60 F. 907 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1894
The questions herein are presented by a bill in equity for the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 469,395, granted to complainant February 23-, 1892, for improvements in the method of making flags. The defenses are anticipation and lack of patentable novelty. The object of the alleged invention was to provide a practical and economical mode of so affixing stars or other emblems to the opposite sides of the field of a flag that they should accurately correspond in their respective relations without requiring especial care on the part of the operator. This was accomplished by temporarily fastening emblems, such as stars, on the face of the field, and unformed blanks, sufficient to cover the corre
“(1) The method of malting flags herein described, consisting in affixing and accurately duplicating the emblems or stars on opposite sides of the field fabric by stitching through the field and an underlying blank fabric from the outlines of the superposed accurately formed star or emblem properly .located on the face of the field and subsequently trimming the blank to the outline indicated by such stitching, whereby said stars for both face and back are given similarity of configuration and a smooth flat-laid attachment without unduly stiffening or encumbering the flag. (2) The method of making flags -as herein described, which consists in locating and temporarily fastening accurately formed stars or emblems upon the face of the field fabric, then temporarily fastening an unformed fabric or blank upon the back of the field fabric covering the position and area of the face stars stitching through the several plies on the outlines of the accurately formed star by overseaming stitch embracing the raw-cut edges thereof, and then trimming away the outlying portions of the unformed blank fabric to conform to the stitched outlines of the face stars, substantially as set forth. (3) A flag having the emblems of stars with raw-cut edges affixed thereon in duplicate upon opposite sides of the field or ground fabric and seemed by overseam stitching that embraces the raw-cut edges of the face stars by zigzag stitches and is carried through the fabrics of the field and back stars, and said back stars having their edges trimmed adjacent to but outside the line of stitching, in the manner set forth.”
It will be seen that claims 1 and 2 cover tbe method, and claim 3 tbe article, described by tbe patentee. Tbe patent in suit covers a, form of wbat is known as appliqué, in wbicb an emblem or design is applied in relief to a field or ground. It is admitted that tbe use of a zigzag stitcb to secure a superposed fabric to a ground fabric, and to prevent tbe raw edge of the fabric from raveling, was not new, nor was it new to use such stitching to form a pattern on a blank underneath tbe ground fabric, and to cut away the portions of tbe blank around the lines of stitching. But complainant claims that be was the first to show bow, by a single sewing operation, two stars could be practically sewed to a field so that tbe front and back stars should register exactly, raveling should be prevented, and a strip of each one of tbe three fabrics permanently united. In tbe present consideration of tbe questions at issue, it will be assumed that this statement, if limited to tbe flag-making art, is correct.
Tbe evidence as to tbe state of the art shows that, in an English patent granted to William Madders in 1865, for improvements in •embroidery, a class of single appliqué work is described, in wbicb a face fabric cut in a certain pattern is first temporarily secured to a field, and is afterwards firmly fastened by buttonhole stitches passing
Various witnesses, experts in embroidery and other needlework, testify to having performed for 10 years last past this double ap-pliqué work, with and without a zigzag stitch, upon face fabric, field fabric, and blank, for making single letters, monograms, and other designs, to register alike on both sides of the field fabric, and to having afterwards cut away the superfluous material from the blank. Mary J. Hewitt, for 15 years employed by the Wheeler & Wilson Manufacturing Company to make samples of their sewing-machine work for exhibitions and fairs, produced a sample showing a “W. & W.” in cloth, stitched on both sides of a piece of flannel, and testified that, in 1887, she put such a “W. & W.” on a horse blanket for the Wheeler & Wilson Company, and described how it was done. She first cut out a “W. & W.” in blue cloth, and pinned it on the upper side of the blanket, and put a broad piece of cloth on the under side. Then she stitched them together around the edge of the upper pattern, and, turning the blanket oyer, cut the under piece of cloth out along the line of stitches, so that the letters on one side registered wi th those on the other side. Then, in order to make the design more firm and more ornamental, she made a second row of stitching like the first row. She testified that the blanket was used by the company until they sold their horses, and she produced what she testified were the patterns , used in cutting out the design. She further testified that to cany a line of stitching across the surface of a superimposed material from one point to another, to unite two or more layers of material, was old and well known long before 1889, and was common in quilting and like operations. She also confirmed the testimony of other witnesses, that to secure a raw edf>e of material, and prevent it from raveling by a herring-bone or zigzag line of stitching, or whipping over the edges, was well known prior to 1879.
It appears that heretofore flags have ordinarily been made either by temporarily fastening stars on one side of a field, with the
It is claimed that the method covered by complainant’s patent produces a better flag at a reduced price, and that it is now in general use all over this country. I think these claims are sustained by the evidence. Upon the whole evidence, the complainant seems to be entitled to a finding that he believed himself to be the first inventor of the patented process and result, and first applied this patented mode of operation to the making of flags, and that the art, as applied to flagmaking, and the article, were new and useful, and had not been thus used or patented before the date of his application for a patent, and were an improvement on the methods and results which preceded them. The question is whether all these circumstances, taken together, are sufficient to constitute invention, or to show patentable novelty in view of the state of the art as hereinbefore set forth.
The theory of the patent law upon this question seems to disregard the individual knowledge, skill, or training of the alleged inventor, and the extent of the exercise of his individual inventive faculties. Whether the alleged invention was a mere accident or the result of years of experiment, the vital question is always the same: Is the thing claimed by him such as would not have occurred to a person skilled in the art to which it relates? For the purpose of determining this question, it must be assumed that the patentee was such a person, and had before him all the accumulated knowledge and experience of this country bearing upon the subject of inquiry disclosed to the public, from the working-model in a related art which may border upon the field of abandoned experiment or lost art down to the embodiment of the principle in some other and distinct field, developed just before the inventive idea flashed upon the mind of the patentee. His application for a patent must, furthermore, be read in the light of all knowledge shed upon the world by foreign patent or printed publication. Underwood v. Gerber, 37 Fed. 682; Id., 149 U. S. 224, 13 Sup. Ct. 854. It may be said that the application of this doctrine is productive of hardship in a case like the present one. But, whether this is so or not, the rule is settled by repeated adjudications since Pearce v. Mulford, 102 U. S. 112.
Applying this principle to the case at bar, we find the patentee claiming a method and result, in connection with fastening emblems to flags, which had been previously employed to fasten letters to blankets, patterns to' embroidery, and patches to fabrics. It seems to me that, if there had been presented to practical needleworkers, such as those who have testified in this case, the problem óf how to economically and methodically attach stars to
But the evidence of these apparently disinterested witnesses is relevant and persuasive in support of the claim that the application of their experience and knowledge to produce what may have seemed invention to Bowman, the flagmalcer, should have occurred to him, and would have occurred to any person skilled in the art of appíiqué work. Lace Co. v. Schaefer, 1 U. S. App. 118, 1 C. C. A. 488, 50 Fed. 106. Such an application of old processes to the new result of affixing emblems to flags seems to he referable. to the skill of the workman rather than to the genius of the inventor, and to be, therefore, an analogous use. The fact that the new form of result has not previously been contemplated or achieved is not sufficient to support the claim, of patentable novelty unless such, result is substantially distinct. Such a result is “only the display of the expected skill of the calling, and involves only the exercise of the ordinary faculties of reasoning upon the materials supplied by a special knowledge, a,nd the facility of manipulation which results from its habitual and intelligent practice.” Hollister v. Manufacturing Co., 113 U. S. 59, 5 Sup. Ct. 717; Thompson v. Boisselier, 114 U. S. 1, 5 Sup. Ct. 1042; Underwood v. Gerber, supra.
In Manufacturing Co. v. Cary, 147 U. S. 623, 13 Sup. Ct. 472, the complainant’s patent claimed a process of tempering wire for furniture springs. The same process had previously been applied
That a more thorough doing of what had been done before, or the production of a new fabric with higher finish, tighter weaving, or greater beauty of surface, due to the observation or skill of the workman, is not sufficient to sustain a patent, is held in Ansonia Brass & Copper Co. v. Eectrical Supply Co., 144 U. S. 11, 12 Sup. Ct. 601; that the mere carrying forward of an original conception resulting in an improvement in degree simply is not invention, is settled. Mill Co. v. Walker, 138 U. S. 124, 11 Sup. Ct. 292; Trimmer Co. v. Stevens, 137 U. S. 423, 11 Sup. Ct. 150. These decisions seem to determine the nonpatentability of the article covered by the third claim.
These views render it unnecessary to consider the evidence as to the general use of the patented process and article. In a doubtful case, such evidence may suffice to turn the scale in favor of the patentee, but not in a case where there is clearly no patentable noveltv. Duer v. Lock Co., 149 U. S. 216, 13 Sup. Ct. 850; Grant v. Walter, 148 U. S. 547, 13 Sup. Ct. 699; McClain v. Ortmayer, 141 U. S. 419, 12 Sup. Ct. 76.
Let a decree be entered dismissing the bill.