Williams Manufacturing Co. v. United Shoe MacHinery Corp.

316 U.S. 364, 62 S. Ct. 1179, 86 L. Ed. 1537, 1942 U.S. LEXIS 1223, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 478
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 25, 1942
Docket332
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 316 U.S. 364 (Williams Manufacturing Co. v. United Shoe MacHinery Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams Manufacturing Co. v. United Shoe MacHinery Corp., 316 U.S. 364, 62 S. Ct. 1179, 86 L. Ed. 1537, 1942 U.S. LEXIS 1223, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 478 (1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Roberts

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The suit was for the infringement of Claims 6, 23,42,85, and 91 of the McFeely Patent No. 1,558,737 for improvements in automatic heel lasting machines. The District Court held the claims valid and infringed. 1 The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed. 2

*365 The defendant sought certiorari on the ground that the claims were invalid under recent decisions of this court because they constituted attempts to repatent a broad combination of old devices—bed lasters and automatic tackers—and embodied only aggregations of new unpatentable mechanisms with old mechanical combinations. In pressing us to grant the writ, the petitioner insisted that it desired no retrial of the facts but merely a proper application of the law to the facts found by the courts below. We granted the writ.

In the manufacture of shoes, after the upper, the lining, and the counter have been placed on a wooden last, and an insole has been tacked to the last, the protruding edges of the materials are flattened over the insole and tacked down at the toe and shank of the shoe. The next operation is “heel seat lasting,” which consists of conforming the upper materials and insole snugly to the contour of the heel of the last and fastening them down with tacks. Originally this was done by hand. Later so-called “bed” machines were used which employed horizontally moving plates, called “wipers,” to flatten the projecting materials over the heel seat, where they were tacked by hand. Heel lasting on a bed machine involves the repeated use of levers and a foot treadle, and the result is not uniform.

March 2,1915, McFeely obtained a patent for a machine which would automatically perform, in one power stroke, the wiping and tacking necessary to complete the process of heel seat lasting. In this patent he claimed numerous combinations of means to accomplish specific steps in the process, amongst others combinations to effect the clamping of the last, and positioning it during the process, and to operate the wipers and the tackers in proper relation to the last. A declared purpose was that the machine should be able to last the heels of shoes of different sizes. One machine was built in accordance with the patent and used for some time. It was found to work satisfactorily on *366 shoes of a small range of sizes, but not to work on shoes of a wide range of sizes as would be required in the operations of the ordinary factory.

October 27,1925, McFeely obtained the patent involved in this case for improvements 3 of the lasting machine described in his earlier patent. The improvements embodied in the claims in suit had to do with a new combination of elements for clamping the last in the machine, a new combination of elements for the operation of wipers and tackers in fixed relation to each other and to the heel of the last, and a new combination of means for positioning the last vertically and automatically altering the position during the operation. A manual adj ustment was a part of each of these combinations by which the heel clamping, the wiping and tacking, and the vertical positioning mechanisms could be adjusted in advance for different sizes of shoes. The respondent is the assignee of both McFeely patents.

The petitioner purchased from a German maker, and used, four machines which were found by the courts below to be exact copies of the respondent’s commercial machines made under the patent in suit. So thorough was the imitation that even minor features not covered by the patent were copied. At the time of the trial, alterations had been made in the petitioner’s machines, but the courts below found that these were for the purpose of avoiding infringement and that they were not effective to that end.

If the petitioner’s statements in support of the application for certiorari are taken at face value, the point for decision is extremely narrow. In argument, however, the *367 petitioner sought to overturn the concurrent findings below and to have us redetermine the question of the novelty and usefulness of the improvements described in the combination claims held valid and infringed.

The courts below have concurrently found that none of the earlier patents cited, including that of McFeely, embodied the combinations of the challenged claims covering means for clamping and holding the last, means for the movement of wipers and tackers in fixed relation to each other, and means for the timed vertical positioning of the last during the power stroke of the machine, each combination including means for manually adjusting the mechanism in advance for different sizes of shoes. These findings are to the effect that the new combinations, while they involve old mechanical constructions, combine these in a new way so as to produce an improved result. These are findings of fact, 4 despite the petitioner’s apparent contention to the contrary, and we will not disturb such concurrent findings where, as here, there is evidence to support them. 5 The claim that the combinations are merely of old elements, which perform no new function and produce no new result, must be overruled.

We come to the petitioner’s contention that the courts below have held the patent valid and infringed on the theory that the improvements and adjustments disclosed in the claims entitle McFeely to repatent the entire combination of the old devices, known as bed lasters and automatic tackers. Petitioner argues that they have so held only because the mechanism of the patented machine permits of its operation upon a wider range of sizes of shoes *368 than the machine earlier patented, and that it does so operate merely because of three trifling mechanical adjustments which it embodies.

The contention is not in accord with the holdings below. It is true that both courts found that manual adjustments are provided which are not found in the earlier McFeely patent or in the prior art as applied to the three combinations embodied in the claims in suit. But the findings do not stop there. In respect of each claimed combination, both courts have found that they embody other improvements, in addition to mere manual preliminary adjustments, and that each combination exhibits invention in that its elements cooperate in a new and useful way to accomplish an improved result.

The petitioner, however, contends that the breadth of the claims in suit is such that, instead of patenting the combinations claimed as improvements over the prior art, and restricting the claims to the improvements, the patentee sought to blanket every machine which combines the old bed laster with the equally old automatic tacking device. It is said that our decisions in Bassick Mfg. Co. v. Hollingshead, 298 U. S. 415, and Lincoln Engineering Co. v. Stewart-Warner Corp., 303 U. S. 545, forbid any such extension of the patent monopoly.

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316 U.S. 364, 62 S. Ct. 1179, 86 L. Ed. 1537, 1942 U.S. LEXIS 1223, 53 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-manufacturing-co-v-united-shoe-machinery-corp-scotus-1942.