29 F.2d 656 | 6th Cir. | 1928
This is a patent suit. Plaintiff alleges infringement of patent No. 1,491,842, issued April 29, 1924, for a fire proof waste can by the manufacture and sale of certain metal waste containers.
Defendants do not seriously contest the validity of the patent in suit. They admit that their old type structure (Plaintiff’s Exhibit A) reads on the claims in suit, but they deny that they have sold this old type can since the issuance of the plaintiff’s patent. They deny that their new type can (Defendants’ Exhibit No. 1) infringed. The court held that defendants infringed claim 3 of the patent in suit by manufacturing and selling waste cans embodying the invention patented by this claim. The alleged infringement was in selling one of the old type cans and in manufacturing and selling the new type. We conclude that plaintiff has established by the weight of the evidence that ■ defendants did sell one of the old type cans after the date of plaintiff’s patent. After the issuance of plaintiff’s patent, Mr. Le Sauvage, plaintiff’s president and general manager, requested Alexander Friend to purchase one of these receptacles from defendant. Mr. Friend died before the trial, and his evidence is not in the record, but it is conclusively shown that Mr. Friend did in August, 1924, purchase from defendant Economy Baler Company some character of self-closing metal receptacle. Defendants, however, take the position that there is no testimony indicating that the receptacle so purchased was the one filed herein as Exhibit A. However, the proof clearly establishes that Mr. Hartman, con-neeted with the office of Charles W. Hills, plaintiff’s solicitor, did in the summer of 1924 receive at the office the waste paper receptacle filed as Plaintiff’s Exhibit A herein ; that it came in a brown cardboard packing box, which box he identified and filed with the record as Exhibit J. This box has on it the following shipping label: “From Economy Baler Company, Ann Arbor, Mich. Alexander Friend & Co., Suite 1024 — 1029 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, Ill. via Amer. Ry. Exp. Collect.” This box or carton bore no evidence of having been opened until opened by Hartman. Plaintiff also files defendants’ acknowledgment of an order from Friend & Co. to Economy Baler Company for a self-closing receptacle dated August 6, 1924, together with the Express Company’s receipt for the same on the same date, and invoice sent by defendants to Friend & Co.
Defendants introduced no positive testimony that they did not sell this Plaintiff’s Exhibit A to Friend, and the attempted explanation that, if it was sold at all, it was by mistake, is not convincing.
Claim 3 of the patent in suit is as follows:
“3. The combination of a receptacle having an opening; an inward opening door hinged to said receptacle and serving to close said opening; cmd a gravitating toggle linkage mounted within said receptacle, connected with said door and serving to urge said door closed with a thrust which increases as the door approaches closed position (Italics ours.)
This claim is entitled to a liberal construction in its favor and in order to its proper interpretation the specifications may be looked to. M. O. Nelson Mfg. Co. v. Myers & Bros. Co., 25 F.(2d) 659, 663 (C. C. A. 6). In the specifications plaintiff’s mechanism is described as follows:
“The door actuating mechanism is housed within the cover between the doors and comprises a yielding linkage connected with the doors and operating to urge both doors closed at all times, while permitting either door or both to be pushed open against moderate resistance. In this preferred form, the closing mechanism is so contrived as to exert a closing tendency on the doors whieh is greatest when both doors are closed.”
It is clear, therefore, that the claim is not broad enough to be embraced in the prior art. The claim is for “a gravitating toggle linkage,” and is not confined to any particular form of “gravitating toggle linkage.” Plaintiff’s new type can manufactured' under this patent and defendants’ old type can are
Upon the whole we conclude that there was infringement in the sale of defendants’ old type can and in the manufacture and sale of defendants’ new type structure, and the decree is therefore affirmed.