8 F. Cas. 1016 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia | 1859
Having carefully read over the immense mass of testimony in the cause, together with the volu- ' minous arguments of the respective counsel, and also the carefully-prepared reports of the examiner in charge of the special branch of the office to which the claims in question appertain, I shall, without any extended analysis of the arguments or testimony, state the conclusions I have reached. The patent of Allen, issued on the 16th of October, 1857, (No. 18,526,) was for an improvement upon steam-gauges, consisting of the application of a volute spring, as set forth, which increases both in width and thickness from its centre to its circumference, in combination with a disc of rubber or other elastic material, substantially in the manner and for the purposes specified in detail in his specification. The application of Farley is for an improvement in steam-gauges, which consists of “the combination of a coiled spring, tapered regularly both in width and thickness from its periphery to its center, with a steam-tight, flexible diaphragm and an indicator, the whole constituting a pressure-gauge, operating substantially as set forth” in his specification. For-asmuch as steam pressure gauges, before the invention of either party, were well known, embracing the several parts of indicator, coupling box, elastic diaphragm of rubber or other material, and flat, round, coiled, and other-shaped springs, it is manifest that the only point of novelty in either application is the employment of the double-tapered spring in lieu of every other species of spring, and that by reason of its specially correct sensitiveness to the pressure of elastic fluids. It must also be remembered that the double-tap»red spring was not the discovery of either of the contending parties, but was well known and used for other purposes, perhaps so nearly' analogous that it may well be questioned whether its adaptation to a steam-pressure gauge was so far novel as to authorize a patent to anybody. But a patent having been granted to Allen, and not having any jurisdiction to vacate a patent once actually issued, upon an appeal like the present I shall not pursue that inquiry, but for the purposes of this case concede the patentability of his invention. It simply remains to inquire which of these two was the first to apply such' a spring to steam-gauges.
Upon the evidence in the case, it is incon-testible that Farley was the first to make a completed machine including double-tapered spring, elastic diaphragm, coupling box, and Indicator, and that this was effected about the 4th of March, 1857. It is equally true from the testimony that Farley had not endeavored to apply this double-tapered spring to steam-gauges before the middle of February, 1857.
Although the testimony on the part of Allen is in many parts obscure, and its weight greatly impaired by his declarations and conduct subsequent to Farley’s invention,
Should the conclusion I have reached be erroneous, I feel gratified to know that the party injured is not without further remedy, as the sixteenth section of the act of 1836 [5 Stat. 123], taken together with the tenth section of the act of 1839 [5 Stat. 354], open to him the courts of the circuit where the parties live; and there, where the witnesses are known, and every circumstance calculated to elicit the truth is accessible to both parties, ample justice may be obtained.
Now, therefore, I hereby certify to the honorable commissioner of patents that I have, after due notice to the parties, examined and considered the foregoing case, and that the decision of the office, awarding a patent as prayed, to Henry W. Farley, is reversed, and his application for a patent is rejected.