133 F. 924 | Cir. Ct. Del. | 1905
The hill in this case charges infringement of letters patent of the United States No. 421,244, dated February 11, 1890, granted to Charles P. Chisholm and John A. Chisholm
“The machine described, in this patent for hulling the peas on the vines is the machine of the podder-process patent (No. 421,244), with such slight modifications as are necessary for the treatment of the larger mass of material. The method pursued in the two instances is the same, the only difference being that in the former case the blows by the beaters are applied to the pods after being stripped from the vines, while in the latter case the blows are given to the pods when still attached to the vines. The two processes, although slightly differing in respect to the. form of the material treated, are strictly analogous. The work is done substantially by the same means and with the like result.”
The substantial question in the former case so far as it related to the patent now in suit was one of anticipation. Judge Acheson delivering the opinion of the court said:
“In view of the French patent to Madame Faure and first certificate of addition thereto, we are of opinion that the claims of the Chisholm patent, No. 421,244, are invalid for want of novelty.”
Judge Gray in his dissenting opinion said:
“I dissent from so much of the foregoing opinion of the majority of the court as relates to patent No. 421,244, granted to Chisholms, for an improvement in the method of hulling peas, and commonly called the ‘podder process.’ I am of opinion that this patent should be sustained as a true invention of a patentable process. Its usefulness cannot be disputed, nor do I think its validity is open to attack. A careful examination of the Faure machine convinces me that it cannot be sustained as an anticipation of the invention of the patent here in suit. I do not find, either in the original patent to Madame Faure nor in the specification and claims of the first addition thereto, any hint of the method of hulling peas by impact.”
In the majority opinion, after reference to certain features in Madame Faure’s French patent and the certificates of addition thereto, and to certain phraseology contained therein and in the article in Ta Nature,
“But, after all, it is a matter of no moment that Madame Faure may not have understood the true theory of the operation. Her opinion is not material. The great fact is that she devised and described a machine for hulling green peas capable of operating by impact and incapable of operating (at least to any considerable extent) in any other way. The organization of the Faure machine and the speed of its beaters are such as to render hulling by abrasion practically impossible. In the nature of the case, the operation of the Faure machine is by impact. This is the principle of the apparatus.”
The counsel for the defendants says in his brief of argument in this case:
“It is admitted that in her original patent, and in her second addition, Madame Faure described her machine as operating by abrasion; and she does not distinctly state in her first certificate of addition whether it operates by abrasion or impact. But she describes the machine with the utmost nicety. If when built and operated according to her directions, it will of necessity hull peas by impact and not otherwise, then it anticipated the patent in suit; if not, not.”
After the decision by the court of appeals of Chisholm v. Johnson certain experiments \frere made in hulling green peas by the “podder” process as tending to throw light upon the disputed point of “abrasion” or “impact” in the operation of the machine of the first certificate of addition to the patent of Madame Faure; it being admitted that the patent now in suit operates solely by impact. The counsel for the defendants refers to these experiments as follows:
“The complainants claim that their experiments prove that the Faure machine operates mainly by abrasion, and only slightly by impact. The defendants claim that their experiments confirm the theory that the Faure machine operates wholly by impact or with only such small per cent of abrasion as may be neglected.”
The experiments above referred to and other proofs in this case, not presented in Chisholm v. Johnson, show, in my judgment, to a moral, if not mathematical, certainty, that, while the machine of the patent in suit operates solely by way of impact, the Faure machine was incapable of hulling green peas by impact except to a comparatively limited extent, and was essentially and distinctively abrasive in its character and operation. There is a general similarity in point of appearance between the Faure machine and the machine of the patent in suit; but with respect to the adjustment and characteristics of the working parts of the two machines, determinative of the nature of the process carried on by them, there are marked and important differences, producing different results. It may be well here briefly to refer to some of these differences. In the machine of the patent in suit, or Chisholm podder, there is a clearance of an inch or more between the tips of the beaters and the faces of the counter-beaters or lifting ribs. In the Faure machine the clearance is only three eights of an inch. By reason of this difference, while green peas can be hulled only by impact in the Chisholm machine, the pods can and necessarily must be abraided in the Faure machine to the extent to which they are caught be
“I find that owing to the fact that this machine, in accordance with the Chisholm patent, is fed only lightly, and owing to the fact that the Chisholm lifting ribs are radially longer than the counter beaters of the Faure machine, no pods will drop down from these lifting ribs between the six o’clock and nine o’clock positions; so that, while the drum is moving during this quadrant, no work is done upon the pods in the quadrant between six o’clock and nine o’clock. In this respect the Chisholm machine and its mode of operation is radically different from the Faure machine. The latter does the bulk of its work in the quadrant between the six and nine o’clock positions, by abrasion, while the former does no work at all within this quadrant.”
The experiments upon which the complainants rely as showing that the Faure machine operates mainly by way of abrasion in the hulling of green peas were made at Hart, Michigan, in July and August, 1902, and extended over a period of more than a month. The Faure machine of the first certificate of addition was reproduced in exact accordance with its drawings and scale, except in one or more minor particulars immaterial to the present discussion. The drum and all the parts inside of it, including beaters and counter-beaters, were identical in size and shape with those of the Faure drawings. The machine was operated at various speeds, sometimes with the beaters and counter-beaters moving in the same direction, and at other times moving in opposite directions; sometimes with the normal clearness of three eighths of an inch between the tips of the beaters and the counter-beaters, and sometimes with an enlargement of the clearance to one inch, so as to correspond with the clearance of the machine of the patent in suit. Among many others, there were ten sets of experiments.
“Proofs are furnished, however, in the present record — which were entirely wanting in the Johnson case — of repeated experiments with a Faure machine, wherein it was practically demonstrated that it was not adapted to perform the patent operation of hulling by impact. While it is true that the resemblance in the general form of the machines is striking, it is obvious from the descriptions given by Madame Faure that she had no conception of the impact method which was discovered by the Chisholms. As it now appears that her device is incapable of its practical performance, I am of opinion that it constitutes no bar to the claims of invention in the Chisholm patent.”
For the foregoing reasons I am satisfied that the claims of the patent in suit are valid and have been infringed by the defendants. A decree for the complainants may be prepared in accordance with this opinion.