Woodstream Corporation v. Herter's, Inc. And George L. Herter

446 F.2d 1143
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1971
Docket20410_1
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 446 F.2d 1143 (Woodstream Corporation v. Herter's, Inc. And George L. Herter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodstream Corporation v. Herter's, Inc. And George L. Herter, 446 F.2d 1143 (8th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

BRIGHT, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Woodstream Corporation, a Pennsylvania corporation and long-time manufacturer and seller of animal traps, brought an action against the defendants, Herter’s, Inc., a Minnesota corporation, and its president, George L. Herter, for patent infringement and unfair competition. Plaintiff, formerly the Animal Trap Company of America, is the assignee of the patents allegedly infringed. Woodstream alleges that the defendants distribute and sell animal traps embodying the improvements protected by the plaintiff’s patents. The district court denied Woodstream any relief. Woodstream Corporation v. Herter’s, Inc., 312 F.Supp. 369 (D.Minn.1970). Wood-stream prosecutes this timely appeal.

Plaintiff alleges the infringement of two patents, Conibear, 3,010,245, issued November 28, 1961, and Lehn, 2,947,104, issued August 2, I960. 1 *****The defendants denied infringement, asserting the invalidity of the plaintiff’s patents. The central issue on this appeal concerns the obviousness of the plaintiff’s traps since the defendants concede the utility and novelty of these devices. 2 The district court held the patents invalid, concluding that

[W]hile the Conibear and Lehn patents here in issue may satisfy the requirements of novelty and utility, the nature of the subject matter sought to be patented was obvious to a person having ordinary skill in the art, and for that reason the patents are invalid. [312 F.Supp. at 371]

Appellant urges a reversal of the district court’s decision, contending that the court’s conclusions lack any evidentiary support, or, alternatively, that the trial court applied an erroneous standard of invention in finding plaintiff’s two patents invalid.

Plaintiff Woodstream’s claim against the defendants for unfair competition rests upon allegations that the defendants’ reproduction and cataloging of conventional leg-hold type traps were so similar to the plaintiff’s products as to create confusion in the market-place between plaintiff’s traps and those of the defendants. The district court treated this issue as purely a factual question, and found that there was no proof that the defendants were deceiving the public, attempting to do so, or palming off their traps for the plaintiff’s traps. On this appeal, plaintiff-appellant contends that federal law required the defendants to advertise their traps as being of foreign manufqpture, in this case Japanese, and, further, that the findings of fact made by the district court upon this issue are not supported by the evidence.

Having fully reviewed an extensive record on this appeal, we conclude that the district court erred in holding the Conibear patent invalid. In all other respects, we affirm the district court’s decision.

I. THE PATENTS IN ISSUE

We turn initially to the patent infringement claims. The structures involved in the instant case are animal traps intended for fur trapping, particularly muskrats, beaver, marten, and other fur-bearing animals. The Coni-bear structure is a killer type trap, a steel trap which kills the entrapped animals through suffocation or by breaking the animal’s neck. The Lehn device presents a trap similar in operation and configuration, except for a modification of the trigger element. These traps, referred to as “swing frame” traps, reflect *1146 a structure consisting of a pair of substantially identical rectangular frames, with one of the frames being slightly smaller and capable of rotating within the other frame. The two rectangular frames are hinged together or pivoted at a midpoint at their ends, with the sides of the frames comprising the jaws of the traps. When hinged and placed in a vertical position, the top and bottom sides of the two rectangular frames may be placed in a position parallel with each other. The jaws of the traps are held against the tension of a coil spring or springs in an open or set position by a sliding latch mechanism made of interconnecting wires constituting the trigger of the traps.

The Conibear trap is released by a wire extending into the center of the trap which disengages the latch member from one of the rectangular frames when the trigger arm which is directly attached to the latch becomes actuated by an animal entering the trap. The latch mechanism contains a diamond shaped wire element which pivots in any direction upon movement transmitted to it by the trigger arm; this movement affords a positive and quick release of the trap. Upon release, the jaws swing rapidly in opposite directions in egg beater fashion under the influence of a powerful coil spring to catch the animal. The following photograph 3 demonstrates the Conibear trap in a set position.

*1147 The Lehn patent, except for some minor modifications in the construction of the pivotal aspects of the frames, reflects an improvement over the Conibear patent, specifically in the trigger mechanism. In the Lehn trap, the latch consists of a key-like mechanism with a collar at one end and U-notches at the other end. The collar encircles the frame side or jaw of the trap; it freely slides and rotates thereon. The opposite end of the latch grasps the second jaw by one of the U-shaped notches fitting on a partially cut-down sleeve which also freely slides and rotates upon the second frame side or jaw. A trigger arm extends from this cut-down sleeve into the trap. Movement against the trigger arm rotates this sleeve, positively forcing the U-notched latch out of engagement with the second jaw. In this way, the mechanism affords instantaneous release action. The following photograph shows a Lehn trap as set.

The defendants’ alleged infringing traps, known as the “Hudson Bay Killer Traps,” are almost identical in appearance and construction to the Lehn traps, except for a modification of the trigger arm and sleeve attachment to the second frame side or jaw of the trap. Like Lehn, a U-notched latch is rotatable and slideable on the first jaw. This latch engages the second jaw not directly upon a sleeve which is attached to the second jaw, but indirectly through a hinged second sleeve connecting to the trigger arm. This second sleeve contains a cut-down opening similar to that on the Lehn trap; it permits the notched latch mechanism to hold the two jaws in a set position. Movement against the trigger arm causes rotation and lifting of the notched latch which, in turn, produce instantaneous release action as in the Lehn device. The following photograph illustrates the slight differences between the allegedly infringing trap and Lehn.

*1148

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446 F.2d 1143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodstream-corporation-v-herters-inc-and-george-l-herter-ca8-1971.