Woerheide v. H. W. Johns-Manville Co.

215 F. 604, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1740
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 6, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 215 F. 604 (Woerheide v. H. W. Johns-Manville Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woerheide v. H. W. Johns-Manville Co., 215 F. 604, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1740 (S.D.N.Y. 1914).

Opinion

MAYER, District Judge.

The sale of prepared roofings has increased extensively during the past 25 years. These roofings are shipped ready to be laid, and it has long been the usage of the trade to send with the rolls of roofing what are known as the “trimmings,” i. e., the nails or other means of fastening. The familiar fastening means were flat-headed nails and tin caps with a nail in the center.

While there may be some difference of opinion as to the good and bad features'of these old-fashioned devices, it is plain that they were open to some serious practical objection.

Workmen, in some instances, mashed the tin caps so as to invert them, and, when the caps became inverted, the area of the binding pressure was substantially impaired. In the use. of the large-headed nails there was often left a considerable space of roofing between the nails upon which no pressure was exerted, and, as roofing fabrics of this character have a tendency to buckle, the buckling would frequently occur when the nails were driven hard. The liquid cement which went with this form of accessories and which was intended to cement the roofing sheets would sometimes in warm weather soften these sheets and in cold weather cause them to become springy or otiff. In short, while the old-fashioned method was fairly good, there was ample room for improvement.

Woerheide, who was a practical roofing man, realized the desirability of finding an improved method of fastening which would secure-[605]*605a nearer approach to accuracy, careful handling, and firm holding. The result was the metal cleat which is the subject-matter of the patent. The device is simple and efficient.

It was the first practical and commercially availed of metal cleat for securing prepared roofings.

What little prior art was disclosed in the Patent Office constituted apt illustrations of how not to accomplish the result which was obviously attained by Woerheide. It is the old story of looking backward and seeing now how easy it was then. But patent cases sometimes are more than scientific discussions and have a good deal of flesh and blood in them.

The value of the Woerheide invention was seen at once by Mr. James of the Belknap Plardware Company of Louisville, Kyv—one of the large jobbers in roofing in this country. Mr. James appreciated that the Woerheide cleat was a great assistance in selling roofings, and so informed Mr. Waxdell of the defendant company. Mr. Wardell is apparently an able up-to-date business man and, I think, can probably detect a good proposition in his line of business about as quick as any one. Mr. Wardell found from Mr. James that he could get a large order if he could supply a cleat similar to Woerheide’s “Kant-Leak Kleet” and told Mr. James that '“he would get up a cleat.”

Mr. Wardell was able to work out the theory of the proposed cleat on the train returning to New York the night after his interview with Mr. James and, as a result, promptly produced the defendant’s alleged infringing device.

When two alert business men like James and Wardell grasp, without hesitation, the commercial value of an article in their branch of business, that is convincing evidence of utility which would readily resolve a doubt as to patentability, if such existed. But I have no doubt on the question of invention because, in view of the state of the art, I think inventive ability was invoked to devise a metal cleat which would be strong, quickly and effectively nailed, and, generally speaking, easily handled.

[1] The next question is whether, from a technical standpoint, the claims are properly expressed. These claims are:

“2. A cleat arched transversely and having greater length than breadth, the crown of the arch being narrow, the side walls of the arch leading with sufficient abruptness from the narrow crown to the base of the cleat to prevent depression of the crown between the side walls, the ends of the cleat being closed by stay portions drawn from, and leading abruptly from, the crown to the base of the cleat and connecting the side walls to resist outward movement thereof beneath the crown of the cleat.
“3. A cleat arched transversely and having greater length than breadth, the crown of the arch being narrow, the side walls of the arch bending with sufficient abruptness from the narrow crown to the base of the cleat to prevent depression of the crown between the side walls, and the ends of the cleat being closed by stay portions restraining the side walls from spreading outwardly beneath said crown; the crown of said arch having therein, in alignment with each other longitudinally of the cleat a plurality of nail holes at the transverse center of the crown for a plurality of nails collectively of service in holding the cleat to its seat by direct action therefrom to and through said side walls.
•‘4. A cleat arched transversely and having greater length than breadth, the crown of the arch being narrow, the side walls of the arch leading with suf[606]*606ficient abruptness from tbe narrow crown to tbe base of tbe cleat to prevent depression of the crown between tbe side walls, tbe ends of tbe cleat being \closed by stay portions leading abruptly from the crown to tbe base of tbe cleat and connecting the side walls to resist outward movement thereof beneath the crown of tbe cleat; tbe crown of said arch having therein, in alignment with each other longitudinally of tbe cleat a plurality of nail boles at tbe transverse center of tbe crown for a plurality of nails collectively of service in bolding tbe cleat to its seat by direct action therefrom to and through said side walls.”

It is contended that such expressions as “sufficient abruptness” and “arched transversely” are vague and do not give that information to which the public are entitled.

[2] I cannot agree with this contention. It is a difficult, if no.t impossible, task to express “sufficient abruptness” and “arched transversely” in terms of mathematical accuracy. As Woerheide aptly pointed out, the necessary abruptness in a small' device of this kind can only be ascertained by experience; and any one reading the specification and the claims ought not to have any trouble in understanding just what the claims comprehend. I think Mr. Wardell, for instance, did not encounter any difficulty on this score.

The real controversy in the case revolves around’the question of infringement; for defendant claims that its cleat is the descendant of a mechanical ancestry different from that of the Woerheide.

This is not one of the cases where one, other than the patentee, worked out the problem independently; but, on the contrary, where, with the device of the patent in suit before him, he has attempted, if possible, to avoid the construction and claims of the patent. Of course, if he has succeeded, then the circumstances under which he undertook the creation of a new form of cleat become immaterial; but, on the other hand, he cannot escape infringement if his structure performs the same function as the patented structure in substantially the same way. An adequate understanding will be had if claim 3 is read on one of defendant’s cleats, such as complainant’s Exhibit 22.

There is much controversy as to the limitation of the phrase “arched transversely.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 F. 604, 1914 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woerheide-v-h-w-johns-manville-co-nysd-1914.