W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Cincinnati Butchers' Supply Co.

35 F.2d 567, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 1929
DocketNo. 64
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 35 F.2d 567 (W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Cincinnati Butchers' Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Butcher Packing Co. v. Cincinnati Butchers' Supply Co., 35 F.2d 567, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011 (10th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory decree in a patent ease, finding infringement, awarding an injunction, and directing an accounting. Various claims of two patents are involved; one group of claims in each patent covers a means of cleaning used in hog-dehairing machines; another group of one of the patents covers [568]*568the means of discharging the carcass from the machine after it is cleaned.

Both patents involved were issued August 30, 1921. Patent No. 1,388,898 was issued to Charles G. Schmidt and Oscar C. Schmidt. It is a machine designed for small packing houses; claims No. 1, 2, 5, 7, and 17 cover the discharging apparatus; claims No. 11,13, 28, 31, and 32 cover the cleaning apparatus, which is identical with the cleaning apparatus of the second patent, although the claims in the latter patent are couched in different, and perhaps more accurate, language. Patent No. 1,388,899 was issued to Osear C. Schmidt. This machine is designed for use in larger packing, houses, and has an entirely different method of discharge; the claims for such not being in issue here. Claims No. 13, 38, 42, 43, 48, 52, 54, and 55 cover the cleaning apparatus found to be infringed. Taking up first the cleaning apparatus of both patents:

Seraping hogs by machinery, and the use of revolving members to which are attached metal scrapers, is old in the art. Bouehafd, 235,731; Flanagan, 307,77f7; Kohlhepp, 720,-702', 1,002,930, 1,125,560, 1,125,562; Meier, 1,024,412; Burke, 1,036,959. The patentees here do not assert patentability oh the broad ground of sueh elements, and these references are not structurally close enough to the plaintiff’s claims to require close analysis. Plaintiff’s claims are based on the design of a machine for the convenient, efficient, and economical application of serapers to carcasses. It consists of a basket or cradle of metal bfirs in which rests the carcass; through sueh bars extend beater arms, on the ends of which are heavy rubber beaters, tipped with metal scrapers. The beater arms are in turn attached to a single revolving axis outside and toward the bottom of the cradle. The carcass is put into the cradle; the beater arms, extending from head to tail, revolve rapidly; the action of the rapidly revolving arms turns the carcass around, tosses it over to the far side of the cradle, which retards its rotation, gravity draws it back to the beaters, and with this combined rotary and orbital movement the hog is cleaned. The machine is a commercial success.

The plaintiff describes its machine in language more accurate than the above, as follows : “It comprises a cradle of bars, a single shaft and rotating beater arms moved on the shaft within the cradle between the bars from below. The cradle is so shaped in reference to the rapidly moving beater arms and beaters thereon that the hog carcass is in effect supported from below by the beaters and is restrained at the sides by the bars of the cradle. The beaters have the effect of simultaneously rotating the carcass and seraping the hide off all parts of it, removing hair and scurf and toe-nails from every part of the carcass. The bars of the cradle have the effect of retaining the carcass in position to be rotated above the beaters in sueh wise that as the carcass rotates it alternately engages one side or the other of the cradle, which exercises a required retarding effect upon the rotation of the carcass. The beaters, although made up of separate flexible beater members carried by arms of a spider, are rotated at such, a speed as to constitute in effect a cylindrical surface engaging the carcass. The combined effect of this rapidly moving cylindrical surface contacting the carcass from below and the bars of the eradle at the sides contacting the sides of the carcass first at one side and then at the other, gives to the carcass an orbital movement in which it is turning about an imaginary axis drawn through the carcass and at the same time is rotating about a center between the bars; i. e., moving bodily back and forth in a roughly elliptical or circular path from one set of bars to the other.”

The issue in the case being that of infringement, there is no occasion for determining the validity of the patents, if ho infringement is found. Before the question of infringement can be determined however, it is necessary to inquire to some extent into the prior art, for the purpose of determining whether the patents involved are entitled to a liberal construction, or otherwise, and to determine whether the patents are at best but improvements in a crowded art, or disclose a basic idea. Only one reference need be considered for this purpose, that of Stallman, No. 1,101,155. The Stall-man patent was issued June 23, 1914. It is a mechanical hog scraper, consisting of a cradle of metal bars, with two series of revolving flexible metal-tipped scraper arms working through the metal bars; there is a shaft on each side of the cradle, instead of on one side only, as in the patents in suit. The action of the beater arms scrapes the hog, rotates it, and tosses it about. Only two of the Stallman machines were built, and they were in operation for several years, although it is claimed that their work was not satisfactory.

The trial court afforded the plaintiff’s patents a fairly liberal construction, and by so doing found infringement. It declined to consider Stallman, or at least deflected its force to a great extent* because, to use the [569]*569language of the memorandum opinion, “the machine did not prove to be practically successful and according-to the testimony only two of them were constructed, whereas, the plaintiff’s patents have been extensively manufactured, sold and used, their utility is beyond question, and the issuance of the patents is prima facie evidence of the novelty of the combination.”

We think the trial court was in error in this statement, and that the Stallman patent must be considered as much a disclosure as if it had been more widely used, and this for two reasons: In the first place the statute' (35 USCA § 31) extends the privilege of patentability only to those devices whieh are “not patented or described in any printed publication in this or any foreign country” or “not in public use or on sale in this country for more than two years prior to his application, unless the same is proved to- have been abandoned,” etc. Entirely irrespective of the matter of use, a man is not entitled to the reward given inventive genius, if his invention had theretofore been disclosed to the public through the public records of the Patent Office. The statute rewards invention, and not diligence in unearthing prior patents whieh have not been turned into commercial success. In the recent case of Milburn Co. v. Davis, etc., Co., 270 U. S. 390, 46 S. Ct. 324, 70 L. Ed. 651, it was held that a patent was anticipated by a prior application which disclosed the idea, although it did not claim it. The court discussed at some length the questions of prior patents, publications, use, and disclosure, and summed it all up by saying that “one really must be the first inventor in order to be entitled to a patent.”

As far as the Stallman patent discloses ideas claimed by the patents in suit, it is an anticipation, whether any machine was ever used. Moreover, irrespective of the patent, the public use of two machines for á period of years bars the patentee from claiming the rights of inventor. In the recent case of Linville v.

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Bluebook (online)
35 F.2d 567, 3 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 176, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-butcher-packing-co-v-cincinnati-butchers-supply-co-ca10-1929.