Wilson v. Seng Co.

194 F.2d 399, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 197, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1952
Docket10450
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 194 F.2d 399 (Wilson v. Seng Co.) 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
Wilson v. Seng Co., 194 F.2d 399, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 197, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317 (7th Cir. 1952).

Opinion

DUFFY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs’ complaint sought relief based on (1) an equitable cause of action asking for an accounting for unjust enrichment because of alleged appropriation by defendant of an invention submitted to it by plaintiff before the patent in suit was issued, and (2) a patent infringement case alleging the infringement of U. S. Patent No. 2,-437,580 issued to plaintiff Wilson on March 9, 1948. The trial court found and concluded that there was no appropriation of plaintiff Wilson’s invention by defendant, and that the claims of the patent in suit were invalid but if valid were not infringed, *400 and. it awarded costs to defendant, including attorney fees of $13,283.35.

Plaintiff Wilson is the owner of the patent in suit, and plaintiff U. S. Bedding Company has an exclusive license to make, use and sell devices under the patent. The defendant has been manufacturing and selling sofa bed hinges for more than 60 years.

In one type of a sofa bed the back and seat members are hinged together, and are provided with special latches so that the seat may be raised until the back reaches horizontal position and the seat may then be unlatched and lowered so that the two members form a bed. The unit may be changed back to a sofa by raising the seat to latching position and then pushing the back and seat members to.the original sofa position. A large number of sofa beds were sold between 1900 and 1914, but their popularity waned until the early 1930’s when again there was a popular demand for sofa beds. The patent in suit relates to latches for sofa bed hinges, and plaintiffs claim infringement of Claims 7, 9, 10, 12, 16 and 17 of the patent in suit.

Prior hinge and latch structures in use by defendant and others utilized automatic unlatching dogs or pawls, but users of sofa beds so equipped were required to use care in moving the seat from bed position to intermediate position, to listen for a metallic click, and to immediately stop the upward movement, otherwise the latching effect would not be obtained.

In early 1944 plaintiff Wilson made up' a latch with an over-balancing dog for a sofa bed hinge, and filed his application for a patent on April 14, 1944. • He then submitted one of the hinges containing his latch and dog to the U. S. Bedding Company, and permitted them to make a set and put them on a sofa bed which was exhibited at the Furniture Show at Chicago in July, 1944. He himself also made a rough sample of the hinge, and during the period of the July, 1944, Furniture Show he had same delivered to the defendant’s factory with a view of working out an arrangement for the defendant to make and sell such hinges.

Defendant showed an interest in Wilson’s device, and on August 2, 1944, its president conferred with him to discuss a license agreement. Fox, the master mechanic of defendant, made up a pair of hinges like Wilson’s. In July and August, 1944, de'fendant experimented with and tested the device which Wilson had left with it, and attempted to adapt the Wilson device to the hinge structures theretofore used by it. On August 4, 1944, defendant .requested Wilson to send his patent drawings so that it could malee an infringement search, but Wilson did not reply to this request nor answer a follow-up letter dated August 25, 1944.

In 1941 defendant had brought out its 810 hinge, using a latch with an over-balancing dog. The purpose of the overbalancing dog was to prevent the latch from unlocking accidentally in sofa position. An over-balancing dog is one which is weighted eccentrically to turn one way in-one position and to turn the opposite way when moved to another position. Defendant discovered that the over-balancing dog, as then designed for use with a hinge, was not reliable since its turning action was at times hampered or prevented by lint, bedclothes or portions of the upholstery getting into its mechanism.

Early in 1944 the defendant had instructed Fox, to attempt to improve its sofa bed hinge and latch construction and to develop a “no-click” unlatching dog. Fox first developed a new shielded latch. While defendant waited for a reply to its communications sent to Wilson, Fox’s attention turned back to the development of defendant’s earlier type of one-direction dog which did not require an over-balancing movement, and which would fit into his-newly developed shield. On September 5,. 1944, defendant wrote to Wilson advising, him that it had developed a dissimilar and. satisfactory device of its own, and it thereupon withdrew offers previously made.

In August, 1944, Fox, together with George F. Hassel, defendant’s chief draftsman, completed a hinge structure with a. new type latch and tumbler and filed an application for a patent December 8, 1944. The device was put on the market in January, 1945, and has been sold commercially in large quantities since that date. Fox and *401 Hassel Patent No. 2,437,949 was issued March 16, 1948, and the accused device is made in accordance with the teachings of that patent. The Fox and Hassel application was co-pending in the same division of the Patent Office with that for the Wilson patent in suit for more than three years, but no interference was declared.

The Wilson device which was turned over to the defendant in 1944 was an unlatching dog for the hinge and latch structure of a shiftable sofa bed, which dog included in addition to an unlatching portion a hook-shaped portion. The upward movement of the seat from sofa position, and also from bed position, to intermediate position was stopped by the hook-shaped notch in the dog. Wilson arranged this dog on the latch of a hinge and latch structure so that in movement from unlatched position toward and prior to latching position, the interior of the hook-shaped portion and the latching pin came into engagement, and the dog was prevented by the engagement from moving into unlatching relation. Although Wilson’s testimony on the point is somewhat vague and contradictory, the evidence discloses that the structure of the device submitted to defendant corresponded exactly with the Wilson patent drawings and descriptions. No hinges have been produced and sold commercially under the patent in suit.

In defendant’s construction the back member, seat member, and latch move as a unit from sofa position until the back member reaches horizontal position. However, as the upward movement of the seat section continues alone, until stopped by the latch, the throw-out shoulder of the dog drops into operative position, so that a single downward movement of the seat releases the latch and permits the seat section to be lowered into bed position alongside of the back section. In returning from bed position, the seat is merely raised as high as it will go until stopped by the latch, and is then pressed downwardly, which causes the notch in the latch to engage the abutment and push the back up to sofa position. Instead of using a locking dog, defendant used a counter-balancing spring to hold the parts together during the shift to and from sofa position. One end of the spring was attached to the sofa frame, and the other end to one of the supporting arms of the hinge structure.

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Bluebook (online)
194 F.2d 399, 92 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 197, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 4317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-seng-co-ca7-1952.