148 F. 220 | 7th Cir. | 1906
The opinion filed below rests the decree upon a finding, of noninfringement, without passing upon the further question raised, whether the “hoist” device of the Eerris patent (No. 584,340) in suit involved patentable invention. Upon the view adopted by the trial court of the appellee’s departure from assumed invention in the means of the patent, the issue of validity was rightly left open — especially so on information, referred to in the opinion, of a controversy with another patentee which was pending and involved that issue. In accord with this course, we assume (without so deciding) that invention appears in the patent device, and consider only its scope under the limitations of the prior art, to ascertain whether the claims are infringed by the appellee.
Both devices in suit are of the well-known hoisting provision of sheave-block, pulley, and rope, combined with means for clamping and releasing the rope; and in both the clamp is operated by the free end of the rope, as also appears in prior structures. In simplicity and cheapness of structure, which were objects of the Eerris invention, the devices are alike, but the mere fact of such equivalency is not entitled to the weight, in this inquiry as to identity of means, which seems to be the contention on behalf of the appellant. The claims of invention rest alone upon the introduction and arrangement of the “clamping device” and “operating device,” namely, the common form of clamping cam, provided with a series of teeth and pivoted upon the oscillating tubular arm (through which the free end of the rope is threaded to actuate the arm) and thus adapted to clamp the rope, in combination with- the so-called “operating device,” which is described in the first claim as “rigidly fixed upon the sheave-block and adapted to engage the clamping device as the arm is oscillated,” and is specified in the patent as “a segment E, having teeth concentric with the pulley-axle and adapted to engage those upon the cam.” These mechanisms are quite simple, and no novel function is disclosed, either in the elements respectively or in the device as an entirety. Rike means and functions appear in numerous prior patents in evidence, and it is sufficient to cite four examples, which are not only analogous in purpose and in mechanisms employed — although differing in the specific form and arrangement of the elements — but as well in their general operation and function, namely: Green’s patent, No. 406,579, of 1889; Young’s No. 447,483, of 1891; Young’s No. 524,015, of 1894; and Rowland’s, No. 524,403, of 1894. Without reference to the well-known general art, it is obvious, upon inspection of these patents, that the patentee, Eerris, entered a narrow field for either improvement or invention in-his device. That he improved upon the prior structures, in the way of simplifying the form and cheapening the casting when made integrally, is undoubted, and such improvement may involve invention; but it is well settled that the patent which may then be granted must be limited to the scope of the actual invention — to his
'I'lie appellee's device conforms to a subsequent patent (No. 785,885), issued to W. Gutenkuust tor an improved “pulley block.” In common with that of the appellant, it varies only from prior structures in the form and arrangement of the rope-clamping means, and preserves the old form of oscillating tubular arm to receive and be actuated by the free end of the rope. Instead of the gear-segment means of the appellant for clamping and releasing the rope, however, the appellee provides another form of clamping cam, pivoted on the oscillating arm (on the outer instead of the inner side of the arm, for the new adaptation), and having two laterally projecting pins for engagement with two slotted guide-plates — which arq extensions of the slieave-block side-plates and thus “rigidly fixed” thereto — so that these means are adapted to engage for clamping or releasing the rope in response to the movements of arm and rope, 'l'hc means thus combined performs the function, not alone of the appellant’s device, but of several prior devices in evidence. Its departure from the intenneshing gear segments of the former, is unmistakable and undisputed; is substantial and not merely colorable. Rejecting the class of means from which the appellant’s adaptation is made, the appellee has taken a means pointed out, for analogous object, in patent No. 213,717, issued to Rosecrants for “hay elevator”; and one which is much nearer the cam-operating means of the.above-mentioned Green patent, No. 406,579, for a “hoist” than to the means of the appellant’s patent.
Notwithstanding these distinctions in the means for clamping the rope, it is contended that the appellee infringes the first claim of the patent upon various propositions, which may be summarized in three; (1) That the invention authorizes generic claims and their interpreta!ion according!)'; (2) that the appellee’s means are invasions of the patent as the mechanical equivalent, although not “the specific gear construction”; and in any view, (3) that the appellee’s slotted guide-plates or arms are the “operating device” of the mechanism, “rigidly fixed upon the slieave-block” within the express terms of claim 1.
1. The first proposition is unsound under the view above stated of the utmost scope of invention attributable to the device. Construed generically the claims would be invalid, and each claim in suit must either be limited to the structure specified in the patent, or be set aside as void.
2. With the invention thus narrowed, the doctrine of mechanical equivalents is not applicable in the sense of' the interpretation sought, and it is unnecessary to consider whether the means of one and the other device are functionally such equivalents.
3. In the argument on behalf of the appellant there is much discussion by way of defining the, so-called “operating device” in the respective structures in suit and in the prior references, in support of the twofold contentions that the patentee, Ferris, was the pioneer in the conception of such device “rigidly fixed upon the slieave-block,” and that infringement is thus established. The means re