Friestedt v. National Interlocking Steel Sheeting Co.

BAKER, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). In the Circuit Court’s opinion 13 cuts are reproduced from prior patents and publications. These elder disclosures show that the art of sheet-piling is quite old; that various forms of sheet members had been employed; that numerous interlocks for holding the sheet members together had been devised; and that wood, cast iron, wrought iron, and rolled steel, as their use developed in the arts generally, were successively brought in aá the materials for this art.

A pioneer character is urged for the patent on the claim that Friestedt was the first to make a practical single-wall piling out of the standard forms of rolled steel as they come from the mills, using the I-beams or the channel beams for the sheet members and the Z-beams for the interlock. But primacy cannot be allowed to Friestedt for the single-wall idea. That was the common structure. And sheet-pilings of cast iron, with a variety of integral and also separate interlocks, were old. We grant, of course, that the inventive faculty may be brought into play in the selection of materials as well as in the determination of the forms into which materials shall be put. But Boult and Simon had already shown the use of I-beams and channel beams for piling, and Boult the attaching of Z-beams to the web of I or channel beams to form the female member of the interlocking means. So we quite agree with the Circuit Court that Eriestedt’s patent can validly cover no more than his departure from Boult and Simon.

Whether Priestedt’s somewhat different way of bringing the I or channel beams and the Z-beams together into a piling completed at the factory involved invention or only an obvious mechanical adaptation of the prior art we need not determine, for in our judgment appellee’s interlocking means for sheet-piling, built under Nye’s patents No. 860,053, July 16, 1907, and No. 877,588, January 28, 1908, would not infringe the Friestedt claims if valid. Appellee does not make a piling completed at the factory. A contractor may buy where he will the I or channel beams of commerce. From appellee he need get only special castings in the form of' clamps. Then, according to the teachings of'Nye’s patents, he drives an I or channel beam. On the bottom of the next beam he fixes (clothes-pin wise) appellee’s casting, which has a sharp edge for driving and also at the side a rigid clasp for slipping over and engaging the adjacent flange of the driven beam. As the second beam is being driven, this clasp guides it, and, when the two beams are in place,- forms an interlock at the bottom. After the second beam is started, another casting (without the driving edge) is straddled upon the top of the first beam, and its clasp engages the adjacent flange of the second beam, serves as an additional guide during -the driving, and, when the driving is finished, may be left (or not, as the contractor sees fit) as an interlock at the top. Now the Fries*759tedt patent is for a fabricated piling, a piling built up from I or channel beams with Z-beams bolted to the web to form the interlocking means. It contains no suggestion of a separate casting by means of which a contractor may take the untouched beams of commerce, and drive, guide, and hold them in place. We find no infringement, first, because the Z-beam or its equivalent (beyond the general result of interlocking) is not used by appellee; second, and more important, because Nye in using the prior art teachings of Boult and Simon took no instruction from Friestedt,- but conceived and developed an independent departure of his own.

The decree is affirmed.