National Screw & Mfg. Co. v. Voi-Shan Industries, Inc.

Citation347 F.2d 1
Decision Date08 June 1965
Docket NumberNo. 19314.,19314.
PartiesThe NATIONAL SCREW & MANUFACTURING CO. and Lockheed Aircraft Corporation, Appellants and Cross-Appellees, v. VOI-SHAN INDUSTRIES, INC., Appellee and Cross-Appellant.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Ninth Circuit

Robert W. Fulwider, Frederick E. Mueller, Fulwider, Patton, Rieber, Lee & Utecht, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellants.

Lewis E. Lyon, Lyon & Lyon, Los Angeles, Cal., for appellee.

Before JERTBERG, MERRILL and ELY, Circuit Judges.

MERRILL, Circuit Judge.

Appellants are suing for infringement of patent. Upon this appeal the principal question is whether the District Court was clearly erronous in its findings with reference to prior art upon the basis of which it concluded that appellants' patent was invalid for lack of invention. Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a); Graver Mfg. Co. v. Linde Co., 336 U.S. 271, 69 S.Ct. 535, 93 L.Ed. 672 (1949).

The patent in issue, LaTorre Patent No. 2,765,699, is for a "blind" bolt — a fastening device used in joining parts of a "blind" structure where the inside of the work is not accessible and the fastening operation must proceed from the outside of the pieces to be joined.

The bolt consists of three parts: (1) a threaded shank ending in the bolt head on the blind side or inside of the work to be joined; (2) a cylindrical collar surrounding the shank on the blind side with its end resting against the projecting lip of the bolt head; (3) a nut in the form of a threaded sleeve. The tip of the nut is pointed to form a cone. As the nut is driven (from the outside) the head of the bolt (on the inside) presses against one end of the collar and the tip of the nut is wedged beneath the collar's other end, causing that end to be expanded as it is forced over the cone and into contact with the blind side of the work which is to be joined.

This patented device is marketed by appellants under the name Jo-Bolt. Appellee's device, marketed under the name V-Bolt, with minor differences is composed of the same three parts operating in the same fashion.

There is no question but that the use of a distortable collar to accomplish a blind fastening is old in the art. Also old is the use of a driven cone to accomplish the distortion of the collar by a wedging action. Both of these elements are to be found in the Curtis bolt, Patent No. 2,099,678, a prior art reference upon which the District Court in large part relied in its determination of invalidity.

In Curtis the cone over which the collar was forced to accomplish its distortion was not a part of the nut. It was on a separate sleeve or mandrel. It is upon this difference that appellants rely in asserting an inventive advance over prior art.

The need which appellants' device meets is for a fastener which will lock to such a degree that vibration will not permit the nut to unthread itself from the bolt. With appellants' device, when the cone-shaped tip of the nut is forced under the collar the result is not only that the collar is distorted, but also that the threads of the nut tip are forced into those of the bolt shank in such a way as to cause a thread lock. This dual effect is pointed up by the designation given to appellants' device in the issued patent: "Blind bolt utilizing distortable collar and deformable locking nut member."

Appellants emphasize that Curtis provides no lock at all between the nut and the bolt; that such lock as is provided by the pressure brought to bear on the shank by the cone as the collar is forced over it is not thread lock, as the shank is not threaded at that point. Furthermore that such lock between the shank and mandrel does not affect the nut which is still free to unthread from the bolt.

We quite agree. However, once the need for a lock between the nut and bolt became apparent, the departures from Curtis necessary to accomplish this result were obvious to anyone skilled in the art. All that was needed was: (1) to...

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