Wine Ry. Appliance Co. v. Baltimore & O. R.

5 F. Supp. 219, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 10, 1933
DocketNo. 2102
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 219 (Wine Ry. Appliance Co. v. Baltimore & O. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wine Ry. Appliance Co. v. Baltimore & O. R., 5 F. Supp. 219, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169 (D. Md. 1933).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

This suit involves eleven patents, which may be briefly and collectively described as relating to door-locking devices for drop-door cars of varying design, including doors used upon flat-bottom ears which are disposed in horizontal position when closed; doors used upon hopper-bottom ears which are inclined from a horizontal position when closed and are adapted to swing downward from the inclined position when opened; and doors used upon the drop-bottom gondola type of car which swing transversely of the car and are disposed in a horizontal position when closed. All of these doors swing open by gravity, and thus discharge the lading.

These eleven patents and their respective claims that are in suit, are as follows: (1) Kadel and Pilcher patent No. 1268725, issued June 4,1918, claims 2 and 11 only; (2) Kadel patent No. 1434953, issued November 7, 1922, claim 2 only; (3) Wine reissue No. 15792 of March 11, 1923, elaims 6, 7, and 10 only; (4) Wine patent No. 1431499, issued October 10, 1922, claim 1 only; (5) Kadel patent No. 1738057, issued December 3,1929, claims 7, 15, 16, 22, and 27 only; (6) Kadel patent No. 1743144, issued January 14, 1930, elaims 8, 9,15, and 18 only; (7) Kadel patent No. 1737927, issued December 3,1929, claim 6 only; (8) Kadel patent No. 1733736, issued October 29, 1929, claim 8 only; (9) Wine patent No. 1460009, issued June 26, 1923, all elaims, ten in number; (10) Wine patent No. 1455694, issued May 15, 1923, claim 11 only; (11) and Wine patent No. 1486210, issued March 11,1924, claims 1 and 4 only.

[221]*221The various devices of the defendant are properly divisible into three classes, which, with the particular patents they are alleged to infringe, are as follows: First, the Enterprise device (so-called because manufactured by the Enterprise Railway Equipment Company) which is alleged to infringe patents (1) and (2); second, the “XLT” devices (a designation coined by defendant for convenience) which are alleged to infringe patents (1), (3), (4), (5), (6), (7), and (8); and third, the drop-door gondola ear device which is alleged to infringe patents (9), (10'), and (11).

The plaintiff company is engaged in the manufacture of various railway appliances, including those involved in the patents in suit. To the plaintiff’s charge that the defendant, the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, has manufactured and is using, or has used, car door-locking devices of various types which infringe one or more of these patents, the defendant asserts the usual defenses of (1) noninfringement; and (2) invalidity of the plaintiff patents as evidenced by (a) prior public use or (b) prior patents, or both. It is axiomatic that the burden of proving infringement is upon the party alleging it, namely, the plaintiff, and that, likewise, the burden of proving invalidity is upon the party alleging it, namely, the defendant. The various patents will be considered, in the order above named, in their respective relations to the three different types of alleged infringing devices.

Kadel and Pilcher Patent No. 1268725 and Kadel Patent No. 1434963 in Relation to Defendant’s Enterprise and “XLT” Devices.

Of the Kadel and Pilcher patent, only elaims 2 and 11 are in suit. These claims are as follows: “2. A railway car having sides and a hinged door, said door extending transversely of the car from one side to the other, hooks pivoted to the sides of the car and adapted to engage the said door when the latter is drawn into closed position, said hooks being so formed and disposed as to fall by gravity into, engaging position and to be swung toward the door pintles for disengagement with the said door.” “11. A railway car having sides and a hinged door extending transversely of the ear from one side to the other, hooks pivoted to the ear and adapted to engage the said door when the latter is drawn into closed position, and means for closing the door, said means embodying a lever extending outside of the line of one of the ear sides and removably attached to the door, and means on the door for the removable attachment thereto of the lever.”

It is not maintained by plaintiff that a single element embodied in either of these claims is new or that, by itself, it is the proper subject of a patent, but merely that, by the combination of old elements, a new device, producing new results, is accomplished. Summarized very briefly, the basic idea created by the combination as set forth in claim 2 rests in the gravity hooks and the manner of their engaging the doors of the ear. The same is true with respect to claim 11 with the addition of a further means for closing the door, in the form of a lever and a fixed attachment in connection with which the lever operates. Plaintiff asserts that this is a pioneer patent because prior to this Kadel invention, all known car door-locking devices which really had for their object the securely locking of the door rather than merely fastening the door as an auxiliary or aid to some other device for keeping it firmly and tightly closed, were dependent upon a winding mechanism, that is to say, upon a device whereby with the aid of levers, cogs, and chains, the doors were opened and closed, and, when closed, were primarily dependent upon such mechanism for proper security. It is true the Kadel and Pilcher patent in the specifications provides that any convenient arrangement for raising the doors into closed position may be used, but, as further stated, the customary winding arrangement is preferably omitted, and the doors are lifted by hand, or, as was demonstrated by witnesses in the course of the trial, if the doors are of the so-called sawtooth hopper type, that is, doors which are inclined from a horizontal position when closed and are adapted to swing downward from the inclined position when opened, they may be operated by pressure of the foot.

We find that the weight of the credible evidence supports plaintiff in this contention. Although defendant, in support of its contention that this patent is invalid because of prior public use, has introduced extensive and uneontradieted testimony to the effect that hooks or latches pivoted upon the sides of ears and adapted to engage by gravity the car doors when the latter were drawn into closed position, were in use as early as 1907 on the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad, and on the Big Four Railroad as early as 1912; and although such devices of varying types bore prima facie close resemblance to the Kadel and Pilcher device, nevertheless there is no evidence in the ease which proves that the pivoted hooks or latches in these earlier [222]*222devices did more, or were intended to do more, than serve as an auxiliary or substitute for the winding mechanism when it became out of order, as it frequently did. This is evident from the fact that in none of these earlier devices did the pivoted hook or latch engage the door itself, or any substantial stiffening beam or member attached to the door, but merely locked into a keeper or strap of such construction as poorly adapted to carry continuously the strain of the heavy loads, which obviously would rest upon it if the doors were not supported in closed position by some other device such as a winding mechanism, which we find was always employed in these earlier devices; and which, furthermore, rendered it impossible or virtually so, for the operator of the doors to dose them by hand or foot manipulation, because prevented by various parts of this winding mechanism from assuming a position with relation to the car door which would enable him to close it in such manner.

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Related

Wine Ry. Appliance Co. v. Baltimore & OR Co.
78 F.2d 312 (Fourth Circuit, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 219, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wine-ry-appliance-co-v-baltimore-o-r-mdd-1933.