228 F. 691 | 6th Cir. | 1915
(after stating the facts as above).
Snedeker’s earlier machine not only tilted the staples laterally instead of revolving them vertically, as they moved from former to
In another earlier device, the staple was turned on its longitudinal axis by causing the driving plunger to revolve as it descended, carrying the staple. This shows that it was not new to turn the staple on this axis, but, at the most, it only furnished one of the ideas which Hoxie adapted to his much simpler plan.
Nor do we overlook the fact that neither Hoxie nor complainant has operated a device made in the specific form shown by Hoxie’s specification and drawing. A little later he devised another method of transforming a section of wire lying at right angles to the plane of ejection into a staple lying in that plane, and of this later form there has been large practical use by complainant. We can neither hold,.as complainant asks us to do, that this is a use evidencing invention, nor, as defendant asks us to do, that there has been no practical use and that the patent is only a paper patent, without assuming cither that the patent does or does not cover this modified form which has heen thus actually used; and we find no necessity in the present case for going far enough to reach that question.
We come, now, to the distinctions between the form shown in the patent and the form used by defendant, and to determine whether either the scope of the invention, as reflected in the claims, or limitations — even perhaps unnecessary — expressly stated in the claims show noninfringement. The striking difference between the two devices flows from the fact that the patented driver is of the horizontal type while the defendant’s is vertical; consequently, in the patented form, the staple, after being shaped, lies vertically, resting upon one leg, and is -then pushed so that it falls over and lies flat upon the floor. The axis of revolution is horizontal and coincident with the bottom leg. In defendant’s device, the legs of the staple are always vertical, and the revolution is on a longitudinal axis midway between the legs. This revolution is caused by pushing the staple along while it straddles and rides upon a carrier leading from one blade to. the other and around a 90’’ curve. To accomplish this result, the arc of the circle between the centers of the two blades, instead of being about one inch long, as in Hoxie, is about three inches, and the two plunger blades, instead of having their inner edges united, as in Hoxie, have these edges about one inch apart; but both are, at their upper ends, united to and carried on a common head. The fact is, as claimed by defendant, that it has used without material change one of the old curved carrier bars for delivering staples to the driving plunger; but it has united with this a forming plunger practically integral with the driver. The two are not directly united along one edge; but, like Hoxie, they form two fingers of one hand. Whether there is a web connecting the fingers is of no functional importance. We have already said that this combination involved invention; and we see no inherent reason why the scope of this invention should be confined to a revolution on the longitudinal axis when that axis is horizontal, rather than extend also to the same motion when the axis is vertical, or to staple motion resulting from gravity alone rather than to motion more largely dependent upon the direct action of other parts.
Each claim calls for “an incasing member,” and it is urged that defendant eliminates this element. To take this view is to give an unduly strict construction. The patented device has what might be considered an incasing member in that it has a completely inclosed, more or less cubical chamber, along one side of which the staple is formed, in the body of which it turns and along another side of which it is ejected; but here, again, comparison of the claims shows that this chamber is not “the incasing member” to which the claims in suit refer. In other claims, this chamber is expressly specified as an element additional to and contained in the “incasing member,” and it necessarily follows that the incasing member is not the chamber, but is something else. With this broader but reasonable view, the incasing member is the casing or framework which surrounds and contains all the working parts — the machine head, which condenses into a unitary structure the twoi reciprocating blades, their ways, the wire cut-off, the space within which the staples turn, the curved guide, and the spring push block. In this sense, we find the incasing chamber embodied in the defendant’s device. It has a structural framework in which all the working parts are held and operate; but, even if the claims called for a chamber containing and retaining the staple in its
From this view it follows that claims 2, 3, 7, and 12 are infringed. Whether claim 9 so. far implies the exclusive use of gravity for turning the staple as to exonerate defendant’s form we need not decide. When all the, claims are considered, those not sued upon, as well as those that are, it cannot now be important either to the injunction or to the accounting whether claim 9 is infringed, and we see no likelihood that any future possibly infringing siructure will involve that question.
The decree below will therefore be affirmed, except as to claim 9, which in the decree will he omitted from the enumeration of claims infringed. This modification will not affect the question of costs, which will be awarded against appellant.