Woodruff v. Carr
Woodruff v. Carr
Opinion of the Court
This suit is brought by the complainant against the defendant Carr, charging an infringement of letters patent, reissue No. 8,541, dated January 14, 1879, for “improvement in buckles.” The original letters patent are dated January 9, 1872, and the object of the invention as statéd by the patentee is “to relieve a trace, strap, or belt from the strain at the point where it is perforated for a buckle tongue.” The defendant is manufacturing a buckle which is constructed upon the same principle as the complainant’s buckle, and operates substantially
The defendant relies for his defense chiefly oil the alleged fact that the device of the complainant is exhibited in many prior patents, and especially in a patent issued to E. Cole; and he also further claims that the reissued letters patent are void, by reason of not being for the same invention as that described and claimed in the original. Other defenses are set up in the answer, but they are not pressed, and the two above mentioned are relied upon to defeat the complainant’s suit.
It will only be necessary for me to consider the first defense; form my opinion the device of the complainant’s patent is found in many prior inventions, and particularly in letters patent No. 69,181, dated September 24, 1867, and issued to E. Cole, of Michigan, for an “improved buckle.” The original “Woodruff patent” has to some extent engaged the attention of courts, which appears to have escaped the notice of counsel. The particular “Cole patent,” now urged by the defendant, to show' want of novelty in the “Woodruff device,” has not to my knowledge been considered. The Woodruff reissue contains four claims, (the first is dismissed from the case by complainant, so that I must look at the second, third, and fourth:)
Woodruff claims—
(2) A buckle frame provided with a loose loop as shown, and having a rigid tongue on the outer face of its forward cross bar, all substantially as shown and described.
(3) In a buckle the combination of the frame, A, having a rigid tongue projecting outward with the loose loop, B, all substantially as shown and described.
(4) The combination of the loop, 13, with the frame, A, and tongue, D, when the whole is constructed as described and for the purposes hereinbefore set forth.
Cole’s improved buckle patent No. 69,181, is constructed to secure not only relief from strain upon the trace or belt at the point where it is perforated for a tongue, but other results, which are not important for consideration now. Cole says his buckle is made to secure “a drawing, both by the tongue and by the frame of the buckle, in so pinching the tug that the hole therein cannot bulge and tear out.” That is, he seeks to relieve the strain on the belt or trace at the point of perforation. To accomplish this, he constructs his buckle with a curved frame broad at one end and having openings and with a tongue on the forward end projecting upward and outward, and a loop which consists of a cross-bar at one end, to which, in case of a trace, the hame tug is fastened, and sidebars running to a broad cross-bar or plate at the other end, with a tongue on the under side projecting downward towards the broad part of the frame. This broad plate and side-bars are made in one piece. The trace passes between the broad part of the buckle frame and under the loop plato and between the side-bars with the tongues fitting two of the
The bill of complaint is dismissed, and decree accordingly for the de fendant. .
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.