83 F. 309 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1897
This is an infringement suit based upon letters patent, No. 526,517, granted to the complainant September 25, 1894, for an improvement in wrappers for tobacco. The alleged invention consists in a combined paper and foil wrapper made “by securing the sheet of foil to the sheet of paper, not over the whole meeting surfaces, but only at small areas thereof.” The claims are as follows:
“(1) A wrapper consisting of sheets of paper and foil laid together face to face secured to each other at small portions of their meeting surfaces only, leaving the remaining portions of said meeting surfaces disunited, substantially as described.
“(2) A wrapper consisting of sheets of paper and foil secured together by narrow zones of adhesive material c, d, substantially as described.
“(3) As a new article of manufacture, a wrapper consisting of separate pieces of foil and paper united together by means of an adhesive substance applied to portions only of their meeting surfaces, the portions of the sheets of said compound wrapper not in contact with such adhesive substance being composed solely of the separate pieces of foil and paper, substantially as described.”
The defendant demurs upon the ground that the patent shows upon its face that it is void for lack of novelty and invention. That this question may be presented by demurrer is now firmly established. Locomotive Works v. Medart, 158 U. S. 68, 84, 15 Sup. Ct. 745; Richards v. Elevator Co., 158 U. S. 299, 15 Sup. Ct. 831; Id., 159 U. S. 477, 16 Sup. Ct. 53; Button-Fastener Co. v. Schlochtmeyer, 69 Fed. 592; Cleveland Faucet Co. v. Vulcan Brass Co., 72 Fed. 505. Indeed, the practice of disposing of this question in limine is not only permitted but encouraged by the courts. Strom Manuf'g Co. v. Weir Frog Co., 75 Fed. 279. Patent litigation is so expensive, dilatory and, ofttimes, vexatious, the record frequently containing a mass of irrelevant matter not even alluded to at the argument, that it would seem to be in the interest of both parties that the question of patentability should be determined before the flood gates of testimony are opened. In plain language the patent is for a sheet' of tin foil and a sheet of paper stuck together by paste which does not cover the entire surface of the sheets. A person who pastes these sheets together at the four corners only, infringes the first and third claims. Should he adopt the plan which, for many years, has been familiar to compilers of scrap books, and which in one of its well-known varieties bears the name of a popular American humorist, he would infringe all the claims. What is referred to in the patent as “a narrow zone of adhesive material” may be created by drawing a brush of mucilage across the paper in • a straight line. The patentee did not originate the use of tin foil