103 F. 650 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey | 1900
The bill in this case charges infringement of certain letters patent of the United States relating to multi-roll printing presses, being Eos. 410,271 and 415,321 dated respectively September 3, 1889, and November 19, 1889, issued to Joseph L. Firm, and also hTo. 529,680 dated November 20, 1894, issued to Joseph L. Firm, assignor to the complainant. Patent No. 410,271 is for an improvement in “Rotary Printing-Machines,” the application therefor having been filed October 27, 1888. Patent No. 415,321 is also for an improvement in “Rotary Printing-Machines,” the application therefor having been filed January 17, 1888. Patent No. 529,-680 is for an improvement in “Printing Machines,” the application
“(0) In combination, the form and impression cylinders adapted for printing a plurality of webs, 1lie rollers by which said webs are collected one upon another, Hie rollers by which said collected webs are folded longitudinally, and a knife by which the same are severed transversely, the said folding-rollers and transversely-severing knife being located at right angles with the printing-rollers, whereby the webs, having been printed and collected, make only one change in the direction of feed while being printed, folded, and cut, substantially as described.”
Claim 7 of patent No. 415,321 is as follows:
“(7) In a rotary printing-machine in which the several pages of a book or newspaper are printed upon a plurality of webs, in combination, the impression-cylinders, the form-cylinders, page-forms, the rolls whereby the webs after being printed are guided into position on top of one another, and cutters by which said webs are severed transversely between the succeeding rows of pages, the page-forms being arranged upon the several form-cylinders with their heads pointing all in the same direction around the cylinder, the forms' for those pages to constitute the first half of the book being located upon corresponding zones of the various form-cylinders and the forms for those pages to constitute the last half of the book being arranged upon other corresponding zones on the various cylinders side by side with the zones in which the forms for the pages of the first half of the book are located, whereby when the webs are run out over one another without turning or reversing the several pages belonging to the first half of the book will arrange themselves above each other and the several pages belonging to the last half of the book will arrange themselves above each other side by side with those belonging to the first half, substantially as described.”
Claims 31,12 and 13 of patent No. 529,680 are as follows:
“(11) In combination, a web printing mechanism adapted to perfoct a web containing four pages abreast, a guide f substantially parallel with the cylinders of said printing mechanism, two pairs of longitudinally folding rollers substantially at right angles with guide f, one pair being arranged in the path of each division of the split web, means for guiding the web to said folding rollers, -transversely cutting mechanism substantially parallel with said folding- rollers, guides substantially parallel with said folding rollers whereby one folded strip is brought over the other folded strip and mechanism whereby the cuts are folded together; whereby the web may be split, then each half folded longitudinally, then cut transversely, and brought together, then folded together, while moving substantially parallel- wiih one plane before longitudinal folding and parallel with a plane substantially a.t right angles therewith after longitudinal folding, substantially as described.
(12) A web printing mechanism adapted to perfect a web containing four pages abreast, a guide f substantially parallel with the cylinders of said*652 printing mechanism, two pairs of longitudinally folding rollers substantially at right angles with guide f, one pair being arranged in the path of each division of the split web, means for guiding the web to said folding rollers, transversely perforating mechanism substantially parallel with said folding rollers, guides substantially parallel with said folding rollers whereby one folded strip is brought over the other folded strip, retarding mechanism whereby the strips are torn apart on the transverse perforations and mechanisms whereby the cuts are folded together, substantially as described, whereby the two halves of the web may be folded longitudinally, perforated transversely, and brought together and torn apart, then folded together, while moving substantially parallel with one plane before longitudinal folding and parallel with a plane substantially at right angles therewith after longitudinal folding,- substantially as described.
(13) In combination a web printing mechanism adapted to perfect a web containing a plurality of pages abreast, longitudinally splitting mechanism, a plurality of frames for folding longitudinally, a folding roll at the apex of each frame, guides whereby the paper from one frame is caused to travel in the same direction with and associated with the paper coming from the other frame and mechanism whereby said associated papers are folded inside of each other, substantially as described; whereby the two parts of said web receive their primary fold separately and their final fold inside of each other.”
The answer sets up among other defences lack of title in the complainant. The defendant claims that the complainant has not title, legal or equitable, to either of the patents Nos. 410,271 and 415,821, and as to patent No. 529,680 has, not an equitable, but only a legal title. Assuming for the present that the objection of want of title is not well taken, the case will now be. considered on other grounds. Patents Nos. 415,321 and 410,271 relate to the class of rotary printing machines commonly known as “straight line” or “straight run” printing presses, in which the plates or page forms are so imposed on the form or type cylinders that the column rules of the printed matter are parallel to the edges of the webs or strips of web, as the case may be, and such webs or strips of web while running between, over and under the form and impression cylinders and rollers in the printing press proper and until they have been associated in register, move in the same vertical plane without lateral turning or deflection. The defendant contends, among other things, that in view of the prior art the combinations covered by claim 7 of patent No. 415,321, and claim 6 of patent No. 410,271, respectively, were not patentable, and were in fact anticipated. The complainant assigns as the date of Firm’s invention of the combinations now under consideration the early part of 1878 or, at the latest, February 19, 1879; On the question of date of invention there is much evidence, not altogether satisfactory when taken as a whole. The defendant claims that no date of invention can be assigned earlier than the dates of making application for the two earlier patents in suit. Claim 7 of patent No. 415,321, covers, in a rotary printing machine in which the several pages of a book or newspaper are printed upon a plurality of webs, a combination of, (1) impression-cylinders, (2) form-cylinders, (3) page-forms thereon for such book or newspaper arranged with their heads all pointing in the same direction around their cylinders, (4) rolls whereby the webs after being printed are without turning or reversing guided into position on top of one another, and (5) cutters by which the webs are severed transversely between the succeeding rows of
“Tills invention relates to improvements on the letters patent issued to me September 3, 1889, No. 410.271. In said patent is described a printing machine in which a plurality of webs after being printed upon are split longitudinally and severed transversely between the pages and all conducted to one double folding- device located at right angles with the printing machine proper. In my present machine, I employ three double folding devices and various improvements in llie details of construction by which I am enabled to facilitate the work and to increase the capacity ol the machine so far as the range of page combination is concerned.”
The drawings and description of patent No. 529,680 disclose a double width web perfecting press using three rolls of web and a corresponding number of printing mechanisms with a slitter in the center for splitting the webs longitudinally in the middle while running through the machine, and with folding and delivery mechanism. The maximum page capacity for each complete revolution of the cylinder is the same as in printing machines covered by patent No. 415,321, or patent No. 410,271. The distinctive feature of the later printing machine as compared with the two earlier is its adaptation to cross-associate the perfecte'd strips of web, if so desired, and thereby increase “the range of page combination.” The three double feeding devices are substantially similar to each other. Firm says in the description:
“A description of one folder, B, will suffice for all. * * * Since now the two halves of each folder are alike, a further description of one half will, suffice for an understanding of both.”
The three double width printing mechanisms in the printing press proper are substantially the same as the corresponding mechanism in the presses covered by patents Nos. 415.,321 and 410,271, respectively. Each side of the complete press has its own folding and der livery mechanism and, as in the two earlier presses, prints, folds and
“It Is also obvious that the products of two or more printing machines, whether of the same or varying sizes, may each he carried into the same folding-maeliine, whether it be of the rotating type, as in Fig. 5, or of the vibrating type, as in Fig. 3. by which machine they will he doubled or folded one within the other, and delivered as a single product”
Claim 2 in the Ford patent is as follows:
“(21 The combination of a folding apparatus with two independent printing mechanisms, whereby the products of the printing mechanisms are automatically carried into the folding apparatus and simultaneously doubled or folded, all substantially as described.”
_ But it is unnecessary further to particularize. A careful examina tion of the testimony, patents, and other printed publications in the case, shows, in my judgment, that the art prior to the first date of alleged invention assigned the was such
The bill must be dismissed, with costs.