after stating the case, delivered, the opinion of the court.
The three patents involved in this suit are for an improved belt pulley, and for the manufacture of the same." Each of them requires a separate consideration.
i. Patent No. 248,599 is for an improved process of manufacturing that class of belt pulleys formed of á'wrought-metal rim and a separate centre, usually a spider, and usually made, of cast metal. The drawings represent the machinery for carrying out the invention, and the pulley at the various stages of its manufacture. The process of manufacture is set forth in detail in the specification, and consists of the following steps: (1) centering the pulley centre or spider; (2) grinding the ends of the arms concentrically with the axis of the pulley; (3) boring the centre; (4) securing the rim to the spider; (5) grinding the face of the rim concentric with the axis of the pulley; (6) grinding or squaring the edges of the rim. This process, it may be observed, is purely a mechanical one.
Does it disclose a patentable invention? That the'patent is for a process in manufacture, and not for the mechanism employed, nor for the finished product of such' manufacture, is undeniable, and is so expressed upon the face of the specification.
The four claims of the patent make no reference to the mechanism exhibited in the drawings, and described in the specification. All claim an improvement in the art of manufacturing, and set forth in more or less detail the various steps in that process. That certain processes of manufacture are patentable is as clear as that certain others are not, but nowhere is the. distinction between them accurately defined. There is somewhat of the same obscurity in the line of demarcation as in that between mechanical skill and invention, or in that between a *72 new article <of manufacture, which is universally held to be patentable, and the function of a machine, which it is equally clear is not. It may be said in general that processes of manufacture which involve chemical or other similar elemental action are patentablé, though mechanism may be necessary in the application or carrying out of such process, while those which consist solely in the operation of a machine are not. Most processes which have been held to be patentable require the aid of mechanism in their practical application, but where such mechanism is subsidiary to the chemical action, the fact that the patentee may be entitled to a patent upon his mechanism does not impair his right to a patent for the process; since he would lose the benefit of his real discovery, which might be applied in a dozen different ways, if. he were not entitled to such patent. But, if the operatio.il of his device be purely mechanical, no such considerations apply, since the function of the machine is entirely independent of any chemical or other similar action.
A review of some of the principal cases upon the subject of patents for processes may not be out of place in this connection,' and will serve to illustrate the distinction between such as are and such as are not patentable.
The leading English cases are those which arose from the patent of September 11, 1828, to Neilson, for the improved application of air to produce heat in fires, forges, and furnaces, where bellows or other blowing apparatus were required: The patent, like many of the early English patents, contained no specific claims, but described a blast or current of air to be passed from the bellows into an air vessel or receptacle, made sufficiently strong to'endure the blast, and artificially heated to. a red. heat, or very nearly so.
It was said that the air vessel or receptacle might be conveniently made of iron or other metals, and that its form was immaterial to its effect, and might be adapted to the local circumstances or situation. In
Neilson
v.
Harford,
1 Webst. Pat. Cas. 331, this patent was construed by the Court of Exchequer, in which the claim was made that the patent was for a principle, and was, therefore, void. Great difficulty was felt in its proper
*73
construction, but after full consideration it was held that the patent did not merely claim a principle, but a machine embodying a principle; and in delivering the opinion Baron Parke observed: “We think the case must be considered as if the •principle being well known, the plaintiff had first invented a mode of applying it by a mechanical apparatus to furnaces; and his invention then consists in this by interposing a receptacle for heated air -between the blowing apparatus and the furnace. In this receptacle he directs the air. to be heated by the application of heat externally to the receptacle and thus he accomplishes the object of applying the blast, which was before of cold air, in a heated state in the furnace.” In citing this case in support of his opinion; in
O’Reilly
v.
Morse,
The Neilson patent, however, subsequently came before the House of Lords on appeal from the Scottish Court of Session in the Househill Coal and Iron Co. v. Neilson, 1 Webst. Pat. Cas. 673. The case went off upon other questions, but in delivering his opinion Lord Campbell thought the patent should be taken as extending to all machines, of whatever construction, whereby the air was heated intermediately between the blowing apparatus and the blast furnace. “ That being so, the learned judge was perfectly justified in telling the jury that it was unnecessary for them to compare one apparatus with another, because, confessedly, that system of conduit pipes was a mode of heating air by an intermediate vessel between the blowing apparatus and the blast furnace, and, therefore, it was an infraction of the patent.” S. C. 2 Bell Scotch H. L. App. Cas. 1; 9 Cl. & Fin. 788.
So in delivering the opinion of this court in
Tilghman
v.
Proctor,
The first case in this court in which a claim for a process received attentive consideration was the great case of
O'Reilly
v. Morse,
In view of some of our later decisions it may be questioned whether the language used by the Chief Justice in some portions of this paragraph may not be broader than these cases would justify, since patents for processes' involving chemical effects or combinations have been repeatedly held to be valid. Thus in
Mowry
v.
Whitney,
In
Tilghman
v. Proctor,
In
New Process Fermentation Company
v.
Maus,
Undoubtedly, the most important case in which a patent for.-?; Vo J^Twas considered was that of the
Bell Telephone,
It is equally clear, however, that a valid patent cannot be obtained for a process which involves nothing more than the .operation of a piece of mechanism, or, in other words, for the function of a machine. The distinction between the two classes of cases nowhere- better appears than in the earliest reported case upon that subject, viz.,
Wyeth
v. Stone,
The leading case in this court is that of
Corning
v.
Burden,
Although the cases are not numerous, this distinction, between a process and a function has "never been departed from by this court, and has been accepted and applied in. a large number of cases in the Circuit Courts.' The following processes have been held not to be patentable : An improvement in sewing machines, by which the soles and uppers of boots and shoes could be sewed together without any welt by a certain kind of stitches, McKay v. Jackman, 12 Fed. Rep. 615. A process for washing shavings in breweries, Brainard v. Cramme, 12 Fed. Rep. 621. For an improved method of treating seed by steam, Gage v. Kellogg, 23 Fed. Rep. 891. A process for crimping heel stiffenings of boots and shoes, Hatch v. Moffitt, 15 Fed. Rep. 252. See also Sickels v. Falls Company, 4 Blatchford, 508; Excelsior Needle Co. v. Union Needle Co., 32 Fed. Rep. 221.
The patent in question clearly falls within .this category. As already shown, it is upon its face “ for an improved process of manufacture,” and mechanism is shown and described simply for the purpose of exhibiting its operation, which- is described in detail. The result is a pulley more perfectly balanced, more faultless in shape, stronger and more durable, perhaps, than any before produced ; but this was not because the patentee had discovered anything new in the result produced, but becatise the mechanism was' better adapted to produce that result than anything that -had before been known. As pulleys of that description had been produced before, doubtless, with greater care in the manufacture of them, a pulley as perfect as his might have been made. So that all that he invented in fact was a machine for the more perfect manufacture of such pulleys. The operation or inaction of such machine, however, is not patentable as a process.
*80 2. Patent No. 248,598, granted upon the same day, is obviously, though not in so many words, for the product of the mechanical process described in the patent just disposed of — in other words,- for a belt pulley made substantially in the manner detailed ipr that patent. In - his specification the patentee states that his invention “consists in a pulley which is perfectly true and accurately balanced — that is, a pulley in which the centre of gravity and geometrical centre or axis coincide.” He further states that all the prior belt pulleys.had been open to the objection of not having been accurately balanced, a defect inherent in their structure. “ Thus, while cast pulleys are of accurate shape, they cannot be practically produced of per: feet balance, owing to the irregularity of the weight of the metal at different portions of the rim, and to contraction in cooling; and where pulleys of similar character to that herein shown have been made, the spiders have not been properly prepared — that is, the spiders have not been operated upon so as to make the ends of their arms exactly concentric with the true centre or axis of the pulley. . . . The spider, however made, will be slightly imperfect in shape, and unless the irregularities are cured before applying the rim, the completed pulley will not be accurately balanced.”
After detailing the advantages of having the pulleys per-' fectly balanced and shaped with absolute acciiracy, and setting forth in general terms the manner of securing this by grinding the rim concentrically vdth the axis, he claims, first, “ the improved belt pulley, herein described, having the ends of the spider arms ground off concentrically with the axis of the pulley; ” and second, the same pulley with the rim • and the ends of the spider arm ground Off concentrically.
Obviously the patent in question is not for a new device, nór for a new combination of old' devices. It contains precisely the elements of every other belt pulley, and operates in substantially the same way. It is in reality a patent for a belt pulley which differs from other belt pulleys only in the fact that the rim and ends of the spider arms are ground off concentrically with the axis. Obviously this is not a patentable feature. The claims state in substance that the belt *81 pulley must be. made in a peculiar way, which is equivalent to saying that it must be made by a peculiar process; in other words, that it is a product of a mechanical process, 'which we have already held not to be patentable. The only object in haying the ends of the spider arms ground off concentrically with the axis of the pulley is that the rim may be concentric with such axis. This, however, is necessary in every pulley, and if the patented pulley be superior to others in this particular,, it is because its workmanship is superior, and because it is made so by a superior process of manufacture. The specification states in substance that this belt pulley is superior to every other because it is better made, more perfectly balanced, and is one in which the centre of gravity and geometrical centre, or axis, coincide. It is said that such perfection of balance can only be obtained by the process described in the prior patent, viz., by grinding off the ends of the spider arms.; but it does not follow that some other person may not, by another process, or by greater care or superior skill or deftness in the handling of tools, manufacture a pulley , which shall be equal to this. But’if this patent be valid, he. would be an infringer in so doing, though he employed no mechanism whatever in the manufacture of such pulley, and did the work entirely with his o\ya hands, if only he ground off the ends of the spider arms.
In short, this is a patent only for superior workmanship, and within all the authorities is invalid'. This court has' repeatedly stated that all improvement's not invention. If a certain device differs from what precedes it only in superiority of finish, or in greater accuracy of detail, it is but the carrying forward of an old idea, and does not amount' to invention. Thus, if it had been customary to make an article of unpolished metal, it does not involve invention to polish it. If a telescope had been made with a certain degree of power, it involves no invention to make one which differs from the other only in its having greater power. If boards had heretofore been planed by hand, a board- better planed by machinery would not be patentable, although in all these cases the machinery itself, may be patentable.
*82
Thus in
Smith
v. Nichols,
In
Pickering
v. McCullough,
So in
Burt
v. Evory,
3. Patent No. 238,702, also for belt pulley, antedated the other patents by seven months, and as stated by the patentee has. for its object, first, the production of a cheap, light, and durable pulley; and secondly, the production of irregular sizes of pulleys without the necessity of a separate pattern for each size of pulley required. This invention consists, first, in constructing the usual crown or dish on the rim of wrought-metal rimmed pulleys by bending said rim transversely during the process of manufacture; secondly, the belt pulley having arms formed of wood, preferably of a cylindrical shape, which at their inner ends rest in sockets cast on the hub, and at, their outer ends are provided with bracket lugs, to which the pin is secured by rivets or other equivalent means.
“The rim D may be of any suitable material — either Wrought iron, steel, or wood — with the bracket lugs C arranged transversely, as shown, in order to brace and support the edges of the rim and prevent the same from working loose from its attachment, which'is liable to occur when the bracket lugs are not arranged as above set forth.
“ The crown or dish d, .usual to belt pulleys, is formed on the rim D by bending or dishing the rim during the process of manufacture, preferably at the same time and by means of the same rolls that bend the rim into the required circular shape. By the use of wood for forming the arms of the pulley, as above set forth, a much lighter and,cheaper pulley can be produced than where iron is used for said arms and-yet possess as great strength.”
The claims are as follows:
“1. A wrought-metal rimmed pulley having a crown, d, *84 formed on its' rim during the process. of. manufacture, as described, and for the purpose set forth.
“2. A belt pulley provided with wooden arms B, a. cast-metal hub A, having radial sockets a and bracket lugs 0, for the attachment of the rim D, as described, and for the purpose set forth.”
If, as stated in the specification, it had been “ usual ” heretofore to form the rim with a crown or dish it makes no difference, so far as the completed article is concerned, whether it be formed during the process of manufacture by bending the rim transversely, or in any other way. Indeed, it is difficult to see how the crown could be made except during the process of manufacture, as it is part of. such process. We are dealing with a belt pulley as a new article of manufacture, and the question how the pulley is made, or how the crown is made upon the rim, is entirely immaterial. As the first claim does not describe a pulley which differs at all in its completed state from prior pulleys, it is clearly invalid.
. The second claim is for a belt pulley provided.with wooden arms»and a cast-iron hub with sockets and bracket lugs, for the attachment of the rim. But as this claim was not found by the court below to have been infringed, it is not necessary to consider it.
For the reasons above given we think all these patents are invalid, and that the demnrrer to the bill should have been sustained, except perhaps so far as the second claim of the last patent is concerned.
Medart may or may not have been entitled to a patent for the machinery employed in the -manufacture of the belt pullej's in question; but he certainly was not entitled to a patent for the function of such machine, nor to the completed pulley, which differed from the prior ones only in its superior workmanship.
The decree of the court below must, therefore, be ■
Reversed^ and the case remanded to the Circuit Court with directions to dismiss the bill.
