Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Traylor Engineering & Mfg. Co.

292 F. 777, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1348
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 1923
DocketNo. 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 292 F. 777 (Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Traylor Engineering & Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Worthington Pump & Machinery Corp. v. Traylor Engineering & Mfg. Co., 292 F. 777, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1348 (E.D. Pa. 1923).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

An aid, if not the key, to the judicial settlement of any controversy, is often found in a clear view of the situation of the parties and of the attitude of each to the other. The plaintiff is the owner of letters patent issued for a claimed invention, in accordance with which it has been manufacturing and selling stone crushers. The special make thus offered to the trade has enabled the plaintiff to supplant other makes which were upon the market. The advantage thus gained the plaintiff owed to the inventive genius and engineering and constructive skill of the patentees, who were in its employ, and that of its predecessor in title, and from whom the invention had been purchased, and under whose direction and supervision the patented crushers were made.

[778]*778The patentees left the service of the plaintiff, taking with them other skilled employees, and entered the employ of the defendant and into the management of the defendant company, which now competes for the trade in that make of crushers. The plaintiff, in consequence, is smarting under the imposition of what it feels to be two wrongs. One is that an unjust and unfair inroad is being made upon the trade which it feels belongs to it; the other is that a trespass upon its patent rights is being committed. On the other hand, the situation in the eyes of the defendant and of the patentees is wholly different. As it is thus viewed, the former employees of the plaintiff are in the exercise of the undoubted, and indeed unquestioned, right to engage in trade on their own account or to set up new associations with others, and have the like clear right to make and sell what was known to the art before the invention now owned by the plaintiff was patented, or to get the benefit of further inventions of their own.

There are thus presented, or at least suggested, two possible questions which may arise out of this controversy. One is the offspring of the relations, contractual or otherwise, which the parties bear or have borne to each other; the other springs wholly out of the law of patents. These questions are wholly different and are to be determined by resort to the wholly different principles, doctrines, or policies of the law which apply. To the first the doctrine.of estoppel, or some kindred doctrine, applies. Essentially it is that a man may have a right,, and yet as against another may not be permitted to be heard to assert it. There may be in the situation which arises something of the thought of unfair competition, because there is always present the thought of unfairness, which should be prevented. A patented right is the right to a monopoly which directly affects, it is true, the individual litigants, but beyond this, although indirectly and yet none the less really, affects thé public. It might be that a patentee, who has assigned his patent to another, warranting the validity of the letters, should not be permitted to escape the charge of infringement by setting up the invalidity of the patent for which he had thus vouched. No such assignment, however, nor any conduct on the part of the patentee, would support a judicial finding that the assignee was possessed of the right to a monopoly under the patent law if the letters patent were of no validity. The form of decree proper to be entered in cases presenting these different complaints would differ and the averments of the complaint would likewise differ. The complaint made is of the invasion of the patent rights of the plaintiff. The averments» are of an ex-elusive right under the patent laws to a special field of trade activities and the trespass of the defendant upon that field. The allusions made to the contractual relations of the parties are more for the purpose of creating an atmosphere than to support a right. There is nothing in the issue as made up to which the doctrine of estoppel applies. We go, in consequence, directly to the question of a patent right and its. infringement.

The General Issue. -

The defense is a qualified denial of both, in that it is that, if the scope of the claims is made broad enough to embrace the acts of the [779]*779defendant, the claims are invalid; if they are so narrowed as to avoid the defense of invalidity, then the defendant does not infringe. The issue thus presented is that of the scope of the claims. There are two patents. The office numbers are 960,231 and 1,145,967. One relates to the mechanism and structure of the crusher proper; the other, to the lubricating device employed. They are known to this record as the “crusher patent" and the “pump or lubricating device patent.”

A Side Issue.

[1] Before passing to the discussion of the main issue, we will notice and dispose of another collateral question which has been raised. This concerns itself with the title of the plaintiff to the letters patent. The title is challenged wholly and solely because of a clerical error in the office number given to the letters in the assignment. Without pausing to set forth the supporting reasons for the ruling made, we content ourselves with a statement of the conclusion reached. This is that the attack upon the plaintiff’s title has failed.

The Crusher Patent.

[2] The defendant meets at its threshold the claim of patentability in the plaintiff’s make of crusher by pointing out that the only advance over the prior art asserted in this application is that it describes a “more compact, lighter, and stronger machine’’ than any which the prior art afforded. This language suggests that the only merit of the advance claimed is in the degree of excellence attained. The point is made, however, by ignoring the fact that this is a statement, not of the invention, but of the commercial objective of the inventor. It has no other bearing upon his claim to invention, but is addressed only to its patentability by meeting the utility requirement. Invention consists, broadly stated, in this: These crushers are used to crush rock. They must be strong, and in consequence have weight. The demand was for crushers of greater and still greater capacity. This demand must be met, and without going into a description of this type of crusher, which would make clear what was done and why it was so done, there resulted larger and still larger and heavier machines, until the practical limit of size and weight was reached. The demand, however, for increased capacity was not satisfied.

Plaintiff’s patentees solved the problem thus presented by a bold departure from, and, indeed, in one sense, a reversal of, the general plan theretofore pursued; or, stated in terms of results, they met the demand for increased capacity, but succeeded in avoiding what had theretofore been deemed unavoidable, an increase in size and weight. On the contrary, they very appreciably reduced both, and thus, among other claims to merit, made practicable an extension of the capacity limit which before seemed to have been reached. In a highly developed art, such as that with which we are dealing, any advance made always is, in a real sense, the fruit of the application of engineering and mechanical skill, rather than of the inventive faculty. The wall which separates the two is often thin, and no definition of either can be formulated, by the use of which the presence of the other can always be confidently asserted or denied. There is one test which can be applied, [780]*780however, the value of which is recognized.

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Bluebook (online)
292 F. 777, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/worthington-pump-machinery-corp-v-traylor-engineering-mfg-co-paed-1923.