Up-Right, Inc. v. Safway Products, Inc. And R. D. Werner Co., Inc.

315 F.2d 23
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMay 14, 1963
Docket19286_1
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 315 F.2d 23 (Up-Right, Inc. v. Safway Products, Inc. And R. D. Werner Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Up-Right, Inc. v. Safway Products, Inc. And R. D. Werner Co., Inc., 315 F.2d 23 (5th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

GRIFFIN B. BELL, Circuit Judge.

Suit for infringement of United States Letters patent No. 2,438,173 relating to portable, collapsible scaffolding units was brought against Safway Products, Inc., a distributor of the accused Aldek Scaffold. R. D. Werner Co., Inc., the manufacturer of the Aldek scaffold, was permitted to intervene. The charge of infringement was limited to claims 1 and 2 of the patent in suit. 1 Two general issues, in *24 validity and infringement, panned out of the prolix pleadings so often prevalent in patent litigation. The issue of infringement involved the subsidiary issue of file wrapper estoppel.

The court, upon reaching its decision, advised counsel for the parties of its views by letter, and this letter was made a part of the judgment. It follows in pertinent part. The reference to the Johnson patent is to the patent in suit.

“Gentlemen:

“Having heard and viewed the evidence presented and studied thoroughly the excellent briefs presented to the court, I have determined that plaintiffs’ Johnson patent has not been infringed by the accused Aldek device of Defendant and Intervener. Plaintiffs’ patent, a combination patent in a very old and crowded art which embodies no new individual elements, is entitled at most to only a very narrow range of equivalents. The accused device does not fall within this range. The Aldek device is simpler, safer and more efficient in operation, and is substantially and materially different in structure, mode of operation, and result.
“It is therefore unnecessary to decide the issue of the validity of plaintiffs’ Johnson patent. * * * ”

Thereafter findings of fact, conclusions of law, and final judgment were entered.

The patent in suit covers an integrally connected assemblage of scaffold elements which may be easily erected for use as a tower type scaffold unit, and which may be easily collapsed or folded into a relatively small compact package for transportation or storage. The essential parts are permanently connected together by hinged joints, thus eliminating the loss of parts, and increasing the ease with which the scaffold may be handled and stored. Each unit includes a ladder. The units may be placed when erected, one on top of the other, to reach desired heights.

Appellant, assignee of the patent, was founded to manufacture and distribute scaffolds made to the teachings of the patent. Some 53,000 units have been manufactured and sold for use in construction and maintenance work, and as one piece folding radio tower sections. There was testimony describing the erection of a 350 foot high tower in one day. The United States Government has taken a license under the patent so that they may be manufactured by others for the government. The Army Signal Corps has purchased units valued at more than one million dollars, and they are used in forming towers, including use on the Distant Early Warning System in northern Canada. They are also used by the major telephone companies in the United States. Sufficient units can be loaded on a single truck to erect a 200 foot high tower.

These units are simple in design. They are of open frame or tubular construction. Each consists of a platform section hinged to two end or support sections with a diagonal ladder section hinged at the juncture of the platform and one of the end sections. The design is based on a triangular conception with one end section, the ladder section and the platform section forming the triangle. The other end section supports the corner of the triangle where the ladder is affixed at the juncture of that end section and the platform, and is perpendicular to the platform and parallel to the opposite end section when the unit is in the erected position. The ladder is used for the purpose of ascending to and descending- from the platform section. The width of the ladder takes up one half of the width of the supporting ends of the platform section, leaving room for a deck covering the other half of the platform section from which to work. Additional units may be stacked, one upon the other, by fitting the legs of the upper unit into holes provided in the four corners of the end sections of the lower unit. As noted in Footnote 1, the only difference between claims 1 and 2 is the brace between the end sections *25 added in claim 2. It is not involved in this litigation.

The crux of the infringement controversy lies in the difference between the device made according to the specifics of the patent, and the accused device. It is necessary in order that the unit be fold-able and portable that one end of the triangle be detachable. The patent sets out the point of detachment as being where the lower end of the ladder joins the bottom of the end section, i. e., the end side of the triangle. The other corners of the triangle are hingedly connected, as is the end section which is not a side of the triangle, but which, along with the opposite end, supports the platform.

The patent in suit, immediately preceding the claims, provides:

“While we have shown the preferred form of our invention, it is understood that various changes may be made in its construction by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit of the invention as defined in the appended claims.”

The differences between the device of the patent and the accused device are nil for the purposes of this litigation insofar as they appear erected. Such differences as form the issue of infringement are two, one resulting from the other. Eather than having the ladder detachable from the bottom of the end section which forms a side of the triangle, appellees have put the point of detachment where the platform joins the end section of the triangle. The ladder, on their device, is hingedly connected at each end but it occupies the same diagonal position as taught in the patent. This change results in a different folding and unfolding method. In substance, the only change has been to move the point of detachment of the triangle from one corner to another.

The resulting difference in folding and unfolding occurs in two respects; in movement, and in the form of the folded package. The device of the patent in the folded or collapsed position is the thickness of three of the metal tubes forming the framing of the unit. The end which does not form a part of the triangle lies on the bottom of the package with the ladder on top of it, fitting partially into the open part of the platform section which comes next above the ladder, and with the end section which is a part of the triangle resting on top, making the folded package.

It is erected from a folding position, as the erector faces the package,- by swinging the end piece which is on top through a one hundred eighty degree arc to the right so that it is again parallel to the ground and an extension of the original package. Next the platform and end section are raised at the joint where the platform hinges to the now extended end section. This in turn commences the forming of a triangle consisting of the end piece, platform and ladder, pulling the outer end of the end section back toward the package until the bottom of the ladder section can be attached to the rung on the bottom of the end section.

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Bluebook (online)
315 F.2d 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/up-right-inc-v-safway-products-inc-and-r-d-werner-co-inc-ca5-1963.