142 F. 539 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illnois | 1906
On May 31, 1898, Dorr E. Felt filed his application for letters patent for a tabulating machine, and a patent therefor, No. 628,176 issued to him July 4, 1899. Complainant, the present owner of said patent by assignment, brings this suit to enjoin infringement of claims 1, 2, and 4 of said patent and for an accounting. Defendant’s answer, as originally filed, denies infringement, and denies the validity of the claims in suit. By amendment to the answer there are set up the further defenses of public use that the subject-matter of the claims was placed on sale more than two-years prior to the application for the patent; that the invention was disclosed in a printed -publication more than two years prior to the said application; that the invention was abandoned. The" cause is before the court on final hearing.
The claims of said patent here under consideration are 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 any position of the carriage to actuate said feeding-devices in the line-spacing movements, substantially as specified.
“(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 saidl 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 specification of the patent so far as the same needs to be recited reads:
“This invention relates to the construction of calculating machines adapted-to both add numbers and to print and tabulate the numbers as they are added, together with the sums of the numbers. My endeavor therein has been to adapt such machines to use with paper in sheet or short length form as distinguished from roil or continuous-length paper; also, to permit the printing upon the paper of a plurality of columns or vertical rows of numbers by providing it with a laterally-shifting- paper carriage and with mechanism adapted also to feed the paper vertically at each printing operation. The machine embodies the usual numeral-wheels and their operating devices — • such, for instance, as those shown in Patent No. 568,021 granted to me September 22, 1896. The wheels are not shown in the drawings; but the setting keys are indicated at 2 2, the segment-levers for rotating the wheels at 3, the vibrating frame whereby the keys are attached to and enabled to regulate the operation of said levers at 4, the crank supporting said frame at 5, the-*541 ■spring for lifting the vibrating frame at 6, the main cam at 7, wherefrom most of the operating parts of the machine derive power, and the pivot upon which the cam oscillates at 8.
All the parts above enumerated are either in my patent or in my pending application, Serial No. 679,461, filed May 2, 1898, and, as will be understood from the patent, they are adapted to enable the operator to preliminarily set ■the type side by side necessary to print any amount coming within the capacity of the machine, whether it embraces one figure or several figures.
The machine is provided with a paper carriage adapted to be moved laterally whenever it is desired to start the printing of a fresh vertical column' •or row of numbers.”
The record discloses that computing machines capable of performing arithmetical operations and printing the same upon a narrow continuous roll of paper were old. The pioneer patent for such machine was granted to W. S. Burroughs, August 21, 1888, and was followed by a subsequent patent to Burroughs in 1890, and one to Felt, the ■assignor of the patent in suit, the same year. The purpose of the patent here involved, among other things, was to substitute for the fixed feed roll of the prior machine a laterally movable paper carriage and means for positioning the same for column printing, so that •a number of columns of figures could be printed by the computing machine on a short wide sheet of paper instead of the continuous ■single column printing of the machine of the prior art, the change to be effected without in any way interfering with the computing mechanism of the machine. Or to express the change effected somewhat differently, by the means indicated in the patent, the listing computer was transformed into a tabulating computer.
The three claims which are directed substantially to the same device embrace the following elements: (1) Printing mechanism adapted to print two or more characters side by side. (2) A laterally movable paper carriage. (3) Devices for feeding the paper longitudinally mounted in the carriage. (4) Means for actuating the feed rolls, acting in any position of the carriage for line spacing. (5) Devices for impressing the paper upon the type. (6) Mechanism for shifting the ■carriage laterally the width of a column space.
Defendant does not seriously deny that if the said claims are valid, its machine is an infringement thereof, but insists that if said claims are construed broadly enough to read upon its device, then they are invalid in view of the prior art. Twenty-two patents are cited by defendant as showing the state of the art at the time of the application for the patent in suit. Of these,/ two, the Hiett patent of 1897 and the Pike patent of 1897, are within the statutory limit of two years of the filing of Felt’s application. The remaining references divide themselves into two classes: (1) Devices having coincident printing action as the ordinary typewriter; and (2) devices having side by ■side printing action. It is unnecessary to analyze these various patents, for the record is most full in this respect, the experts called by the respective parties to the cause having detailed at length the features of the structures claimed therein. The point of divergence between the •experts for the respective parties is not as to the construction of these prior art patents, but as to the interpretation of the claims in suit, in reaching their conclusions as to whether said patents are an
It appears from the record, that Felt in 1890 completed a machine embodying the invention disclosed in said claims in suit. In February of that year, he took the machine to the Census Office in Washington where under arrangement with the Superintendent of Census, it was used in that office for the purpose of determining its efficiency in census record tabulation. Felt testifies that said model was used in the Census Office for a period not exceeding one week, and during that time it was operated by clerks in the Census Office. He further testifies that while said machine was being so used, he offered to build machines similar to the model for sale to the Census Bureau. Ho order for the building of such machines was given to Felt, nor did the Census Bureau indicate to him the reason for their failure to piace an order. This as said above, was in February, 1890. Thereupon Felt went to work upon other features of the machine, which he testifies he considered necessary to perfect the machine before it was placed upon the market, which features are the subject-matter of claims of the Felt patent not here in- issue. So far as the features of the machine embraced within claims 1, 2, and 4 are concerned, they were in nowise changed from the time of their reduction to practice, as disclosed in the model of 1890 to the time of the application for the patent in 1898. On January 12, 1890, ¿here appeared in the Chicago Tribune an article concerning Felt’s model, together with a sketch of the exterior of the machine, reciting in a general way the results accomplished by the comptograph and referring to the census test about to be made. The above facts, defendant insists, work a forfeiture of the patent, and moreover show an abandonment of the subject-matter of the invention. It seems clear that these facts do not sustain the defense of disclosure by publication within the meaning of section 4886 of the Revised Statutes [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3382]. It was said by the Supreme Court in the case of Cohn v. United States Corset Co., 93 U. S. 366, on page 370, 23 L. Ed. 907:
“It must be admitted that, unless the earlier printed and published description does exhibit the later patented invention in such a full and intelligible manner as to enable persons skilled in the art to which the invention is related to comprehend it without assistance from the patent, or to make-it, or repeat the process claimed, it is insufficient to invalidate the patent.’’
And to the same effect are Seymour v. Osborne, 11 Wall. 516, 20 L. Ed. 33; Tilghman v. Proctor, 102 U. S. 707, 23 L. Ed. 279.
It seems satisfactorily established that complainant’s model of 1890-when produced before the Census Bureau covered all the issues involved in the claims in suit. To all intents and purposes for this proceeding, it -was complete. All that he did toward perfecting it, was the addition of certain mechanical appliances not covered by claims 1, 2, and 4. This cannot be called perfecting the device. In fact
The character of the use of an invention, as to whether it was experimental or public, is often difficult to determine, and the line which marks the end of legitimate experimental use and the beginning of that public use of a device from which the law raises a presumption •of a surrender of the inventor’s rights' therein to the public, necessarily •cannot remain fixed, but must vary with the facts of each case. In the case at bar, the alleged public use occurred more than 15 years ago, and the testimony in regard thereto is that of Felt alone. It appears that the model machine of 1890 was made with the idea on Felt’s part of its adaptability to and use in census work, and it was taken there and used, presumably in a public way. Felt was sufficiently satisfied with his machine after a test thereof to offer to build and sell similar machines to the Bureau. Why this offer was not accepted, whether such failure was due to inherent defects in the model exhibited in the judgment of the officials, or whether the price asked was too high, is left to conjecture. The record is silent. Felt claims the test was experimental and demonstrated to him vital shortcomings in the device, which had to be remedied before he had a marketable machiné. He is the only witness called as to the transaction. While his declaration to the effect the use of the device as ■experimental would not avail if the record clearly disclosed a public use thereof, yet the facts as here disclosed are entirely consistent with such explanation, and the doubt should be resolved in patentee’s favor.
There remains to be considered the one other defense, that, because of his failure to apply for a patent until 1898, Felt must be held to have abandoned his invention. It is true that there was no change made, so far as concerns the features of the device covered by the ■claims in suit, from the 1890 model. Meanwhile, but within two years prior to the Felt application, and therefore not a bar to the Felt patent, there were issued the Hiett and Pike patents, which show computing machines with laterally movable paper carriages, under one ■of which, the Hiett, defendant claims to operate. A court might perhaps be justified in holding that Felt’s delay of eight years in applying for a patent, almost two years after others had made practically the same discovery, constituted laches, in a case where intervening rights were of such a character that to hold otherwise would work serious wrong. The record before the court discloses nothing of that character. It appears that defendant had made no considerable outlays prior to the filing of complainant’s application. Certainly no one should be permitted to avail himself of that defense as against an
“The law does not favor forfeiture, and, It being a question of fact whether there has been abandonment, all reasonable doubts must be resolved in favor of the patent.”
Upon the facts before the court, this defense must likewise be overruled. The bill may be dismissed as to Reuben E. Spangler, the sales agent in Chicago for the Universal Accountant Machine Company, joined as a defendant in this action. No showing has been made against him. It was not necessary to join the American Arithmometer Company, sole licensee under the Felt patent, as party complainant herein. Section 400 of Walker on Patents, to that effect, is not borne out by the authorities cited.. In cases where the licensee has sought to maintain an action for infringement in his own name, the courts have held that the action must be brought in the name of the owner of the patent, or the owner of the patent must be joined in the suit. Waterman v. Mackenzie, 138 U. S. 252, 11 Sup. Ct. 334, 34 L. Ed. 923. I know of no authority that requires that the owner of a patent must join his licensee as party complainant.
Complainant may prepare a decree in accordance herewith.