34 F. 789 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1888
This suit was tried by the court, under a stipulation of the parties, without a jury. .It is an action on the case for alleged infringement of patent No. 321,87G, granted to plaintiff, June 30, 1885, for a “machine for swaging and jointing saws.” The device, as shown and described, is only applicable to circular saws, and the chief features of the improvement' covered by the patent are a movable anvil upon which the saw-tooth rests while it is swaged to the width necessary for clearance by means of a hammer in the hand of the operator, the anvil also resting upon an adjustable support. The patent also covers a device for jointing the saws after the process of swaging, but, as that feature of the invention is not in controversy, it need not be described. The patent contains five claims, but infringement is only charged as to the first and second, which are:
(1) In a saw-swaging machine, the combination of a frame, a horizontal, adjustable shaft or arbor, a horizontally adjustable rest, and a die secured to an arm pivoted to the frame as set forth. (2) The combination of the pivotal anvil-bearing arm, the die thereon, and the rest therefor, substantially as described.
It will be seen that the movable anvil which is spoken of in the introductory description of the patent is called a “die” in these claims.
The defendant has pleaded the general issue, with notice of special mattef, the material portions of which are, first, that plaintiff was not the original and first inventor of the devices covered by the patent, or any substantial part thereof, and that in fact defendant was the original and first inventor of the material and substantial parts of the machine described in the patent, and that a patent was granted defendant therefor on the 8th of July, 1884. The proof shows,that plaintiff, as early as February, 1883, had conceived the invention covered by his patent, and made a drawing of it; and that as early as the .1st of March, 1883, he had a full-sized working machine constructed and in operation at the mills of the Burlington Lumber Company, in Burlington, Iowa. That defendant, who was then and still is in business as a manufacturer of saws at Rock Island,TIL, ordered one of plaintiff's machines in May, and the same was constructed and shipped to defendant on the 27th day of June, 1883, containing substantially the mechanisms covered by the plaintiff’s patent. And on the 13th of September, 1883, defendant filed
The defendant states, in substance, that in 1882 his attention was attracted to the demand for such a machine, and that he devised a sort of experimental working model of the machine, which he had then conceived; that about the time he got his working model made, and tested it so far as to see that a saw could be swaged upon it, the Kinney saw-swaging machine came out, and that he then abandoned further experiment with his machine. It is very evident from the portion of this old machine produced in court that it does not contain the movable arm, which carries the anvil or die of the plaintiff’s patent, nor the support, H, on which the die rests while the operation of swaging is performed, nor anything which would suggest these operative} parts. And it is too palpable to admit of discussion that defendant has taken those two features of his machine bodily from plaintiff’s machine, so that I am compelled to the conclusion that the defense of want of novelty has wholly failed. Defendant also insists that the first claim of plaintiff’s patent is void, because it includes the “horizontally adjustable rest,” which is the “support, II,” described in the specifications, and that by the terms of the specifications this rest is not movable or adjustable, because the sped-
The question of damages is more difficult. The proof shows that plaintiff’s machine with the jointing attachment cost $100, and sold for $150; thus showing a profit to plaintiff on his machine of $50 per machine. Defendant, however, does not use plaintiff’s jointing mechanism, but uses a different arrangement for jointing or evening the saw-teeth after they are swaged with the hammer. The proof also shows that before plaintiff obtained his patent defendant manufactured IB machines, and sold 6 of them, and that since the issue of the patent he has sold the remaining 7, and that defendant’s machine sold for from $80 to $65, and that his profits did not exceed $10 per machine. I do not think defendant should be mulcted in damages for machines sold prior to the issue of plaintiff’s patent. At the time these sales were made plaintiff had no patent, and, although we may assume from the proof that defendant knew when he made his machines that plaintiff was the inventor, yet, until plaintiff made his application for a patent, it was not certain that he -would ever applj1, for or obtain one. Hence defendant cannot be said to have been a trespasser upon plaintiff’s property before his (plaintiff’s) patent was obtained. After plaintiff had been adjudged in the interference proceeding to be the prior inventor as against defendant, and plaintiff’s patent had been issued, all sales made by defendant were in violation of plaintiff’s rights, and plaintiff' is entitled to damages. The defendant’s machine not containing all that is covered by the plaintiff’s patent, but only the device for the swaging operation, it is obvious that the profits made by plaintiff in the manufacture and sale of his combined swaging and jointing machines furnish no standard for fixing the plaintiff’s claim for damages against defendant; so that the only proof we have is the defendant’s profits of $10 on each machine sold after the issue of plaintiff’s patent; and, as the proof shows that defendant only sold seven machines after that date, the finding will therefore be that the court finds defendant guilty, and assesses the damages at $70. And upqn this finding, which stands in the place of the verdict of a jury, the court, under the provisions of section 4919, Rev. St., fixes plaintiff’s actual damages at