William B. Mershon & Co. v. Bay City Box & Lumber Co.

189 F. 741, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5741
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedJuly 19, 1910
DocketNo. 64
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 189 F. 741 (William B. Mershon & Co. v. Bay City Box & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William B. Mershon & Co. v. Bay City Box & Lumber Co., 189 F. 741, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5741 (circtedmi 1910).

Opinion

DENISON, District Judge

(sitting by designation). A resawing machine is for subdividing the board or timber produced by the original sawing. It may be located in the sawmill for producing thinner market forms of lumber than it is desired to cut from the log, or in the secondary plant for producing' thin box lumber, heavy veneer or the like. It consists, essentially, in a slitting saw, circular or band, cutting on a vertical line, and opposing feed and pressure rolls, usually in sets, for gripping the board and feeding it as it travels on its edge along a table to the saw. Each of these opposing feed rolls is carried upon a slide, moving laterally of the table, and adjustable, so that the two opposite sets of rolls may approach toward, and recede from, each other, and each slide is connected to a weight or spring pushing it toward the center, thus giving to the rolls an elastic pressure on the board.

Earlier than any of the patents in suit, it was common to give to these machines capacity for three functions: First, slitting a board through [743]*743the-center to make two equal parts. As the boards vary in thickness, or may vary, as they come to the saw, the machine must automatically present to the saw the center line of the hoard. This was accomplished by connecting the slides to each other by some equalizing device so that they and their respective rolls must move to or from the line of cut simultaneously and equally. This operation was called “self-centering.” Second, taking from one side of the board a cut of a predetermined, standard thickness. This was done by disconnecting the equalizer, adjusting the right-hand slide and roll by a gauge at the fixed distance from the line of cut, and allowing the weight-pressed, left-hand rolls alone to exert the feeding pressure. With the machine thus set, the board could be run through several times, leaving, in the last cut, the deficiency, if any, under the maximum thickness. This operation was called “slabbing.” Third, dividing the board on a line diagonal to its sides so that the right-hand board, for example, would be thick at the top and thin at the bottom and the left-hand board would be thick at the bottom and thin at the top, thus producing a standard weatherboarding or siding. This was accomplished by tilting both sets of rolls slightly away from the vertical position, so that the sides of the board, as presented to the slitting saw, were not parallel with the saw.

[1] The first patent in suit, being No. 537,526, issued April 16, 1895, upon the application of H. J. Gilbert, filed October 22, 1894, involves the combination of the first and third of these functions. Claims 1, 2, 5, 6, and 13 are relied upon. The mechanism is most generally described in claims like claim 2, and most specifically identified in claim 13. Those two claims are as follows:

“2. In a resawing machine, the combination with the saw, mounted in a substantially fixed position, of the set oí feed rolls adjustable toward and from the same in the cutting plane thereof, and means for moving the rolls toward and from the saw and inclining them to the plane thereof, substantially as described.”
“13. In a resawing machine, the combination of a base casting or framework having a concave seat, a feed roll supporting frame composed of a substantially cylindrical portion resting in said seat, and adapted to slide back and forth and tilt therein, and a transverse horizontal portion carried by the cylindrical portion, a pair of slides transversely adjustable upon said hoi-izontal portion df the frame, a set of feed rolls carried by the slides, and means for adjusting said slides upon the frame and for moving the latter back and forth in its seat and tilting it, substantially as described.”

Obviously, “fore and aft”, adjustment of the feed rolls to and from the saw was desirable to accommodate the different problems presented by special forms of stock; and whenever the stock was very thin, or was warped, the rolls should be as close as possible to the saw, while, with thicker stuff, or for convenience of access either to saw or rolls, it might be desirable to increase the distance between them. It was, accordingly, entirely common to provide adjusting means by which the roll-carrying slides could be adjusted to and from the saw, or by which the saw could be similarly adjusted tí) or from the rolls. It was also common to provide means for tilting the rolls; and before tilting the rolls, it would be advisable to withdraw them from the saw, if they were too close for the tilting operation. Gilbert devised simple and [744]*744efficient means for this withdrawing and this tilting. By his construction, the frame supporting the roll carrying slides, was carried on a cylindrical body projecting beyond the opposite sides of the frame, forward and back, and resting in concave seats in the bed frame. These concave seats were longer than the cylinder ends resting therein, and thus the latter had a longitudinal play, permitting the whole frame to have a sliding movement to and from the saw. It is also obvious that a tilting or rocking capacity was thus given to the sliding frame. The concave seat was provided with a slot, which, in its forward part, was located at the bottom of the seat and was parallel with the line of cut, and, at its rear portion, was curved to one side. The cylinder end was provided with a bolt depending vertically into this curved slot; hence, as the frame was withdrawn from the saw, this bolt and slot connection compelled the tilting of the rolls, and, as it was returned toward, the saw, compelled the rolls to take their vertical position. While in thé forward position, the device could not be used for making siding, and while in the withdrawn position, it could not be used for ordinary resawing. This construction seems to have been novel and useful, and is the express basis of several claims in the patent, but complainant’s counsel say is not called for by the claims in suit.

The defendant’s structure is provided with somewhat similar, passive means for permitting the frame to slide and rock, the cylinder with its ends sliding in a concave seat having become pins or trunnions rocking and sliding in their boxes. The sliding and tilting, however, are accomplished by an adjustment of set screws at the sides of the frame and by a worm and segment. When it is desired to withdraw and tilt the mechanism, it is first completely withdrawn by a manipulation of set screws, and it is then tilted, as much or as little as is desired, by a wholly independent adjustment. There is no bolt and slot connection whatever.

It will be noticed that the claims in suit do not call, separately, for ^means for moving” the rolls toward or from the saw, and for “means for inclining” the rolls, but call, in a unitary or combination way, for “means for sliding and inclining” the rolls. It might well be said that this language was fairly limited to the unitary or combination idea shown by the patent for concurrently accomplishing these two things, either result automatically accompanying the other; but on this construction of the claims, there would be no infringement.

If the claims in suit are capable of a construction broad enough to cover a device where the means for sliding and the means for tilting are substantially independent and where the two operations are successive and not coacting, but each is complete in itself, and if this can be considered a true combination, then they are anticipated by the Cooper machine.

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Bluebook (online)
189 F. 741, 1910 U.S. App. LEXIS 5741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-b-mershon-co-v-bay-city-box-lumber-co-circtedmi-1910.