110 F. 402 | 3rd Cir. | 1901
The petition for rehearing states: “We should not trouble the court with the motion for rehearing were we not convinced, from many careful readings of the opinion, that the court overlooked a certain press of whose existence there is no dispute, and certain earlier patents,” etc. The press here referred to is the Cleveland Leader press. That press was not overlooked, and we are at some pains to call attention to the careful language used, which, while not mentioning such press by name, wholly differentiates it from Firm’s device, and shows that it, could not infringe,'and did not anticipate, such device. It was not, therefore, specifically referred to in the opinion. Not only was particular attention called to the circumferential page-form heading in the Globe press: viz. “In the main press, a four-plate wide web was printed on both sides, four pages abreast, the column rules running around the cylinders ; consequently the printed columns were parallel with the web sidesbut circumferential page-form heading was pointed out as one of the features of Firm’s device. “It will be noted,” says the opinion, “that in this device the page forms are all headed cir-cumferentially, and in the same direction around the form cylinders; that the webs move in the same vertical plane along ultimately converging paths. The. same vertical plane intersects the central longitudinal margin of all the webs on any. line parallel therewith, from the time'the webs leave their respective rolls to the point where they converge, printed and registered. It is this feature that gives such a type of press in the art the name'‘straight line’ or ‘straight run,’ as distinguished from ‘angle bar,’ or presses where the web is deflected and transferred to a different vertical plane.” The “type of press” could only refer to one (and the language could have no other meaning), where, as noted, “the page forms are all headed circumferen-tially.” Having thus noted that the feature of circumferential heading existed in the Globe Democrat, and was an element of Firm’s claim, the opinion showed that the advance made by Firm was in eliminating the angle bars, not from every type of press, but from one having circumferential page-form heading. Thus the court, says: “But .Firm conceived the idea of printing his whole paper by the same simple, straight-ahead method, so followed by one of the Globe webs.” Now the method followed in printing the web' in the Globe
“The Nicholls provisional specifications, filed in the British patent office July 14, 1870, and January 12, 1871, while strongly suggestive of the combinations of claim 7 of patent No. 415,321 and claim 6 of patent No. 410,271, cannot he held to have anticipated them, whatever may have been the effect of those specifications on the state of the prior art.”
In our opinion we say:
“We are then brought to the question whether the combination here shown was novel, useful, and patentable. That it was novel, the court below found, and our research in the art leads us to the same conclusion.”
It will thus be seen while they were not referred to by us by name, they were by reference. We may add, however, that in them only general language was used, and an intent announced by the patentee to occupy a general field. But such paper intent never materialized in plans or specifications. On the important element of form heading no light is thrown. Within the scope of the general language used, opposing experts have constructed widely different types of presses. If the light thrown by Nicholls’ provisional specifications on the art 30 years ago met the test laid down by the court in reference to a prior foreign patent, that it must be “sufficient to enable-those skilled in the art to understand the nature and operation of the invention, and to carry it into practical use,” and “that it must be an account of a complete and operative invention, capable of being put into practical operation” (Seymour v. Osborn, 11 Wall. 516, 20 L. Ed. 33), it is inconceivable that the device sup-o-ested would not have been seized upon in the 20 odd years ensuing before Firm’s patent, and embodied in a practical press. The fact that it did not so instruct press builders proves the disclosures were not sufficient to so instruct. “Whatever,” says the court in Seymour v. Osborn, quoted above, “may be the particular circumstances under which the publication takes place, the account published, to be of any effect to support such a defense, must be an account of a complete and operative invention, capable of being put into practical operation.” In closing we deem it proper to say that in view <of the size to which oftentimes in patent cases the zeal of counsel and the ingenuity of experts unduly swell records and briefs, so called (in this case the record contained 2,200 pages and one of the briefs 484 pages), it is not to be expected that courts, and especially appellate ones, will follow the lead thus