52 F. 758 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Illnois | 1892
This is a bill in equity charging defendants with the infringement of patent No. 303,116, granted August 5, 1884, to Sarah Caverly, assignee of Amos K. Caverly, for a “machine for rounding bent handles,” and for an injunction and accounting The inventor says of the invention covered by the patent:
“My invention relates to machines for forming such round or oval or bentwood handles and other woodwork, whether bent or straight; and it consists in a cylindrical cutter head mounted on an ordinary frame, and revolving vertically by suitable gearing, constructed, preferably, of two cylinders or disks bolted together, having in the center of its periphery a groove the shape and size of the curve or oval on the dressed handle, and the cutter knives adjusted from both sides of the cutter head into the groove. * * '*
“The cutter head is of cylindrical form, made of steel, iron, or other suitable material, constructed, preferably, of two cylindrical pieces or disks, each having such a curved or concaved cut on its inner face, extending from beyond its diameter to its periphery, that, when they are placed with their curved faces together, the curves or concaves in the disks will form a groove in the head the size and shape of the dressed handle. "When the cutter head is constructed in two pieces, the latter are securely fastened together by bolts passing through bolt holes in each, and nuts, or otherwise prevented from having independent motion. Each of the disks forming the cutter head has one or more openings or ditches, flaring at the top on the outer face thereof, decreasing in width in their inward progress, and terminating at the bottom in narrow crescent-shaped openings in the curve on the inner face of the disk, the metal being concaved and sharply inclined at one end of the recesses, to per*759 mit the ready shedding of the chips from the cutter, and convexed and inclined in like manner at the opposite end to form beds for the concaved knives.
“ The cutter knives are thin plates of steel, beveled at their cutting ends like ordinary plane blades or bits, concaved on their cutting faces to fit a con-vexed bed at one end of the openings in the cutter head, adjustable thereon to regulate the depth of their cutting action by set screws working through a slot in the knives, and secured by said set screw to the head. * * *
“The number and mode of adjustment of the cutter knives used maybe varied as the size of the head or the character of the wood to be shaped may render expedient. I have found that, for general purposes, six knives—three in each half of the head, the knives thereof on one side alternating in their appearance on the concave with those on the other—is a very satisfactory and efficient arrangement. The bent handle is held by the operator on the rest block, and guided by him into the groove in the head, which, revolving rapidly—say two thousand revolutions per minute—by the action of its cutters, shapes the side of the handle exposed to the cutters the form of said groove. The handle is then turned over and guided into the groove in like manner, shaping the other side, and completing the rounding of the handle. * * *
“The knives are adjusted to the disks of the cutter head upon sharply inclined beds formed in one end of the openings in the disk, thus presenting the cutting edges of the knives diagonally to the plane of the curved portions of the disks, similar to the manner in which plane bits are secured to the plane frame, the incline on the other side forming a channel for the discharge of the chips made by the cutters, and are adjustable back and forth within the disks by set screws working in slots in the knives. By this longitudinal adjustment the depth of the cutting action of the knives may be regulated.”
The patent has four claims, which are:
“(1) A cutter head, consisting of a cylinder with a groove in the center of its periphery and recesses from either side, terminating in narrow openings on such groove, for the adjustment of the cutter knives. (2) A cutter head constructed of two cylindrical disks, each with such a concave on its inner face, extending from beyond the diameter to the periphery, that, when secured with their curved faces together, the concaves form a groove on the periphery of the head corresponding to the shape and size of the dressed work, with one or more recesses extending from the outer face of each disk, diminishing in width as they progress, and terminating in a narrow opening in the curve, forming beds for the cutters, and spouts for the discharge of chips, with knives secured in the openings. (3) A cutter head constructed of two cylindrical disks, each with such a concave on its inner face, extending from beyond the diameter to the periphery, that, when secured with their curved faces together, the concaves form a groove on the periphery of the head corresponding to the shape and size of the dressed work, with one or more recesses extending from the outer face of each disk, diminishing in width as they progress, terminating in a narrow opening in the curve, forming beds for the cutters and spouts for the discharge of chips, with slotted knives secured in the openings, and ¿djustable longitudinally therein by set screws. (4) The combination of the frame, the cutter head with groove in its periphery, and one or more openings from each side,, terminating in a narrow slit on the groove, one or more knives so curved that the bevel on their cutting ends presents a flat surface, and gearing by which the head is actuated.”
The defenses are:
“(1) That the claims are void for want of patentable novelty. (2) That the patentee was not the original and first inventor. (3) That the invention was in public use by the inventor and others more than two years before the patent was applied for. (4) That the defendant does not infringe.”
Upon the question of novelty, the proof shows that between 1865 and 1868 a cutter head was made and put in use in the Grand de Tour Plow Works, at Dixon, Ill., which showed a grooved head with cutters inserted in the groove, and in all respects operating like the machines covered by the patent, except that the cutting knives were set so that they struck the wood at a more obtuse angle. One of these old cutter heads is produced in evidence, and the testimony in relation to it shows that it was used for five or six years, during which time many thousands of plow handles were shaped and finished upon it, and it did
The second and third claims of this patent are objected to by the defendants, upon the ground that they are based upon a preferential mode of constructing the device. The patentee says in his specifications:
“The cutter head, B, is of cylindrical form, made of steel, iron, or other suitable material, constructed preferably of two cylindrical pieces or disks,” etc.
In the language of the supreme court in Small v. Jones, 91 U. S. 185:
“This is not of the substance of the patent. A recommendation is quite different from a requirement. The latter is a demand, an essential, a necessity. The former is a choice or preference between different modes or subjects, and is left to the pleasure or judgment of the operator. He may adopt it. * * * The principle is this: The omission to mention in the specification something which contributes only to the degree of benefit, providing the apparatus would work beneficially and be worth adopting without it, is not fatal, while the omission of what is known to be necessary to the enjoyment of the invention is fatal. Accordingly, when the inventor says, ‘I recommend the following method,’ he does not thereby constitute such method a portion of his patent.”
But, without being hypercritical, I am unable to see what there is described in the specifications, or in the second, third, and fourth claims, which was not in the older devices shown in the proof. The Moline and Louisville cutter heads were made with two disks; they had cutter knives inserted through the recesses extending from the outer face of each disk into the groove, and forming beds for the cutters, and spouts for the discharge of the chips, the slotted knives were secured in the opening, and adjusted longitudinally thereon by set screws. In other words, all the elements of the complainant’s patent are found in these old working cutter heads of the Grand de Tour Plow Company, the Louisville Agricultural Works, the Avery Plow Company, the Moline Plow Company, and the Wilder patent, and most of them date back much earlier than even the witnesses for the complainant would carry Caverly’s invention.
It is strenuously urged, however, on behalf of complainant, that the angle at which Caveriy set his cutters was such as to make his machine operate better than either of the prior cutter heads which have been referred to. The proof shows by the complainant’s expert, Bartlett, that 45 degrees is the proper angle at which the plane bit or cutter should be
“They are adjusted to the disks of the cutter head upon sharply inclined beds, * * * presenting the cutting edges of the knives diagonally to the plane of the curved portions of the disks, * * * similar to the manner in which plane bits are secured to the plane frame.”
This language does not instruct the persons making a machine after the manner described in the Caverly patent as to what angle to set the cutters in order that they may do the best work. The Wilder patent of 1863 provided that the cutters should be fitted “obliquely” in slots through the cutter head, and Mr. Bartlett, plaintiff’s witness, says that the common joiner’s plane irons had been set for very many years at about the angle of 45 degrees. This, then, was common knowledge, and all persons familiar with the use of the ordinary plane knew that 45 degrees was about the right angle for effective cutting by the plane bits. Caverly comes no nearer in defining the angle at which the knives shall be set than does Wilder. Wilder says, “They are to be set obliquely,” and Caverly says, “The_y are to be set diagonally,” to the plane of the curved portion of the disks; so that neither of these patents instructs the public just at what angle the knife should be set, but leaves that to the skill of the mechanic who constructs the machine. For some reason the cutting bits in the Grand de Tour head were set with but a slight incline to the face of the work. The Louisville, Avery, and the Moline cutters were set at something more than 45 degrees; some of the complainant’s witnesses say they were set as high as 60 degrees, but whether these knives are set at 45, 60; 80, or 85, it is but a matter of more or less, which was left to the judgment of the mechanic who constructed the machine, and is not a matter of invention. It was not new to set plane irons, or other cutting tools, at an angle of 45 degrees, but, on the contrary, that was a very oíd mode of setting them. “It is the invention of what is new, and not the arrival at a comparative superiority or a greater excellence in that which is already known, which the law protects as exclusive property, and which it secures by a patent.” Smith v. Nichols, 21 Wall. 112. The proof shows that all these old cutters worked, and worked fairly well; that a great deal of work was done upon them. It may be that the Caverly cutter head is better by reason of the change in the angle of the cutters, but “the change was only in degree, and consequently not patentable.” Guidet v. Brooklyn, 105 U. S. 550.
The proof also shows that the “Moline cutter head,” one disk of which is in evidence, was in actual and public use in the defendants’ shops at Moline more than two years before the application for the Caverly patent was made; and the proof also strongly tends to show that Caverly worked in the shop while it was so in use; and that his place of work was so near where this cutter head was located as to raise the presump
For these reasons the suit will be dismissed, for want of equity.