it seems pretty plain that when a plate passed across a ply, it did not slide upon it at all; but that the end of the plate caught the edge of the ply and simply pulled it along, the joint surface of contact becoming greater and greater until the plate began to leave the ply at the other edge of the “bat”. While this was going on, the only slip was between the inner surfaces of the two plies, the “bat” acting as an endless belt. This is apparently a practicable method of “shrinking”, “sizing” and “crazing”, but it is not the plaintiff’s method, and we cannot agree with the judge in regarding it as an anticipation.

With this reference out of the way, the patent in suit has the conventional earmarks of validity. The art had gone for many years without automatic “crazing”, during all of which the need for it had existed; there had been at least one effort which was of another type and did not — then at any rate — go into use; the invention, when made, was a successful answer and has been widely used. It is true that in the plaintiff’s commercial machine the “crazing” takes place, for part of the run, in the patented way, and for the rest between two belts which apparently hold the plies flat like the plates in Stocker and Stacy’s machine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 F.2d 417, 44 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 52, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-hat-machinery-corp-v-boesch-mfg-co-ca2-1939.