114 F. 655 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of New Jersey | 1902
This is a suit in the usual form for an injunction and accounting, brought by Karl Hutter against Lewis H. Broome, doing business under the name and style of the Victor Bottle Stopper Company, for the conjoint infringement of letters patent No. 491,113, of February 7, 1893, and of design patent No. 25,435, of April 28, 1896. Both of these patents relate to bottle stoppers, and both were issued to Karl Hutter, the complainant. The defenses are a denial of infringement, an alleged want of novelty or invention, and of consequent patentability in the mechanical patent, and of want of similarity between the design described in the design patent and that of defendant’s structure.
The object of the invention, as stated in the specifications of the letters patent No. 491,113, is as follows:
“The chief object of the invention is to provide a bottle stopper with a plug so constructed that the bent ends of the bail can be passed through it, and also to provide such a plug with means for hermetically sealing the bottle. The invention consists more especially in providing the tapering plug with a substantially triangular or heart-shaped slot, through which the inwardly bent ends of the bail wire can be inserted.”
The claim of the patent is single, and is as follows:
“What I claim as my invention is the combination of the bottle stopper plug, e, having substantially heart-shaped slot, i, the apex of said slot being lowermost and centered in said plug, e, with the bail wire, d, having bent ends, d2, and means substantially as described for connecting said bail wire to the bottle, the slot, i, being wider than the bend, d^, of the bail wire is long, as and for the purposes described.”
The state of the art at the time of the issue of this patent is sufficiently shown by the references made by the patent office in denying the first application by the patentee. The references are to White-
It is easy to belittle the invention involved in a simple device, such as this, but the fact that it had not occurred to any one before to make such a combination for the attainment of so many useful results appeals strongly in favor of the conclusion that there is here a true invention. The presumption, too, in favor of the action of the patent office in issuing the letters after protracted consideration, is, as always, an important factor in determining the presence of inven, tion in a given patented device. The testimony in this case, does not, in my opinion, overcome this presumption, and the patent, therefore, must be pronounced valid.
No serious contention is made by the defendant as to the validity of the design patent No. 25,435, of April 28, 1896. Infringement, however, is denied, on the ground of certain differences discovered between the fo"m of complainant’s and defendant’s stoppers. The existence of such differences depends principally upon the testimony of defendant’s experts. By that teslimony it is also pointed out that the button at the bottom of the stopper actually made by complainant differs from the drawing in his design patent, in that the former extends to the outer limit of the bead, D, while the latter is slightly offset from the edges of said bead. A careful inspection, however, of the design patent and of the exhibits of the defendant’s stopper convinces me that these differences, whether between the drawing of the design in the patent and complainant’s actual structure or between either of these and defendant’s structure, are too minute and unimportant to overcome the charge of infringement. The design of the patent and the alleged imitation must be viewed as wholes, and judged by the impression made upon the eye of an intelligent observer not unaccustomed to observe the same. If to such an eye — -for instance, that of a dealer in the articles in question, or one interested commercially in their use — the appearance of the two articles is so similar as that one could readily be mistaken for the other, ground for alleging infringement may be said to exist. And this is so notwithstanding thát real, but minute, differences of outline, not affecting the general contour and form as apparent to the ordinary observer, may have been discovered by expert examiners. The testimony of several witnesses, accustomed to handle such goods, establishes such substantial similarity between the design of
The two inventions which are the subject-matter severally of the patents in suit being, in my opinion, capable of conjoint use in one and the same bottle stopper, and it appearing from the testimony that the defendant actually conjointly was using the said two inventions in single bottle stoppers made, used, and sold by him, let a decree be drawn in conformity with this opinion and the prayer of the said bill.