The patent in suit makes an advance in a very simple art. Although the improvement may appear almost trifling, it has proved of genuine value, and has been adopted broadly in the trade. Brunswick-Balke-Collender Company v.. Thum, 111 Fed. 904, 50 C. C. A. 61, is authority for sustaining a patent similar in its simplicity and commercial success, although the patent in suit has to a much less degree monopolized the market. It is concluded not only that the patent is valid, but also that the manufacturer, the-Lewis Batting Company, at one time infringed it. Such infringement is inferable from the evidence of the complainant respecting his visit to the factory of the Lewis Batting Company, in August, 1901. But it also appears by the complainant’s evidence that the defendant did not begin to handle the pads of the Lewis Batting Company until
Marcus v. Sutton
124 F. 74
U.S. Circuit Court for the Dis...1903Check TreatmentAI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
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