22 F. 309 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1884
This suit is brought to enjoin the defendants from using and furnishing to others for use the several inventions described in two patents granted to Alexander Graham Bell, of Salem, Massachusetts, being No. 174,465, bearing date March 7, 1876, for “Improvements in Telegraphy,” and No. 186,787, bearing date January 30, 1877, for “Improvements in Electric Telephony.” The issues made by the pleadings are practically resolved into the single question, to which the proofs and argument of counsel are mainly addressed, whether the patentee Bell, or Daniel Drawbaugh, of Mill-town, in Cumberland county, Pennsylvania, was the first inventor of the electric speaking telephone. Coneededly, Bell was an original inventor of the telephone, the principle of which, with the essential means for its application, are described in his first patent, and of the improved apparatus described in his second patent. The fifth claim of the first patent is for “the method of and apparatus for transmitting vocal or other sounds telegraphically, as herein described, by causing electrical undulations similar in form to the vibrations of the air accompanying the said vocal or other sounds, substantially as set forth.” This patent has been judicially construed in two cases in the Massachusetts circuit; and in both eases it was substantially held that Bell was the discoverer of the new art of transmitting speech by electricity, and that the claim should receive the broadest interpretation to secure to the inventor, not the abstract right of sending sounds by telegraph without regard to means, but all means and processes described which are essential to the application of the principle. American Ball Telephone Co. v. Spencer, 8 Fed. Rep. 509; Same v. Dolbear, 15 Fed. Rep. 448.
In view of the conclusion reached upon the merits of the issue, it is not material whether Bell’s inceptive invention did or did not antedate the time of filing his application for the first patent. That application was filed February 14, 1876. It describes apparatus which was an articulating telephone, whether Bell knew it or not. Mr. Cross, an expert, caused apparatus to be made in conformity to the description and to drawings as shown in figure 7 of the patent, which proved itself to be an operative, practical telephone. Probably the date of his inceptive invention might be carried back to July, 1875, but, irrespective of the time of the invention, the justice of his claim to be an original inventor of the telephone must remain unchallenged. It was through him also that the telephone ,was made known to the scientific public, and thence introduced into commercial use.
The defendants contend that long before Bell had perfected his invention, and long before its mental conception by him, Drawbaugh had not only made the same invention, but had perfected improvements in organization and detail which Bell never reached, and which
Drawbaugh, in his testimony, adopts the statements of the answer as true. He also testifies that ho commenced his experiments with the electric telephone as early as 1866; that prior to or as early as in 1867 he had made apparatus (in which he employed a tea-cup as the transmitter) through which speech could be transmitted feebly and incoherently; and that as early as the time of the birth of his son Charles he had so progressed that his wife, who was then confined to her bed, could, by listening with one of his instruments, hear the words spoken by him in the other instrument in a distant part of the house. His son Charles was bom in 1870, and, if Drawbaugh’s narrative is true, he had succeeded at that time in transmitting speech distinctly through the instruments, although whispered words would not he accurately heard. He describes instruments which he says were made by him from, time to time as experiments led him from one improvement to anofdier. He testifies that ho thinks he made his first telephone apparatus prior to November, 1866, and is positive he had it before he moved his shop to the “Clover-mill” in 1867. As he describes it the body of the transmitter was a porcelain teacup, the diaphragm was of membrane, the electrodes interposed in the circuit were two copper disks, the upper one of which was con-
The theory of the defendants is that Exhibits E and B were used
The complainant starts with the benefit of the presumption of law that Bell, the patentee, was the inventor of that for which the letters patent were granted him. Whoever alleges the contrary must assume the burden of proof. Evidence of doubtful probative force will not overthrow the presumption of novelty and originality arising from the grant of letters patent for an invention. It has been frequently held that the defense of want of novelty or originality must be made out by proof so clear and satisfactory as to remove all reasonable doubt. Washburn v. Gould, 3 Story, 122; Smith v. Fay, 6 Fisher, 446; Hawes v. Antisdel, 2 Bann. & Ard. 10; Patterson v. Duff, 20 Fed. Rep. 641; Wood v. Cleveland Rolling-mill Co. 4 Fisher, 560; Parham v. American Button-hole Co. Id. 482. In U. S. Stamping Co. v. Jewett, 18 Blatchf. 469, S. C. 7 Fed. Rep. 869, Blatcuifoed, J., said the defendant had not fulfilled “the necessary obligation of showing beyond any reasonable doubt” that Weber (the alleged prior inventor) was prior to Heath, (the patentee.) In Coffin v. Ogden, 18 Wall. 120, Mr. Justice Swavne, delivering the opinion of the court, stated the rule applicable to the defendant as follows: “The burden of proof rests upon him, and every reasonable doubt should be resolved against him. ” To overthrow this presumption and disprove that Bell was the first inventor, the defendants introduce the testimony of nearly 200 witnesses tending to prove the priority of indention by Drawbaugh. As the complainant concedes that Exhibits E and D are highly organized, practical telephone instruments, and fully capable of perfect articulation, the patents are invalidated if these instruments were in existence at the date of Bell’s invention;
In the argument for the defendants great stress is placed upon the evidence of a gradual and natural development of Drawbaugh’s invention, shown by the original instruments produced, beginning with Exhibit B, and ending with the perfect magnetos E and D. It is strenuously urged that these exhibits fortify his testimony describing the instruments no longer extant, and mark the origin and culmination, beginning with the cup machine and Exhibit E, of two separate lines of invention, one leading to the battery telephone, in which the undulatory vibrations are controlled by variations in the resistance of the circuit; and the other to the magneto telephone, in which the vibrations are created in the act of producing the current itself. The general theory of the defense is substantiated by three classes of witnesses: those who heard of the existence of Drawbaugh’s “talking-machines” at various times; those who talked through the machines on various occasions, or heard others talk through them; and those who attempt to identify one or more of the exhibits as the instruments they saw used. Only an outline of their testimony will be given.
More than 50 witnesses testify to having heard of the talking-machines prior to February 14, 1879.
Of these witnesses three think they heard of them in 1869; three in 1870; two in 1871; five in 1872; three in 1S73; three prior to 1873; eight in 1874; two in 1875; from 1866 to 1876, one; from 1868 to 1871, one; from 1868 to 1873, one; from 1869 to 1870, one; from 1869 to 1876,one; from 1871 to 1872,two; from 1872to 1873, one; from 1873 to' 1874, one; from 1873 to 1875, three; from 1874 to 1875, one; from 1874 to 1876, one; from 1872 to 1876, one; prior to 1869, one; prior tó 1872, two; prior to 1875, one.
Sixty witnesses do not attempt to identify any particular instrument, but testify that they saw a talking-machine, or talked through it or heard it talked through, at Drawbaugh’s shop on occasions subsequent to 1867, and most of them fix the occasion as prior to 1876. The substance of the testimony of some of them will be given. Wilson G-. Fox testified that he' saw the talking-machine at Mr. Draw-baugh’s shop about the year 1867 or 1868, when the old faucet company was in operation there. Prior to March, 1871, the witness was employed in the carding room of the Harrisburg Cotton-mill, and Drawbaugh came there to get material to wrap his wire to use for the talking-maehine. Henry Bonholtzer testified that he was at Drawbaugh’s shop in 1869, and saw talking-machines there. Margaret Brenneman testified that she saw the talking-machines at Draw-baugh’s shop in 3869. Abraham May testified that he did work on Daniel Hart’s house, at Milltown, in August and September, 1870, of which he produces his account-books; that he never did any work
The third class of witnesses are those who identify more or loss positively one or more of the several exhibits as the instruments used by them, or which they saw used by others, prior to March 7, 1076. Exhibits F and B are identified by the following witnesses: Brooks sa w them in 1874; Smysor, in 1872; Eberlv, before .December, 1870; Wagner, in the fall of 1874; Freese, in I860 or 1870; Yetter, about Christmas, 1875; Fry, spring oí 1375; Carl, in 1870; Schenck, in 1861); Balsley, between 1870 and 1874; Good, before 1872; Iiahney, in 1871 or 1872; Schettel, about 1872; Nichols, in 1875; Bennekor, in May, 1875; Weber, late in 3874; Stephen, before 1875; Sliire-man, about 1872; ITawn, about 1872; II. B. Eberly, in May, 1878; J. 0. Smith, between April, 1872, and April, 1873; Sternberger, in October, 1871; Fetterow, in April, 1876; Halsiugor, prior to 1876; Slioop, in 1869; II. F. Drawbaugh, in 1872; Zimmerman, in 1871; Bates, in 1874; Guistweit, in duly, 1870; Hale, in fail of 1873; Stone, in June, 1871; Free, in Juno, 1872; J. A. Oyster, in June, 1S76; Hannan K. Drawbaugh, in January, 1871; J. B. Drawbangh, in 1869;’ G. W. Drawbaugh, in 1870; Lensemun, in July, 1871; Fisher, in 1S6S or 1869; Hub!or, in fall of 1878; Updegraff, in 1874; W. II. Docker, in 1873; and a number of other witnesses saw ono of those two exhibits.
The identification of Exhibits C, I, and A is made by a smaller number of witnesses. Some of them think they saw 0 in 1870, and others at various dates after that and as lato as March, 1876.
Ono of the witnesses thinks he saw I in 1871, the others locate the occasions in 1873, 1874, and 1875. Some of the witnesses think they saw A as early as 1872, one of them in 1870; but most of them saw it, they think, in 1875.
Exhibits E and D resemble each other very closely in appearance, and most of the witnesses produced to identify them saw both at the same time. They locate ike time as follows: Fry, laborer, .in May or June, 1875; Fry, fanner, in April, 3 875; Baylor, in J une, 1873, (Exhibit I);) Springer, after April, 1876; Schettel, about 1875; Bhoop, after February, 1877; Musaer, in Juno, 1876, (Exhibit D;) Millard, in 1875; Holsinger, in summer of 1875; Bhoop, in 1874 or 1875; Bates, between 1874 and 1877; Dellinger, in March, 3 876, (Exhibit Fi;) Gusfcweit, between 1870 and 1876; Bowen, in September, 1878; Hale, in fall of 1875, (Exhibit D;) Michael Dellinger, in November, 1877, (Exhibit ]);) Harman K. Drawbaugh, in January, 1875, and helped put up wire for them; J. B. Drawbaugh, prior to January 26, 1875; George W. Drawbaugh identifies ail the exhibits as seen by him sometime between 1871 and 1878; Updegraff and Musser, in 3876; Smith, in 1872 or 1876, (Exhibit E;) May, in 1876, (Exhibit D;) J. H. Smith, in May, 1876, (Exhibit D;) Decker, in 1874,
Some of the witnesses who identify exhibits identify the whole series. Other witnesses besides those named identify one or more of the exhibits as seen by them at times subsequent to the date of Bell’s application for his patent. Some of the witnesses who identify one or more of the instruments exhibited to them by Drawbaugh as the Exhibits F, B, or C, saw or used them in 1875 or 1876. Among these are the following to whose testimony a reference will be made: Mr. Springer testifies that he repeatedly talked and listened with Drawbaugh through the instruments, after the first of April, 1876, using Exhibits F and B as the instruments. Mr. Musser testifies that he talked through F and B in June, 1874, but the proofs show that this occasion was as late as in the summer of 1876. Mr. Moore, who is produced to show that Drawbaugh applied to him to acquire an interest in the invention, testifies that the talldng-machine which Drawbaugh produced was Exhibit B. This was in May, 1S75. Mr. Bayler testifies that he talked through F and B in 1873, but the proofs show that the occasion was between 1875 and 1877. Mr. Nichols locates the middle of January, 1875, as the time when he saw Exhibit B in use.
That the talking-machines referred to by the witnesses were electric instruments is clearly established. Drawbaugh testifies explicitly that they were always used with a closed circuit, and without breaking the current, some of them being battery telephones, and some magneto telephones. He always represented them as actuated by electricity to those to whom he explained or described them, and claimed his invention would supersede the telegraph. His assertions show them to have been electrical instruments. He stated to the witness Shank, “It was the greatest invention ever known; if he had the means to go on with it they could talk, or rather be a time to come as to talk, to the old country same as we can talk here.” To Zaeharias, that “he could run it out for miles, and parties could talk in at one end and be heard at the other end the same as persons in a room together.” To Smith, that “parties between Harrisburg and Philadelphia could communicate as if they were speaking together; there would hardly be any limits;” it was an “instrument to convey the voice — to supply the jfiace of the telegraph.” To Smyser, that it would work “from here to California.” To Fry, that one “can talk as far as the wire goes. ” Td Carl, that “he could hear a man talk from that place to New Cumberland or Harrisburg, and understand distinctly what he said.” To Sherwick, that it was “better and handier than the telegraph; that you could just talk through it in place of writing.” To Balsley, that “by attaching two wires you can hear it away off; the telegraph is nowhere with it.” To Iiahney, that “he could talk the same for miles as he could for a short distance.” To
Thus Drawbaugh is corroborated by a cloud of witnesses whose testimony tends to substantiate his narrative. Without stopping at this point to consider the credibility and probative force of their testimony, it suffices to state that, although some of the witnesses seem to have been reckless and unscrupulous in their statements, the great body of them are undoubtédly honest witnesses. It is impossible, however, to believe that Drawbaugh can be mistaken in the substance of his testimony, and the conclusion cannot be ignored that either his testimony is true, in its essential parts, or his narrative has been manufactured to fit the exigencies of the case. In order to ascertain what effect is to be given to the corroborative proofs, it is important to determine whether Drawbaugh is an honest witness or whether he has intentionally falsified collateral facts, and is therefore to be deemed discredited. If the defense is to be believed, he had been experimenting with bis talking-machine from 1866, and had successfully transmitted speech as early as 1870, if not before that time. He testifies that he had used Exhibits B and P in transmitting speech for two or three years before he made Exhibit C. According to the theory of the defendants, Exhibit C was made in 1869 or 1870. At that time he had reached a secondary stage in the development of his invention, and certainly as early as in 1872, when Exhibit C had received its latest modifications, the invention had passed out of the period of rudimental forms embodying principle merely, into a form embodying nice details of construction, and had reached a perfection not reached by Bell in his earlier patent. Drawbaugh 'was well aware ■of the merit and of the great pecuniary value of the invention. He had obtained patents for several inventions of minor value; yet, from 1870 until duly, 1880, he did not apply for a patent for the telephone. It was of the first importance to explain the reason of his inaction, because it seems incredible that the inventor of the telephone should not only omit to patent it as soon as he could, but should also remain silent for years after others were winning the fame and profits of the invention. Only one explanation was possible, and that has been attempted. As stated in the answer and in his testimony, it is that he was .unable to do so by reason of his poverty. The answer alleges “that for more than ten years prior to 1880 he was miserably poor, and utterly unable to patent his invention or caveat it.” He was asked the question: “Do you mean to have it understood from your last answer that there was any other reason for some period prior to 1870, except your poverty, whether greater or less, which prevented
In the elaborate efforts of the defendants to substantiate the theory of JDrawbaugh’s inability from poverty to patent his invention, much testimony has been produced to show, and which does show, that he was always more or less in debt, often a borrower of small sums of money, was dilatory in paying his debts, and used to plead his inability when dunned, and was often sued, and judgments and executions were obtained against him; but it is clear from a few plain facts that the theory of extreme poverty is unfounded, and that Drawbaugh is dishonest in putting it forward. In 1867 and 1869, besides what he received for his wages, he received $6,000 from the pump company for his faucet invention, besides $1,000 in the stock of the concern. On the first day of April, 1869, he received $1,000 from one Gardner, for the sale of a half interest in a faucet invention. He invested $2,000 of the $5,000 in real estate, lost $400 of it in an apple speculation, and used the $1,000 received from Gardner to buy a house and lot for his father. Between 1867 and 1873 he paid $1,200 to the Drawbaugh Manufacturing Company for assessments on his stock, besides $870 in labor; and in July, 1873, received from that company $425 cash, in settlement of its affairs. From 1867 to April, 1872, he was the owner of real estate, for which he had paid $2,300 in the fall of 1867, and upon which he expended in improvements, in the spring of 1868, from $300 to $400, and which was incumbered only by a prior lien for $300. In the spring of 1872 he incumbered it for $1,000, not as a principal, but as a surety. He was in receipt of $110 annually as rent for a part of this property, occupying the rest himself until he sold it in 1876, and bought another house in the towrn of Mechanicsville. He was always in receipt of fair wages for his labor. From April 1, 1875, to April 1, 1876, he received nearly $450 for wages from the axle company, irrespective of his earnings from other sources, and declined steady work at times, because he could make more by job-work. Thus it appears that, al-thofigh at times it was not convenient for him to pay his debts, or ho was careless or indifferent, he had not only the means of raising money during all this period, but that on many occasions he had means for investment and for speculation. The pretense that he could not raise the fees to caveat or patent his invention is transparently absurd. He was accustomed to prepare specifications of patents, and was a maker of models, and advertised himself as an inventor, designer, and solicitor of patents. During the time he was experimenting on his talking-rnachine, and before he applied for a patent, he found time and materials for experimenting with and making the Giffard injector for steam-engines, the autograph telegraph, the magneto-dial telegraph, the magneto key, the automatic
Drawbaugh devoted a great deal of time between 1867 and 1878 to the invention and construction of his electric clock, and the time and money expended by him in experimenting and constructing this clock in its various forms, especially those made in 1877 and 1878, was much more than would have enabled him to patent his talking-machine. These clocks were built by him with his own tools and out of his own money, and, to build them economically, he made a gear cutting-machine vdiieh must have cost him more than it would to patent his telephone. In April, 1878, he received $500 from the Electric Clock Company for the privilege of using his clock invention.
In order to fortify the theory of Drawbaugh’s inability from poverty to patent his invention, the defendants have attempted, by testimony from him and from others, to show that he was extremely solicitous to patent it, and tried to induce others to furnish the means. Mr. Springer testifies that “his (Drawbaugh’s) whole mind appeared to be on his talking-machine; he told me that many a night he didn’t sleep just studying how to improve it.” After May, 1872, according to the testimony of Jacob Hawn, the talking-machine superseded the clock in Drawbaugh’s interest. According to Mr. Holsinger, from 1873 to 1876 “he appeared to be crazy on it; I often tried to get information from him on other subjects, and about half a minute’s talk would turn him right on the talking-machine.” ITenry E. Draw-baugh, his brother, testifies: “Every time I was down there, from the summer of 1872 to 1879 or 1880, he was working at it and. talking, and wanted me to go in with him and furnish means.” Mr. Bates says he was in Drawbaugh’s shop eight or ten times between the summer of 1874 and the fall of 1877, and “his general conversation was about the talking-machine; said he would like to get it patented, but had not the means, and "could make' a fortune out of it.” Drawbaugh testifies as follows:
“ Question. A good many witnesses have testified that you were at various times talking of patenting your electric speaking-telephone invention: what is your recollection about that — did you intend to patent it or not? Answer. Yes, sir; I intended to patent it. I had spoken to a number of persons to assist me. I would state to them that I would give them an interest in the invention for them to furnish the money to have it patented. Q. Why did you not patent it with your own money? A. I didn’t have any money. Q. At how early a time did you have the intention of patenting it? A. I could hardly say how early. I spoke to persons even at an early time. I spoke to*323 Christian, liberty; it may have been prior to 1870 I spoke to Frank Lee; I spoke to them about taking an interest. They were among the earliest. I can’t remember all the persons, as I had spoken to a great many.”
Lee is not a witness, having died in 1872. Christian Eberly locates the time as between 1867 and 1870. He had been a partner with Drawbaugh in a number of inventions, and was a capitalist. He was asked:
“When Mr. Drawbaugh showed you his talking-machine, state whether he proposed to you to go into partnership with him and furnish the money for that also, as you had before that time, on the other inventions?”
He answered:
“.Not altogether ; he intimated that ho would take me in. I don’t recollect as I said anything, or wliat I said.”
The witness was often in Drawbaugh’s shop subsequently, in 1871, 1872, and 1873, bat mentions no other proposition. The only other persons Drawbaugh specifies as having been applied to by him are Capt. Moore, Henry Bayler, and Simon Oyster. Oyster was not called as a witness. Oapt. Moore was examined as a witness for the defendants, and his testimony is significant. Ho was the principal of the Soldiers’ Orphans’ School, an institution in the vicinity of Eberly’s Mills, and was the secretary and treasurer of the axle company, a concern that in part occupied Drawbaugh’s shop in 1875 and 1876. He testifies that about May, 1875, Drawbaugh showed him a talking-machine; said he was unable to patent it himself, and desired witness to “go in with him and get a patent.” lie states that he told Drawbaugh he didn’t want to go into any new inventions, but that it would be a fortune to any person bringing it out if it could be put to practical use. He identifies Exhibit J3 as the only machine shown him at that time by Drawbaugh. Although he and Draw-baugh maintained intimate business relations for a year after that time, the subject seems never to have been referred to again. Mr. Moore was an intelligent capitalist. It is strange that Drawbaugh should have shown him Exhibit B, one-half of tho crude instrument of 1867-1869, if the perfect instruments, E and D, were in existence; and more strange that tho subject was never mentioned again between them, or that no attempt was made to speak through any machine, if they had any faith in tho value of the invention. Mr. Bay-ler, the other witness, carried on lumbering and a saw-mill from 1873 to 1877 in the vicinity of Milltown, and employed Drawbaugh frequently to repair machinery. He testifies that in June, 1873, Draw-baugh showed him the talking-machine, and ho said to Drawbaugh, “Why, Dan., that is virtually a talking telegraph,” and advised him to take out a patent for it, to which Drawbaugh replied : “If I had the means, I would; if you’ll advance me the means to procure a patent I’ll give you a half interest.” The witness continues: “Generally, on him meeting me, ho would urge it, — urge me to take an in
The defendants produce other witnesses to prove that from 1870 to 1879 Drawbaugh was showing his telephone, adverting to his poverty, and trying to induce somebody to assist him. Mr. Herr may be cited as an illustration. He testified that in 1870 or 1871 Draw-baugh wanted money to get a caveat to secure his invention, and told the witness if he would help him or procure any person to assist him he would give him a half interest. Without adverting further to the testimony on this subject, it is sufficient to say, in view of the fact that there never was a time from 1867 to 1880 when Drawbaugh did not have the money to caveat and patent his invention, or the means of borrowing it, the only legitimate effect of such testimony is to discredit the whole defense by exciting the suspicion that it is bolstered up by exaggerated and unreliable testimony. It will hereafter be shown that among the men with whom Drawbaugh maintained business and friendly relations during this period there were many of intelligence and means. Some of them may have distrusted his judgment and regarded him as a visionary; some of them may have been indifferent or timid; but it is incredible that when only a trifling sum was required for a half interest in the invention none of them could be sufficiently impressed with its merit or financial value to investigate it seriously as a speculation or an investment. He induced persons to invest in faucet inventions and in his magnetic clock; and it cannot be true that he could find no one to entertain the talking-machine, which, according to the common rumor of the neighborhood, was to supersede the telegraph, and, in the words of one of the witnesses, “make Drawbaugh the richest man in the Cumberland valley.” It was very natural that a hard-headed old farmer like William Darr, on being told by Drawbaugh that he had a machine by which he could talk across the Atlantic ocean, should advise him to “try it first in talking across the Yellow Breeches creek;” but it is beyond comprehension or belief that none of the capitalists or speculators about him could be induced to seriously consider it, if it was an operative device. Where a witness falsifies a fact in respect to which he cannot be presumed liable to mistake, courts are bound, “upon principles of law, morality, and justice, to apply the maxim, falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus.” The Trinidad, 7 Wheat. 283. Drawbaugh could not be mistaken in asserting that it was his poverty which prevented him from caveating or patenting his invention. He was not’ led to the assertion inadvertently. Those with whom he is associated in the defense understood fully, and so did he, that the fact that a professional inventor and patentee did not go to the patent-office to secure an invention like the telephone for 10 years after it had been
The defense must rest upon the testimony of the witnesses who corroborate Drawbaugh. The case made by these witnesses is sufficiently formidable to overcome the legal presumption of the validity of tlie complainant’s patents. It is met by the complainant with rebutting evidence, direct and circumstantial, showing the intrinsic improbability of the theory that Drawbaugh was the inventor of- the telephone, and showing his conduct or declarations inconsistent with any hypothesis that he was more than an unsuccessful experimenter with the invention. Many witnesses have also been produced by the the complainant to attack the credibility and reliability of the testimony of the defendants’ witnesses. Of necessity the testimony of most of the defendants’ witnesses can only be attacked by showing that the witnesses are mistaken as to the time when they saw Drawr-baugh’s talking-machine, or as to what they really saw on the occasions they refer to. The way in which the testimony of Uriah P. Nichols is mot will illustrate the general tenor of such testimony. Mr. Nichols was one of the most intelligent and trustworthy of the defendants’ witnesses, a farmer and machinist, who testified that on the eighteenth day of January, 1875, he visited Drawbaugh’s shop on business, saw two instruments which he identified as Exhibits B and A, and he described their mode of operation as stated to him by Draw-baugh at the time. Ho says ho listened at one instrument while a boy spoke into another 200 feet away, connected by wires, and hoard the boy say: “Is it you, father, speaking?” The complainant produces nine witnesses to show that the occasion could not have been prior to February, 1878. The witness fixes the date by a purchase of lime made by him on the visit, and states that he went to Drawbaugh’s to see an electric clock of which he had recently read a description in a newspaper, and soon after the visit told Mr. Maish and others about the telephone he had seen at Drawbaugh’s. The complainant proves that the newspaper article was not published until February, 1878; that wlion the witness told Mr. Maish of the telephone at Draw-baugh’s, the latter, who was then a member of congress, remembered the occasion, knew all about Bell’s telephone at the time, and had used it in Washington. Mr. Maish states that, as Drawbaugh was one of his constituents, he would have been deeply impressed by the conversation if he had understood Drawbaugh claimed to bo the inventor. Without attempting to particularize the rest of the testimony for the complainant upon this issue, it suffices to say that several other witnesses wore introduced to show that the lime was not pur
The first group of facts of this nature are those which bear upon the capacity and character of Drawbaugh as an inventor, and tend to show that it is not only highly improbable but almost impossible that he could have been the author of the telephone. In the summer of 1878 he composed a biography‘of himself for publication in the history of Cumberland county, which presents a graphic picture of the inventor and of the man. He commences by describing himself as “born in the quiet, secluded village of Milltown, three miles from Harrisburg,” and as “one of the greatest inventive geniuses of this age, who has spent the greater part of an active life conceiving and producing, as the result of the conceptions of an unusually fertile brain, a score of useful, ingenious machines and devices.” “It appears,” he says, “by examining a list of his inventions, that the manufacturing interests of the place in his boyhood days gave direction to hja thoughts and incentive to his actions.” He proceeds to enumerate a list of his inventions as follows :
“His first invention was an automatic sawing-machine; then a number of machines used in wagon-making; then a machine for boring spoke tenets; then a machine for sawing tenets; a barrel-stave jointing-machine, patented in 1851. This machine was pretty generally introduced, and its merits appre-*327 elated. An automatic grinding-machine was next invented to meet a demand created by the introduction of tlie jointer; then followed several machines for making stave headings and shingles, all of which were patented in 1855; after which, machines for rounding, heading, crazing, dressing, and finishing outside of barrels were invented. These were again followed by device for running mill-stones; one for dressing mill-stones; a device for elevating grain in mills. Ho then invented and had patented four improvements in nail-plate feeding; next a tack-machine and a new design in tacks. Photography next engaged his attention. He fitted himself for action in this field by manufacturing his own camera ground, and fitted acromatic lenses for camera, prepared the necessary chemicals, and improved the process for enlarging pictures, hi ext electricity and electric machinery attracted his attention, and an electric-inaehine was produced, throwing out of consideration the galvanic battery and electric pile; then a machine for alphabetical telegraphing; then the justly-celebrated electric clock and the machinery necessary for its construction; and several kinds of telephones: one of which is operated by battery, and another by induction.”
Tie concludes as follows:
“It will be seen from the foregoing that Mr. Drawbaugh has penetrated vast fields in search of information, and with what success we leave it to the readers to determine. We are proud to own Mr. JD. as a citizen of our township, and deem him worthy of a position at the head of the list of our prominent men, and are happy to accord him that position.”
This portrait, drawn by himself, depicts, without the aid of extrinsic evidence, the ignorance and vanity of the man, and the incongruous and fantastic assortment of his inventive projects. It suggests also the character of a charlatan. That he was a skillful and ingenious mechanic is undoubtedly true. Invention was Ms hobby and his vocation. But that he was an inventor in a large sense is disproved by the nature and results of his work. Every patent that he obtained was for some improvement on existing devices, which involved mechanical skill rather than any high degree of inventive faculty. This is shown to some extent on the face of his patents, the list of which is as follows:- November 11, 1851, “for improvement in stave jointing-machines;” May 22, 1855, “for stave machines;” April 28, 1864, “for improvement in mill-stones;” May 12, 1863, “for improved machine for leveling the faces of mill-stones;” December 12, 1865, “for improvement in nail-plate feeders;” November 20, 1866, “for improvement in faucets;” November 19, 1867„ “for improvement in nail-feeding device.”
His own testimony, given in an interference proceeding in the patent-office in 1879, shows that none of his inventions were sufficiently meritorious to prosper vigorously. That proceeding involved a question of priority of invention between himself and one Hauck, respecting an improvement in a faucet. He had filed his application for a patent in January, 1879, and undertook to carry back the date of his invention to 1869. The scope and range of his inventive faculty became a subject-of inquiry. He there testified that he had made, “he might say, fifty inventions, and had patented over a dozen.”
When the speaking telephone was first introduced to the attention of the scientific public it was pronounced by one of the most eminent electricians of the day “a result of transcendent scientific interest,” and “the greatest by far of all the marvels of the electric telegraph.” The inventions attributed to Drawbaugh include not only the conception of the principle of the unbroken undulatory electric current, and of the delicate and complex instrumentalities essential to its efficient application in transmitting and reproducing articulate speech, but also of many other devices involving a nice adjustment of forces and requiring sensitive mechanism. These were inventions of a peculiarly scientific order, which would seem to demand a special conversance with the'principles of acoustics and electricity. Besides making the cardinal discovery of the theory of the unbroken undulatory current, Drawbaugh is assumed to have perfected a brilliant and extraordinary series of original discoveries, for which, to use the words of Mr. Benjamin, “there is no parallel instance in the whole- history of invention.” Mr. Benjamin, referring to the microphone, which was introduced to the public in 1878 by Mr. Blake, but which is one of the instruments asserted to have been invented by Drawbaugh at an earlier date, says: “It was looked upon as a great and orginal discovery.”
It was said by Chief Justice Taney, (O’Reilly v. Morse, 15 How. 111,) speaking of the invention of the telegraph:
*329 “Tío invention can possibly be made consisting of a combination of different elements of power without a thorough knowledge of the property of each, and the mode in which they operate on each other. For no man ever made such an invention without having iirst obtained this information, unless if was discovered by some fortunate accident.”
None of Drawbaugh’s alleged discoveries were made by accident. His statement is, that, starting with the belief that speech could be transmitted by electricity, he made first one contrivance and then another, gradually obviating difficulties and making advances experimentally, until he finally perfected the several inventions. In view of Bell’s special equipment for investigation and experiment in electrical and acoustic science it would not seem strange that his persistent efforts to effect the electrical transmission of speech were eventually successful, were it not that others as intelligent, as well equipped, as ingenious, and as persevering as be, bad devoted years to the same object in vain. He had the assistance of Mr. Watson, an expert in electricity, and a skilled workman in electrical mechanism, in constructing the apparatus employed in his experiments, and who also aided him in his experiments. lie had demonstrated his inventive proficiency by inventions in telegraphy for which patents were granted to him. And yet had it not been for an accidental discovery made by him in -Juno, 1875, and which would probably have escaped one whose trained faculties were not centered on a careful study of the phenomena, he might have failed.
Drawbaugh, on the other hand, was not only untutored, but he was isolated by his associations and occupations from contact with men of advanced science; he had narrow opportunities for instruction, and few incentives for profound research. Among the multitude of his inventive conceptions was one that a talking-machine was a possibility. According to the testimony of Lory, a witness for defendants, before Drawbaugh began his practical experiments he exhibited a sketch of a machine that he was about to make that would talk a distance of 20 miles, and work something like a telegraph. If this is true, he commenced on his telephone as the architect plans a building, or tbe engineer makes a draught of his structure. His own testimony shows that he did not attempt to qualify himself for electrical inventions by any systematic study after he began experimenting with his talking-machine. Although he had undoubtedly acquired considerable desultory information about electricity, and especially about the mode of operation and detail of construction of electrical mechanism, it is obvious that when he commenced with his talking-machine he was a tyro in electrical science, essaying the most difficult work of the electrician. It is almost incredible that the subtle intellectual discoveries which were a closed book to the ablest electrician could have been reached by a smatterer in science, or by any series of empirical experiments. As has been remarked, he seems to have discovered nothing accidentally; yet from the beginning to the end of his narrative
“I had a number of crude apparatuses, but can’t remember exactly the shape of any of them. I had membranes stretched over hoops, — over a hoop, I remember that; and I had electro-magnets, and the arrangement was varied. I don’t remember exactly the arrangement.”
He testifies that when he used the cup-machine he used- it in a continuous electric circuit, and thinks he used it as a receiver with Exhibit B as a transmitter. He states that he succeeded in transmitting speech with these two instruments, and, of course, he could only have done fhis by employing the unbroken undulatory current of electricity. He cannot state how he conceived the initial idea of the undulatory current and the continuous circuit, or, subsequently, the theory of any of the remarkable devices which he produces. His answers to questions intended to elicit such information may be illustrated by giving one of them:
“I don’t remember how I came to it. I had been experimenting in that direction. I don’t remember of getting at it by accident either. I don’t remember of any one telling me of it. I don’t suppose any one told me.”
He produces sketches or models or originals of instruments which he says he made from time to time. He states that they were used to talk through on various occasions; and from these outlines of accomplished facts leaves the history of his inventions to be filled out by inference and conjecture. An inventor can hardly forget the.process of thought by which a great intellectual conception germinates and matures into the consummate achievement; but Drawbaugh’s memory is a blank. If the untutored mechanic educated himself into an accomplished electrician by his own experiments and observations, the incidents and phenomena which revealed new discoveries, and illumined the way for new advances, would be indelibly impressed upon his mind. It seems a little short of the miraculous that a man of his capacity and equipment should have produced these inventions at all; more marvelous still that he should have produced them without, any intellectual perception of his discoveries.
Another group of important facts which are satisfactorily shown by the proofs are those which indicate Drawbaugh’s own knowledge that he was not an original inventor of the telephone. Reference has been made to some of the evidence bearing upon his neglect to patent or caveat his invention in discussing the question of his credibility as a witness. If no honest and reasonable explanation can be given for his conduct, the inference is very strong that he knew he did not have a practical telephone to patent. He may have had a talking-machine which was well calculated to excite the curiosity of
Without attempting to refer to other testimony to the same general effect, what has already been referred to shows that if Drawbaugh had seriously desired to bring his talking-machine into public notice, and secure the fruits of his invention, he had ample opportunity to do so. Who can doubt that if he had a practical telephone to exhibit he would have selected just such men as Kiefer, Wilson, and the others, to demonstrate it to them, and enlist them to demonstrate its utility and value to the public. Such an invention was of a kind well calculated to excite public interest, and to impress practical men with a quick appreciation of its commercial importance and its pecuniary value. It was so sufficiently perfected, according to the theory of the defense, that a patent could have been obtained prior to 1870. to secure the application of the principle, and to compel every subsequent inventor to pay tribute to the discoverer of a new art. For years it was mechanically perfect, and its efficiency and importance-as a great factor in human intercourse could have been demonstrated to the public without appreciable inconvenience or expense. Draw-baugh fully appreciated its importance and value. He had the means to patent it himself, and friends to assist him in introducing it into public use. He had the talent to induce others to invest in his inventions. No explanation is possible why, under such circumstances, his Efforts should have left no mark upon the annals of inventive progress, and given no evidence of life beyond the idle curiosity his'
In 1874-76 Drawbaugh issued a business card advertising himself as “inventor, designer, and solicitor of patents.” On the back of this card is printed a list of his inventions as follows: “Stave-heading and shingle cutter; barrel machinery; stave jointing-machine; tram and red-staff for leveling face of mill-stones; riñe and driver for running mill-stone; nail machinery for feeding nail-plates; pumps, rotary and others; hydraulic ram; the Drawbaugh rotary measuring faucet; carpet-rag loopor; electric clock; and magneto-electric machine for short-line telegraphing and fire-alarm, and propelling electric clocks.” He takes pains to say of this magneto-machine on his card that it “can be applied to any form of electric movement, and dispenses with a galvanic battery.” He bad obtained patents for some of these inventions, but had not for others. He was then experimenting with his electric clock and with his magneto-machine for short-line telegraphing, firo-alarms, etc., and included them in the list of his inventions. The omission to mention the most important one of all of his inventions — one respecting which, according to his present testimony, there had not been a week from the time he made his first cup-machine that he had not been engaged with it — one which was complete before his electric clock was complete — is a significant statement by implication that he had no such invention to advertise. It is to be remembered that when he chronicled his achievements in the autobiographical sketch of 1878 the Bell telephone had been introduced into commercial use at Harrisburg, three miles from Draw-baugh’s shop, and the local newspapers had been full of the subject. The cursory allusion in that autobiography to “several kinds of telephones” is in striking contrast with the eulogistic description of the electric clock, and wholly inconsistent with the theory that he deemed himself to be the originator of the telephone which at that particular time was a topic of universal interest.
In his testimony given in 1879, in the interference proceeding with Hauck, although he did Hot include the talking-machine in the category of his successful inventions, in the course of his testimony lie produced a sketch of his faucet, and stated that he made it “about 1874 to 1876, when I was experimenting on telephones or phonographs.” He represented himself, not as an inventor of that which he is now claimed to have perfected, but as an experimenter with a “telephone or phonograph.” It is instructive to road this statement in
“It may be mentioned that Mr. Drawbaugh constructed a rude telephone long before Mr. Edison loomed up as the ‘ boss ’ inventor. He never .expected to send articulate sounds over a magnetized wire, but he believed that an alphabet could be arranged after the manner of the musical scale, and that messages could be transmitted and understood by the variations of,the tone and pitch. This unlettered mechanic came very near anticipating Edison and Bell in the invention of the telephone, and nothing but his poverty prevented him from conducting his experiments to a successful issue.”
His advertising card, his testimony before the patent-office, his autobiography, and his statement to Matthews, authenticated in wr.' .- ing, were all made when he had no pecuniary interest to color the facts, and upon occasions when he was- anxious to present himself in the most favorable light as an inventor; and they were all made after his talking-machine, according to the theory of the defendants, was a perfected invention, and known to be such by many of his friends and neighbors. These are declarations evidenced in writing, and one of them made under oath, which point in but one direction. They are consistent with his conduct. They show that he understood himself to be an experimenter with telephones or phonographs, but not the inventor of the speaking telephone. The complainant has supplemented this evidence by the testimony of other substantial witnesses
In this connection it is to be noted that soon after telephones were introduced in Harrisburg, late in 1877 or early in 1878, Drawbaugh visited the offices whore they were used, examined the inside of the instruments, and borrowed one to take home, which Ire kept for several days; and the instrument which he borrowed hears a close resemblance in appearance to Exhibit A, which, it .is asserted, lie had made in 1873 or 1874.
No extended reference will be made to the testimony of other witnesses, such as Mr. Weaver and Mr. Grissinger, allowing declarations of Drawbaugh, made after the Boll telephone was in commercial use, to the effect that although he had experimented on the telephone years before Bell ho had obtained no satisfactory results. It remains to consider what effect is to be given to the testimony of tho multitude of witnesses who have been produced to substantiate the defense. Disregarding the testimony which is merely hearsay, and therefore incompetent as evidence of the main fact, the testimony of many other witnesses is overthrown by the palpable improbability of thoir statements, or by the contradictions between their statements and those of other witnesses for the defendants upon subsi antive points, or by successful attacks upon their accuracy in the rebutting testimony of the complaint. There still remains a formidable number of witnesses
It is not strange to any reader of the autobiography that Drawbaugh should have taken up the telephone. That he and those about him should have treated it as a talking-machine is entirely natural. That his talking-machine, as late as in 1876, bore a striking resemblance to the Reis telephone is shown by Mr. Shapley’s testimony, a witness. who noticed the resemblance, and loaned Drawbaugh a copy of the Scientific American describing it.
There is enough here to explain Drawbaugh’s declarations to his neighbors about the talking-machine he was inventing, and to excite the curiosity of the community. A careful reading of the proofs renders it easy of belief that the witnesses who testify about casual visits to his shop, which occurred many years before their testimony was delivered, and to cursory tests of his instruments on those occasions, have confused the fragmentary and incoherent articulation of such an apparatus, with the hearing of distinct words and sentences. When witnesses undertake — as many of them do — to give the exact words or sentence, heard in the instrument five or ten years before,, when their attention was not called to the subject afterwards, no hesitation is felt in rejecting such statements as utterly incredible. It may be charitably inferred that such a witness has confused his recollection with more recent impressions. As will hereafter be shown*
The more important testimony is that by which it is sought to identify the several exhibits and show their existence at times consistent with the theory of the natural evolution of the invention. The identification of particular exhibits as seen by the witnesses among the various objects of curiosity at Drawbaugh’s shop several years before they testify, is necessarily unreliable when it is attempted by observers who had no knowledge of the mode of operation or of the internal organization of the instruments. Such witnesses could not appreciate what they saw, even if they examined the instruments. Most of the witnesses belong to this class. Indeed, the greater proportion of them do not profess to identify the exhibits positively. Some are more certain than others that particular exhibits are the instruments, they saw. Exhibits F, B, and C are fragmentary remains of instruments, and their value depends upon Drawbaugh’s description of the operative parts that no longer exist. Scores of witnesses testify to seeing the tumbler device resembling Exhibit F, and the tin-can device resembling Exhibit B, but the identification of the other exhibits prior to the date of Bell’s patent is comparatively feeble. The appearance of Exhibits F, B, and C is sufficiently peculiar and distinctive to impress the memory of those who saw them. On the other hand, the other exhibits are not of this character, and all that ordinarily the witnesses can safely say of them is that five years or more before testifying they think they saw or used a small walnut box externally resembling [, or A, or E, or D.
It may bo said generally of all the testimony of the witnesses who attempt to identify exhibits, that it is mainly valuable when it proceeds from those who used the instruments which they think they remember, and obtained results. They must remember the results obtained much better than the minor differences of appearance presented by the instruments. Granting that Exhibits F, B, and G would be likely to be remembered, what shall be said of the value of the testimony of scores of witnesses who state that they tested these instruments, or saw others tost them, and they articulated perfectly, when it appears by the most authentic tost that these instruments wore incapable of such articulation?
In March, 1882, after most of the proofs in the case had been taken, a test was made of the capacity of the exhibits to transmit speech in
The proofs on both sides lead to the general conclusion that Draw-baugh was not an original inventor of the speaking telephone, but had been an experimenter, without obtáining practical results until the introduction of the instruments into Harrisburg. It is very probable that after reading in the Scientific American, loaned to him by Mr. Shapley in October, 1876, the article purporting to describe Bell’s telephone, but which really describes better the Beis apparatus, he undertook to improve his old devices. At that time, or after he had examined the telephone instruments at Harrisburg and carried one of them home to study, he may have altered the organization of his instrument and made the intermediate exhibits between F and D. If he exhibited them at his shop, and was able to transmit speech through them, this fact will account for the testimony of the witnesses who identify these exhibits, and may be mistaken as to the time they
The observation of an eminent commentator may be quoted as apposite to the case:
“iTo form of judicial evidence is infallible, however strong in itself; the degree of assurance resulting from it amounts only to an indefinitely high degree of probability; and perhaps as many erroneous judgments have taken place on false or mistaken direct testimony as on presumptive proof.” Best, lüv. § 468.
A decree is ordered for complainant.