Wen Products Inc., an Illinois Corporation, and v. Portable Electric Tools, Inc., an Illinois Corporation, And

367 F.2d 764, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4642
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 21, 1966
Docket15083_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 367 F.2d 764 (Wen Products Inc., an Illinois Corporation, and v. Portable Electric Tools, Inc., an Illinois Corporation, And) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wen Products Inc., an Illinois Corporation, and v. Portable Electric Tools, Inc., an Illinois Corporation, And, 367 F.2d 764, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4642 (7th Cir. 1966).

Opinion

DUFFY, Senior Circuit Judge.

The appeal by the plaintiff is from that part of the amended final judgment dated January 15, 1965, which adjudged Claims 4, 5, 6 and 7 of United States Patent No. 2,866,485 not infringed by either of defendant’s alleged infringing jig saw tools, Models 2100 and 2100B.

The appeal of the defendant is. from that part of the amended final judgment which held Claims 4, 5, 6 and 7 of the patent in suit to be valid, and dismissing the counterclaim which sought a judgment that the patent in suit be declared invalid.

There are seven claims in the patent in suit. However, plaintiff relies only upon Claims 4, 5, 6 and 7. These claims relate primarily to the counter balancing mechanism used in small jig saw tools. As to defendant’s jig saw tool, Model 2100, plaintiff relies upon Claims 4, 6 and 7. As to defendant’s Model 2100B jig saw tool, plaintiff relies upon Claims 4, 5 and 7.

Patent No. 2,866,485 in suit was grant-ted on December 30, 1958, to Nicholas Anton, the president of plaintiff corporation, on an application filed March 19, 1958, on “Power Tools,” as a continuation in part of a co-pending and earlier-filed application of the same inventor which had been filed November 30, 1955, and later abandoned. All of the rights to and under the patent in suit were vested in plaintiff at all times material hereto.

Plaintiff’s patented device is an electrically-operated hand jig saw tool. It is particularly adapted for use by so-called “Do-it-yourself” workers and others, for sawing light lumber, boards or plywood. The tool is commonly referred to as a reciprocating jig or saber saw.

The patent in suit calls for a combination of elements including a driving spur gear and reciprocating parts driven thereby, the spur gear having a counterweight which has a weight of pre-determined relationship with the weight of the reciprocating parts.

A number of problems had been encountered in the manufacture and use of small, light-weight, electrically-operated, single-drive gear hand jig saws. It was necessary that they be sold at a relatively low price for workshop use as distinguished from industrial use, but the major problem was to prevent excessive vibration which was common in small electrically-operated jig saw tools then in use. Many attempts had been made to solve this problem including a complicated and expensive driving mechanism employing counter-rotating gears and planetary gear systems.

Plaintiff claims that in 1955, the patentee developed an improved electrically-operated hand jig saw having a minimum of objectionable vibration, and that from November 1955 through August 1964 more than 300,000 of these saws were sold. Plaintiff also claims that in 1956, defendant began purchasing plaintiff’s saws for resale and that in the fall of *766 1957, defendant brought out the first of the jig saws here accused — Model 2100.

Plaintiff claims the problem of excessive vibration was solved by the patentee by the discovery and utilization of a previously unknown and significant relationship between the weight of the counterweight means on a single main track gear, and the total weight of the tool-holder slide, the cross head and pin means, hereinafter referred to as the reciprocating parts. Thus, an important and novel feature of the device of the patent in suit is the relationship of the counterweight in the single main drive gear to the combined weight of the reciprocating parts of the tool.

The patent specification provides one example only of the related weights of the reciprocating parts and the counterweight. The weight of the counterweight is not stated in the specification but can be computed from the dimensions given in the specification. These weights as found by the District Court are 0.42 oz. for the counterweight and 0.98 oz. for the reciprocating parts.

We consider first the appeal by the plaintiff. The basis for the conclusion of the District Court of non-infringement was that the counterweights in the accused saw were not “substantially smaller” than the weight of the reciprocating parts as required by the claim of the patent. The plaintiff points out that in the accused Model 2100 jig saw, the counterweight was 70.5% of the weight of the reciprocating parts, and that in Model 2100B, the counterweight was 81.1% of the weight of the reciprocating parts.

The District Court held that the patent claims should be construed as being limited by the specific example given in the specification, and construed the words “substantially smaller” as requiring that the weight of the counterweight be approximately 50% less than the weight of the reciprocating parts. In the only example given in the patent specification, this relationship existed.

The file wrapper of the patent in suit shows that when the second application was filed (as a continuation in part of a previous application which was later abandoned), there was no mention in the specification or claims of any relationship between the weight of the counterweight and the weight of the reciprocating parts. The claims filed with the application were cancelled after rejection by the Examiner. The applicant attempted to amend the application by inserting into the specification the weight of the counterweight as 0.56 oz. and by adding two claims in one of which the weight of the counterweight was said to be approximately half of the weight of the reciprocating parts, and in the other claim (later cancelled), the counterweight was stated to weigh 0.56 oz. and the reciprocating parts 0.98 oz.

Before any action was taken by the Patent Office, but after an interview with the Examiner, another amendment was filed on September 29, 1958 in which all reference to the counterweight weighing 0.56 oz. was cancelled, and was replaced by language to the effect that the weight of the counterweight can be obtained from its dimensions.

Thus, the applicant cancelled from Claim 9 the limitation “said counterweight having a weight of approximately half the total weight” of the reciprocating parts, and substituted therefor the limitation “said counterweight having a weight bearing a predetermined relationship to and being substantially smaller than the total weight” of the reciprocating parts, i. e., 42%.

We think that the District Court’s holding of noninfringement of Claims 4, 5, 6 and 7 should be sustained. The District Court carefully considered the file wrapper, the prior art and the specifications of the patent in suit. Because of the crowded state of the art, the Court was correct in restricting the claims of the patent to a narrow range of equivalents. In Fife Manufacturing Co. v. Stanford Engineering Co., 7 Cir., 299 F. 2d 223, 226, we said — “Where the patent *767 is found in a crowded art, the doctrine of equivalents is given a narrow range.”

Claims 4 and 7 are the broader claims. They specifically require that the counterweight be substantially smaller than the total weight of the reciprocating parts. The weight relationships of the accused devices were quite often different from the critical relationships described in the patent.

Claims 5 and 6 are narrower claims, but we hold that they also were not. infringed.

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367 F.2d 764, 151 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 366, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wen-products-inc-an-illinois-corporation-and-v-portable-electric-tools-ca7-1966.