43 F. 437 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Pennsylvania | 1890
The defendants are charged with the infringement of letters patent No. 248,277, for an improvement in reversing gear for steam-engines, granted to Frank L. Bliss, October 18, 1881, upon an application filed March 8, 1881, the title to which letters patent became vested in the plaintiffs by assignment from the patentee, dated January 22, 1887. The specification states that the invention is especially applicable to engines employed in drilling and pumping oil-wells. These engines, the proofs show, are operated under peculiar conditions. The engine is necessarily located at a distance, usually about 70 feet, from the derrick, where the operator is required to be. Jn practice, an engineer is not employed, but the driller standing in the derrick handles tho engine. It is very important that the engine should be at all times under his ready control, as it is often necessary that it be instantly stopped, or its motion reversed. In oil operations, such engines are moved from place to place, and they do not sit upon permanent or solid
“I suppose there have been more time and money spent on reverse gears for oil-engines, which seemed to be the easiest thing to make, but seemed to be the hardest thing to accomplish, of any machinery in the oil territory.”
' This is bj no means an overstatement. The problem was not solved until Bliss perfected his reversing gear, the great merits of which are now universally recognized by oil operators. Bliss’ invention permits the use of a rod, or other positively acting instrumentality, operating from-the derrick to start, reverse, stop, or slow the engine, and yet obviates all the objections incident to a rigid connecting mechanism, and dispenses with all locking devices. To this end, he employs an actuating lever, in the form of an elbow, or letter L, placed on the engine-bed. This, lever and the reversing link are not rigidly, but flexibly, connected. The-lever rests on a stop on'the engine bed, and is joined to the link by a slotted lifting-bar, so that the continual vibration of the link is not transmitted to the lever, but is taken up as loose or idle motion 'by the slot. The slotted connection and stop take all jar or vibration from the lever when at rest on the stop. The reversing link is then practically disconnected from the lever. In other w'ords, when the reversing gear is not in actual use, it is practically disconnected from the engine. The specification of the patent describes a rod, which may be composed of sections of gas-pipe coupled together, connected with the upright arm of the-actuating lever, and extending to any desired point, for enabling the operator to control the reversing gear at any required distance from the-engine. “Under this arrangement,” says the specification, “it will be-seen that the link, D, can be given a positive movement in either direction, whether for reversing the engine or for throwing it out of action, by bringing the link midway of its throw .upon the swiveling block, and thus
“ The elbow lever and. link having a slotted connection with the link, I), in combination with the stop, or set-screw, for relieving the lever from the vibration due to the movement of said link, D, substantially as described. ”
Before proceeding to the question of infringement, and the defense of noil-infringement, three other defenses made to this suit will bo considered in their natural order.
1. It is alleged by the defendants that reversing gear, which embodied the invention claimed in the patent in suit, was in prior public use in the year 1878, on the steam-boat Shirley Belle, a small boat which plied the upper waters of the Allegheny river at or near Warren, Pa., for a. few months, hut which was blown up by the explosion of the boiler in the fall of that year. To sustain this defense, the defendants examined three witnesses, all of whom speak from mere memory, after the lapse of 11 years, and who differ among themselves very much in their recollection. The principal one of those witnesses is Robert Mackey, the defendants’ foreman, under whose patent, granted in 1888, they manufacture the alleged infringing devices. He states that there were two engines on the Bhirley Belle, and that ho made two sets of reversing gear for the boat, and that one was placed on each engine; but who assisted him in the work or applied the devices to the boat he cannot tell. They were put on, he thinks, about a month or six weeks before the boat blew up. He produces a sketch, recently made from memory, for the purposes of this case, which shows a construction almost identical with what is disclosed in Bliss’ patent, as illustrating the reversing gear he made for the Bhirley Bello. The other two of said witnesses, however, testify positively that the boat only had one engine and one set of reversing gear, and this contradiction of itself tends to the discredit of Mackey’s testimony. Fred Bhirley, the defendants’ second witness under this head, acted both as fireman and engineer on the boat until the day before the explosion; and, according to his recollection and description of the reversing gear, the elbow lever and lifting-bar had neither slot nor stop, and the lever vibrated. Anson Ji. Bhirley, the defendants’ other witness upon this point, describes the slot as in the lifting-bar, and not in the elbow lever, as Mackey states it was, and he neither describes, nor mentions at all, a stop. Ho does speak (and he alone of all the witnesses) of a little plate on the top of the steam-chest, “to hold the lever when it was to work;” but, according to Mackey, the stop was bolted on the frame of the engine bod, and, as we have already seen, the stop is used as a rest for the lever when not at work. These three witnesses otherwise differ in matters of detail, and, upon the whole, their testimony is unsatisfactory, and inconclusive. On the side of the plaintiffs, Moses B. Shirley, who was a fireman on the Shirley Belle at the time of the explosion, and for several months before; squarely contradicts Mackey, and also Anson H. Shirley, as to the construction and mode of operation of the reversing gear used on the boat; and, according to a
2. It is contended by the defendants that, in view of the prior state of the art, there was nothing patentable in the combination described and claimed in Bliss’ patent; but, under the proofs, this proposition is altogether inadmissible. ' The several' elements in themselves may have been-old, but the combination was absolutely new, and productive of novel and highly beneficial results. Each of the elements is essential to the efficiency of the device, and the new and useful results are due to their co-operation. So far from the combination being an obvious one for attaining the proposed results, it is shown that numerous unsuccessful experiments had been made, covering a long period of time, to produce a reversing gear having the advantages which Bliss’ device possesses. His invention, indeed, met a long-felt want in the oil trade, aird the utility and great importance of his device are not to be gainsaid.
3. Again, the defendants allege and set up as a defense that the patented device was in public use and on sale for more than two years prior to the application for the patent. I find the material facts bearing on this defense to be as follows: The firm of Harmon, Gibbs & Co., composed of C. G. Harmon, George H. Gibbs, and Lewis L. Bliss, was formed in the spring of 1877. Frank L. Bliss was an employe of the firm. The primary purpose for which the firm was formed was to build an engine for oil-wells with a reversing gear actuated by steam, the invention of George H. Gibbs. This reversing device consisted of a miniature cylinder placed on top of the main steam-chest, the piston of which was connected with an elbow lever having a connection'with the reversing link, and was designed to operate it by direct steam-power. It is not necessary more particularly to describe this device. It is enough to say that it did not embody Bliss’ invention. It is most clearly established, by the correspondence of the firm and otherwise, that the first engine of any kind which Harmon, Gibbs & Co. ever built was not completed until the month of December, 1877; and that engine was equipped with the steam reversing gear just mentioned. Therefore, when H. H. Argue, the defendants’ witness, states that iñ the month of October, 1877, an engine built by Harmon, Gibbs & Co., and equipped with the push reverse, (of which particular mention will Soon be made,) was used in drilling an oil-well at Derrick City, on the Carter lease, he is undoubtedly mistaken. The first engine built by that firm, and which, as already stated, was equipped with Gibbs’ steam reverse, was bought by his brother-in-law, J. J. Carter; and in February, 1878, it was put in the field at an oil-well on Carter’s leáse, at Derrick City, to test its efficiency. As tried in
4. We arc now brought to the consideration of the question of infringement. .Prior to the filing of the bill, the defendants were, and they still are, engaged in manufacturing and selling engines for drilling and pumping oil-wells having an unbalanced slide-valve, with a reversing gear to be connected with and operated from the derrick by a rod. In their device the defendants employ the usual reversing link, a lifting-bar, and an elbow lever pivoted to the engine frame. Instead of a stop on the frame or bed of the engine to serve as a rest for the elbow lever when it is down, the end of the horizontal arm of the lever is provided with a downward projection or appendage, which engages the engine-bod and performs the precise function of the stop of the Bliss patent. In effect, it is the Bliss stop inverted. Then the lifting-bar and elbow lever are flexibly connected in this manner, viz.: Near the end of the horizontal arm of the lever is a swiveled eyebolt, with a vertical hole through its side, and the upper end of the lifting-bar is reduced in diameter, and passes loosely through this hole, and is provided with shoulders a little distance above and below the same, so as to permit to the lifting-bar free vertical play for the purpose of taking up the vibration, and relieving the lover of all jar when resting on the engine bed. This is practically the slotted connection of the Bliss patent. It is used for the same purpose, and with the same effect. Without enlarging upon the subject, I content myself with saying that a careful comparison of the models of the two devices, with the aid of the explanatory testimony, has brought me to the conclusion that the changes which the defendants have made are differences in form merely, and not in substance. The two devices do the same work in substantially the same way, and accomplish exactly the same results. Therefore, in the sense of the patent law, they are the same devices, notwithstanding the differences in name, form, or shape. Machine Co. v. Murphy, 97 U. S. 120, 125; Cantrell v. Wallick, supra.
I cannot agree with the learned counsel, for the defendants that the patentee limited himself to an adjustable stop. The specification, I
As already intimated, the Bliss invention was one of unusual merit. He was not a mere improver of an old mechanism. No pre-existing reversing gear met the needs of oil-well operators. Bliss’ device, and his only, did so. With reference to the particular field of industry for which it was devised and to which it is especially applicable, his reversing gear was not only altogether original, but was of immense value. It met new conditions and new wants. He accomplished results much sought after, which no one before him had been able to achieve. He was the first to devise means whereby the driller, standing at a distant point, can give a positive movement in either direction to the reversing link, while, upon the release of the actuating lever, the reversing gear, by means of the stop, will automatically adjust itself to a disconnected position. Bliss’ device first made it possible to use, in drilling and pumping oil-wells, an unbalanced slide-valve, thereby avoiding a waste of steam, and promoting economy in the consumption of fuel. The invention, then, was really one of a primary character, and the patent well deserves to be liberally dealt with, both in the matter of construction and in giving to the patentee and his assignees, in full measure, the benefit of the doctrine of equivalents. Consolidated, etc., Valve Co. v. Crosby, etc., Valve Co., 113 U. S. 157, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 513; Machine Co. v. Lancaster, 129 U. S. 263, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 299. Let a decree be drawn in favor of the plaintiffs.