72 F. 173 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan | 1896
The proofs in the cause fail to establish any individual liability for the matters charged in the bill upon Mr. Marvin, the individual defendant, and it is practically conceded that it should he dismissed as to him.
The defenses to the charge of infringement are: (1) That the
The second of these defenses it is 'not necessary to discuss.
It is not claimed that the lubricator described in the letters patent is a pioneer invention,, and it is clear that, in its general appearance and the principle of its operation, it strongly resembles, if it is not identical with, prior devices, for some of which Craig had obtained patents, and from several of which he had taken parts, and brought them into a combination which he claims is patentable. Lubricators of this general type have been so often the subject-matter of litigation within the last 20 years that it is unnecessary to enter, into a full description of the patented and alleged infringing devices. The induct pipe, the educt pipe, the condenser, the oil reservoir, the sight-feed, the glass tube and observation chamber, and up-drop and down-drop, and an equalizing pipe connecting the steam delivery with the oil exit, are-old. In this condition of the art, the first question is, has Craig added to it, either by a new and meritorious combination of familiar parts or the. addition of a new feature to mechanism in use? Craig’s departure from previous manufactures consists in locating the pipe which connects the steam inlet and oil exit within the condenser in a straight line between the two, instead of placing it outside of the lubricator, as in previous constructions. That this is the extent of his improvement under the letters patent sued upon is clear from their specification, which, after a general description of the device, states:
“The above-described lubricator is essentially like that exhibited in letters patent No. 277,464, dated May 15, 1883, and granted to me. I have made additions to it for the object or purpose hereinbefore mentioned; that is to say, I have provided the condenser with a pipe or conduit, p, to lead from it to the boiler, in order to conduct steam from the boiler into the condenser, such pipe having in it a stopcock, q.”
Seibert, in 1876, Baker, in 1880, Harvey, in 1881, and Holland, in 1882, employed this pipe externally for the same purpose. There could be no invention in this arrangement of parts, which, upon Craig’s own admissions, constitutes the sole feature which distinguishes his last from former patented devices. ’
The prior patent to Craig is as effectual to avoid the latter as' if issued to another. James v. Campbell, 104 U. S. 356; Roller-Mill Co. v. Coombs, 39 Fed. 25, 38. The patent sued upon seems to me clearly void for want of invention in view of the state of the art, and the limitation which the inventor has imposed upon himself in his specification as to the nature and extent of his improvement.
2. But the magnitude of the interests involved compels the consideration of other defenses presented, which, whatever opinion may
Craig took no appeal from the rulings of, the patent office restricting him to the location of the pipe g within the condenser. He was, however’, permitted to describe it as located “wholly within the lines of the lubricator,” instead of designating its position in terms as “within the condenser”; but in the light of the history of his application, as disclosed by the file wrapper, his own construction of his claims. before the examiner of interferences, and upon his successive appeals' to the examiners in chief and the acting commissioner, and exhibited in the drawings and specifications submitted in support of his application, which excluded the form of construction now claimed to be covered by his patent, the phrases “within the lines of the lubricator” and “within the condenser” must be held mérely equivalent expressions, which restricted him to the very arrangement of parts which his application described and delineated. Morgan Envelope Co. v. Albany Paper Co., 152 U. S. 425, 14 Sup. Ct. 627; Sargent v. Lock Co., 114 U. S. 63, 5 Sup. Ct. 1021; Roemer v. Peddie, 132 U. S. 313, 10 Sup. Ct. 98; J. L. Mott Iron Works v. Standard Manuf’g Co., 4 C. C. A. 28, 53 Fed. 819; Temple Pump Co. v. Goss Pump, etc., Co., 7 C. C. A. 174, 58 Fed. 196; Williams v. Shoe Co., 49 Fed. 245; Shaw Stocking Co. v. Pearson, 48 Feu. 234. To hold otherwise would be to give to the preferred form of expression a scope and elasticity which entirely contravene the construction which Craig accepted as the condition of his grant. Moreover, the second claim of the patent locates the conduit g “wholly within the lines of the lubricator”; and the phrase “as set forth,” at the close of that and claims 4, 5, 6, and 7, by necessary implication, refers to the construction described in the specification, and qualifies each claim. It makes interior location of that pipe not merely a preferred form of construction, but the sole form permissible under the patent. Corn-Planter Patent, 23 Wall. 181, 218; Brown v. Davis, 116 U. S. 237, 251, 6 Sup. Ct. 379; Burr v. Duryee, 1 Wall. 579, 581. He cannot now obtain by construction what the patent office repeatedly denied, nor can he evade his own limitations upon his claims. His patent cannot thus be enlarged. Burns v. Meyer, 100 U. S. 671. Manufacturing Co. v. James, 125 U. S. 447, 463, 8 Sup. Ct. 967; Railroad Co. v. Mellon, 104 U. S. 112, 118.
Despite these rulings, it is argued in Craig’s behalf that he is entitled to a broad construction of the patent, and should have the benefit, as against infringers, of the doctrine of equivalents. Waiving the assumption that his patent has been infringed, its character repels this pretension. The" principle is well settled that “wliei-t an invention is one of a primary character, and the mechanical functions performed by the machine are, as a whole, entirely
“But if tlio invention claimed be itself but an improvement on a know* machine by a mere changing of form or combination of parts, the patentee cannot treat another as an infringer who has improved the original machine by use of a different form or combination performing the same functions. The inventor of the first improvement cannot invoke the doctrine of equivalents to suppress all other improvements which are not mere colorable evasions of the first.”
This doctrine is stated still more positively in Knapp v. Morss, 150 U. S. 221, 230, 14 Sup. Ct. 81, where Mr. Justice Jackson, delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“If the Hall patent was a valid pioneer invention, the doctrine of equivalents might be inyoked with regard to the sliding blocks and rests, and thus a different question would be raised; but, being confined to the specific elements enumerated by letters of reference, it is neither entitled to a broad construction, nor can any doctrine of equivalents be invoked so as to make the appellant’s device an infringement of the second claim in controversy.”
See, also, Wright v. Yuengling, 155 U. S. 47, 52, 15 Sup. Ct. 1; Boyd v. Hay-Tool Co., 158 U. S. 260, 15 Sup. Ct. 837.
This rule must be applied to the Craig patent in view of the state of the art as evidenced notably by the prior patents granted to complainant, one of which confessedly is essentially reproduced with but a trifling variation, which was known and used by earlier inventors, whose devices long anticipated those of Craig. If any additional consideration were needed to confirm the construction herein given to the words “within the lines of the lubricator,” it is found in the testimony of defendant’s expert, Jesse Smith, who well says that, “if the claims of the Craig patent are to be construed broadly, * * * so as to cover the defendant’s device, it will also cover the device of the Mitchell patent as well as the device of the Clark patent:, both of which are wholly within the Craig invention.” The same may be said of the Seibert patent, which long antedated Craig’s cup.
It is urged by defendants with much force that all of the claims here sued upon would be directly infringed by a lubricator constructed under letters patent No. 340,486, issued to Craig May 20, 1886, which under the case of Miller v. Manufacturing Co., 151 U. S. 186, 14 Sup. Ct. 310, avoids the patent of February 26, 1889, or, at. least, limits its novelty to the precise construction which it describes. Without deciding that the last patent is invalid because all of its claims might have been made in that of 1886, the claims and essential features of the lubricator in the earlier patent constitute a strong argument for the strict construction of the so-called
3. Was there a public use or sale of Craig’s cup two years before his application for the patent therefor? Hodges & McCoy’s patent for locomotive lubricator bears date November 18, 1884. Their application was filed September 30, 1884. Craig’s application was filed June 1, 1885. In order to successfully meet the issue upon the interference, it was necessary for Craig to carry his invention back of September 30, 1884, the date of the Hodges & McCoy application. The issue in' controversy between these parties was defined by the examiner of interferences in his decision of March 12, 1887, as follows:
“The combination of a lubricator provided with a sight-feed or observation chamber in which oil rises through water in its passage to the discharging conduit for leading such oil to the part or parts of the engine to be lubricated, with a conduit to lead steam from the boiler into the condenser of such lubricator, a.nd with another conduit within and to lead steam from such condenser into the said oil-discharging conduit.”
Craig testified that he conceived the invention in issue in the latter part of 1882. His idea and aim were to make “a lubricator that could be adopted for use in an ordinary stationary engine, and one that could also be adapted for use upon an engine when there were differential pressures to guard against.” He says that he completed such a lubricator in February, 1883. In support of this claim, he put in evidence, before the examiner, a drawing which he states was made October 5,1882, showing a device capable of being-made to embody the issue by the removal of a plug at the top of the condenser chamber, and the substitution therefor of a pipe connection with the boiler or steam pipe. He states that for the invention he obtained letters patent No. 281,241, July 7, 1883, on an application filed June 13th of that year. The lubricator of this patent and that of No. 277,264, he testifies, operate upon substantially the same principles. It will also be remembered that he admits the essential similarity of that patent to the one here sued upon, the difference between them, as above remarked, consisting in the addition of the pipe or conduit p to lead from the condenser to the boiler, in order to conduct steam from the boiler to the condenser. In support of this contention that he had completed in January or February, 1883, the lubricator upon which the issue was joined, he put in evidence the bills for work done thereon by parties whom he had employed in its construction. He satisfied the examiner that he had perfected and reduced it to practice in March, 1883, and operated it upon the Pillsbury engine at Lawrence, Mass.; and, on the evidence, the commissioner awarded him priority of invention, affirming not only his conception of the device, but its actual reduction to practice.
In this condition of the proofs, the examiner in chief, to whom Craig had brought the issue by appeal, held that the earliest date which could be assigned to Craig for the conception and disclosure of this invention was June 1, 1885, when he filed his application. The file wrapper shows that the first presentation in the patent
Craig’s position here is as clearly incongruous as that taken in the patent office. To make good his claim to invention, he insists that he completed and reduced to practice on the Pillsbury engine a device embodying- his invention as early as March 13, 1883. To meet the defense that Ms alleged invention had been in public use and on sale more than two years before his application for a patent, he denies that the cup put on the Pillsbury engine contained the invention here claimed, because the interior pipe was plugged and functionless on the stationary engine. The fact, if it be a fact, that, after his cup had been in successful use for three weeks with its interior pipe open, Craig closed that pipe, in search of a different device, and that, thus changed, the lubricator was thereafter used by his vendee, does not avoid the effect of the first use. The article sold embodied both inventions, if he had two, and was sold without restriction or condition. There was nothing in the transaction which limited Finsbury’s use of it, with or without the plug. Piere is no evidence that Pillsbury knew of the change. Had he removed the plug, and used the cup as a double connection lubricator, he could not have been held an infringer. He had not bargained for the device which Craig’s experiment might develop,but for that which he commended as his finished production. It became his property absolutely. It was a sale of the device in the course of Craig’s business as a manufacturer. A conditional sale or a sale on approval as an offer to sell makes the device “on sale,” within section 4886. Henry v. Francestown Co., 2 Fed. 78; Kells v. McKenzie, 9 Fed. 284; Lyman v. Maypole, 19 Fed. 735. In order to constitute a public use of invention, it is not necessary that more than one of Che patented articles should he publicly used. “One well-defined case of such use is just as effectual to annul the patent, as many.” McClurg v. Kingsland, 1 How. 202; Fruit-Jar Co. v. Wright, 94 U. S. 92; Worley v. Tobacco Co., 104 U. S. 340; Egbert v. Lippman, 104 U. S. 333; Manufacturing Co. v. Sprague, 123 U. S. 249, 257, 8 Sup. Ct. 122.
In Egbert v. lippinan, supra, it is said, by way of illustration:
“Nor instance, if the inventor of a mower, a printing press, or a railway car makes and sells only one of the articles invented by him, and allows''the vendor to use it for two years without restriction or limitation, the use is just as public as if he had sold or allowed the use of a great number.”
In Elizabeth v. Pavement Co., 97 U. S. 126, it is said that while abandonment of the invention to the public will not necessarily follow its public use or sale within two years before the inventor’s application, “yet if the invention is in public use or on sale prior to that time, it will be conclusive evidence of abandonment, and the patent will be void.”
The rule of judgment applied to cases where the question of public use arises is stated in Manufacturing Co. v. Sprague, 123 U. S. 249, 8 Sup. Ct. 122, as follows:
“In considering the evidence as to alleged prior use for more than two years of an invention, which, if established, will have the effect of invalidating the patent, and where the defense is met only by the allegation that the use was not a public use in the sense of the statute, because it was for the purpose of perfecting an incomplete invention by tests and experiments, the proof on the part of the patentee, the period covered by the use having been clearly established, should be full, unequivocal, and convincing.”
The condition imposed by section 4S86, Rev. St. U. S., does not require for the defeat of a patent, because of the sale or use of its subject-matter with the inventor’s consent two years prior to his application, that such sale or use must have been continued during all that period. It is enough if the inventor has sold an article or permitted its use without restriction at any time over two years before he applied for a patent. Andrews v. Hovey, 128 U. S. 267, 274, 8 Sup. Ct. 101; Id., 124 U. S. 694, 719, 8 Sup. Ct. 676; Egbert v. Lippmann, 15 Blatchf. 295, Fed. Cas. No. 4,306.
The object of section 4886, which before the revision of the statutes was section 24 of the act of 1870, as said by Mr. Justice Blatchford in Andrews v. Hovey, supra, was to “require tbie inventor to see to it that he filed his application within two years from the completion of his invention, so as to cut off all question as to the defeat of his patent by the use or sale of it by others more than two years prior to his application, and thus leave open only the question of the priority of invention.” Under these rulings and under the proofs in this case, it is clear that there was such a public use and sale of the Craig lubricator as to avoid his patent.
For these reasons, without discussing other questions, the bill must be dismissed, with costs.