DocketNumber: No. 33567
Citation Numbers: 144 F. Supp. 927, 110 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 396, 1956 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2877
Judges: Goodman
Filed Date: 7/31/1956
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This patent infringement suit was tried before a jury. Upon the conclusion of the evidence, defendant moved for a directed verdict in its favor on the ground that the claims in suit were invalid as a matter of law. Believing that the question tendered by the motion warranted a careful study which could more conveniently be made, if necessary, upon a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the Court denied the motion for a directed verdict and submitted the cause to the jury. The jury returned a verdict that the four claims in suit were valid and infringed. Defendant thereupon moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. An appraisal of the entire record in the light of the oral and written arguments upon the motion, compels the conclusion that the claims in suit are invalid as a matter of law and that the verdict must be set aside and judgment entered for defendant.
The patent in suit, No. 2,334,227, is a combination patent for a roller bearing.
The use of a central guide rib to hold the rollers in position affords a number ■of advantages. The controversy regarding the validity of plaintiff’s patent centers around one of these advantages, to wit, the ability of the central guide rib to correct skewing of the rollers. Skewing means the misalignment of a roller with its axis of rotation when the bearing is in operation. Skewing results when, because of a greater load pressure on one portion of the bearing than another, the forward movement of one ■end of a roller is retarded while the ■other end moves ahead. In the ordinary roller bearing having a flange at each ■end of one of the races to maintain the .rollers in position, the flanges will limit the degree of misalignment of the rollers, if they skew. But there is no means to restore them to proper alignment. So long as the load pressure on the bearing remains unequal, the skewing will continue and the misalignment may become .so pronounced as to produce destructive heat and friction.
If a roller which is held in position by a central guide rib skews, the shoulder of the roller’s central groove, which is nearest the forward end of the roller, will contact the guide rib. Sufficient friction will be produced at the point of contact to retard the movement of the forward end of the roller permitting the other end to catch up. The roller will thus be immediately restored to proper alignment. In order that the central guide rib may function in this manner to correct skewing, it must be placed on only one race and that race must be the one which is stationary when the bearing is in operation.
Plaintiff was not the first to employ a central guide rib on one of the races of a roller bearing to maintain the rollers in position. United States patents No. 1,885,914, to Heim, and No. 585,580 to Kempster, both describe a roller bearing having a central rib on its outer race projecting into a central groove in the rollers to maintain them in position. United States patent No. 747,824, to Kempster, claims a central guide rib on both the inner and outer races. A variation of this construction wherein only the inner race is provided with the central guide rib is suggested by the specification of this patent and illustrated in figures 4 and 5 of the drawings.
Plaintiff claims that he achieved invention in being the first to perceive the advantage of the central guide rib as a means of correcting skewing and to specify that the rib must be placed on the stationary race if this advantage is to be realized.
But, as has been noted, the prior art reveals both a bearing with the central guide rib on the outer race and a bearing with the guide rib on the inner race. Either type of these bearings could be appropriately employed in applications in which the race having the guide rib would be stationary.
It is apparent that the extent of plaintiff’s contribution to the art was to point out that old devices had a theretofore unperceived advantage which would be realized in some old and common applications, but not in others. In the words of the Supreme Court in General Electric Co. v. Jewel Incandescent Lamp Co., 1945, 326 U.S. 242, 249, 66 S.Ct. 81, 84, 90 L.Ed. 43, “that did not advance the frontiers of science in this narrow
Thus, solely from the comparison of the prior art with the teaching of plaintiff’s patent, without weighing the testimony of any witnesses, expert or otherwise, the only reasonable conclusion that can be drawn is that the patent is invalid. The verdict of the jury must therefore be set aside and judgment entered in favor of defendant. Cutter Laboratories, Inc., v. Lyophile-Cryochem Corp., 9 Cir., 1949, 179 F.2d 80, 84.
Present judgment accordingly.
. Although the specification of plaintiff’s patent described his bearing structure as particularly suitable when rollers of the needle type are to be employed in the bearing, it states that the structure is equally adaptable to rollers of all dimensions.
. Whether the central guide rib actually functions in the above-described manner to correct skewing, and, if it does so, whether its placement on the stationary race of the bearing is essential to this function, were both vigorously contested issues of fact at the trial. For purposes of the present motion, the facts are taken to be in accordance with the contentions of plaintiff.
. The structure of the Heim bearing differs from that of plaintiff’s bearing in that the outer race of the Heim bearing is formed in two sections arranged in alignment. But, this feature is for convenience of manufacture, and is obviously not necessary for tbe operation of tbe bearing. The claims of Kempster patent No. 585,580 include separator disks between the rollers as an element of the bearing. Separator disks are not employed in plaintiff’s bearing. Five of the claims of Kempster patent No. 747,824 include such separator disks, but claim 6 does not, and the specification states that the separators may be entirely dispensed with, if so desired. It is apparent from a consideration of both Kempster patents that the separators would also not be necessary to the operation of the bearing described in Kempster patent No. 585,580.
. Actually plaintiff’s patent does not make it clear that the skewing correcting function of the central guide rib depends upon its placement on the race which will be stationary when the bearing is in operation. Eight of the patent’s nine claims specify the placement of the central guide rib on the stationary race. Claim 9, one of the four claims in suits, ■does not. The specification of the patent does not indicate that the claims which specify the placement of the central guide rib on the stationary race, do so because such arrangement is necessary if the rib is to function to correct skewing. The specification merely states, without explaining why, that it is preferable that the central guide rib be placed on the race which will be stationary in operation. Consequently, defendant contends that plaintiff’s patent is invalid for failure to adequately describe his invention as required by statute. 35 U.S.O. § 33 now §§ 111, 112. As well, defendant contends that, since the provision that the central guide rib be placed on the stationary race was added to claims one through eight by way of amendment, such claims are void as claims for new matter unsupported by a supplemental oath.
Altbougb there is merit to both of these contentions, we do not reach them in view of the conclusion that plaintiff’s patent is invalid for lack of invention.
. The Heim patent and the Kempster patent, No. 585,580 for a bearing with the central guide rib on the outer race both illustrate the bearing as it might be employed in the hub of a wheel. If the bearing were so employed, the outer race having the central guide rib would be the rotating race. But, there is nothing in the specification of either patent to suggest the bearing could not be employed as well in applications wherein the outer race would be stationary.
The Kempster patent, No. 747,324, which depicts in figures 4 and 5 a bearing with the central guide rib on the inner race, does not illustrate any application of the bearing. But, the specification states that the bearing design is especially appropriate for sheaves of pulley-blocks and wheel-hubs. In these applications, the inner race with the central guide rib would be stationary.