Waldes Kohinoor, Inc. v. Industrial Retaining Ring Co.

198 F. Supp. 755, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 218, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6033
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Jersey
DecidedNovember 1, 1961
DocketCiv. A. No. 229-58
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 F. Supp. 755 (Waldes Kohinoor, Inc. v. Industrial Retaining Ring Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldes Kohinoor, Inc. v. Industrial Retaining Ring Co., 198 F. Supp. 755, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 218, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6033 (D.N.J. 1961).

Opinion

WORTENDYKE, District Judge.

This Court has jurisdiction over the parties and of the subject matter of this case. 35 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.

Plaintiff is a corporation of the State of New York, and maintains its principal place of business in that State. The individual defendants are citizens of the State of New Jersey and constitute a partnership doing business as Industrial Retaining Ring Company in the Town of Irvington in that State. Venue is properly laid in this District. 28 U.S.C. § 1400(b).

Eight separate causes of action are set forth in the complaint, upon each of which issue has been duly joined. The answer of the defendants includes four counterclaims, which have also duly come to issue. In the first four causes of action in the complaint, the plaintiff seeks appropriate relief for the alleged infringement by the defendants of four United States patents, of each of which plaintiff is admittedly the owner. A soft copy of each of said patents is annexed to the complaint. The parties stipulated that the causes of action for the alleged infringement of the plaintiff’s patents be tried to the Court, without a jury, in advance of the other causes of action involved in the case. This opinion embodies the Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law upon the trial of the plaintiff’s patent infringement causes of action.

[756]*756The defendants deny the validity of each of plaintiff’s patents, and allege that the claims thereof relied upon are without true meaning, because insufficiently definite. Defendants concede, however, that the claims may be read upon the defendants’ accused devices.

The first three of the patents with which we are presently concerned relate to improvements in retaining rings of a type adapted to be sprung into a seating groove provided therefor in a shaft or in a housing bore to serve as an artificial shoulder capable of securing a machine part against axial displacement. The fourth patent relates to improvements in means for handling open-type retaining rings. It discloses a tool for inserting such rings into, and for withdrawing them from, their seating grooves, and a magazine-type holder for such open-type rings, facilitating their vertical stacking in quantity, and from which they may be withdrawn as needed by means of the tool described in the patent.

The single question which this Court is presently called upon to decide with respect to each of the plaintiff’s patents here in suit is that of its validity.

The first three of plaintiff’s four patents are No. 2,487,802 (hereinafter ’802), issued to Heimann November 15, 1949, upon application filed November 8, 1944; No. 2,487,803 (hereinafter ’803) also issued to Heimann November 15, 1949, up-en application filed August 21,1947; and No. 2,491,306 (hereinafter ’306) issued to Feitl December 13, 1949, upon application filed November 21,1945. The fourth patent is No. 2,483,379 (hereinafter ’379), issued to Brell September 27,1949, upon application filed August 19, 1946.

For the purposes of this opinion, and as the term is used in the specifications and claims of the subject patents, a retaining ring is an artificial, removable .shoulder which may be assembled in a ■circumferential groove in the external ■surface of a shaft, or within the bore •of a housing, to prevent the axial displacement of the shaft relative to the machine part against which the shoulder abuts. Such a ring is a substitute for a shoulder cast integrally with a shaft or housing, which is not removable without destruction of the shoulder in disassembling the parts involved.

The retaining rings described in ’802 are claimed to embody an improvement upon retaining rings described in Reissue Patent No. 18,144 issued to Heier-mann on August 4,1931. The ’803 patent describes a claimed improvement in the so-called “E” retaining rings disclosed in United States Patent No. 2,206,454, issued to Benzing on December 31, 1935. The ’306 patent describes rings of three types: internal (applicable axially), external (applicable axially), and external or crescent (applicable radially).

Heimann ’802

An appreciation of the features and functions of the device described in this patent requires its comparison with Heiermann Re. 18,144. Heiermann discloses tapered section-height, external and internal retaining rings which deform circularly when applied to a groove in a shaft or in a housing. Plaintiff admits that the Heiermann rings were known and in public use before November 8, 1944, when the ’802 patent was applied for. The Heiermann ring is described in the specifications of the ’802 patent. The tapered feature of the Heiermann rings is claimed to create sufficient elasticity or springiness to permit the firm retention of the ring in the groove in which it is inserted. The tapering taught by Heiermann was not dimensionally specified by him, but his ring was generally described as diminishing in thickness toward its open end portions, and having a wide middle surface. These Heiermann rings came into public use many years ago, in the United States as well as in Europe. The present litigants are in agreement that the affect of the tapering taught by Heiermann and embodied in the ’802 patent was the maintenance of the circularity of the rings after deformation by spreading or compression, thus assuring a continuous pressure-seat of the ring [757]*757upon the floor of the groove in which it is inserted. I find from the evidence in this case that the only difference between the Heiermann Re. 18,144 ring and the ■embodiment of the ’802 patent here in .suit consists in the bowing of the ’802 ring, as compared with the conceded flatness of the Heiermann ring. Plaintiff admits that the “rings of the ’802 patent retain the structure of the Heiermann rings except that the rings of the ’802 patent are symetrically bowed about a line extending transversely of the ring, .substantially intermediate its middle section and its open ends by a calculated .amount which is at least as great as the .sum total of the maximum permissible tolerances of the machine part to be .secured, the thickness of the ring, and the .axial location of the groove in the shaft ■or housing within which the ring is retained.”

Heiermann Re. 18,144 of August 4, 1931, taught the restriction of piston wrist-pins from longitudinal play by means of spring rings “tapering and diminishing in thickness toward the end portions” of the ring, and inserted in annular grooves in the wrist-pin, for the purpose of preventing axial displacement thereof. The ends of the ring are provided with openings for the accommodation of a tool for inserting or removing the ring from the groove. Having in mind that the Heiermann rings were flat, while the Heimann rings are bowed, it is obvious that if the thickness or interface cross-section of a flat ring and the width of the groove in which it is inserted are exactly equal, there can be no end-play between the faces of the ring and the walls of the groove. Moreover, if the plane of the end of the machine part is continuous of the plane of the near wall of the groove, and abuts tightly against the adjoining lateral face ■of the ring, there can be no end-play of the machine part relative to the shaft. If, however, dimensional tolerances exist between the respective surfaces of the units of the assembly, some degree of ■end-play will occur, which may be compensated for by a means of centric or preloading, i.

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198 F. Supp. 755, 131 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 218, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldes-kohinoor-inc-v-industrial-retaining-ring-co-njd-1961.