223 F. 342 | 6th Cir. | 1915
This was a suit to enjoin alleged infringements of three patents and to recover the usual profits and damages. One of the patents was issued January 29, 1895, to Eugene L. Williams and John S. Williams jointly, and numbered 533,403; later, through mesne assignments, the patent was transferred to the plaintiff ; and the invention claimed is for an improvement in “ties for wire structures.” The second patent was issued March 22, 1904, to George Sylvester Tiffany, assignor, by mesne assignments, to the plaiñtiff, and numbered 755,187; the invention is in terms claimed to be an improvement in “dies.” The third is alleged to have been issued to George S. Tiffany, assignor to the plaintiff, and numbered 774,210; and counsel for plaintiff dismissed the bill as to this patent, calling it the “Tiffany tie patent.” The answer is in effect a denial of invention in or infringement of either of the two patents first mentioned. The court found that the first patent was not infringed, without pass
The defense of previous invention is set up in the answer; and in view of the patents there referred to, it is urged that want of patentable novelty in the Williams patent plainly appears. It is therefore necessary to look into the prior art. Cross-wires with crimps or bows at their intersections appear in a number of patents earlier than the one in suit. Tor instance, Tigs. 2 and 3 of Caldwell’s patent upon wire fences (October 25, 1887, No. 372,060), show cross-wires with intersecting hows, which are the same as those of Tigs. 4, 5 and 6 of the patent in suit; this is not apparent in Tigs. 4 and 5, but the specification states that the hows of these wires are the same as those in Tig. 6. Both Leggett and Staples, the one in his patent spring bed bottom (August 19, 1890, No. 434,794), and the other in his patent spring support for upholstery (September 20, 1892, No. 482,908), show
Caldwell'used a “clasp or staple” to fasten the vertical and horizontal wires at their intersecting points. It is stated in his specification : -
“The method of uniting the longitudinal and vertical wires at their intersections [is] by means of a clasp or staple bent around the crimped portion of each wire.”
The clasp or staple was used by placing its bend diagonally across the bow of the strand wire and turning its ends in opposite directions around the vertical wire at the extremities of its bow. Thus, virtually the same kind of instruments (staples) were designed in the Caldwell patent and in the Williams patent, to fasten the intersections of the same sort of bowed wires, vertical and horizontal.
The Depew patent upon wire fencing (April 11, 1893, No. 495,029) described a “clip that is normally provided with a re-entrant looped bend and elongated parallel legs” (practically a staple partially adapted for ultimate use), as “a connecting clamp or tie” at the intersections of the cross-wires (Fig. 3). The bend of the clip was placed about the vertical wire immediately above the strand, with the curves of the legs engaging the strand and the ends projecting on both sides of the vertical wire where they were twisted together. And Mitchell used a wire clamp to effect his tie. This clamp was a staple, with the ends of its legs bent into hooks. The bend of the clamp engaged the iron upright, resting on the shoulder at the.upper extremity of the bow, and the hooks held the strand wire (Fig. 3). This is called by one of the experts a “suspension” tie, but its form would not seem to prevent clasping the cross-wires firmly.
In Biggs’ patent upon pliers for building^ wire fences (January 2, 1894, No. 511,991), a staple is shown (Fig. 3), with its legs turned about midway of their length at right angles and in parallel lines. The bend of the staple was placed about the vertical wire, resting on the strand, and its projecting ends were turned around the strand (Fig. 2).
“The case is obviously within the principle, so often declared, that a mere carrying forward of the original thought, a change only in form, proportions, or degree, doing the same thing in the same way, by substantially the same means, with better results, is not such an invention as will sustain a patent. Roberts v. Ryer, 91 U. S. 150 [23 L. Ed. 267]; Belden Manufacturing Co. v. Challenge Corn Planter Co., 152 U. S. 100 [14 Sup. Ct. 492, 38 L. Ed. 370].”
See Smith v. Nichols, 21 Wall. 112, 118, 22 L. Ed. 566; Burt v. Evory, 133 U. S. 349, 358, 10 Sup. Ct. 394, 33 L. Ed. 647; Grant v. Walter, 148 U. S. 547, 553, 13 Sup. Ct. 699, 37 L. Ed. 552; Galvin v. City of Grand Rapids, 115 Fed. 511, 517, 53 C. C. A. 165 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.); Soehner v. Favorite Stove & Range Co., 84 Fed. 182, 187, 28 C. C. A. 317 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.); Torrey v. Hancock, 184 Fed. 61, 70, 107 C. C. A. 79 (C. C. A. 8th Cir.); and see Lane v. Welds, 99 Fed. 286, 290, 291, 39 C. C. A. 528 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.); Brown Hoisting & Conveying Mach. Co. v. King Bridge Co., 107 Fed. 498, 504, 46 C. C. A. 432 (C. C. A. 6th Cir.). “ ' •
2. The Tiffany Patent. It is stated in the specification:
“This invention relates to dies into which may be driven a staple and which will form said staple in the shape of a knot or tie upon crossed wires passing through the dies to unite said crossed wires, as in the making of wire fencing.”
The specification further states:
“The object of the invention is to provide simple and efficient means for forming the tie into a peculiar shape upon the crossed wires within the dies. * * * ”
Doubtless the tie so provided for is the one as to which the bill was dismissed; it corresponds in the main with the Williams tie. The two ties are, however, differently applied to the cross-wires. According
The claims, with the interpolations mentioned, appear in the margin.
“Tile staple is then manipulated through the medium of a suitable die in a manner to carry its énds in direction of one another,,so that they will curve over the vertical wire * * * at a point below the horizontal wire.”3
Any consideration of the claims and drawings of the Tiffany patent will show that whatever improvement was made by Tiffany is to be found in the peculiar shaping of the channels and recesses of-the opposed faces of the dies. When the staple is forced between the dies, it will obviously follow the lines of least resistance, and so be bent around the intersection of the two cross-wires there held, and converted into a tie like that of Dig. 3 of the drawings.
Nearly four years before the date of the Tiffany patent, the Lamb Wire Fence Company, assignee of Lamb and Hoxie, was granted a patent (April 3, 1900, No. 646,497) disclosing two die constructions, both of which are in principle similar to the die construction in issue and one of which produces a tie like that of Tiffany. The Lamb and Hoxie ties are shown in Digs. 14 and 24:
The faces of both sets of dies show transverse registering channels for the cross-wires. The first set is provided with spirally located and registering grooves deeper than the transverse channels and crossing them diagonally; also with registering recesses for the admission of a plunger with a shoulder and continuing reduced width for receiving and driving a straight tie wire. The plunger forces the tie wire between tlic dies in the plane of the cross-wires and into the spiral grooves about the intersection of the erpss-wires, producing the result seen in Dig. 14. The only difference that need be mentioned between the first set and the second set of these dies concerns the tie-forming grooves of the dies; the second set being provided with arcs or circular grooves,
It is contended that the Hoxie patent and the Lamb patent should be disregarded because the staples were driven into’ the dies at right
Furthermore, in view of the state of the prior art touching the feasibility of bending and uniting pieces of wire into particular forms by driving them through pre-designed opposing channels and recesses wrought in the -faces of an upper and a lower die, the Tiffany patent cannot escape application of the principles declared in Peters v. Active Mfg. Co., 130 U. S. 626, 628, 629, 9 Sup. Ct. 389, 32 L. Ed. 738. See also, Mahon v. M’Guire Mfg. Co. (C. C.) 51 Fed. 681, 683, per Judge Blodgett; Dayton Loop & Crupper Co. v. Ruhl (C. C.) 55 Fed. 649, 651, per Judge Taft. There is at least strong analogy between the use of dies for welding and forming pieces of iron into particular shape (as, for instance, in Peters v. Active Mfg. Co.), and for forcing pieces of wire into special relations and forms such as are described in the earlier art here disclosed. Nor can the decisions just cited be avoided upon the theory that the Tiffany dies “are in the nature of machines, ■or active mechanical devices, which co-operate” to form the wire into the tie produced by them; or upon the idea that the tie is applied and combined with the cross-wires of the fence structure. The bows of the cross-wires were shown as distinctly by the Hoxie patent of 1901 as they were by the Tiffany patent of 1904, and enough has already been said of the other co-operating features of the earlier dies. The argument in this behalf of the learned counsel seems to proceed upon
We conclude that the first claim, the only one really in issue, of the Williams patent, and all the claims of the Tiffany patent, are void. The decree must therefore be affirmed, with costs.
“The com!'.Illation in a wire structure, of the crossed wires, one of which is bowed to receive the other, with a tie consisting in a staple engaging with its bend the said bowed wire with its legs crossing the other wire and its points bent around the bowed wire from opposite sides, substantially as described.”
“1. Dies having transverse registering channels [8, 8 and J¡, 9] for the reception of the cross-wires [12, H], one of said dies [I] having an inclined way [2] and a semicircular recess [5], the other of said dies [6] having a central concavity [7] with! curved branches [IT] leading from opposite sides thereof, which curved branches register with the opposite terminals of said semicircular recess [5].
“2. The combination of the dies, one die [I] having an inclined way [2] and a transverse channel [3] below the plane of the highest point of said way, a semicircular recess [5] whose terminals abut upon said channel [3], the other of said dies [8] having a central concavity [7] crossed by a transverse channel [8], said central concavity having curved branches [II] which régister with the terminals of the semicircular recess [5] in the first-mentioned die, and a registering channel in the face of each die.at right angles to the first-mentioned channel [the channel 4 in the case of die I and the channel 9 in the case of die 6].
“3. In a device for the purpose set forth, the combination of the opposed dies having registering channels [3,8 and k, 9] in their inner faces which cross at right angles, one of said dies [8] having concave branches [II] which cross one of the channels [8] below the plane of the bottom thereof, the other of said dies [I] having a semicircular recess [5] which' registers with the terminals of said branches [II] to direct the ends [IS] of the tying-staple past each other and under one of the crossed wires [14].
“4. The combination of the opposed dies having registering cross-channels [3, 8 and It, 9] in the meeting faces thereof, a semicircular recess [5] in one of said dies [I] crossed by one of said channels p}] and depressed below the plane of the bottom thereof, the opposite die [8] having a depression [7] and concaved branches [II] crossing one of the channels [8] therein, said concaved branches being adapted to lead the ends [13] of the staple into the- opposite-terminal of said semicircular recess in the opposing* die to direct said ends-[IS] past each other and cause them to lie concentric in the same plane.”
Attention may here be directed to the device subsequently designed by John g. Williams and patented, called “wire crimping and fastening pliers,” which is used for making the Williams tie in the field during fence construction. The patent bears date February 2,1894, and the device has recesses and curves for holding the cross-wires and forming the staple into a tie about the intersection analogous to those of the Tiffany dies.
“The improvement consists in coacting dies having feed slots for the staple-like fasteners, arranged diagonally across the lines of the wire-receiving channels, the latter being provided in the working faces of the dies to have the deep wire channel of one die cross the corresponding channel of the other die at right angles in order to properly position the wires in relation to each other and to the feed slots for the staple-like fasteners and each die having semi-spiral grooves which extend in the general direction of the deep wire-receiving channel thereof, whereby the locking fasteners may be fed simultaneously through the diagonal slots of both dies to be positioned thereby in oppositely inclined directions across the joint between the crossed wires, and the semi-spiral groove of one die operates on the closing of the dies to twist the ends of the staple-like fastener fed by the other die around the wire which is contained in the said die that effects the twisting of the staple fastener.”