Kenneth REINER and Frank A. Klaus, Jr., d/b/a Kaynar Company and Kaynar Mfg. Co., Inc., Appellants, v. I. LEON CO., Inc., Appellee.
No. 77, Docket 25662
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit
Argued Nov. 4, 1960. Decided Dec. 21, 1960.
501
In this collateral attack upоn the attachment lien, we will of course indulge in the presumption of regularity of the proceedings which ultimately upheld it. Freeman, Law of Judgments, 5th Ed., § 387, p. 831-2. This means that we will presume the attachment lien was accompanied by every essential jurisdictional fact but if the аbsence of a prerequisite fact appears on the face of the record, the attachment lien must fall.
The inference that the affidavit was amended is met and overcome by the virtual admission in the record that it was not amended. Indeed, in the pre-trial proceedings the trial court noted the recital in the State Court judgment to the effect that Conard was a resident of Kansas. And when counsel noted that the affidavit “could have been amended“, the trial court replied that it came too late unless the giving of the bond amounted to an amendment to show some other ground of attachment. part. While the bond did formally recite that the necessary affidavit for the attachment had been “duly filed“, it is clear from statement of counsel that the original affidavit had not beеn amended to show a statutory ground for the attachment and that no new affidavit had in fact, been filed.
True, the attachment was never dissolved. The property was sold under it and the proceeds paid into court. But it seems too clear for doubt that the attachment was upheld and the property sold on the strength of the bond conditioned upon the payment to Conard any damages which he “may sustain by reason of the attachment if the order be wrongfully obtained.” The judgment operated to perfect the attachment lien, or we may say, the attachment lien merged in the judgment, but it came too late to avoid the sweep of Section 67 of the Bankruptcy Act. Judgment is reversed.
Swan, Circuit Judge, dissented in
Henry L. Burkitt, New York City, for appellee.
Before HAND, SWAN and MEDINA, Circuit Judges.
HAND, Circuit Judge.
This is an appeal from a judgment of Judge Byers, holding invalid fоr lack of invention claims 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 10 and 11 of Reissue Patent No. 23,163. We are told that only claims 2 and 3 are in suit. The invention is for “clamps,” used to maintain “formed curls” in a woman‘s hair, and the first question is whether the disclosure was an “invention.” The “clamp” consists of two superimposed membеrs, or “jaws,” which open and close at one end under spring pressure, between which, when open, the curl is inserted, and which hold it fast when they are closed. It is difficult to give an adequate understanding of the device without the diagrams that are part of the disclosure, but perhaps the following verbal description may serve. Each member of the “clamp” is struck out of a piece of flat metal, and has two parallel prongs, joined together at one end to form a handle. The metal separating the prongs of the uрper member is not cut away at the base where it joins the handle and remains attached as a part of the upper member, forming an intermediate tongue. This tongue is first bent upwards and then downwards between the prongs of the upper member. It has a hook at its end which engages the edge of a slot in the lower member between the two prongs of that member.
The handle end of the upper member is bent upwards at a substantial angle, and the handle end of the lower member is slightly bent up, so that the handle ends of the two members arе at a substantial angle to each other. When a user of the “clamp” presses together the handle ends, the prongs are forced apart against the resulting distortion of the tongue of the upper member, and the curl is inserted; and when this pressure is relieved, thе prongs close again, grasping the curl.
Were this all, there would be nothing to keep the members from shifting laterally on each other, although they would rock and the prongs would open and close on a fulcrum along the line where the plates are in contаct. To remedy this defect the members are held together as follows. Near the handle end of the lower member two “spurs” are struck up out of the metal, and pass into corresponding “sockets” or holes in the upper member, large enough to receive the “spurs” with a loose accommodation. This coaction of sockets and “spurs” makes the two members functionally one, the members being held together by the engagement of the hook at the end of the tongue of the upper member to the lower member. Since the tongue spans the fulcrum of the “clamp,” nothing more is necessary; the members will rock upon each other on the line of the “spurs” and sockets as long as the hook at the end of the tongue engages the slot between the prongs of the lower member.
The original application was filed on July 24, 1946 and a patent was issued on January 18, 1949. An application for reissue was filed on July 12, 1949, on which the reissued patent in suit was granted on November 1, 1949. Before the date of the original application a number of patents for hair curlers had issued, and it is against the background of these that we must appraise the invention in suit. The first of them was Goodman‘s patent, No. 1,893,281, issued on January 3, 1933, one object of which was stated to be “to provide a light, strong and durable spring clip which is constructed without a hinge or pivot pin, and which may be readily manufactured on a high production basis at a relatively low cost” (p. 1, lines 8-12). It disclosed a “clamp,” or a “clip,” without pivot or hinge. This was followed on February 13, 1934, by a patent to Widerman, No. 1,946,561, which was “hinged.” In 1936 a patent was issued to Lindsay, No. 2,031,377, for making a “hair curler,” one object of which was making a curl which could be “re-
Thus, between the appearance of Goodman and application for the original patent in suit an interval had elapsed of thirteen years, the art had disclosed seven “clamps” for hair curlers; and the answer to the need for suсh a device had obviously been the subject of much experiment. How far any of these succeeded the record does not show; but it is apparent that the patent in suit has been widely accepted. Reiner, one of the inventors, had been in a war industry, and had had no experience in women‘s dress or adornment. Braga, his associate, was, so far as appears, equally unfamiliar with the subject matter. The record does not specifically show what attracted them to this kind of device; but it at once achieved an unexpected success. In the first year-1946-its sales approximated $40,000, which at ten cents for every three clamps meant a sale of over a million clamps, and in twelve years the sales had reached 90 million. In 1957 they were about 750,000 a day, and by 1958 the plaintiff hаd established an almost complete monopoly of the “two-piece clips in the market.” These figures apparently the defendant does not challenge.
We are of course acutely aware of the constant reminders in the books that the sale of a patented device is not alone a measure of its invention, and we accept that conclusion. Nevertheless, great commercial success, when properly scrutinized, may be a telling circumstance. It is idle to say that combinations оf old elements cannot be inventions; substantially every invention is for such a “combination“: that is to say, it consists of former elements in a new assemblage. All the constituents may be old, if their new concourse would not “have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art” (
The test laid down is indeed misty enough. It directs us to surmise what was the range of ingenuity of a person
Jones‘s patent, 2,133,145, is the nearest of all those offered, but the lower member, 11, is kept in register with the upper membеr, 10, by means of the “side flanges, 17,” which requires the upper member to be different from the lower, and the use of more metal than the spur and socket device of the patent in suit. Moreover, the closing spring is altogether different. In such small and fragile devices slight divergences may be determinative. The “clamps” are small and easily lost; they must not be too troublesome to adjust, yet tenacious when in place. They are used in substantial quantity and cheap enough to make trivial their detachment and loss, which will be frequent. Neverthelеss they are obviously an important accoutrement of a woman‘s wardrobe, as appears not only from the amazing quantities sold, but from the repeated variants that kept coming upon the market. Unless we are to measure invention by the size and complexity of the product, this new article fulfilled the qualifications for a patent. We hold Claim three valid.
The other defenses do not require any extended discussion. It is plain that the reissued Claim three did not enlarge the scope of the invention. It is also plain that its languаge reads, not only on the specifications, but upon the defendant‘s “clamp.” The distinction suggested that the “resilient integral extension,” i. e. the spring, pulls instead of pushes, the members together as in the defendant‘s “clamp” is irrelevant. Claim three does not contain аs an element either method, and covers both. If there is a patentable distinction between the two, it might confine the patentees to the disclosure of their patent; but that would not invalidate Claim three. A claim must of course read upon the specifications, but the specifications, unless so declared, are only an example of what the claim is intended to cover; it is a species of a broader genus, else no claims would cover anything not literally described in the specifications. There is nothing in Grubman Engineering & Manufacturing Co. v. Goldberger, 2 Cir., 47 F.2d 151 to the contrary.
The judgmеnt dismissing the complaint is reversed; judgment for the plaintiff will be entered on Claim three of the patent, and the complaint will be dismissed as to the other claims as moot.
SWAN, Circuit Judge (dissenting in part).
In my opinion Judge Byers’ decision holding invalid claim 3 should be affirmed. I agree to dismissal of the complaint as to the other claims as moot.
