Wasserman v. Burgess & Blacher Co.

119 F. Supp. 684, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 28, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4436
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedMarch 11, 1954
DocketCiv. No. 52-1078
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 F. Supp. 684 (Wasserman v. Burgess & Blacher Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wasserman v. Burgess & Blacher Co., 119 F. Supp. 684, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 28, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4436 (D. Mass. 1954).

Opinion

SWEENEY, Chief Judge.

This is an action for patent infringement brought by Max Wasserman, as owner of United States Letters Patent No. 2,610,593, against Burgess & Blacher Co., a Massachusetts corporation having a place of business at Roxbury, Massachusetts.

Findings of Fact

The defendant denies infringement and asserts that the patent in question is invalid both for want of invention and for want of novelty. The plaintiff’s patent is comprised of five claims, all of which are alleged to have been infringed with the exception of Claim No. 4. A typical claim in issue reads as follows:

“1. A covering for a sky light opening having a sill framing the sky light opening, a metallic frame extending all around the sill on the top edge thereof with an outwardly projecting flange all around the sky light opening, means ■ extending downwardly from the inner edge of the frame for securing the metallic frame to said sill, a plastic dome member having a base flange co-extensive with said outwardly proj'ecting metallic flange all around the sky light opening, and means for clamping said flanges together including a plurality of spaced bolts passing through aligned holes in the flange of the plastic dome and said metal flange, the holes in the plastic dome being slightly larger in diameter than the bolts which pass through them, providing fitting and expansion tolerances.”

An examination of the cross-sectional drawing of the plaintiff’s construction shows a basic square metal frame with a top and two sides which fits over the wooden curbing of the roof opening. The inner side or flange of the frame extends slightly above the level on which the top side of the frame j’oins the outer side, so as to provide a condensation gutter. Means for fastening the construction to the sill are provided on this inner side of the frame at a point below the condensation gutter where a spike or screw passes through the frame into the sill. The outer side of the frame extends downwardly somewhat further than the inner side, so as to completely cover the exposed portion of the sill and act as weatherproofing. The top or covering member of the frame j'oins both sides and then continues outwardly on a horizontal plane to form a marginal flange. On top of this basic frame there is set an elliptic plastic dome with an outwardly projecting base flange co-extensive with the horizontal flange of the frame. The dome and frame are j'oined on these flanges by passing bolts through aligned holes in them, care being taken that the holes in the plastic dome are slightly larger in diameter than the bolts so as to allow for expansion and contraction.

It appears further that a sealing gasket is interposed between the flanges in the sections where the fastening bolts are located, but it is omitted at the corners of the structure.

The plaintiff contends that this form of construction makes for a completely watertight unit which may be prefabricated to fit any shape or size of skylight opening and thereafter installed with ease in the field.

From a comparison of the plaintiff’s unit and the allegedly infringing device manufactured by the defendant it appears that there is substantial identity between them, save for minor modifications, notable among which is the fact that in the defendant’s skylight the marginal co-extensive flanges have been creased along their outer borders and bent down to form a depending skirt or lip where the clamping members are present.

We need not decide whether this modification or any others which may exist are sufficient in scope to negate any claim of infringement here, since in this-Court’s view the patent in suit must be declared invalid for want of invention, thereby making it unnecessary for us to pass on to a consideration of the question of infringement or non-infringement.

[686]*686I believe that practically every element in the plaintiff’s patent was taken directly from the prior art and those that were not (if there are any) were either suggested by the prior art or else were devised by the patentee as unstartling routine solutions to problems incident to the use of the materials incorporated in the plaintiff’s patent.

In other words, once plastic with its known properties became accepted by the art as a skylight material, then the plaintiff, well aware of these properties, reached out and selected from the store of the prior art other well known skylight construction elements and incorporated them into an overall unit which solved the major problems of the trade in the way they had been solved before, while at the same time allowing for the action of a new material.

Prior to the date of the alleged invention, which occurred sometime in 1950, plexiglás domes with marginal flanges had been known to and used by the trade ' in skylight construction for at least three years. Evidence of such knowledge and use cited by the defendant includes:

(a) Defendant’s Exhibit B, a photostat of page 124 of the Architectural Forum Magazine for October, 1947, showing the use of this type dome in a skylight construction.

(b) Defendant’s Exhibit C, a photograph of plexiglás skylights actually installed in a private home in Lexington, Massachusetts, in 1948.

(c) Defendant’s Exhibits F and G which comprise invoices and factory orders and a photograph, evidencing two sales by a local corporation of the type dome under consideration.

It is correct to state therefore that the use by the plaintiff of a preformed plastic dome-shaped cover does not by itself amount to an innovation or constitute invention, nor do we understand the plaintiff to make such a claim.

Further, the provision of oversize holes in the plastic material to allow for expansion and contraction and the use of a gasket to reduce vibration and to act as waterproofing were taught as early as 1947, as is seen from the passage in Modern Plasties Encyclopedia, page 1121, read into the record at the trial by Professor Dietz. These principles suggested in the above passage were actually applied to plastic skylight domes.

Condensation gutters formed interior of the covering dome of a skylight by means of a flange are old to the art as is seen in the following references cited by the defendant: Snead Patent No. 106,-967; Howard Patent No. 191,802; Defendant’s Exhibit A, blueprint of detail of skylight constructed for Farina Brothers; Defendant’s Exhibit B, supra; the blueprint of the details for a skylight installed in the Fitchburg Youth Library, Fitchburg, Massachusetts, constituting part of Defendant’s Exhibit G. In at least three instances this flange was part of a framing element or element substantially equivalent to a frame, i. e., in the Snead Patent, in Defendant’s Exhibit B, and Defendant’s Exhibit G.

The use of a square tubular casing or frame to fit the sill of an aperture in the roof of a house does not standing alone add anything to the art of skylight construction, and in at least one reference cited by the defendant such a frame was employed to support a superstructure whose function was protective, i. e., Hoffland Patent No. 1,563,706, for a Chimney Protector.

Furthermore, the disclosures in Hayes Patent No. 295,167, Dixon Patent No. 1,033,161, Schalkenbaeh Patent No.

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Related

Max Wasserman v. Burgess & Blacher Co.
217 F.2d 402 (First Circuit, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
119 F. Supp. 684, 101 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 28, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wasserman-v-burgess-blacher-co-mad-1954.