delivered the opinion of. the court.
Prior to the invention of Dr. Richmond, the only method of supplying an artificial for a natural crown, in case the tooth had decayed or broken off, was by what is called a peg tooth. This was made by drilling the nerve canal larger; then a porcelain tooth with a hole in it was ground to fit the root, and the two were connected together by a wooden or metallic pin or dowel made to fit the hole in the porcelain as well as the hole in the tooth. The operation', however, was very unsatisfactory. It was found to be impossible to fit the artificial and the natural tooth so closely together that particles of food and saliva would not work in between them, fouling the mouth and ultimately causing the decay of the root or such a swelling of the wood as would split the root in the act of mastication, or such an enlargement of the cavity as would cause the wooden pin to drop out, resulting in either case in the loss of the tooth. It was the object of Dr. Richmond to supersede-this method of crowning teeth by a more perfect, cleanly and durable device*
It is substantially-conceded in this case, and was found by the- court below, that his patent No. 277,941 describes an invention of great utility in the practice of dentistry, which has been largely adopted by the profession throughout the country, for building upon- the roots of decayed teeth artificial crowns, which are claimed to be as strong and as well adapted to the purposes. of mastication as natural teeth, and to imitate them
Gold or other metallic caps were not wholly unknown before-the invention of Dr. Richmond. One such, known as the Morrison operation, wras described in the Missouri Dental Journal of May, 1879. Another is explained in the patent of November 4, 1873, to John B. Beers, who seems to have been the first to make use of a screw or pivot to attach the cap to the root of the tooth. In both of these cement or porcelain, enamel was used to fill the cap and secure the necessary adhe-. sion to the root. Two or three other similar devices are shown; but none of them seem to have been attended by any-practical success, and neither of them exhibits the combination of the Richmond patent. Indeed, if was scarcely claimed that his. invention had been anticipated, and, as infringement of all his. claims was admitted, the whole defence practically turned upon the question.of abandonment.
The facts bearing upon this defence are substantially as follows: Dr. Richmond began his experiments in fitting a gold collar to the neck of a tooth as early as 1875 or 1876 in San Francisco, and he states himself that he performed the operation described in his principal patent in the mouth of one Kalloch on Christmas of 1876, and, so far as he knew, the operation was entirely successful, and the tooth still remained in the mouth of his patient. . He further states in his examination 'that he practised this operation extensively in San Francisco, Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland, New York and New London, and demonstrated it to five hundred dentists'in private practice and in public clinics. In their general characteristics these operations, as he states them in his testimony, were the same as were described in his patent, although there appear to have been certain differences in detail. Sometimes the tooth was backed with gold and sometimes with platina;, sometimes the crowns were made entirely of platina, except the solder and porcelain. The operation v?as performed by. making a band surrounding the root, with a porcelain front, a pin extending into the root, and the whole cemented on the" root in one piece. The band was made with a piece of gold-
It is but just to the plaintiff to state in this connection that Richmond appears to have had a quarrel with the treasurer of the plaintiff company in 1883, very soon after the patent was issued to the Richmond Tooth Crown Company as assignee of the inventor; and that he was called as a witness by the defendants, and apparently testified under a strong bias against the plaintiff; but his evidence regarding the extent of his operations is fortified by a large number of letters from dontisis in different parts of the country, written in 1878 and 1879, certifying in strong language to the value of his invention. Indeed, the evidence is that he instructed Dr. Gaylord, one of the defendants in this suit, in the art of making and applying this tooth crown as early as 1879, performing two operations in Dr. Gaylord’s mouth and one in that of a patient, and receiving pay for the same. .As the application for the patent Avas not made until December 1, 1882, more than two years after all these operations were conducted, the evidence of abandonment is overwhelming, if it be once admitted that the operation Avas -identical with that described in the patent, or different from it only in an immaterial particular.
The reply to all this testimony is, that the tooth croAvns made prior to the year 1880 were defective, because they were made with an incomplete metallic floor to the ferrule, and for that reason the metal cap or thimble Avas more or less leaky. There is considerable evidence upon this point, Dr. Gaylord swearing that the operation taught to him was exactly like that Avhich Avas described in the patent, while the plaintiff’s
But whether a .cap thus constructed be imperfect or not, it is entirely clear that the closing of this alleged hole, which is so small that its very existence is denied, is such a carrying forward and perfection of the original device as would occur to any ordinary dentist, since it is of the very alphabet of dental science that the dentine of a tooth shall be protected as far as possible from the action of food and the fluids of the mouth. There is little doubt that some progress was made between the first operations of Dr. Richmond in San Francisco' and that disclosed by his patent; but the real invention was made when the ferrule with .the porcelain crown was adopted and applied to the root of a tooth prepared for the purpose of receiving.it. All subsequent progress was made on this line and in furtherance of this idea, and was such as would occur . to an ordinarily skilful dentist. There is a multitude of cases in this court to the effect that something more is required to support a patent' than a slight advance over what had preceded it or' mere superiority in workmanship or finish.
Smith
v.
Nichols,
Nor do we think, the use which Dr. Richmond made of his invention can be fairly called experimental. The fact that he taught it to a large number of dentists throughout the country, with no suggestion that it was an experiment, and received pay for such instruction, precludes the defence he now sets up that all this was simply tentative. It was said in
Smith & Griggs Mfg. Co.
v.
Sprague,
In preparing his specification Dr. Richmond naturally laid great stress upon the hermetical sealing of the cap; as he must have been satisfied that his first operations constituted a com/plete abandonment of what he did to the public, and that thb entire validity of his proposed patent would depend upon his
Little need be said with regard to patent No. 277,943, which is for preparing the root for the reception' of the denture described in the former patent. This preparation consists in removing the crown from the root, and then driving into the nerve cavity a suitably shaped piece of wood; in removing the same and cleansing the nerve cavity; and in - immediately plugging or filling the upper part of the nerve cavity by driving in another piece of wood, as described in his fourth claim. These operations were all - old, and were performed in the order stated in this patent. Practically, the only novelty is in the immediate filling of the nerve cavity with a wooden plug after the previous operation. In this connection, the patent states that, “ in order to avoid pain by treating the tooth while still benumbed, and to prevent abscess or inflammation, it is very important to close the pulp canal' immediately. This I accomplish by driving a second piece of wood, shaped like the first,'into the pulp canal in the presence of carbolic acid, filling it to its apical foramen, thus perfectly excluding the air.”
It is hardly necessary to say that it is no invention, within the meaning of the law, to perform with increased speed a series of surgical operations old in themselves, and in the order in which they were before performed. With what celerity these successive operations shall be performed depends entirely upon the judgment and skill of the operator, and does not involve any question of novelty which would entitle him to a patent therefor.
The decree of the court below dismissing the bill is therefore
Affirmed.
