121 F. 103 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1903
This is a bill to restrain infringement of United States letters patent No. 604,690, issued to Lewis E. Waterman May 24, 1898, and subsequently, on December 29, 1898, assigned to complainant. The application for the patent was filed August 12, 1895. It was a second application; an antecedent one filed July 31, 1894, being abandoned, by permission of the Patent Office, after its rejection by the Commissioner on appeal. The second application, upon which the patent, after considerable argument and repeated rejections, was finally allowed, was for precisely the same invention described in the first application. It was so treated by the Patent Office. Therefore, under the authorities, the second application for the patent will be treated as continuous of the first. International Tooth Crown Co. v. Richmond (C. C.) 30 Fed. 775; Henry v. Francestown Stove Co., 9 O. G. 408, Fed. Cas. No. 6,382; Colgate v. W. U. Tel. Co., 4 Ban. & A. 36, Fed. Cas. No. 2,995; Graham v. Geneva Mfg. Co. (C. C.) II Fed. 138; Godfrey v. Eames, 1 Wall. 317, 17 L. Ed. 684.
The patent relates to improvements in hard rubber fountain pens, and includes 26 claims, and 8 pages of specifications. It was practically conceded on argument that the claims in dispute are merely
“(5) In fountain pens, one or more annular progressive elastic ink and union joints and stops, formed by tbe combination of truncated tubular wedges, without an abutting shoulder, and with an elastic mouth in the outer member of each joint, engaging the opposite part of the inner wedge or member with a comparatively slight elastic pressure; the stop being formed at and opposite the inner part of the conical chamber, where its wall is thicker, less elastic, and more rigid.
“(C) In fountain pens, an ink and union joint and stop, consisting in the co-operative and supporting union of external and internal conical members, the external member provided with an internal conical surface, seat, or chamber, and composed of material made progressively thicker and less yielding from the outer to the inner end .of its conical surface, and the internal member provided with an external conical surface, in which the external member, at, by, and near its mouth, engages the opposite part of the internal member with elastic pressure, and forms a noncapillary joint and stop.
“(7) In fountain pens, an automatic and progressive ink joint and stop, consisting in the co-operative and supporting union of external and internal conical members, the external member provided with an internal conical surface, seat, or chamber, and composed of material made progressively thicker and less yielding from the outer to the inner end of the conical surface, and the internal member provided with an external conical surface, in which the external member, at, by, and near its mouth, engages the opposite part of the internal member with elastic pressure, and forms a noncapillary joint and variable stop, and the internal conical member projects beyond the external conical member, and thereby provides for the automatic maintenance of a progressive ink and union stop and joint during both use and wear.
“(8) In fountain pens, an ink and union joint and stop, consisting in the co-operative and supporting union of external and internal conical members, the external member being also provided at its open end with an elastic, externally beveled annular lip, that engages the opposite part of the internal member with elastic pressure, and forms a noncapillary joint and stop with and upon the internal member.
“(9) In fountain pens, a cap having within its open mouth a conical seat or chamber for the conical end of the fountain, also provided at its mouth with an externally beveled elastic annular lip, engaging the conical end of the fountain at and near its base.”
Claims 5 to 9, inclusive, relate to fountain-pen caps, haying an interior tapered or conical surface, an elastic exterior, and a tapered or conical external member, consisting of the nozzle or barrel of the fountain pen. Claims 17 to 26 are printed in the opinion of Judge Lowell in the case of Waterman v. Johnson (decided Jan. 16, 1902) 123 Fed. 303, which was for infringement of the patent in suit, and which renders unnecessary their restatement in extenso. It suffices that claims 17 to 26 constitute the elements of a conical or tapered interior member, and an elastic exterior member consisting of a cap with an elastic mouth. Complainant asserts and the proofs establish that the elasticity of the cap or exterior member is owing to its conformation. The cap has an annular lip, and is thinner at its mouth than at any other part. This manner of construction induces a'degree of elasticity which enables the cap, when used as a
Defendants attack the validity of the patent, and claim no inven
An examination of the testimony and the exhibits in evidence quite well satisfies me that what the patentee claimed as new is not entitled to the merit of invention. In the then state of the art a noncapillary progressive wedge joint was known — elastic tapered hard rubber substances, fitting tightly into each other, were known to produce a noncapillary jointure. Improvements over fountain pens then extant were undoubtedly made by complainant. But every improvement is not patentable. The Supreme Court has stated the rule to be that the improvement must be the product of an original conception. Burt v. Evory, 133 U. S. 349, 10 Sup. Ct. 394, 33 L. Ed. 647; Pearce v. Mulford, 102 U. S. 112, 26 L. Ed. 93; Slawson v. Grand St. Ry., 107 U. S. 649, 2 Sup. Ct. 663, 27 L. Ed. 576. Such was not the invention in suit. Irrespective of the existence of a similar joint in fountain pens, the citations of hard rubber atomizers, cigar holders, blowers, etc., having conical joints, are in analogy to the tapered exterior and interior members described by the complainant. The mere duplication of the joint does not import to complainant’s device inventive skill. No new result was produced and no change was required to adapt the well-known noncapillary joints to the use designed by the patent in suit. Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Truck Co., 110 U. S. 490, 4 Sup. Ct. 220, 28 L. Ed. 222; Mann’s Boudoir Car Co. v. Monarch Co. (C. C.) 34 Fed. 130; Holmes Elec. Protective Co. v. Alarm Co. (C. C.) 33 Fed. 254. The adaptation, therefore, of the conical or tapered joint to the use of the fountain pen, belonged to the domain of the skilled mechanic. To any one acquainted with a tapered joint as used in the exhibits herein referred to, it must have been a most obvious thing to apply the same joint to hard rubber fountain pens, and to thereby enhance their usefulness and durability.
The Waterman patent, No. 604,690, is therefore held to be invalid, and the bill may be dismissed, with costs.