33 F. 922 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut | 1888
This is a bill in equity founded upon the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 218,300, dated August 5,1879, to William Mills and Christian H. Hershey, for improvement in hair-crimpers.
The article consists, in the language of the patent, “essentially of a strip of soft, non-elastic metal, preferably flat, covered with a fibrous coating, cemented thereto, so that when cut into proper lengths for use the ends will not fray out, but remain the same into whatever number of pieces the crimper may be divided.” The claims are as follows:
“1. Ahair-crimper consisting of the non-elastic metallic core, C, and braided covering, A, said covering, A, being cemented to said core, C, throughout its-entire length, substantially as described.
2. The process of manufacturing hair-crimpers by first flattening soft metal wire between rollers, then coveringdt with a braided fibrous coating, attached thereto by means of an adhesive substance, and afterwards dividing the material into suitable lengths for hair-crimpers, substantially as herein described. ”
The infringing article consists of a brass wire within two strips of paper, the whole covered with a braided covering, the two strips of paper having been passed through a cementing mixture before entering thebraider.
The suit in equity of Hershey et al. v. Howard M. Giles and others, in the circuit court for the Southern district of New York, which was decided by Judge Wallace on April 10, 1885, involved this patent, and the' same infringement. In that case the patentability of the invention, and
The only question which I shall consider is, whether the use of this process by Blakesley has been now shown, beyond a fair doubt, by the additional witnesses, and by all the testimony. When the motion for preliminary injunction was made in 1884, in the New York case, Wright, the predecessor of Blakesley in the crimper business, remembered the use of the bare metal process in 1876, and told Blakesley and the defendants’ counsel of it; hut Blakesley did not remember it with any clearness, and could not testify to it. The affidavits were, therefore, prepared by counsel, omitting all mention of this method, which intervened, for a very short period, between the “Wright process” and the double cover process. The Wright process consisted in covering a strip of metal with a braid, and then gumming with dextrine the long braided strip at the end of each crimper. When the depositions were taken, Blakesley had called to mind, or thought he had, the use of the bare metal process, and both he and Wright testified accordingly; but no explanation was given of the omission to tell this fact in their affidavits. The defendants’ case, in the New York suit, rested upon the double cover process, which counsel apparently thought was a sufficient anticipation of the patent in suit. In this case, Robinson, Lewis, Hubbell, Sikes, Mitchell, Mrs. Gowdy, Carrington, Blakesley, and Wright,—the first five being new witnesses,—testify to the use of the bare metal process by Blakesley in 1876. And all except Lewis, Hubbell, and Mitchell testify to the use of the two processes. 1 disregard the testimony of Hubbell and
I am fully aware of the ease with which honest witnesses can persuade themselves that they remember some bygone circumstance which they are ingeniously induced to think that they remember; but, in this case, I do not perceive any manipulation of these witnesses, and I think that their testimony was not manufactured, and they were not mistaken. There is nothing improbable, either by reason of the state of the art, or of the character of the improvement, in the history which is given. The invention, after the Wright process had been used, was a very natural one.
The bill is dismissed.