8 F. 710 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1881
This case rests upon letters patent No. 220,767, issued to the orator and purporting to be for an improvement in soft-metal traps. Several questions arise upon the defences made, and among them one upon the patent itself, as to whether it covers any patentable invention, or any invention at all.
The specification states:
“Tlie object of this invention is to provide what are commonly termed ‘plumbers’ traps’ (which are ordinarily made of lead) of a quality superior to those made before the date of my invention, and at much less expense. The said invention comprises, as a new article of manufacture, a die-drawn seamless soft-metal trap, the same being the trap resulting from the practice of the means and methods herein specified as embraced in my invention — the practice of the process of causing soft metal to issue with variable velocities, or in variable quantities, at opposite sides of an annular die.*”
Then, what the figures accompanying are, one being a sectional and another a side view of the traps, and the rest views of apparatus to make them; and then that—
*711 “ My said invention may bo manufactured by any suitable process, moans, or apparatus whereby soft metal may be caused to pass in variable quantities or at variable velocities through or from an annular die.”
And then describes the apparatus constituting one means by which the trap may he produced, and the mode of production, stating further that—
“ The walls of the trap thus formed will ho of uniform thickness at the inner and outer sides of the bends or curves,” and that it issues from the die “in the form of a pipe of greater or less curvature, and with solid or seamless walls, the outer surfaces of which are more or less marked with longitudinal strait-ions from end to end of the trap, which latter is thus distinguished from other traps by its peculiar appearance.”
The claim is for “a die-drawn seamless trap of soft metal as a new article of manufacture, substantially as herein described.” There is nothing further in the patent showing what traps of this sort were in use or known before, or any other advantages of this trap; neither is there anything in the evidence or case in the record showing anything wherein a die-drawn trap is any different from or better than other traps. These traps are simply bends of water pipes, downwards, and then upwards, far enough to hold sufficient water in the bonds to fill the bore of the pipes at the lowest point, and prevent the passage of air or gas. It is a part of common knowledge that such traps were made prior to this patent, or invention, of lead, and perhaps of other soft metal, by moulding or casting. Traps so made were in very common use in the drainage of houses in cities. This common knowledge and use courts take judicial notice of in cases of this kind. Brown v. Piper, 91 U. S. 37; Terhune v. Phillips, 99 U. S. 592; Quirolo v. Ardito, 17 Blatchf. 400. It was the duty of the orator to point out in his specification the improvement which he claimed to he his invention. Rev. St. § 4888. He had the right to assume, the same as others had, that notice would he taken of this common knowledge ; hut he was hound to show what there was beyond that which he claimed to be his. With this burden upon him he cannot justly claim that there are differences or advantages in favor of his which should be presumed to exist beyond what he has specified. The patent must be taken as it reads, in the light of common knowledge, until it is shown to cover more by those who claim it does cover more.
Looking at the old and well-known structure and the' patent at the same time, there is nothing different between the old and the new, except that the old is cast or moulded, and the new is drawn through a die. They are to be made of the same material, and are to oper
The bill is dismissed, with costs.