6 F. 290 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Wisconsin | 1881
This is á bill to restrain the infringement of a patent for an alleged now and useful improvement in cultivators. The original patent was issued to complainants July 3, 1866. A re-issue was granted March 31, 1868. Various defences are interposed, among which is the defence that the defendants are selling cultivators made by Thomas, Ludlow & Rodgers, of Springfield, Ohio, which are covered by letters patent No. 152,706, granted to J. H. & J. W. Thomas, June 30, 1874, and they deny that they aro infringing complainants’ patent. In the specifications of the patent, the invention is described as consisting of the application to the shank, B, of the tooth, of a curved brace-bar, 0, the upper end of which passes through a slot or mortise in the beam, A, and is held in position by a clamping-bolt, I), which passes transversely through the slot or mortise near the brace-bar,' so as to clamp it in any required position, and thereby adjust tho tooth in any inclination, at the same timo allowing it to yield to immovable obstacles without breaking. It is further stated in the specifications that “it is evident that, in a device thus constructed and operating, the brace-bar, 0, can be so clamped
The invention being thus described, what is claimed as new and desired to be secured by letters patent is the “combination of the slotted beam, A, shank, B, brace-bar, 0, and bolt, D, when the parts are constructed and arranged to operate as and for the purposes herein specified.”
The device patented to J. H. & J. W. Thomas, and which the defendants are selling, consists of a wooden bar or beam having a slit in the rear end to receive the shank of the shovel or tooth. The shank and the tooth consist of one piece of metal, the shank at its upper end being of curved form, and secured in the slit by a bolt or pivot. Another threaded bolt is passed through the beam or drag-bar, a little in the rear of the bolt to which the shank of the tooth is fastened, and in such place as-to sustain the tooth or shovel when in proper position. It is stated in the specifications of the patent that the ends of the bifurcated bar or beam are drawn down by the threaded bolt which sustains the tooth or shovel when it is in position, or by the united action of both the bolts mentioned, “until clamped against the standard of the shovel with such force that the friction shall maintain the shovel, in position while passing through mellow earth, but not so tight but that it will yield to an excessive resistance before force enough is applied to break the shovel.” It is further stated that by making the shank in one piece its construction “is greatly cheapened as compared with that class where an arm has to be welded to the shank;” and the-substance of the patentee’s claim is, in combination with the drag-bar or beam, bifurcated at the rear end, the shovel standard, curved at its head and where it is adjusted to the drag-bar, and pivoted and clamped by the bolts before described.
The only question which it is necessary to consider is that of infringement.' The complainants’ patent is for a combi
In Rich v. Close, 4 Fish. 282, it was said, by Judge Wood-ruff, that “an inventor must be taken to know of what his invention consists, and his patent does not secure to him the exclusive right in anything more than he claims to have
In The Corn-planter Patent, 23 Wall. 224, it was held that ■“where a patentee, after describing a machine, claims as his invention a certain combination of elements, or a certain device or part of the machine, this is an implied declaration, as conclusive, so far as that patent is concerned, as if it were expressed, that the specific combination or thing claimed is the only part which the patentee regards as new. True, he or some other person may have a distinct patent for the portions not covered by this; but that will speak for itself. So far as the patent in question is concerned, the remaining parts are old, or common and public.”
These statements of the law, as thus expressed in the two cases cited, are exactly applicable to the case at bar. Here, as in Rich v. Close, the patentees have narrowed their claim by the use of clear and express terms: “What we claim as new, and desire to secure by letters patent, is the combination of the slotted, beam, A, shank, B, brace-bar, 0, and bolt, D, when the parts are constructed and arranged to operate as and for the purposes herein specified.” Not having claimed to have invented either of the parts separately, and expressly claiming only a certain combination of parts as described, there is an implied declaration, as conclusive as if it were expressed, that the specific combination is the only part which the patentees regard as new, and that the several parts
It follows, from what has been stated, that the defendants do not infringe the complainants’ patent by merely using the slotted beam. They do not infringe unless they have appropriated the entire combination. The patentees declare in their specifications what their invention is. They expressly say, inter alia, that it consists “in applying to the shank of the tooth a carved brace-bar, the upper end of which passes through a slot or mortise in the beam.” The defendants use the slotted beam, the shank of the tooth, and the clamping holt. But in their device there is no brace-bar welded to the shank, and passing up through the mortise in the beam.
It follows, therefore, from these statements of the law, that if the defendants omit entirely one of the elements of the complainants’ combination without substituting any other, or if they substitute another which is new, or which performs a substantially different function, or if it is one that is old, but was not known at the date of the complainants’ patent as a proper substitute for the omitted ingredient, or if their machine consists in a now combination of the same ingredients, then the defendants do not infringe. A material ingredient of complainants’ device is the curved brace-bar, welded to the shank of the tooth. This cannot be denied. If the defendants, omitting the brace-bar, have substituted an element in its place, that substitution consists not in supplying by physical addition another part, distinct from the rest of the device, in the place of that omitted, but in merely changing the form of the head of the shank whore it rests in the mortise in the beam. In the complainants’ device the curved brace-bar is welded to the rear of the shank about midway between the point where the shank is pivoted to the beam and the tooth, and passes into the mortise at the end of the beam, where it may be clamped. As before stated, the tooth and shank of defendants’ device consist of a single piece of metal; the head of the shank, where it passes
Then, I think, there is force in the claim that the curved part of the shank lying within the beam in defendants’ device performs a function not found in complainants’ combination. The curved head rests on the clamping bolt, so that thereby all the teeth may bo adjusted to a line. The function of alignment is thus secured, and, by this arrangement of the parts, the bolt on which the head of the shank rests becomes not only a damping device hut an aligning holt. Furthermore, it is quite apparent, from an examination of the models, that in the operation of the defendants’ machine, when, for example, the team is backed, the pressure does not move the teeth out of position, because the clamping holt on which the curved head of the shank rests operates as a stop and prevents any forward movement of the teeth; whereas, in complainants’ device, it is evident that if the brace is not set so tightly in the mortise that it cannot escape, it might, in hacking, be drawn entirely out, and the teeth would be pressed forward, with nothing to operate as a stop except the pivot which fastens the shank to the beam, and with a liability that as the machine should he started forward its movement might be such as to cause the brace to catch on the beam, or to prevent it from passing directly back within the slot or mortise.
From what has been said, and without further elaboration, it would appear that the claim made by defendants is not without reason to support it, namely, that in their device they omit the brace-bar and do not substitute for it an element which wholly performs the same function; that, therefore, their substituted element, if there is one, is not an equivalent, because, “by an equivalent in such a case it is meant that the ingredient substituted for the one withdrawn performs the same function as the other.” Gills v. Wells, supra. Further, that in the construction of .their device a new element is introduced which performs a function substantially different from that which the complainants’ device was designed to ■perform, (see Babcock v. Judd, 1 Fed. Rep. 408;) and, in short, that the defendants’ combination is a new arrangement
There is considerable similarity, at least in the application of principles, between this case and the case of Prouty v. Ruggles, supra. Adopting the language of the court in that case, it may be well said here: “None of the parts referred to are new, and none are claimed as new; nor is any portion of the combination less than the whole claimed as new, or stated to produce any given result. The end in view is proposed to be accomplished by the union of all arranged and combined together, in the manner described, And this combination, composed of all the parts mentioned in the specifications, and arranged with reference to each other * * * in the manner therein described, is stated to be the improvement and is the thing patented.' The use of any two of these parts only, or of two combined with a third which is substantially different in form or in the manner of its arrangement and connection with the others, is therefore not the thing patented. It is not the same combination if it substantially differs’from it in any of its parts.”
Certain models were prepared and submitted by one of the expert witnesses, as illustrating the supposed identity of the two devices in question, but I do not think they demonstrate such identity. The structural arrangement of the parts in the two machines is substantially different. The brace-bar is a distinct member of the complainants’ combination. They have claimed it in their specifications to be an essential part of their invention. It is the construction of the several parts, not separately, but in combination, which they claim to be new, and their improvement consists in arranging different parts of the cultivator, and combining them together in the manner stated in the specifications, for the purpose of producing a certain effect. Prouty v. Ruggles, supra. Applying to the ease what I conceive to be correct legal principles, my conclusion is that the defendants do not infringe the complainants’ patent.
Let the bill be dismissed.