41 F. 698 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1890
The complainant’s patent, No. 148,973, dated March 24, 1874, application filed March 4, 1874, is for an improvement in hubs for vehicles. It contains but one claim, which is as follows: “A wooden hub, strengthened by one or more seamless metallic bands, which occupy annular grooves in the periphery of the hub, substantially as described.” In the specification the complainant states that his invention consists in combining with ‘ a wooden hub one or more solid seamless metallic strengthening bands, which occupy annular grooves in its periphery. He disclaims the means for setting the bands, and declares that they “ constitute no portion of the invention which it is intended shall be covered by theáe letters patent, and that the operation, as well as the means employed, are to constitute the subject of separate applications for letters patent.” The specification sets forth that the annular grooves may be cut by turning, at any desired point between the mortise line of the hub and it's ends, and that their depth and width may be varied. The dimensions of the band should be such as to fill the groove, and make a finish flush with the surface of the hub. The bands are preferably applied when cold,-and may be composed of wrought-iron or steel, or of cast-iron or rolled brass, or of malleable iron, and of any required thickness or width; but it is important that the metal employed possess fair ductile properties, apd be of such a character as-not to -be unduly or injuriously weakened in its terisile capacity by the changes necessarily resulting from the process of setting the bands in the grooves. In the process of setting, the hub is to pass snugly over the outer shoulder of the groove, and abut with more or less bearing against the inner shoulder. The hub, with the band, is then placed endwise into a solid female die, which has an interior surface corresponding at one point, as nearly as it may be practicable to make it, with the exterior surface of that portion of the
The specification concludes as follows:
“I am aware that hubs have heretofore been strengthened by metallic bands applied to their peripheries in various ways, and that a variety of means have been employed for securing them in position; also that annular grooves in hubs have been filled with metallic wire, wrapped therein in continuous lengths upon a sheet-metal strip, forming a broken band, with the whole subsequently covered with solder. Such bands obviously differ from mine, as they are not solid nor seamless, and cannot be made to so compress the wood' beneath them as to compensate for that inevitable subsequent shrinkage, which occurs in all cases. I am also aware that mortised metallic flanged bands have been driven upon the wooden centers of hubs, and secured in position by abutting the edge of one end of said flanged band against an annular shoulder, and by reducing the diameter of the edge at the opposite end, so as to cause it to abut against a shoulder formed by cutting an annular recess in the periphery of the hub. Such mortised bands are employed in so-called ‘flanged wheels,’ and in such wheels no additional strengthening- bands are requisite; for it is by the mortised bands that all strain is borne, whether it be induced by the driving of the spokes or by subsequent use of the wheel. I am also aware that a mortised metallic shell has been heretofore combined with a wooden center constructed in two sections, and that these sections have been held in position within said shell by upsetting both ends of the shell against the outer ends of the two wooden sections. My improved hub differs from any pre-existing one known to me, in being strictly a wooden hub, and in having the strengthening bands of solid seamless metal set in annular grooves cut in the periphery of the hub, and made to fill and occupy said grooves, whereby the said hub may be made of the minimum size and of any required form, yet possess the requisite strength, with positive security of the bands in position, and without anj' liability of their being loosened by subsequent contraction of the hub by reason of ordinary and usual shrinkage of the wood.”
The answer denies infringement; denies that the complainant was the original or first inventor; avers the invalidity of the patent for want of novelty, and for want of patentable invention; that the alleged invention, had been deseribed in certain patents and printed publications, and had
It is clear from the record that seamless metallic strengthening bands fixed by compression upon wheels and other objects, were known and commonly used long prior to the date of the complainant’s alleged invention. A common method was to apply them heated, and allow them to contract into theii\plaees upon the wood. Another method commonly known and used was to drive the band, either hot or cold, upon a tapering surface, and thereby secure the effect of compression. Bands set by these methods, however, cannot properly be said to have antici-' pated the • band described in the complainant’s patent. They did not occupy, as do the complainant’s, annular grooves, although it is true that the surface of the wood immediately under the band was somewhat compressed by the method of shrinking or of driving the band to its place. But the hot band, when contracted to position, would chan the wood, and destroy its fibers and elasticity; and the driven band was not “upset,” but, if at all changed by being driven, was stretched over the hub. In either case the band would become loose and displaced by the shrinkage of the wood. Between these bands and' the complainants’ there is clearly a patentable difference in favor of the latter.
Quite a number of anticipating devices — that is to say, of bands of date later than the shrunken and driven bands above referred to — are set up in the answer and referred to in the evidence, and the question of anticipation turns upon the construction to be given to them, and to the testimony concerning their manufacture and use. It was specially insisted on behalf of the defendants at the hearing that the claim of the complainant’s patent is anticipated by patent No. 128,546, to -Pbineas Jones, dated July 2, 1872; by patent No. 146,250, dated January 6, 1874, and issued to C. H. Guard; by patent No. 149,625, dated April 14, 1874, and issued to Johnson V. Woolsey; by what is referred to as the “Marietta use,” the “Peru use”, the “Ford-Guard use,” the “Ford use”, and the “Naugatuck use.” The patents referred to are for improvements in hubs for vehicle wheels. The Jones patent shows a seamless metallic strengthening band, which is driven onto the hub in such manner that one edge rests against and flush with one wall of an annular groove in the periphery of the hub. The specification sets forth that, when the band has been set in position on the hub, then, by means of suitable dies and other devices, its flange is forced down into the,annular groove, or, as it is termed in the specification, recess; thus bringing the flange, both front and rear, flush with the surface of the wood, so as to take a solid bearing against the shoulder, front and rear, and positively prevent longitudinal movement; the object being to secure the band, to prevent any tendency to endwise movement, and also that the edges of the band may be flush with the surface of the wood center. The band of the Jones patent performs the additional function of bracing the spokes, but that fact does not affect the question whether it is an anticipation of the complainant’s band. In the Guard patent we find V-
The hub of the Woolsey patent is provided with two bands surrounding it, one at each end of the mortise space. The under inner edge of the band is beveled back towards the center of the under surface, as shown in the drawing, and “the outer edge is curved downward and pressed into the wood, there being a groove made in the hub to receive the edge of the band as it is bent or pressed into it to a little depth, forming a shoulder for the curved edge of the band to rest against, to thereby prevent it from coming off or loose.” The patentee states that, “in driving the tenons of the spokes into their mortises, the mortises at the surface are very liable to crowd out, in consequence of the strain of the tenons against the ends. This crowding or forcing out of the wood weakens the ends of the mortises, so that there is less support for the tenon than if such forcing out of the wood had not boon; to avoid which is the purpose of the bands referred to, which are pressed upon the hub at each end of the mortise, flush with the surface. The outer edge is then rolled down and pressed into the wood, thereby forming a smooth, rounded shoulder, while the edge pressed into the wood prevents the band from coining off or loose.”
For the purpose of comparison, it is necessary to keep in mind the claim of the complainant’s patent, for “a wooden hub, strengthened by one or more seamless metallic bands, which occupy annular grooves in the jieriphery of the hub, substantially as described.” It will be seen at a glance that this is a very broad claim. Looking to the specification for the signification of the words “substantially as described,” we find that the grooves may be at any desired point between the mortise line of the huh and its ends, and that their depth and width may be varied. We find, too, that the band is to be of such dimensions that the groove will be wholly filled by it with its peripherical surface flush with the surface of the wood, “if a finish flush be deemed desirable, as is usually th
We now come to'what is called the “Marietta use.” Without reviewing the testimony in detail, it will be sufficient to say, that it satisfies me that prior to the complainant’s invention the Marietta hub was constructed with seamless metallic bands, occupying annular grooves in its periphery. Prior to 1870 the Marietta Wheel Company' manufactured and sold wheels strengthened by seamless metallic bands, which were driven on the hub, and allowed to shrink into position. In the year 1870 the company adopted the plan of compressing the bands in grooves in the .peripheries of 'the hubs, instead of driving and shrinking them on. They were compressed into the grooves by the use of sectional dies which fitted into cup-shaped sockets. The grooves were cút in the hubs, which were then, with the bands upon them, placed within the dies, and the dies forced down into the cup-;shaped socket. This is substantially the process used by the complainant, except that his dies are not sectional. There is much conflict of testimony with reference to this use, but, upon careful consideration, I have reached the conclusion that the defendants’ version is correct. The Marietta use is therefore also an anticipation.
Next to be considered is the Peru use, dating from 1872, and continuing until some time in June, 1873. This use relates to a hub of the same general construction as the Marietta hub. The business of manufacturing it was a failure, and the plant, which cost about $70,000, was sold for $18,000. The Peru hub is less valuable than the Olds hub, which .has been esteemed much more highly by the trade, and commands a higher price; but the complainant’s claim is so broad as to include the Peru hub, and his patent is therefore anticipated by it.
The Ford-Guard use was at Tippecanoe, Ohio, beginning in 1873. It was the manufacture of hubs under the Guard patent, which has already
The Naugatuck use was the manufacture at Naugatuck, Conn., in 1872, by E. S. Parmelee, of the Naugatuck Wheel Company, of hubs with seamless strengthening bands upset in grooves. The bands were made of iron, of half oval shajje, and compressed into the grooves by the use of sectional dies, in two parts. Three sets of these wheels were shipped gratis to a wheel manufacturer of New Haven, since deceased. Wliat became of them subsequently does not clearly appear, but that wheels were made and used is established by a preponderance of the evidence, and they, too, anticipated the complainant’s invention.
After the hearing of this cause, the record was, upon defendants’ application and complainant’s consent, opened, and letters patent No. 37,-225, issued December 23, 1862, to J. W. Gardner, for improvement in attaching handles to cutlery, were introduced in evidence for defendants. The specification sets forth that the invention consists in having the im
“A wooden hub, as a new article of manufacture, consisting of a wooden body, with seamless metallic bands secured thereto in the manner described in the specification, by upsetting the bands into annular grooves in the periphery of the hub, condensing and consolidating the fibers thereof so that the bands are firmly and inseparably secured in the hub, and without any liability-of their being loosened by subsequent contraction of the hub, the whole constituting a strictly Wooden hub.”
The objections to thus paraphrasing the complainant’s claim are insuperable. It incorporates into the claim the method of setting the bands in the grooves, whereas the specification expressly reserves not only the mode of operation, but also the means employed, to constitute the subject of separate applications for letters patent. It is significant that whether such applications were actually made is not disclosed. It is a fair inference that if made they were rejected, for at the hearing it was argued for the complainant that the bands cannot be made to occupy the annular grooves without using the process emjfloyed by the complainant, and described in thá specification of his patent; and if that, or the means employed, had been patented, the complainant would have included the patent or patents therefor in this suit. The reservation also distinguishes this case from Smith v. Vulcanite Co., 93 U. S. 486, which was cited for complainant as analogous, but does not apply. The claim, as paraphrased, is also inconsistent with the specification, which describes the hub as subjected to “more or less compression adjacent to the band,” and the wood as “ mechanically condensed to a greater or less degree.” Again, section 4888 of the Bevised Statutes requires the inventor to “particularly point out and distinctly claim the part, improvement, or combination which he claims as his invention or discovery.” Keeping in mind the rule that the claim, whether the phrase “substantially as described,” be employed, (as it is in the claim of the complainant’s patent,) or not, should always be construed in the light of the description contained in the specification, it must also be remembered that when, as in this case, a claim is explicit, it cannot be altered or enlarged by reference to the specification or otherwise, and that whatever is described in the specification, and not claimed, is dedicated to the public. The Gardner invention is a complete anticipation of the complainant’s patent, which does nothing more than to substitute for ferrules, fitted and compressed by means of dies in recesses in parts of the handles and in the tangs of cutlery,'bands similarly applied to the hubs of carriage and wagon wheels. The bill will be dismissed, at complainant’s costs.