41 App. D.C. 427 | D.C. Cir. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from a decree in the supreme court of the District dismissing appellant’s bill for the infringement of certain letters patent relating to adding machines. Three patents are here involved: Eelt patent No. 586,021, issued September 22, 1896; Eelt patent No. 628,176, issued July 1, 1899; Eelt patent No. 661,121, issued November 6, 1900.
Both here and in the court below the controversy centered around the tabulator patent No. 628,176, the issue as to the other two being submitted upon the briefs. We will therefore first consider this patent. Three claims are involved, claims 1, 2, and 4-, which read as follows:
“1. The combination with the printing mechanism adapted to print two or more characters side by side, of a laterally movable paper carriage, devices for feeding the paper longitudinally mounted in said carriage, and automatic mechanism acting in
“2. The combination with a series of type arranged to print side-by-side devices for impressing the paper upon the type, a laterally movable paper carriage adapted to position the paper for the different columns, feed rolls for moving the paper longitudinally past the type, and means for actuating said rolls, substantially as specified.”
“4. The tabulating machine having in combination a laterally movable paper carriage, means for feeding the paper vertically in any position of the carriage, and mechanism for shifting the carriage laterally the width of a column space, substantially as specified.”
The controversy here, as stated in appellant’s brief, relates “to the feature of providing an adding machine with a laterally movable paper carriage adapted to handle wide sheets of paper, and to print and add thereon a plurality of parallel columns of numbers, instead of just printing a single column of numbers on a long, narrow, continuous roll of paper.” Mr. Felt was the inventor of the computing machine called the “Comptometer,” the patent up6n which was issued in 1887. In 188S he developed from his Comptometer printing-adding machines known as the Roll-Paper Comptographs, which added and printed the numbers in a list on a continuous roll of narrow paper. One of these machines was sold and delivered to a bank in Pitts-burg in 1889. Prior to 1889 Mr. Felt had been in partnership with a Mr. Robert Tarrant and a Mr. De Berard, Mr. Felt being the inventor and Tarrant the financial backer of the partnership. In 1889 the Felt & Tarrant Manufacturing Company, a corporation, was organized with Mr. Felt as president. The stock was divided as follows: Felt 9/16, Tarrant 6/16, and De Berard 1/16. The indebtedness of $12,000 or $14,000 of the old partnership was assumed by the partners according to their respective interests. The stock of the company was issued in payment for special tools, adding machines, parts of adding machines, and the patents owned by the old Felt & Tar-rant partnership. In 1902-the appellant, Comptograph Com
Early in 1890 Mr. Eelt completed the full-sized operative tabulator adding machine introduced in evidence as “Felt’s 1890 Model.” This, appellant insists, was a reduction to practice of the claims of the tabulator patent now under review, and we shall assume that this contention is correct. This machine was operated in the presence of a reporter of the Chicago Tribune, and an article de'seribing the machine in general terms thereafter appeared in that paper. It appears that when Mr. Felt constructed this machine he hoped to have it accepted by the United States Census officials, and early in February he personally exhibited it to them. This attempt of Mr. Felt, however, to have his machine adopted by the Census officials was unsuccessful, and it was taken hack to Chicago, the headquarters of the Felt & Tarrant Company. According to Mr. Felt’s own testimony, Mr. Tarrant, while a minority stockholder, absolutely dominated the policy of the corporation. The reason for this was that he paid all hills of the company and furnished it quarters in his factory. These conditions remained unchanged until some time after the application for this patent was filed, May 33, 1898. In the brief of appellant it is stated: “It is thus apparent that Tarrant, though only a minority stockholder in the Felt & Tarrant Company, entirely controlled Felt and the development of his inventions, and that Felt, being without money, as we will hereinafter show, and unable to secure auy, was bound to submit to Tarrant’s views as to what should he done with the 1890 invention.” Mr. Felt was asked by counsel for appellant to state the attitude of Mr. Tarrant toward the 1890 machine when it was brought hack from the Census Office at Washington, and answered: “He said I mustn’t do anything more with it, and that what time and money we had must be devoted entirely to the machines we then had on the market; namely, the Comptometer and the Comptograph. He seemed to regard me as merely an inventor who had no business judgment, and whenever I wanted to talk about the wide-paper machine to him he treated the subject with contempt, and wouldn’t talk
Mr. Pelt procured a copy of the Hiett patent soon after its issuance, and, while he and a workman by the name of Ziehm testify that just before the issuance of this patent they added a sheet-end warning device or alarm on Felt’s 1890 model, we are not satisfied that this was done, prior to the date of the Hiett patent. Mr. Pelt, testifying several years after the event, says that this device was put on while the application therefor “was being prepared or was pending in the Patent Office,” and, inasmuch as the patent was issued March 16, 1897, he therefore concludes that the work was done prior to the issuance of the Hiett patent. Just why he remembers- that the work was done before rather than after the issuance of the patent he does not explain, and the testimony of the witness Ziehm is even more vague and unsatisfactory. Mr. Pelt testifies that between the construction of this model in 1890 and the time the patent was applied for, he made several efforts to interest other capital in the machine, and that had he succeeded he would have insisted upon an application being made for this alleged invention. He says that he did not have sufficient funds of his own to apply for a patent. But, even if we accept this statement, it does not appear that the idea of filing an application for his own benefit over occurred to him, nor does it appear that he attempted to obtain outside aid to that end.
While, as we have seen,- the Hiett patent, which fully disclosed the issue herein, came out in April, 1897, Pelt’s application was not filed until May 31, 1898, and the application was then filed in behalf of the Pelt & Tarrant Corporation, to which belonged all of Eelt’s inventions. In other, words, the corporation that for a period of eight years had- treated with contempt the alleged invention filed an application covering it
The patent in issue was declared void in Universal Adding Mach. Co. v. Comptograph Co. (present appellant) 77 C. C. A. 227, 146 Fed. 981. Speaking of the Hiett patent the court said: “Indeed, Felt’s only escape from the Hiett patent, as an anticipating device, lies in the claim that though the Felt patent was not applied for until 1898, the idea was conceived and put into process of mechanical development- in 1889 and 1890 * * Assuming that this concept of the patentee was complete when the patent was exhibited to the Census Office in 1890, so as to he practicable and operative, the machine was sufficiently completed to obtain a patent (if the feature were patentable at all) upon the broad feature claimed.” The court found that either the mechanism of 1890 was a mere inoperative and impracticable experiment, and hence supplanted by the Hiett patent, or else, “for the purposes of the broad claims allowed, the mechanism of 1890 was operative and practical, and therefore abandoned or lost through the eight years of inaction that followed.”
It is insisted by appellant that as the issues were made in the above case tlie testimony upon the question of abandonment was not as full as it would otherwise have been, and that in the present case it has been amplified. It does not clearly appear what additional testimony upon this point has been adduced in the present record (Comptograph Co. v. Burroughs Adding Mach. Co. 37 L.R.A.(N.S.) 821, 105 C. C. A. 533, 183 Fed. 321). It is clear, however, that there were sufficient facts before the court upon which to base its finding, and its decision, therefore, is at least persuasive upon the issue here. Brill v. Washington
Upon an examination of the present record, we see no escape from the conclusion that this alleged invention was abandoned. It concededly belonged to the Felt & Tarrant Corporation. That corporation was dominated by Mr. Tarrant. His attitude concededly was the attitude of the corporation. After the failure of Mr. Felt to interest the Census Office officials in the device, Mr. Tarrant peremptorily directed that nothing more be done with it; that thereafter all time and money the company had must be devoted entirely to the machines then on the market. And whenever, thereafter, Mr. Felt “wanted to talk about the wide-paper’ machine to him he treated the subject with contempt.” If this was not “a wilful or negligent postponement” of this alleged invention, within the doctrine of Kendall v. Winsor, 21 How. 322, 16 L. ed. 165; Consolidated Fruit-Jar Co. v. Wright, 94 U. S. 92, 24 L. ed. 68, and other authorities upon this question, it would be difficult to suppose a set of facts constituting such postponement. While the object of the patent laws is through protection to stimulate inventions, of course the fundamental idea is the benefit to be conferred upon the public. This object is too frequently overlooked by inventors. We have said that they may not withhold their improvements from the public until they inay manufacture free from the claims of rival inventors (Hawkins v. Ward, 38 App. D. C. 90), for such a practice would unduly prolong the monopoly. The law permits, but does not compel, an inventor to apply for a patent. “It is the unquestionable right of every inventor to confer gratuitously the benefits of his ingenuity upon the public, and this he may do either by express declaration or by conduct equally significant with language, — such, for instance, as an acquiescence with full knowledge in the use of his invention by others; or he may forfeit his rights as an inventor by a wilful or negligent postponement of his claims.” Kendall v. Winsor, 21 How. 329, 16 L. ed. 168. Here the invention was complete in 1890. It was deliberately cast aside by its owner, the Felt & Tarrant Corporation., This .policy remained unchanged for
Mr. Felt, individually, may have believed in this alleged invention, and, individually, may have entertained no idea of abandoning it; but his personal views on the subject were subordinated to the views of the dominating member of the corporation, Mr. Tarrant, who determined the policy of that corporation. Had Mr. Felt, when he found that his corporation would do nothing with his invention, applied for a patent for his individual benefit, a different case would have been presented, for courts are always desirous of lending a helping hand to a worthy inventor who has been the victim of adverse circumstances. McBerty v. Cook, 16 App. D. C. 133. But here the corporation that had in terms abandoned the invention was the party that attempted to resurrect it. We must therefore hold that tbis patent is void.
We will now examine patent No. 568,021. Tins patent having been issued September 22, 1896, on an application filed June 14, 1895, expired September 22, 1913. Claims 47, 48, 49, and 52 are here involved. These claims relate to so-called delayed transfer or carrying mechanism. An adding counter contains several adding wheels for units, dimes, dollars, etc., hearing on their peripheries numbers from 0 to 9. When the unit wheel has moved through nine spaces the addition of one unit
“47. The combination with tire carrying levers and their latches, of devices for moving the levers into position for carrying, such devices being also retracted partially immediately after thus moving the levers released from the latches to escape re-engagement therewith, substantially as specified.”
It is contended by appellee that this claim is met in the prior patents to Wythe, No. 445,582, February 3,1891, and Ilopkins, No. 517,383, March 27, 1894, the filing date of the latter patent.being October 4, 1892. An examination of claim 47 discloses three essential elements: First, a lever adapted to move the numeral wheel in a carrying operation; second, a detent to prevent the operation of such lever, and which in turn is controlled by the position of the numeral wheel of the next lower order;. and, third, means to restrain the carrying lever from performing its function after it has been tripped by the withdrawal of. the detent until the primary actuators have ceased their movements.
Turning to the Hopkins’ patent, the carrying levers are clearly shown in Fig. 51 at 354. Their latches are shown at 360. In Fig. 53 the carrying lever is shown in its raised position and locked by the latch 360, which engages pin 361 attached to the lever. The lever was moved to a locked position by the arm 391. There is a partial retraction of this arm after moving the lever as called for by the claims. While the claim ends here, the arm 391, as shown in Fig. 2, has moved to the third position, leaving the carrying lever 354 to engage the numeral arm, thus effecting the carrying operation.
Claim 48 differs from claim 47 only in requiring “a cam device for controlling the movement of said devices for moving '• the levers.” This cam device is found in Fig. 24 of the Hopkins
We are clearly of tlxe opinion that these claims were anticipated by the Hopkins patent. It is unnecessary, therefore, to consider the other references.
We now consider patent No. 661,121, Avhich is the narrowest of all and relates to the type hammers of the printing mechanism of the machine. The supposed novelty of the claims resides in making the hammers Avhich co-operate with the type segments of the printing mechanism in two parts, hinged together by a piA'ot, then applying the actuating poAver to the wheel member and putting a stop in the path of movement of such member, so as to arrest it before the striking part reaches the paper. The claims are four in number, 37, 38, 39, and 40. 37 and 40 read as folloAvs:
“37. The calculating machine, having type and hammers for pressing the paper against the type, said hammers having hinged heads, made separate from the bodies, actuating springs attached to the beads, and means for arresting the heads before the hammers can make the impressions, substantially as specified-” 1
. “40. In a machine for printing numbers, a printing hammer made in two parts and hinged together, one part receiving the actuating power and imparting it to the other, and being itself arrested before the making of the impression, substantially as specified.”
Counts 38 and 39 do not differ materially from count 37. In Mr. Felt’s specification he directs attention to his prior patents and to the fact that his hammers differ from those pre
The decree will therefore be affirmed, with costs.
Affirmed.
A motion by the appellant‘for a'reargument was overruled March 2. 1914.