Waterloo Cement Machinery Corp. v. Engel
This text of 230 F. 169 (Waterloo Cement Machinery Corp. v. Engel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an action for infringement of claims 1 and 2 of letters patent No. 842,262, issued to Ransom Z. Snell, January 29, 1907, for a mixing machine particularly designed for mixing concrete and similar substances, which has a mixing tank supported on a frame, and rotated on its vertical and horizontal axis to mix the material, and then tilted to discharge the same. Claim 1 is for the following elements: (1) A pair of standards; (2) a supporting crossbar connected at each end with the top of the standards; (3) a mixing tank journaled at the center of the supporting crossbar; (4) an annular rack around the mixing tank; (5) a driving shaft journaled in one standard; (6) a gear on the driving shaft meshing with the annular rack; (7) means for rotating the drive shaft; (8) a spindle at the other end of the supporting crossbar journaled in the other standard; and (9) means connected with the spindle to rotate it and tilt the mixing tank. Claim 2 comprises the following ele[170]*170ments: (1) Standards; (2) crossbar; (3) mixing tank; (4) a shaft journaled in one of the standards and pivotally supporting one side of the crossbar; and (5) a gear wheel on the shaft meshing with the rack and the mixing tank.
In Fowler & Wolfe Mfg. Co. v. McCrum-Howell Co., 215 Fed. 905, 132 C. C. A. 143, the Circuit Court of Appeals for this circuit had before it a somewhat similar question arising from the failure of the claim of the patent to specify the size of tubes for a radiator, and Judge Rogers, writing the opinion, said:
“We cannot understand why the court below should have reached the con-elusion that an invention described in the specification, but not included in the ‘claims,’ cannot be protected by a patent. We regard the law as well established that the claims of a patent are to be construed in the light of the specification.”
Anticipation by the prior art is not proven. In neither the Creeke, Smith, Taylor, Hoffken, nor Hornsteiner patents is found the combination of elements of the claims under discussion. Tilting appliances with both' ends open for mixing material, bearings, and specific journaling, it is true, are disclosed in such patents; but in all of them different methods, of assembling are shown, and they did not, achieve [171]*171the same result as the patent in suit. In none of them 'is disclosed a combination with a sleeve extending from the bottom or middle of the tank and a spindle projecting upwardly into a sleeve from the center of the crossbar.
Defendant’s construction shows a crossbar with a spindle or shaft attached thereto and extending through bearing plates integrally and upwardly into the tank. The mounting or journaling of the supporting crossbar is somewhat different from complainant’s; but the adaptation is the full equivalent of complainant’s and achieves the same result. The defendant has merely changed the form of the principal element of the combination in suit, and does not avoid the charge of infringement as alleged in the bill.
A decree, with costs, may be entered in favor of the complainant.
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230 F. 169, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterloo-cement-machinery-corp-v-engel-nywd-1915.