80 F.2d 847 | 2d Cir. | 1936
The plaintiff is owner by assignment of the patent in suit which it is alleged has been infringed by the use by the defendant in the Eastern District of New York of a machine manufactured by George W. Swift, Jr., Inc. The manufacturer - is defending this action.
The patent relates to a cutter with its operating and adjusting gears so designed that it will cut off varying lengths of moving material without causing buckling or tearing. The particular material upon which the defendant used the cutter claimed to infringe is corrugated paper board as it ran out of the machine in which it was made. Cutters which would do this were old when the patent was granted. They worked on the principle of having the cutting knife revolve in the direction in which the material traveled and at the instant the cut was made at the same speed or so near it that the material would withstand without harm such slight distortion as might- take place.
“2. An apparatus for subdividing continuously advancing sheet material transversely into sections, including a cut-off mechanism having a movement at the instant of cutting substantially in the same direction ás the' path of movement of the material, means for varying the frequency of operation of said cut-off mechanism to vary the length of the sections being ‘ cut, and means operable while the machine is running for adjusting the relative speeds of the cut-off mechanism in its cycle, so as to maintain the traveling speed of the cut-off mechanism at the point of cutting operation substantially the same as the speed of sheet travel.”
The plaintiff prevailed below on the theory that “the invention extended to every means by which the result could be obtained,” and accordingly it was held that the defendant’s machine infringed.
Before describing the defendant’s mechanism, it is better to turn- to a patent granted to Erik W. Mikaelson on September 5, 1933. It is No. 1,925,965 for a flying shear, and, as its cutting length cannot be varied without stopping the machine, it is in no material respect like the cutter of the patent in suit. It uses elliptical gears as did Harbrecht and Sieg, but differs from them in that the angular adjustment of those gears is obtained, instead of by using differential gears, by means of a worm screw acting on a worm wheel. When the worm screw is revolved, its worm wheel turns one of the elliptical gears as desired, and so the angular adjustment is made. This construction has the advantage of the worm screw and' gear principle in keeping the adjustment when made constant without the need for any blocking.
The defendant’s machine has the Mikael son worm screw and wheel adjusting means, to which has been added a small electric motor with suitable electrical connections to permit it to be operated in either direction or stopped while it is itself whirling around with the cutter gear mechanism. It is also connected mechanically to the worm screw in such a way that by operating the motor when it is whirling with the worm screw and the cutter gears the screw may be turned either way. In this manner the cutting speed of the defendant’s cut-off machine can be varied at will without loss of machine time. The operator does that simply by pushing electric buttons and uses another set of buttons to change the cutting length by adjusting the variable transmission.
It is apparent that the defendant has achieved the same result that Sieg did. Yet that is not decisive on the question
So it is necessary for the appellee to show that the means employed by the defendant are substantially the same as those disclosed in the patent, and in this vital respect it has been faced with the impossible. Instead of following the patent and varying the cutting length and cutting speed by a manually operated control which does both at once and is mechanically so connected to the moving parts through differential gears that it need not, and does not, whirl with them, the defendant has first taken, the Mikaelson worm screw and wheel adjusting means, open for use in so far as the patent in suit was concerned, and, second, has attached to it electric motive power for turning the adjusting screw in place of the hand power used in the patent as the actuating force. The inherent differences between the two methods of power supply are such that the defendant’s will apply the necessary energy while itself whirling around with the parts upon which it operates, while the patentee’s construction requires the power to be applied to adjust the gears through a member which can be grasped in the hand and so must be stationary except as it is moved by hand. One could never, by follow-ing the path of the patent to whatever point of refinement ingenuity permits, arrive at the method employed by the defendant, since it lies in an entirely different direction. Consequently, the adjusting mechanism used by the defendant to get practically the same result as can be obtained by using the patented cutter is a noninfringing substitute for the patented construction. Cimiotti Unhairing Co. v. American Fur Refilling Co., 198 U.S. 399, 25 S.Ct. 697, 49 L.Ed. 1100; Imhaeuser v. Buerk, 101 U.S. 647, 25 L.Ed. 945; Oilgear Co. v. J. N. Lapointe (C.C.A.) 65 F.(2d) 380; Weil Pump Co. v. Chicago Pump Co. (C.C.A.) 74 F.(2d) 13; Hunt, Helm, Ferris & Co. v. C. A. Libbey Co. (C.C.A.) 283 F. 58.
As infringement has not been proved, we find it unnecessary to consider the question of validity.
Decree reversed.