W. F. Burns Co. v. Automatic Recording Safe Co.

241 F. 472, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2383
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 27, 1916
DocketNos. 2287, 2301, 2302, 2304, 2314
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 241 F. 472 (W. F. Burns Co. v. Automatic Recording Safe Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. F. Burns Co. v. Automatic Recording Safe Co., 241 F. 472, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2383 (7th Cir. 1916).

Opinion

MACK, Circuit Judge.

These cases, together with a case against a dealer, in the District Court for the Southern District of New York, involving however, the product of the White Brass Castings Company, were all heard by Judge Sanborn about the same time and were decided together. His opinions will be found reported in 224 Fed. 506, 512, and 513.

On the appeal of the Automatic Company, the decree rendered in the New York case was modified, and claims 1 and 5 of the first Fisher patent in suit, No. 793,779, were held infringed. 231 Fed. 985, 146 C. C. A. 181. While the appellee in that case did not appear on the appeal, an examination of the opinion of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, and of the briefs submitted therein by the appellant, demonstrates that the important questions presented here were, fully raised and carefully examined in that court.

In the opinion in Bankers’ Registering Safe Company Case, claim 8 of the first Fisher patent in suit No. 793,779, which was in issue only in that case, was held to be infringed. In view of certain limitations found in claims 1, 5, 6, and 7, and in view of the finding as to claim 8, the court'said that it was unnecessary at that time to decree whether or not these other claims were infringed. In the decree, however, claims 1 and 5 were held not infringed, and claims 6 and 7 were held to be infringed. k

In all of the cases, claim 4 of the Thompson patent, No. 758,340, and claims 6 and 7 of the first Fisher patent in suit, were in issue. In addition thereto, in the Bankers’ Registering Safe Company Case, claims 2, 3, and 4 of the first Fisher patent in suit, claim 7 of the second Fisher patent in suit, No. 990,534, claim 6 of the third Fisher patent in suit, No. 990,535, and claims 1, 2, and 5 of the fourth Fisher patent in suit, No. 1,073,847 and in the Savings Loan & Trust Company Case claims 2 and 6, and in the Burns Company Case claim 5, of the second Fisher patent in suit, were likewise- in issue. While all of these claims were held valid, only claims 6 and 7 of the first Fisher patent in suit were found to be infringed. As to these, however, each defendant wag enjoined.

Furthermore, in the Bankers’ Registering Safe Company Case the court held that the complainant had acquired a valid trade-mark in the word “Teller” as the designation of its product, and enjoined the defendants both from violation thereof and from unfair competition, especially in the simulation of its wares. In the W. F. Bums Company Case, the charge of unfair competition was not sustained.

[475]*475The questions involved will be more clearly apprehended by a of the claims in suit, the following extracts from the several patent specifications, some of the patent drawings, and some of the drawings of the devices of the several defendants:

Thompson Patent, No. 758,340, April 26,1904.

4. In a savings hank, the combination, with a, case, of a plurality of located within said case, said ease having horizontal slots through the vortical wall thereof near its top registering with openings communicat-ing with the individual receptacles through which coins may be inserted, a plate located above the tops of said receptacles, and projections depending from said plate into the open upper ends of said receptacles and extending below the horizontal planes of the openings leading thereinto.

Thompson specifies:

My invention has for its object the production of a portable savings bank, in which shall be provided a series of tubes or compartments for receiving coins, said compartments so arranged that the coins of one denomination are separated from those of another denomination, and provision to lock said coins in the compartments until intentionally removed. The invention consists, in the provision of a series of tubes engaged together to form one article, provided with means for inserting a coin in each tube, and provided with means for locking the coin therein until it is intentionally removed. 0 is a plate arranged to fit into the top of the frame A, preferably made of stamped metal, with suitable depressions therein, so that it will fit over the ends of the tubes and hold them in place, as shown at o, Fig. 2.

Fisher Patent No. 793,779, July 4, 1905.

1. In a portable savings bank, a core comprising a plurality of rigid vertical flanges spaced apart to form compartments to receive coins, the distance be-tween tbe flanges of each compartment being greater than the diameter of the coins to be received by such compartment, the adjacent flanges being united at corresponding ends by walls adapted to partially surround the coins.

2. In a portable savings bank, a core comprising a base, a plurality of rigid radially projecting flanges spaced apart to form compartments to receive coins, the distance between the outer edges of the radial flanges at each side of each compartment being greater than the diameter of the coins to be received by such compartment.

8. In a portable savings bank, a core comprising a horizontal base, a plural-ity of rigid vertical radially projecting flanges spaced different distances apart to form compartments to receive coins of different denominations, the distance [476]*476between the outer edges of the radial flanges at each side of 'each compartment being greater than the diameter of the coins to be received by such compartment.

4. In a portable savings bank, a core comprising a circular horizontal base and a plurality of rigid vertical radially projecting flanges spaced different distances apart to form compartments to receive coins of different denominations, the inner edges of adjacent flanges being united by curved walls conforming to the peripheries of the coins, and the outer edges of adjacent flanges being spaced apart a distance greater than the diameters of the coins to be received by the compartment between such flanges.

5. In a savings bank, the combination, with a base, of a plurality of rigid vertical flanges supported above the base and spaced apart to form compartments for the coins, the distance between the flanges of each compartment being greater than the diameter of the coins to be received by such compartment, a cover comprising a surrounding side wall and top wall united thereto, said cover adapted to inclose the base and the flanges thereon, and means for detachably securing said cover to the base.

6. In a savings bank, the combination, with a circular base, of a plurality of vertical flanges supported above the base and spaced apart to form compartments for the coins, walls uniting the inner edges of adjacent flanges, said walls forming a central compartment, a cover comprising a surrounding side wall and top united thereto and adapted to inclose the base and flanges thereon, means for detachably securing said cover to the base, said cover having slots therethrough communicating with the compartments between the flanges and said central compartment.

7.

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241 F. 472, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-f-burns-co-v-automatic-recording-safe-co-ca7-1916.