70 F. 833 | 9th Cir. | 1895
In sheet-metal can manufacture, where the heads are applied to the outside of the body, the heads are struck from circular sheets of metal by means of dies, one of which is a plunger of the shape and size of the inner diameter of the can-head flange, and the other of which is a matrix or raised die of the depth of the flange and of the diameter of the exterior of the flange. The circular disk of sheet metal being laid on this matrix, and the plunger depressed to force the sheet into it, the result is that the flange is upturned around the margin of the sheet-metal disk, and is of definite dimensions, both as to its thickness and as to its exterior and interior diameter. Can heads made by the same dies are, therefore, always of the same size. Can bodies are, however, not always of the same size, whether they be made by hand or by machinery. They are formed over a horn or mandrel, which at best can only give them uniform interior diameter, even if it were possible to press the blank sheets around the mandrel with uniform force, or to make the joint forming the side seam with uniform accuracy. Besides this, (he can bodies thus made are liable to vary in both internal and external diameter. They are also subject to variation in external diameter, even if of uniform size inside, because of the varying thickness of the sheet metal of which they are made; such variation sometimes occurring in the same sheet and in different parts of the form of the can body. As it is necessary that the can heads, which are of uniform diameter, shall in all cases closely fit against the exterior surface of the end of the can body, it is therefore requisite that an external compressing means shall be employed to compress or reduce can bodies which are slightly too large for the proper size to enter the can head. This externally applied compressive force must be in action at the time the can head is applied to the can body, because the relaxation of such force would allow the can body to expand to its original size, and to assume any irregularity of shape which it previously possessed, and thus unfit it to receive the head. Therefore, the compressive force applied to the can body must continue to hold the can to its form and size while the head is being put thereon. As the head is to closely fit the exterior of the can body, and the two are to be applied simultaneously to each other at all points in their circumference, it is essential that both the head and the body be held in exact alignment with each other while the two parts are being brought together. It is therefore essential that whatever device be constructed to carry into effect this purpose must be so constructed as — First, to bring the ends of the can body to the necessary size and diameter to receive the can head; secondly, the head and body must be accurately held in proper alignment, so that, in the act of bringing them together, the flange of the head may
When one claims to be the owner of such a patented device, which has been infringed by another, the first important thing to do is to see what is the invention covered by the patent that is claimed to have been infringed. Accordingly, we turn to the record to see for what the complainants’ patent was awarded. It is there seen that the inventor, Norton, asked for more ilia n the patent office gra nted. The contents of the file wrapper, which was not in evidence in the case of Norton v. Jensen, 1 C. C. A. 452, 49 Fed. 859, show that Norton, in his application for the patent, claimed to have invented, not an automatic or any other kind of machine for putting ends on fruit or other cans, but'to have invented “certain new and useful improvements in machines for putting on” such ends. And, in his original application, he thus specified his invention:
“Tliis invention relates 1o a machine for putting on tlio ends of fruit and other cans wherein the joint by which the ends are secured to the body is of the variety commonly called the ‘slip joint,’ in contra distinction from a seamed or turned joint. The objects sought are the performance of this operation automatically, and with speed and efficiency- Tbe invention consists in a clamping mold, the interior dimensions anü form whereof correspond with the exterior dimensions and form of the can body, and the end whereof is chamfered away. In this invention, the can body is first placed within a clamping- mold, conforming accurately in shape and dimension to the exterior of the can body, and, while confined in this mold, the end of the can is forced upon the body by a piston entering the mouth of the mold, room being provided for the entrance between the mold and can body of the flange borne upon the end of the can by chamfering away the interior of the mold slightly as far as said flange extends. The mold is also preferably made tapering at the mouth where the can end is received, so as to guide the end accurately to the body and insure the registering of one with the other. In the furtherance of speed, I place a series of these molds, accompanied by pistons, upon arms radiating from and revolving around a common center, or upon a wheel, and at proper times actuate the molds to clamp and release the cans and the pis ions to put on the ends by means of suitable devices with which they are connected or come in contact during the rotation of the arms or wheels.”
All ÍJiuse, and other features of the invention, Norton proceeded to describe in his application, with (he aid of the accompanying drawings, and his claims were therein thus stated:
“1. In a can-ending machine, the combination of a clamping mold conforming- to the exterior of the can body, a piston for forcing the cap or end piece upon the body, and devices for operating said mold and piston, substantially as specified.
“2. In a can-ending machine, the combination of a clamping mold conforming to the exterior of the can body, and chamfered away at the end so as to give room for flange of the cap or end piece, a piston for forcing the end piece upon the body, and devices for operating both mold and piston, substantially as specified.
“3. In a can-ending machine, the combination of a clamping- mold, conforming to tlie exterior of the can body, a chute for admitting the can ends, a piston for applying the ends to the body, and devices for operating both mold anti i««ton, substantially as specified.
*838 “4. In a can-ending machine, the combination of a series of clamping molds, mounted and rotating about a common center, devices for opening and closing said molds, a piston or pistons for each mold, and a device or devices for operating said pistons, substantially as specified.
“5. The combination, with a movable can clamping- and discharging mold, of a device for forcing the can end upon the can body while clamped in said mold, substantially as specified.
“6. The combination, with a clamping mold for the can body, of a chute or device for delivering the can bodies to said mold, a device for presenting and retaining the can end in position at the mouth of the mold, and means for forcing the can end upon the can body, substantially as specified.”
All of these claims were rejected by the patent office, — claims 1, 2, and 5 because of patents theretofore issued, namely, patent No. 285,700, to Pierce, on December 21, 1880; patent No. 233,070, to Dillon and Cleary, on October 12,1880; patent No. 225,085, to Brooks, on March 23, 3880; and an English patent, numbered 4,237, issued in 3873. The examiner of the patent office thus stated the objections to claims 3, 4, and 0, made by Norton:
“Claims 3 and 0 are rejected on Pierce; and, since the chute which he shows may be applied to any one of the other references, the claims are rejected on all the other references, taken in connection with Pierce. Claim 4 is rejected on Pierce and on the English patent, each showing a series of clamps and a stationary piston for inserting the head into each mold and its contained can as it comes opposite the piston. In view of the broad description, including various modifications of applicant’s machine, these patents meet the fourth claim.”
To meet and avoid these references and objections made by the patent office, Norton amended his application by inserting, after the word “efficiency,” in his original specification, the following:
“Heretofore machines have 'been constructed for. applying the heads to that class of cans where the flange of the head is inserted inside the can body, or where-the head is criinped on the can body. In such machines, the interior of the can body is ordinarily sized so as to fit and receive within it the can head by means of an interior mandrel or former, which is forced inside the can body while it is secured within a mold or holder, and then the can head is dropped or pressed into place inside the can body, as illustrated in letters patent Ño. 235,700, granted to George H. Pierce December 21, 1880. As the can bodies are originally formed around an inside mandrel, the. interior diameter of the can varies, if at all, very slightly, and the side scam also ordinarily forms no projection on the inside of the can, as it.does on the outside, so that the operation of applying the heads to this class of cans would be comparatively simple and easy, even if the heads were required to fit the can bodies tightly, which, however, is not the ease. But heretofore no successful method has yet been devised for automatically applying the heads or covers to that class of cans wherein the flange of the cover slips or fits over the body of the can, forming the ordinary slip joint. In that class of cans, it is essential that the heads or covers, when snapped on the can body, should fit the same very tightly and accurately, and, as the exterior diameters of the can bodies always vary somewhat, owing to the varying thickness of the different parts of the stock from which they are made, the operation of snapping or fitting the heads on the can bodies is one of considerable difficulty, and, when done by hand, as it heretofore always has been done, it requires skilled labor, and is a síow and tedious operation. The heads or covers for the cans are formed by a stamp, so that their interior diameters are always precisely the same; and, in my machine, the can bodies are placed within a can-sizing and clamping mold, and compressed thereby until the exterior diameter of the can body is made to conform accurately to the interior diameter of the head, and so held while the head is forced-upon the can body, the mold or holder being cut away or enlarged at each end to conform to the*839 exterior diameter of the head, thus leaving an annular space between the can body and mold conforming to the thickness and width of the Range on the can head or end, into which annular space the head is forced, and then the mold is opened and the headed can discharged.”
And lie further amended his original application by striking out all of the claims therein contained, and substituting in lieu of them the following:
“1. hi a machine for applying to can bodies heads fitting outside the same, the combination of a device for sizing the exterior diameter-of the can body to conform to the interior diameter of the can head, and holding the same so sized while the head is applied, said sizing and holding device having its end enlarged to fit the exterior diameter of the can head, so as to leave an annular space between it and the can body for the reception of the flange of the can head, with a device for forcing the can head into said annular space, and thereby applying the head outside the can body, substantially as specified.
”2. In a machine for applying to can bodies heads fitting outside the. same, ¡he combination, with a chute or device for delivering the can bodies to the machine with a movable device for clamping the can body and sizing its exterior diameter to conform to the interior diameter of the can head, said clamping and sizing device having its end or mouth enlarged to leave an annular space between the same and (lie can body clamped therein for the reception of the flange of the head, a chute or device for delivering the can heads to the machine, and a device for forcing the can head into said annular spa.ee at tlio end of said clamping and sizing device, substantially as specified.
•‘iS. In a machine for simultaneously applying the heads to both ends of a can, the combination oí a series of movable devices for clamping the can body and sizing its exterior diameter to conform to the interior diameter of the can heads, said clamping and sizing devices having enlargements at each end or mouth for the reception of the can heads outside the can body, with devices for simultaneously forcing the can heads on each end of the can body into the annular spaces at each end thereof between the can body and said clamping and sizing device, substantially as specified.
‘•4. The process herein described of applying heads to can bodies consisting in first sizing the exterior diameter of (he can body to conform to tin; inferior diameter of the can head, and clamping it in a suitable mold or holding device, and then forcing the heads on ilie can body into an annular space at the end of (he mold or holding device, between it and the can body, substantially as specified.”
In a note to the amendments thus made by Norton to his original application, he said:
“The principle and mode of operation of the present invention is eniirely different from that of the machine shown in the references, and is designed to effect a very different result or purpose. The references all show (¡('vices for pulling the heads inside of the cans. Instead of the inside mandrel shown in the Pierce patents for sizing and flaring (he interior of the can, in applicant’s invention no such method of operation is or could be adopted. lii applicant's invention, the can is sized from the outside. None of the references show a mold or clamp for the can body having an annular space between the can body and mold into which the head is forced, nor do any of the references show sizing the exterior of the can from the outside, both of which are essential features of applicant’s invention. By the amended claims, as well as by the amendment to the specification, it will be seen, we think, that applicant’s invention is properly limited and distinguished from the prior art, as disclosed by the references.”
Claim 4 of the amended claims was rejected by the patent office; and upon objection there made that the statement made in the applicant’s specification that his invention consists in “a clamping mold, the interior dimensions and form whereof correspond with the
In defense of the suit, the defendant, among other things, set up in his answer, and also introduced in evidence, the patents to which Norton was referred by the patent office, when rejecting his claims as originally made, and also letters patent No. 152,757, issued July 7, 1874, to George A. Marsh, for “improvement in devices for heading cans,” and letters patent No. 238, 351, issued March 1, 1881, to-William J. Clark, for a “can-heading machine.”
As already said, none of the proceedings in the patent office disclosed by the contents of the file wrapper were in evidence in the case of Norton v. Jensen, 1 C. C. A. 452, 49 Fed. 859, nor were any of the prior patents here set up as anticipations of the complainants’ patent there shown, except that of Pierce, in respect to which the court said the testimony showed that Norton’s invention was prior in point of time, for which reason the court concluded that the Pierce patent had “no particular bearing upon any of the inventions or machines in controversy.” 1 C. C. A. 452, 49 Fed. 862. As there presented, Norton’s invention undoubtedly appeared to be of a primary character, standing at the head of the art, and its owners were, therefore, properly held to be entitled to a broad and liberal construction of its claims. Whether the same broad and liberal construction should be applied in the present case remains to be considered.
That the complainants’ patent is, by the record in this case, placed in a different position from that occupied by it in the case of Norton v. Jensen, is very clear. Although the application for the Clark patent was filed January 7, 1881, and that patent issued March 1, 1881, and although the application for the Pierce patent Avas filed August 13, 1880, and that patent issued December 21, 1880, whereas Norton did not file his application for his patent until June 24, 1882, yet he testified that he made his invention and made a small experimental machine to demonstrate its practicability as early as July 15, 1880, — nearly one month before the application for the Pierce patent was filed. Nevertheless, the fact is beyond dispute, for it is a part of the record evidence, that all of the claims asked for in Norton’s original application were rejected by the patent office, based largely upon the suggestion that they were covered by the patent theretofore issued to Pierce, whereupon Norton, so far from then claiming that his invention was prior in point of time to Pierce’s, amended his specifications by, stating that he knew that machines had theretofore been constructed for applying heads to the same class of cans, where the flange of the head is inserted inside the can body, or where the head is crimped on the can body, and, for the purpose of showing that such machines Avere unlike his inA’-ention, he proceeded to say, in-his amendment to his specifications:
*841 “In such machines, the interior of the can body is ordinarily sized so as to fit and receive within it the can head, by means of an interior mandrel or form, which is forced inside the can body while it is secured with a mold or holder, and then the can head is dropped or pressed into pla.ee inside the can body, as illustrated in letters patent granted to George H. Pierce, December 21, 1880.”
Following ibis, be amended bis application 'by substituting for his original six claims, which the patent office rejected, four other claims, the first three of which were allowed, and are embodied in the patent. In addition to the Pierce and Clark patents, the record shows that on June 2C, 1880, Dillon and Cleary applied for, and, on October 12,1880, were granted, a patent for "an improvement in mechanism for placing heads in cans,” and, in 1874, Marsh was granted a patent for "certain new and useful improvements in devices for heading cans.” The Dillon and Cleary patent was, like that to Pierce, for a device for pulling heads in cans, and the Marsh patent, while for a device for putting tight-fitting can heads on the outside of can bodies, was designed to be used by hand. It consists of a solid die with a cavity to receive the can head, secured rigidly to which, at one side, is a semicircular bevel-faced guide, slightly overlapping, at its middle portion, the cavity, but the two extremities of which do not overlap it. Those extremities are, however, tilted slightly upward, to enable the headed can to be tipped ont of the die. To use this device, the operator first fits a head into the die by .slipping one side under the guide. He then takes the can body in his hands and places one side under the guide into the uncovered half of the can-head flange. He then, by tilting the can body, forces it into the head, the overhanging portion of the guide serving to crowd the last portion of the circumference of the can body into the can-head flange. The headed can is then tilted out of the die. This device for putting tight-fitting heads on the outside of can bodies, as well as the device of Pierce for putting such heads in cans, was in existence at the time Norton made the amendments to the specifications descriptive of Ms invention, and at the time he made the amended claims under the objections raised in the patent office.
It is perfectly clear that the claims first made by Norton were much broader than those finally made in his application for* the patent, and that were allowed and embodied in the patent issued to him, and it is equally as clear that this narrowing of his claims was compelled by the objections raised by the examiner of the patent office. Under such circumstances, the rule is well settled that the patentee cannot, after the issuance of the patent, broaden his claims by dropping any element which he was compelled to include in order to secure the patent. In Fay v. Cordesman, 109 U. S. 408, 3 Sup. Ct. 236, the court said:
“The claims of the patents sued on In tills case are claims for combinations. In such a claim, if Hie patentee specifies any element as entering into the combination, either directly by the language of the claim, or by such a reference to the descriptive part of the specification as carries such element into the claim, he makes such element material to the combination, and the court cannot declare it to be immaterial. It is his province to make his own claim, and ids privilege to restrict it. If it be a claim to a combination, and be restricted to specified elements, all must be regarded as material, leaving- open only the*842 question whether an omitted part is supplied hy an equivalent device or instrumentality.”
In Sargent v. Lock Co., 114 U. S. 63, 5 Sup. Ct. 1021, it was said:
“In patents for combinations of mechanism, limitations and provisos imposed by the inventor, especially such as were introduced into an application after it had been persistently rejected, must be strictly construed against the inventor, and in favor of the public, and looked upon as in the nature of disclaimers.”
To the same effect are the cases of Shepard v. Carrigan, 116 U. S. 503, 6 Sup. Ct. 498; Leggett v. Avery, 101 U. S. 256; Vulcanite Co. v. Davis, 102 U. S. 222-228; Mahn v. Harwood, 112 U. S. 354-364, 5 Sup. Ct. 174, and 6 Sup. Ct. 451.
And, concerning the general rule by which claims are to be construed, the court said, in Howe Machine Co. v. National Needle Co., 134 U. S. 394, 10 Sup. Ct. 570:
“Doubtless a claim is to be construed in connection with the explanation contained in the specification, and it may be so drawn as in effect to make the specification an essential part of it; but since the inventor must particularly specify and point but the part, improvement, or combination which he claims as his own invention or discovery, the specification and drawings are usually looked at only for the purpose of bettor understanding the meaning of the claim, and certainly not for the purpose of changing it and making it different from what it is. As remarked by Mr. Justice Bradley, in White v. Dunbar, 119 U. S. 47, 52, 7 Sup. Ct. 72: ‘The claim is a statutory requirement, prescribed for the very purpose of making the patentee define precisely what his invention is; and it is unjust to the public, as well as an evasion of the law, to construe it in a manner different from the plain import of its terms.’ ”
Now, comparing tbe original with the amended claims of Norton, it is not difficult to see the difference between what he sought to have allowed him, and what he was compelled to accept in order to get his patent. Take claim 1. As originally made, it read:
“In a can-ending machine, the combination of a clampfing mold conforming to the exterior of the can body, a piston for forcing the cap) or end pfiece upon the body, and devices for operating said mold and pfiston, substantially as specified.”
Here, as will be observed, nothing whatever is said about any annular space in the end of the mold, but the claim is simply for the combination of a clamping mold conforming to the exterior of the can body, and a piston for forcing the cap or end piece upon the body, with the operating devices. As here made, claim 1 was clearly anticipated, as held by the patent office, by the patent of Pierce, the device^ of which consisted, in part, of an opening and closing mold or clamp, the upper end of which is chamfered away to enable the end of the can body to be expanded after the reception of the can head, which is forced to its place in the can by means of a piston while the can body is tightly held by the mold. Claim 1, as thus originally made, was, therefore, rejected by the patent office, and the applicant substituted in lieu of it this claim, which was allowed:
“In a machine for applying to can bodies heads fitting outside the same, the combination of a device for sizing the exterior diameter of the can body to conform to the interior diameter of the can head, and holding the same so sized while the head is applied, said sizing and holding device having its end enlarged to fit the exterior diameter of the can head, so as to leave an annular*843 space between it and the can body for the reception of the flange of the can hea.fl, with a device for forcing the can head into said annular space, and thereby applying the head outside the can body, substantially as specified.”
Now, here was an element inserted in claim 1 by the applicant which the original claim did not contain, namely, a mold so constructed as to leave at its ends an annular space between the mold and can body for the reception of the flange of the can head, with a device for forcing the can head into the annular space, and thereby -applying' the head outside the can body. That the annular space so introduced is an important and essential element of Norton’s invention was expressly declared by himself in the note to Ms amended specifications and claims, where he said:
“None of the references [that is to say, none of the patents to which his attention had been called by the patent office] show a mold or clamp for the can body having ail annular space between the can body and the mold, into which the head is forced, nor do any of the references show sizing the exterior of the can from the outside, both of which are essential features of applicant's invention.”
And, in his specifications, the applicant also expressly asserted the essential nature of the annular space of the mold, for he there says:
“As shown in Mgs. 2 and 3, the end of the mold is chamfered away in-teriorly to give room to the flange of the cap or can end to pass outside the can body. This is a very essential feature. * ® *”
Thus, the inventor himself, when seeking' the patent, declared that one of the essential elements of his invention is the annular space betunen the can body and mold into which the can head is forced, thereby, as in terms declared in claim 1, applying the head to the outside of the can, in which respect, the inventor further declared, his invention differs from any of the patents to which he was referred by the patent office.
Another essential element common to all of the complainants’ claims as finally made, allowed, and embodied in their patent, is the piston, or device for forcing the can head into the annular space. Both the annular space and the piston or device for forcing the can head into that space were also made essential elements of each of the other claims as finally made, and allowed and embodied in the patent, and, as each of the claims of Che complainants’ patent is for a. combination, unless the defendant’s device contains that annular space and piston or device for forcing the can head therein, or (heir mechanical equivalents, it is clear that the charge of infringement is not made out. McCormick v. Talcott, 20 How. 402; Vance v. Campbell, 1 Black, 427; Schumacher v. Cornell, 96 U. S. 554.
Claim 2 of the complainants’ patent, in addition to the elements in claim 1 thereof, embraces a chute or device for delivering the can bodies and a chute or device for delivering the can heads to the machine, and claim 8 is "for simultaneously applying the heads to both ends of a can, the combination of a series of movable devices,” such as is claimed in claim 1, to wit, the mold for clamping the can body and sizing its exterior diameter to conform to the interior diameter of the can heads, with an annular space at its ends for the
In tbe complainants’ device, two wheels are employed to rotate on a common stationary axis, and to carry at their peripheries molds in a circumferential series. Eacb of these molds consists of a fixed-inner semi-circular jaw and two quarter-circular jaws, tbe latter being binged to tbe former, and adapted to open and close tbe mold like tbe two halves of a double-lidded vessel, wherein tbe half lids open outwardly. Means are provided for opening and closing these hinged parts of tbe mold, consisting of crank arms or levers, a slide connected by links witb tbe lever, and a fixed cam provided witb a groove or grooves wbicb receive a pin that projects laterally from tbe slide, and causes tbe slide to move radially inwardly and outwardly as tbe wheels revolve. At one point in tbe revolution of tbe wheels, and at a point where tbe binged parts of a mold will open, a chute for can bodies is arranged to deliver a can body into tbe mold. Tbe mold for receiving tbe can body is closed in its further revolution by tbe fixed cam. To eacb mold are also applied two end chutes down wbicb can beads may descend into proper position opposite tbe ends of tbe can body inclosed in tbe mold. Two piston beads on pistons or shanks are arranged to move inwardly towards tbe mold, one from eacb side, and to simultaneously push tbe can heads into tbe annular spaces and thus upon tbe ends of tbe can body. Tbe desired movements of these pistons are obtained by springs and cams, springs being arranged to throw and bold tbe pistons in their retracted positions, and cams being employed to thrust tbe pistons inward in forcing tbe can beads into tbe annular spaces and thereby upon tbe can bodies. Tbe mold is made in two parts, to open and receive tbe can body,_ and to discharge it after it is beaded. In bis specifications, tbe inventor said:
“A model constructed after my invention, that is, so as to conform to the exterior of the can body, fits the body accurately, and presses with equal clamping force upon every part thereof.”
When closed upon tbe can body, tbe mold bolds it in an immovable position, tbe can bead being carried from tbe can-bead chute by
The defendant's device consists of a main central shaft, B, upon which is mounted a driving wheel, E, to _ which power is applied in any convenient manner. Fixed upon the central shaft is a spool, upon the ends of which are two disks, I), D, perforated by a row of 20 holes, which pass through them near their peripheries in a circular line, which is concentric with the main shaft:. Metal rods, F, Fa, pass through these holes, each rod passing- through both disks and operaving in pairs, one of which moves in one direction, while the other moves in the opposite direction, and each pair of which carry and operate two sets of jaws, — a "set of jaws” being designated by the defendant, in his specifications, as “both of the two halves that form the entire circular ring that incloses a can head and one end of the can body.” The half of this entire ring which is nearest to the rods, F, Fa, he designates as the inside jaw, L, and the other half, which pulls hack from the inside jaw when the jaws open, is called the outside jaw, X. Two screw bolts, ⅞1, M, are made with a flange, .tía, near their middle part, and with screw threads cut. both above and below the flange. These holts arc screwed down into the back, La, nearly to the flanges. Metal Mocks, O, (), are perforated so as to slide down over the upper ends of the bolts, and rest upon the' flanges, Mb. Xuts, Mb, on the upper ends of the bolts, screw down tightly upon the blocks, O, O, and fasten them rigidly in place. The blocks, 0, O, may be raised or lowered to perfectly adjust the distance between the outside jaw, N, which is carried by the blocks, O, 0, and hinge holt, h, and the inside jaw, L, by loosening the nuts, Mb, and turning the bolts, At, M, so as to screw them further into or out of the hack, La, and then again tightening- the nuts, Mb, upon the blocks, ü, O. The outside jaw, N, is made with a shank, g. This shank, g, fits in the space between the blocks, O, O, and a hinge bolt, h, passes through the blocks, O, O, and the shank, g, of the outside jaw, and hinges the outside jaw in its place, so that it may stand open or he turned and closed. A latch, i, is pivoted to the edge of the hack, La, and is fixed normally in the position shown in the drawings by a spring, j, which is fixed at one of its ends to a small stud in the latch, and at its other end is fixed to a stud, k, that projects below the edge of the back, La. A. small stud, 1, projects from the side of the outside jaw, and when the outside jaw is tamed down and closed with the inside jaw, the stud, 1, in descending will strike the upper edge of the latch, i, and, pressing it: downward, will pass into the notch shown in the latch, when the spring, j, will retract the latch and lock the two jaws together. A long metal pin, I’, is fixed in the outside jaw or in its shank, and is used as a lever for the purpose of revolving the outside jaw on its hinge holt so as to open and close the jaws as required. The pin, V, at ihe proper time strikes against bent cam rods which are fixed in their several positions as hereinafter explained, and when the pin, P, comes in contact
There are twenty sets of these jaws in the machine shown in the drawings, and they are all made precisely alike and all operate precisely alike. They all have the same kind of fastenings and connections, except that, as 10 sets of jaws stand facing the other 10 sets, one-half of the latches, i, with their fastenings are fixed upon the right-hand edges of the backs, La, while the other half are fixed upon the left-hand edges of such backs. This is done in order that the latches, i, may all be upon the back sides or edges of the jaws as they revolve forward around the central shaft. H is a collar that is perforated, and both rods, F, Fa, pass through it. On the end of rod, Fa, a screw thread is cut long enough to permit a nut to be used on both sides of the collar, with something to spare for adjustments. The rod, Fa, first has the inside nut screwed upon it, then the collar, H, is placed upon it and the second or outside nut is screwed upon it. Upon the other end of its companion rod, F, another collar, H, is fastened in the same manner. The rods, either before or after the collars are fastened to them, are put in their places in the disks, the two sets of companion jaws being placed upon the rods as the rods are being placed in the disks. The sets of jaws are fastened to their respective rods by the pins, Y, V. The smooth end of each rod passes loosely through the collar that is fastened to the adjacent end of its companion rod. This is done only for the purpose of holding the collar better in its place, and is not necessary. In this manner, one of the collars is attached rigidly to one end of one of the rods, and the other collar is attached rigidly to the other end of its companion rod; and one of the sets of jaws is attached to one of the rods, while the other set is attached to the other rod. One rod slides loosely through the inner extension of the inside jaw and through one end of the collar, and the other rod slides loosely through the corresponding extension of the other inside jaw and through one end of the other collar. Upon each one of the collars, H, is fixed a suitable stud, a, and a friction roller, G-. These friction rollers are moved in a direction that is lengthwise with the rods, F and Fa, by coming in contact with the inclines at the ends of sectional cam rings, K, Ka. These cam rings, K and Ka, are placed concentric with the central shaft, B. Only a limited
At the inside edge of the jaws, next to the back, La, is cut an annular channel, W, to receive the can head. The front edge of the channel, W, forms an annular shoulder that covers the front edge of the rim of the can head and forms an abutment against which it may bear. This annular shoulder reduces the open diameter within the jaws so that it is just small enough to surround the end of the can body, and guide it into the rim of the can head when the can head is forced forward. From this annular shoulder to the outward edge of the jaw the jaw flares outwardly, thus increasing the diameter of the ring formed by the closed jaws as it extends forward from the can-head channel, W. By this arrangement the end of the can body is received in the inside jaw, L, at a point where the diameter of the jaw is greater than the diameter
As shown in the drawings, the chute for the can bodies is made of four pieces of angle iron, 2, 2, and 3, 3, fastened together with metal sheets or cross pieces. The lower end of the chute is made so as to coniine the can body as closely as possible, and not interfere with its freely passing through the chute. This is in order to prevent its getting wedged by bounding out of its proper position when it strikes the jaws in its downward passage. The chutes for the can heads are placed at the sides of the chute for the can bodies. Vertical rods, 12,12, serve as the outsides of the head chutes. These vertical rods are held in their positions by suitable brackets, 13, extending across the chutes and secured to their vertical side; pieces. 15. At the inside of their lower ends the rods, 12, have fastened to them a thin metal sheet that extends nearly across the chute, to better guide the can heads into the jaws. The rods, 12, are cut short, so that no part of the jaws can come in contact with them. The thin metal sheets at the inside of the lower ends of the rods extend below the rods. They are hung so as to allow the backs, La, of the jaws to pass under them, and their inside faces should be in line, both vertically and crosswise, with the inside faces of the backs. La, so that the latter will form a continuation of the front side of the chute, while the can head is passing from the chute into the jaw.
The operation of the machine is as follows: The chutes are kept filled with can heads and can bodies. These stand in columns, resting one upon the other, except the lower ones, which rest upon such part of the jaws as happens to be under them. The machine is set in motion, and, as it revolves, the jaws will pass under the chutes, and each set of jaws will receive the lowest can body and also the lowest can head that is in each one of the can-head chutes. The can heads will be at each end of the can body in the jaws. The jaws will pass forward from under the chutes carrying can heads and can bodies with them, and will be followed with the next set of jaws, which will in like manner receive the next can body and next can heads, then in the bottom of the chutes. Each can body and the can heads belonging to it will be carried forward by the jaws as fast as they receive them, and the columns of can bodies and can heads will constantly descend and fill the places of those thus carried away in the jaws. As the jaws pass forward, the pins, P, P, in the outside jaws, will strike against the cam rods, R, R, and those jaws will be turned over and closed with the lower jaws under them. The levers, i, will operate as before described, and lock the jaws together with the can body and can heads fast inclosed within them. The friction rollers, G-, G-, belonging to the rods, F and Fa, which carry that set of jaws, will then come in contact with the inclines at the ends
Undoubtedly, this mechanism of Wheaton, like that of complainants, puts tight-fit ling can heads on the outside of can bodies automatically, to do which there must, of necessity, be mechanism for centering and bringing into exact line with each other the can body and can head, and also mechanism for shaping and sizing the can body, and also for forcing the head and body together. Any device, in order to accomplish the desired result, must do these things. Put ihe question is whether the device of Wheaton, in centering and aligning the can body and can heads, and in shaping and sizing the ends of the can body, and in forcing the heads and body together, uses the elements of the claims patented to Norton, or their mechanical equivalents.
It is apparent that the mechanical construction of Wheaton’s device is quite different from that of the Norton device, and, as a consequence, that the mode of operation of the two machines is, to some extent at least, different. Some of these differences, stated by the appellant, we find to be true. In the Wheaton machine the central shaft revolves, while that of the Norton machine is stationary. The devices that Wheaton connects with his central shaft are two disks, which are made rigid, and, therefore, revolve with the shaft. The device which Norton attaches to his stationary central shaft is an annular cam made in two like pm-Is, which cam is made stationary, and, therefore, does not revolve. Norton’s machine does not have either the revolving central shaft of the Wheaton machine nor the revolving disks which are attached to it in the Wheaton machine.
Tt is true that at each end of the jaws of the Wheaton machine is cut an annular channel for the reception of the can heads; but it is not true that that machine contains any piston, or any equivalent therefor, for forcing the can heads into those annular spaces, and thereby applying them to the outside of the can body. On the contrary, ih the Wheaton machine, the can heads reach their seat in the annular spaces of the jaws by force of their own gravity, and they are carried in that position in the jaws as they approach each other crosswise of the machine, without any change in the position of the can heads until they are forced on the can body by the coming together of the jaws. The device which, in the Wheaton machine, forces the heads on the can body is not the equivalent of the piston of the Norton machine, for it accomplishes that result, not by forcing the can heads into the annular spaces, and thereby applying them to the outside of the can body, but by bringing the jaws together in the «essentially different operation already described. The absence of the piston of the Norton device, or any equivalent therefor, from toe Wheaton device is of itself enough to make it necessary to adjudge that the device of Wheaton is no infringement upon the Norton den ice; the piston being an essential element of each of the combinations covered by the patent of the complainants.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to the court below to dismiss the bill at complainants’ cost.