287 F. 273 | 6th Cir. | 1923
Appeal from an order denying a motion for preliminary injunction in suit for infringement of United States patent No. 1,157,046, October 19, 1915, to Jacques Rousso, on a towel cabinet for supplying individual towels successively to respective users. The patent discloses a device containing an elevated shelf carrying a package of towels laid flat. Through an eyelet in the front edge of each towel there extends upward from the forward part of the shelf a rod which arises above the towels, then forward and downward past the shelf, then into a receptacle where the towels fall after being used, being there retained on the conducting rod until released. The claims in suit are Nos. 1, 2, 3, and 5. We reproduce in the margin claim 1, which is the broadest, and claim 3, which is as narrow as any.
This specific structure has never been held to infringe. The nearest approach is in Chicago Towel Co. v. Rousso, supra, in which infringement was found in a structure in which, while having no rod employed as a means for retaining the towels, the bringing and holding of the chain upward through the towels and then forward was accomplished by means of a front door of the cabinet extending above the stack of towels, at the upper edge of which door a rod extended parallel with and across the front door, an inch or so forwardly from the front thereof. The top of the door being higher than 'the stack of towels, the chain was thereby caused to rise and was held above the towels over the top edge of the front door, and over the projecting rod. The chain was thereby held in its upright position by a positive and independent device disconnected from the towels. The court, which found the question of infringement in the structure there involved “not free from difficulty,” was careful to disclaim deciding that “the employment of a chain or similar device for stringing and locking the towels necessarily infringes on Rousso’s gooseneck rod combination,” limiting its conclusion of infringement to a structure “employed as it is in the particular device of appellant, held while in use upward and forward.”
We do not, upon this record, attempt to decide the meritorious question of infringement. That question will be entirely open on final hearing. We content ourselves with holding that.it does not clearly appear that the trial judge in refusing preliminary injunction failed properly to exercise the judicial discretion vested in him in that regard. We therefore have not undertaken to state all the considerations, pro and con, affecting the question of infringement.
The order of the District Court is affirmed.
“1. In a device of the class described, a towel support, and a retaining member extending upwardly from said support and then downwardly sufficiently to constitute a suitable guide for a towel while in use, substantially as described.”
“8. In a device of the class described, an elevated towel support, and a retaining member extending upwardly from said support and .then downwardly sufficiently below said support, said retainer being provided below said support with a substantially vertical portion of considerable length to constitute a suitable guide for a towel while in use, substantially as described.”
Another patent was included in the suit, but review is not sought of the order denying injunction, so far as that other patent is concerned.