221 F. 68 | 9th Cir. | 1915
The plaintiff, Charles Edward Grelle, is the owner and holder of letters patent of the United States No. 43,-33S for an ornamental design for a five-light lamp post. The plaintiff the Independent Foundry Company, of which Grelle is president, is engaged in the manufacture and sale of lamp posts designed in conformity with the patent issued to Grelle, under and by virtue of an exclusive license from Grelle. It is alleged in the bill that the city of Eugene, Or., without the consent of the plaintiffs, and with full knowledge of the issuance to Grelle of the letters patent in suit, procured from the Gross Bros. Iron Works lamp posts the design of which infringed the design patent issued to Grelle; that the city of Eugene thereafter sold one of such lamp posts to the defendant Griggs, a resident of the city of Eugene, and caused the post so sold to be erected on the sidewalk in front of the premises owned by Griggs; that the city of Eugene has, without the consent of the plaintiffs, sold and erected other lamp posts which infringe the design patent owned and held by Grelle; that the city of Eugene, through its water board, is engaged in furnishing electricity for, and is lighting, maintaining, using, and operating such lamp posts, and is profiting by the use and operation thereof; that the defendant Griggs maintained and used the lamp post erected in front of his premises by the city of Eugene, with full knowledge that it was an infringement of the Grelle patent, and in violation of the rights of the plaintiffs in the premises.
The defendants in their answer to the bill set up the usual defenses in cases of this character: First, that the design patent which the plaintiffs claim to have been infringed is not the result of inventive genius, is not novel in any way, would not require the exercise of originality or inventive faculties in designing, was not patentable, and the patent issued to Grelle was therefore void; second, that the posts purchased and erected by the city of Eugene in no respect constituted an infringement of the Grelle patent. Each of these defenses is urged in this court.
[1 ] 1. There is a presumption, of course, in favor of the validity of a patent, and the task of proving its invalidity is imposed by the law upon the party so alleging. In the present case we are of opinion that the defendants have not sustained that burden. The record reveals testimony tending to show that the design of various parts of the Grelle lamp post—the base, the column, and the arms—was not new, and that similar designs had been in use for many years. But it appears from the testimony of the defendants’ own experts that the combination of the various designs as disclosed by Grelle’s post was new. This is the true test. That each separate element in a patented design was old does not negative invention, which may reside in the manner in which they are assembled, since it is the design as a whole, and the impression it makes on the eye, which must be considered. Graff, Washbourne & Dunn v. Webster, 195 Fed. 522, 115 C. C. A
2. The second defense interposed by the defendants—that the lamp posts purchased and erected and operated by the city of Eugene do not infringe the design patent of Grelle—presents a more difficult question. For the purpose of comparison, the posts in controversy are here inserted :
Plaintiffs’ Post Defendants’ Post
For the purpose of this opinion we adopt the descriptions of the lamp posts as set forth in the opinion of the court below. Each consists of a base, a cylindrical column diminishing at the top, a shoulder or head from which four arms extend, and a single light with a globe at the top. The four arms extend from the head or shoulder at an
Y. P. Heusill, a witness for the defendants, described the distinguishing features of the two posts as follows:
“The type ‘S’ post [the Grelle post! has a round base, with more moldings than the city’s post. The type ‘S’ post has a fluted base; the city’s post is square, with a square sunk panel. The type ‘S’ post is more ornate at the base of the shaft than the city’s post. Both posts have fluted columns. Type ‘S’ post has a round cap or head. The city’s post has a square, with sunk panels. The type ‘S’ post is ornamental. There is a difference in the shape of the arms. One is round—the type ‘S’ post is round, increasing to elliptical, while the city post, the arms are square, with a square panel, or with a sunk panel shaped similar to the outline of the arm.”
The learned judge of the court below had before him a lamp post designed in conformity with the specifications of the Grelle design patent, and also a post similar to the posts purchased, erected, and operated by the city of Eugene. We have not been favored with these posts, nor with models thereof. The court below found that the lamp post adopted by the city of Eugene was not an infringement of the Grelle design patent, and, under such circumstances, its finding is entitled to great weight.
[2J The leading case upon the subject of design patents is Gorham v. White, 14 Wall. 511, 20 L. Ed. 731. That was a suit by the plaintiff to enjoin the defendant from manufacturing spoons and forks alleged to infringe the plaintiff’s design patent. The rule was there laid down that the true test of identity of design was the sameness of appearance; (hat mere difference of outline in the drawing or sketch, a greater or smaller number of lines, or slight variations in configuration, if insufficient to change the effect upon the eye, will not destroy the substantial identity; that an engraving which has many lines may present to the eye the same picture, and to the mind the same idea or conception, as another with much fewer lines; that it is not essential to identity of design that the appearance should be the same to the eye of an expert. “If, in the eye of an ordinary observer, giv
There is in this case no testimony tending to show confusion or mistake among purchasers and users of lamp posts manufactured and sold by the plaintiffs, nor is there any testimony of additional sales by the plaintiffs due to the popularity with which the Grelle design was received by the public.
“There is not much chance for originality. The only chance for originality the designer has in designing a post is in the detail.”
There is an additional reason why the defendants’ post should not be held to be an infringement of the Grelle patent. In the decisions which we have cited there were involved alleged infringements of design patents for silverware, ornaments, dishes, lamp shades, and similar articles. There is this distinction between such cases and the case at bar. In those cases the object and purpose of the specific design was to excel in artistry and ornamentation. In the present case it appears from the record that the object of the defendants in adopting the design of post claimed to infringe the Grelle patent was a practical one. The post was designed by Alvin Meyers, superintendent of the Eugene city water board. It appears frdm his testimony that
The plaintiffs lay great stress upon the fact that a cross-section drawing of the Grelle post would be identical with a cross-section drawing of the defendants’ post, and that from such drawings one could not tell whether the posts were square or round. But, as we have pointed out, that is not the true test. It is the appearance to the eye that constitutes mainly, if not entirely, the contribution to the public which the law deems worthy of recompense. Gorham Co. v. White, supra.
The decree of the court below is affirmed.