32 F. 695 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1887
The first claim of the patent in suit (No. -298,425, granted May 13, 1884, to John E. Stannard for machine for creasing paper) is a bald attempt to patent the function of the machine described in the specification, or the result of a mechanical operation which the operator must learn how to perform for himself without aid from the specification. No mechanism for creasing paper “by means of successive blows or pressures” is suggested in the specification,, except the combination of devices covered by the third claim of the patent, and no instruction is given how to take “the step” which is the subject of the first claim, unless by the use of those devices.
The third claim fully and accurately embodies the real invention of the patentee. The complainant’s case must stand or fall upon the infringement of that claim by the defendant. Novelty is imparted to that claim by the peculiar grooves or channels in the cam disks, all the other elements being old, separately, and in the combination claimed. The new result is produced by making the groove of the cam “with two inward trends towards the shaft 9 — one at 21, and the other at 23, the latter extending inward nearer the shaft than the other — and with an outward swell or trend between them, as clearly shown in Fig. 2.” The peculiar shape ,of the groove is the gist of Stannard’s invention. The proofs show that the defendant has never infringed this claim. He had altered the cam grooves in the Elmer machines to plain eccentrics, in February, 1884, before the complainant’s patent was granted. He did this for the express purpose of avoiding litigation,"after the interference had been declared in the patent-office between the Elmer patent and the application of Stannard. His conduct towards the complainant throughout shows good faith. The complainant assumed that the defendant was using the original Elmer machines constructed according to Elmer’s patent; he acquired Stannard’s patent as soon as it was granted, and brought this suit the day after against the defendant. After the 'suit was brought, being met with proofs that the Elmer machines had been altered before the issue of the Stannard patent, so that they did not employ the real invention of Stannard, the complainant has fallen back upon the worthless first claim of the patent. The bill as to infringement is dismissed with costs.
The bill prays for the cancellation of the Elmer patent owned by the defendant, as an interfering patent. The adjudication of the patent-