273 F. 482 | 2d Cir. | 1921
Tetters patent No. 1,009,502 were issued to Barney Goldman, the assignor of the appellant. The patent is for a skylight. It is intended primarily to be used on theaters and buildings where large audiences congregate. It is so designed as to operate automatically, thereby opening a number of apertures located in the frame of the skylight. In this way the smoke and flames are drawn to the skylight, avoiding the suffocation of the people gathered in the building. The skylight is usually built to comply with the laws of localities as to size.
Claims 1 and 2 of the patent sued on are as follows:
“1. A skylight comprising a frame projecting from the roof of a building and having an opening with an inclined jamb, and provided with an offset at the top of the jamb, a cover pivoted to the lower part of the jamb, means connected to the cover for securing the cover on to the jamb, and means attached to the said connection, for automatically releasing the cover to swing downwardly to iis open position.
“2. A skylight comprising a frame projecting from the roof of a building and having an opening with an inclined jamb, and provided with an inclined offset at the top of the jamb, a cover pivoted to the lower part of the jamb, a flexible connection operatively secured to the cover for holding the cover on to the jamb, a fusible link attached to and situated between the end of the connection and the cover, for automatically releasing the cover to swing downwardly to its open position.”
The frame of the skylight has a number of apertures, and to each lower portion of the opening is pivoted a cover, which is held closed by means of one or more wire ropes or chains connected to the upper portion of the cover, and the ropes may be operated from a position below the skylight. Each of these ropes has connected thereto a link of fusible metal. When closed, the cover is positioned at an inclined angle; the idea being that when any of the ropes or chains are released, or any of the fuses melt, the cover will, by gravity, fall to an open position.
The appellee the Ereel Investing Company is the owner of the Strand Theater, at Fulton street and Rockwell place, Brooklyn, and it is upon this building that the skylight which the appellant claims infringes its patent was used. The appellee August Kuhnla, Incorporated, is the manufacturer of the skylight. The appellee Edward Keough is the manager of the theater. The appellee August Kuhnla, Incorporated,
*485 “The weight of the center part, as soon as that is released, being itself on a vertióle line, she falls down, and that drop from falling, that opens the door; that is, the weight.”
The particular skylight which is claimed to infringe, he testified, occupied the vertical position, and further:
“Q. And you found that they were intended to be opened by the weight of those rods plus that runner on that vertical standard? A. That is what I found.”
In the patent in suit there are inclined jambs, and the doors are positioned in an inclined position. In the appellee’s structure, there are no inclined jambs. The shutters are in a vertical position, and are started by the impulse of the weight of the rods, when the collar supporting them on the vertical post drops. The appellee’s device does not have a rope control, as does the appellant’s. In the appellant’s device, a rope running to each door controls a series of doors, and it is when, by the melting of the fusible link, the ropes are released that the shutters drop of their own weight; this pursuant to gravity alone. The control of the appellee’s structure is by rigid rods, and it is impossible to open any shutter independently, without releasing one of the rods by disconnection. It requires the weight of the rods or the thrust of the same to open the door in appellee’s structure. The appellant concedes this difference, but it contends that the rigid connecting rods of appellees’ structure attain the same function and the same result as the appellant’s inclined jamb, and maintains that in this sense they are the equivalent of the inclined jamb. But it is plain that the appellee’s connecting rods are not jambs in the ordinary acceptation of that term. They are not side posts or sides of a door or window, as the word “jamb” is defined by the dictionaries:
“A side or vertióle piece of any opening or aperture in a wall, such as a door, window, or chimney, which helps to bear the lintel or other member overhead, serving to sustain or discharge the superincumbent weight of the wall.” Century Dictionary.
These rods are movable and slidable, and are not stationary, as a jamb is. The rods exerted a driving weight to force the vertical door outward and downward, and the appellant’s inclined jambs are stationary, which act as stops to hold the appellant’s door tilted outward or overbalanced, so that, when the doors are released, they will, of their own weight and without any action whatever on the part of the inclined jambs, drop down. While it is not necessary, to make out a case of infringement, that the arrangement which infringes performs the same service, still it must produce the same results in substantially the same way. Werner v. King, 96 U. S. 218, 24 L. Ed. 613. Where each element is one of the operated means, the identity depends, not merely upon the function performed, but the manner in which it is performed. U. S. Light & Heat Corp. v. Safety Car H. & L. Co. (C. C. A.) 261 Fed. 915; Imperial Bottle Cap & Mach. Co. v. Crown Cork & Seal Co., 139 Fed. 312, 71 C. C. A. 442.
Decree affirmed.