33 F. 249 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1888
The bill in this case charges infringement by defendant of letters patent, No. 259,550, granted to Martin H. Konaga, June 13, 1882, for “an improvement in horse hay-rakes,” and asks for an injunction, and an accounting for damages. The defendants do not deny .the complainant’s title, and only contend—Mrsi, that the complainant’s patent is invalid for want of novelty in the device therein shown; and, second, that the defendants do not infringe. The invention covered by this patent relates “to horse hay-rakes, or sweeps, of the class employed
The proof shows that it was old to use poles, or thills, for the purpose of guiding horse-rakes, as well as nearly every other class of vehicles mounted upon wheels to be drawn or propelled by animal power; and it seems quite clear that if it was found desirable in use to have some device attached to these rakes by which they could be backed from under the accumulated load, there was no invention in attaching a pole or tongue to
It seems to me, therefore, that the defense of want of novelty is fully established by the proof in this case, and that this bill should be dismissed because of the invalidity of the patent.