Waterbury Brass Co. v. Miller

29 F. Cas. 385, 9 Blatchf. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 48, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1836
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 19, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 385 (Waterbury Brass Co. v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterbury Brass Co. v. Miller, 29 F. Cas. 385, 9 Blatchf. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 48, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1836 (circtdct 1871).

Opinion

WOODRUFF, Circuit Judge.

The bill of complaint herein is filed to restrain the defendants from infringing two re-issued patents granted to the complainant as assignee of Hiram W. Hayden — one for an “improvement in machine for making kettles,” the other for an “improvement in brass kettles” —and for an account of the gains and profits hitherto made by the defendants by their alleged infringements. The defence contained, in the answer of the defendants, and relied upon on the trial, consists in a denial that Hayden was the first inventor of the patented machine, or the kettle produced thereby, and, second, a denial that the defendants have infringed the patents.

It is not necessary to state the history of the complainant’s patents, further than to, say, that, on the 16th of December, 1851, letters patent were issued to Hayden for what he claims to have invented, which were aft-erwards extended for seven years, and subsequent surrenders and re-issues were made, upon the last of which the re-issued patents were granted to his assignee, on the 24th of May, 1870, which are relied upon in this suit.

The re-issued patent for an “improvement in brass kettles,” in its specification, sets out a process of making kettles upon a machine described in the very terms and details employed to describe the machine which is the subject of the other patent; that is to say. one patent describes a machine and mode of making a kettle, and other similar articles, and the other patent claims, as the invention of Hayden: “(1.) A kettle, or other similar metallic article, or vessel, made from a single sheet, or flat disk, or blank, of metal, stretched and compressed, so as to extend the sheet into its ultimate form, by the process substantially as herein set forth; (2.) A kettle, or other similar metallic article, or vessel, having its greatest thickness at the bottom, and thinned, or gradually reduced in thickness, towards the top, by the process substantially as set forth.” Hence, one patent is for a machine, described and operated as set forth in its specification. The other is for a product of the process, substantially as set forth in both.

Whether the product patent has been infringed, or can be infringed, by the defendants, without, at the same time, infringing the patent for the machine, may, perhaps, be a question of interest to the parties. It was asserted, and substantially assumed, by the counsel for the defendants, on the trial, that it could not. It may not be necessary to consider that question. If deemed material, some observations will be hereafter made on that subject. Assuming, for the present, that the questions between the par[387]*387ties are identical under each of the complainant’s patents, as the machine and process of making kettles, and other articles, are described in precisely the same terms in each, and that neither is infringed unless both are infringed, it will be sufficient to describe the machine and its operation in very general terms.

For the purpose of bringing into view the questions to be decided in this case, the machine may be generally described as of two parts, each having, in the process of making a kettle, distinct offices or functions. 1st. An engine lathe, with its mandrel made to revolve by ordinary pulleys and gearing, and its mandrel foot or spindle pointed, to sustain the subject of the operation when clamped to the mandrel, or a chuck attached thereto, and made to revolve therewith. This differs in no material respect from an ordinary cutting lathe, although supplementary devices are added, to adapt it to the particular service intended, such as, a form or pattern, (in the shape of the interior of the article to be produced,) made fast to the mandrel and to revolve with it — a clamp, adapted to the office of pressing the material upon the form, which also revolves with the form and on the point or end of the spindle — and an arrangement at the lower end of the lathe, by which the spindle is readily drawn back when it is desired to remove the kettle. &c. 2d. A burnishing or spinning tool and tool carriage, secured to the frame of the lathe, consisting of a burnishing or spinning tool, (either rigid, like an ordinary tool, or a roller, with a beveled rounded edge, held at the end of an adjustable arm,) and a carriage therefor, set upon slides, so adjustable, and so guided when adjusted, that the tool is sustained and guided in a precise path, prescribed for it before motion is given to the machine, the path being such, that the tool will, when moved, travel along and in near proximity to the form set upon the mandrel, as above described. It will be readily seen, that, by these two parts of the machine, provision is made — First, for inserting in a lathe a circular disk or blank of metal, clamping it firmly against a form, and causing it, together with such form, to revolve with rapidity; and, second, a burnishing or spinning tool, adjustable, so that it may set firmly against the disk, at or near its centre, and, if moved, it is mechanically guided along and in near proximity to the bottom and side of the form.

So far, nothing is described which produces the desired result. The lathe may be set in motion, and the disk or blank will revolve. The tool impinges on the disk near its centre, and the friction may produce some impression on the small circle, at the point of contact. But that is all. The material is in proper position,aform is in contact therewith, to communicate the desired shape, the tool is impinging on the disk near its centre, and a path is prescribed in which it must, if moved, inevitably travel, and, so travelling, it will spin or stretch the disk upon the form to the precise shape thereof, and, at the same time, reduce its circumference at its upper or outer edge; or, in other words, it will spm the metal to the size and form desired. Motion of the tool is, therefore, alone wanting to the operation; and this motion is, in the machine described by the specification in the complainant’s patent, taken, by gear wheels ard pinions, from the wheels or pulleys of the revolving lathe. These wheels and pinions act upon a screw connected with the tool carriage, which will move it forward or backward, but with such arrangement of devices, that, as already stated, the tool must move in its prescribed path. By these means, the machine, being set in motion, spins the disk to the form inserted in the machine, and, by a succession of forms, to any shape desired, the slides of the tool carriage and path of the tool being readjusted with every change of form. This statement does not give the details of the machine, and it may not be sufficient to give a full comprehension of its operation. But I think it sufficient to bring into view the questions in contest, and, with some other details which may be suggested in the further discussion, to make the device intelligible.

The machine, m all its details, being described, .and its complete operation stated, the specification annexed to what is called the machine patent, proceeds to state the claims:— “What is claimed as new, and the invention of the said Hiram W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 385, 9 Blatchf. 77, 5 Fish. Pat. Cas. 48, 1871 U.S. App. LEXIS 1836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterbury-brass-co-v-miller-circtdct-1871.