Peter Roberts, the owner of a patent for a quick-release socket wrench, sued Sears Roebuck for patent infringement. The jury found the patent valid and infringed and awarded Roberts $5 million in damages (later raised to more than $8 million), and Sears has appealed, arguing among other things that the patent is invalid because “the subject matter as a whole would have been obvious at the time the invention was made to a person having ordinary skill in the art to which said subject matter pertains.” 35 U.S.C. § 103. Obviousness is a question of law rather than of fact.
Dual Mfg. & Engineering, Inc.
v.
Burns Industries, Inc.,
A socket wrench has two parts (see Figure 1): the shaft
which the person using the wrench grasps and turns (labeled “10” in Figure 1), and a detachable socket (16) which grips the nut that the wrench is turning. Usually the wrench comes with a number of sockets of different size so that a single wrench can be used to turn nuts of different width.
The principle of the socket wrench is not new. The alleged novelty of the Roberts patent is in the mechanism, shown in Figure 2, for releasing the socket when
the user of the wrench wants to change sockets. The knob (22) at the top is the pushbutton (also 22) on the back of the head of the wrench (see Figure 1). Notice that the pushbutton is not depressed. In this, *797 the locked position, the pin (20) to which the pushbutton is attached is pressing a little ball (18) against, and partially through, a ring in the wall of the mechanism; since the diameter of the ring is smaller than that of the ball, the ball cannot fall out. In the locked position the part of the ball that protrudes outside the ring (24) is lying in a depression in the inner wall of the socket (not shown in Figure 2), and so holding the socket on the wrench. Pressing the push-button will force the pin down until the hollow space in it (26) is next to the ball, and the weight of the socket will force the ball into that space. There will now be nothing holding the socket to the wrench, and the socket will fall of its own weight.
This is the Roberts quick-release mechanism. It was a huge commercial success— though this may have owed a lot to Sears’ promotion and marketing of it—because it made possible changing sockets with one hand. By holding the wrench face downward and pushing the pushbutton with your thumb you can drop off the socket attached to the wrench, and by keeping the button down you can insert the wrench into a different socket and then lock it onto the wrench simply by releasing your thumb. Roberts, an 18-year-old employee of Sears, came up with this design in six months. He obtained a patent, assigned it to Sears, later sued Sears for having defrauded him of his patent rights, and won that suit, see
Roberts v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
In deciding whether an invention is obvious, “When all is said, we are called upon imaginatively to project this act of discovery against a hypostatized average practitioner, acquainted with all that has been published and all that has been publicly sold. If there be an issue more troublesome, or more apt for litigation than this, we are not aware of it.”
Harries v. Air King Products Co.,
A patent confers a monopoly over the products in which the patented idea is embodied, and monopoly, among its other effects results in a lower output of the monopolized product, and so reduces consumer welfare. The framers of the Constitution and the Patent Code would not have wanted patents to be granted where the invention would have been made anyway, and about as soon, without any hope of patent protection. The grant of a patent in such a case would confer no benefits that might offset the costs of monopoly. Cf.
Atlantic Works v. Brady,
Roberts’ quick-release mechanism is simplicity itself and as one would expect its essential elements were well known when it was invented. A man named Wendling had already patented the use of a pin and ball to hold a socket onto a wrench; his device lacked only the pushbutton. DePew had invented a mechanism for lifting heavy loads that worked like a socket wrench, with the load corresponding to the socket; a pin protruded from the top of the mechanism, much like Roberts’ pushbutton, and was moved up and down to release the old load and lock on a new one to the lifting mechanism. Gonzalez and Carpenter separately had patented socket wrenches that had the essential elements of the Roberts patent; true, the emphasis was on the lock *798 ing rather than the release function, but these are reciprocals. Wilson had submitted a patent application for a quick-release socket wrench almost identical to Roberts’, though the application was abandoned, and was not known to Roberts when he submitted his application.
The relevance of the earlier patents and of Wilson’s application is not that they anticipated Roberts’ patent and hence invalidated it—they may or may not have; that is not the issue we decide—but that they show that the basic ideas embodied in Roberts’ patent were already well known when he made his invention. Cf.
Republic Industries, Inc. v. Schlage Lock Co.,
The judgment is reversed with directions to dismiss the complaint.
