295 F. 745 | N.D. Cal. | 1916
I have asked counsel to be present this morning that I may announce the conclusions that I have reached in this case, as I find that by reason of the opening of the new term I shall not have an early opportunity to put my views in writing, and I have concluded that it will be better for the parties to have a decision now, than to delay it for a reason which possibly would be of no material value over a present statement of my conclusions, which counsel, who are entirely familiar with the case, will be able to appreciate, notwithstanding the somewhat general manner in which they are stated.
I am quite unable to agree with the view, so urgently put forward by the defendant, that this conception was in any material respect anticipated by any one of the several patents relied on for the purpose. In view of its simplicity, now that the idea is disclosed, it may easily be said that in the light of the prior art it would have been obvious; but the history of the art shows very clearly that it was not so. There had been issued something like 800 prior- patents in the art, all looking to the idea of attaining the same end; that is, of securing some means of concealing in an ordinary room used for general household purposes a standard double width bed in such manner that its presence would not be obvious to the ordinary observer, but without previous success, and that being so, and the art showing no prior evidence of the advance here made, or any real development of the essential idea embraced in this patent, I think that it must be given the benefit of a broad conception.
The principle upon which the device works is that of providing means whereby a bed of the character mentioned may be turned upon a vertical axis adjacent to one side of the opening entirely through a closet door of ordinary width, and concealed in a closet of ordinary standard dimensions. If I am right as to the scope of the conception, the invention, upon well-established principles, covers any means by.which the same thing may be accomplished in an equivalent way, because, being of a broad character, it is entitled to the full benefit of the doctrine of equivalents; and I am quite satisfied that the alleged offending device of the defendant, while mechanically different in some respects, nevertheless involves substantially the same principle as that upon which plaintiff’s conception is based. It is true that the defendant’s device involves some additional movements, and it may be that it is an improvement in some respects over the plaintiff’s device; but this does not avoid infringement of the fundamental conception of the plaintiff.
These are the only points I deem it essential to notice. A decree may be drawn in favor of plaintiff.