This is аn appeal from a judgment dismissing a complaint after demurrer had been sustained thereto.
The suit was an action at law for damages for infringement by defendant-appel-lee of United States Patent No. 1,810,826 granted to plaintiff-appellant and covering a “Grease Service Rack.”
The demurrer was based upon several grounds and was sustained generally; but the only ground relied upon by appellee in this court is as follows: “The patent which is the subject matter of the action and which is made a part of the complaint, is void upon its face because * * * it describes and claims a mere aggregation as distinguished from a true combination.”
The object of the alleged invention is thus set out in the specifications: “It is the object of my present invention to provide means whereby a series of generally similar grease dispensing pumps or grease guns, each containing a different specialized lubricant or other fluid required in the servicing of the automobile, may be arranged and kept at hand so that they may be used with the greatest facility, and so that the danger of confusion of the various lubricants is reduced to a minimum. Thus, it is an object of my invention to reduce to a minimum the possibility of applying to any part of the automobile requiring specialized lubrication or requiring some fluid for specialized servicing, any fluid or lubricant other than the appropriate fluid or lubricant required for the particular part, and at the same time to facilitate the quick and easy selection of the required lubricant оr other fluid.”
The first claim of the patent may be taken as typical. It reads as follows: “A specialized lubricating service rack including a series of pump supports, for receiving a series of pumps containing different fluids, a- corresponding series of dispensing pumps mounted upon said supports, a series of indicia upon said rack in juxtaposition to said series of pumр supports, respectively, each indicating a particular part of the automobile requiring a specialized lubrication or service and a series of identification marks upon said pumps, and a corresponding series of identification marks upon said rack in juxtaposition to said pump supports, for identifying each with its particular support and hence with thе particular legend denoting the part of the automobile to which said pump is properly applicable.”
The service rack includes the following elements: (a) A series of pump supports; (b) a corresponding series of dispensing pumps; (c) a series of indicia upon the rack, close to the supports, each mentioning a particular part of the аutomobile requiring specialized lubrication; (d) a series of identification marks upon the pumps; (e) a corresponding series of identification marks upon the rack near the supports for identifying each pump with its particular support.
1. It is apparent that the claim is what is generally known as a combination claim. The real question at issue is whether the combination of elements disclosed by the patent is a “mere aggregation” not subject to patent, or is a “true combination” subject to patent within the provisions of the patent laws; in other words, a patentable combination.
A brief review of some of the pertinent authorities will be helpful.
Hailes v. Van Wormer,
Reckendorfer v. Faber,
Pickering v. McCullough,
Richards v. Chase Elevator Co.,
Grinnell Washing Mach. Co. v. E. E. Johnson Co.,
The court reviews the cases above cited and then proceeds (page 433 of
“Applying the rule thus authoritatively settled by this court, we think no invention is shown in assembling these old elements for the purposes declared. No new function is ‘evolved from this combination’; the new result, so far as one is achieved, is only that which arises from the well-known operation of each one of the elements.
“ * * * So in this instance we think the combination accomplished by Phillips fails to show that exercise of invention, producing a novel and useful result from the co-operating action of the elements, which is essential to distinguish patentable combination from an aggregation of old elements so placed by mechanical skill as to do work more rapidly and economically.”
In American Chocolate Machinery Co. v. Helmstetter (C. C. A.)
The distinction was quoted with approval by this court in Portland Gold Mining Co. v. Hermann,
Moore v. Saunders,
The court also said (page 317 of 247 F.) : “To be sure the new assemblage accomрlishes as an entirety more than either old element did in separate operation, and in a way the elements were, as was said below, ‘successively co-operative.’ But the co-operation was like that of the successive changes of horses in a coach journey from London to Bath. Those out of London, their task done, dropped their burden at Maidеnhead; others picked it up there, and carried it to Newbury; and so on to destination. There was, of course, a ‘successive co-operation’; but in the sense of the patent'law a patentable combination of old elements means more than that.”
Skinner Bros. Belting Co. v. Oil Well Improvements Co. (C. C. A.)
Judge McDermott used an illustrative analogy which is perhaps better than that of the successive changes of horses in a coach journey from London to Bath. He said [page 898 of 54 F.(2d)]: “A rough analogy, that cannot be pressed too far, has repeatedly occurred to me in considering this question. I think of a football team as a combination; one passes, one receives, another blocks, another runs, and still others hold the line. Eleven men are doing different things, each in his own way, and not always simultaneously; yet they are working to a common end, to advance the ball; and they coact as a unit. I think of a track team as an aggregation; one runs, another hurdles, another jumps, am other throws. They all work for a common general end, to amass points for their alma mater; but there is lacking the vital spark of cQ-operation or co-ordination. They work, not as one unit, but as several.”
The same court, speaking by Judge Phillips, in the case of Independent Oil Well Cementing Co. v. Halliburton,
“When the respective individual functions of the elements assembled are not changed and where they produce no result' other then the added results of such functions, there is а mere aggregation of elements. * * *
*610 “When the elements are so united that by their reciprocal influence upon each other, or by their joint action on a common objective, they perform additional functions and accomplish additional results, the union is a true combination. * * *
“The result must be due to the joint and co-operative action of all the elemеnts, not a mere aggregation of the several results of the separate elements acting independently.”
To the same effect are the cases of Beecher Mfg. Co. v. Atwater Mfg. Co.,
In numerous cases, marks or indicia for assistance -and identification have been held not to constitute patentable combinations. Excella Pattern Co. v. McCall Co. (C. C. A.)
To the same effect are the cases of In re Meinecke (Cust. & Pat. App.)
In the light of the teachings of the foregoing authorities, let us examine the patent in the case at bar.
There is no contention that there is co-action between the various subelements that go to make up the elements set out in the claim, e. g., coaction between the support and the grease pump, or between-the grease pump and the legend on the grease rack;
The gist of the invention, if there be invention, is to be found, as stated by counsel for plaintiff, in the “relationship between a series of similar grease-guns, a common rack or holder or support which will hold them all, and car-part indicia adjacent the holders or supports, and markings on the grease-guns and on the holders or supports.” (Italics supplied.) Indeed, each claim sets out as the distinguishing feature the relationship between a series of supports, a series of grease guns, a series of legends, etc.
Multiplicity of unitary elements, however, does not of itself result in invention. There must be something added to the multiplicity in the way of special arrangement or allocation resulting in coaction between the unitary elements before -there can be said to be invention.
But there is no special arrangement or allocation of the unitary elements claimed here. No. 1 grease gun with its support and its accompanying indicia might just as well be No. 8. There is no particular value in the arrangement. Nor is there any co-action between the unitary elements. Drop out any of the grease guns with their supports and accompanying indicia and the other grease guns with their supports and in-dicia will operate and furnish information as before.
There is no co-operative work; each unitary element performs its own work and neither affects, nor is affected by any other unitary element.
The plaintiff’s device is simply another illustration of the use of indicia as an aid in selecting articles that might bе subject to confusion. The carpenter’s cabinet for augur bits, the druggist’s medicine cabinet, the hotel keeper’s rack for room keys are other examples.
The calling of the device an “educational appliance” does not endow it with pat-entability.
2. But plaintiff contends that the question of patentability cannot be determined upon demurrer, but only after a trial involving a hearing upon the facts which may be produced.
That a patent case may be disposed of on demurrer if the circumstances warrant such disposal is well settled. In Richards v. Chase Elevator Co., supra, the court said (page 301 of
This court, in Luten v. Kansas City Bridge Co.,
In the earlier case of Mahler v. Animarium Co.,
Other Circuits are in accord. Friend v. Burnham & Morrill Co.,
In Lange v. McGuin,
In the case at bar, the device of plaintiff is not complex; the specifications of the patent are plain; the claims are easily understood. The complaint, the patent, the fund of “common knowledge of fаcts and principles which is possessed by all persons of average intelligence” was before the trial court upon the demurrer. It, of course, took judicial notice of the statutes relating to patents.
The same information is before this court. We hold that plaintiff’s patent was void on the ground presented to this court, which was one of the grounds presented to the trial court.
We think that the judgment of the trial court was right, and it is, accordingly, affirmed.
