42 F. 846 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1890
This is an equity action for infringement of two letters patent granted to the complainant for an improvement in fountain-pens. The first of these patents, No. 347,961, is dated August 24, 1886; the second, No. 353,162, is dated November 23, 1886. The applications were filed April 23, 1883. In both patents the improvements relate to fountain-pens in which the ink is sustained in the reservoir by atmospheric pressure, and is supplied to the pen by capillary attraction as distinguished from the attraction of gravitation. No. 347,961, in so far as it has reference to the present issue, relates to an arrangement by which the pen is held in place at tho lower end of the reservoir or holder. The interior surface of the reservoir is provided with grooves, into which the edges of the pen fit. The pen is thus held in position with its upper portion extending into the ink space of the reservoir, so that the ink may pass directly into the inner portion of the slit of the pen, and thus be transmitted to its point. The only claim of the patent alleged to be infringed is the second. It is as follows:
“(2) A reservoir or tubular holder constructed with longitudinal grooves in the inner walls of its lower end, in combination with a pen the lateral edges of which fit into said grooves, thereby insuring the retention of the pen in place, substantially as and for the purpose herein set forth.”
In No. 353,162 the invention comprises certain novel means of insuring the downward flow of ink within the reservoir of a fountain-pen and the frequent and regular transmission of ink to the point of the pen. The ink reservoir or tubular holder is closed at its upper and open at its lower end. The pen is fixed at the lower end so that its slit is in close
All three of the claims are involved. They-are as follows:
- <!'(1) In a fountain-pen, the combination of the folio wing’elements, to-wit: an ink reservoir closed air-tight at its- top and open and internally unobstructed at the bottom for the passage of-air and ink, .4 slitted pen attached •to the permanently open bottom of the reservoir, and a lip or tongue the inner surface-of which is applied parallel with the pen to form, conjointly with the surface and the slit of the pen, a channel for conducting the ink directly from the open lower end of the reservoir to the point of the pen, all substantially as and for .the purpose herein set forth.
“(2) In a founta-in-pén, the combination .of the following elements, to-wit: an ink-reservoir closed air-tight at its top and open and internally .unobstructed ■ at tlie-bottom- for the passage of air and ink, a slitted pen attached to the permanently open bottom of the reservoir, and a lip of tongue.the.inner surface of which' is applied parallél with thépén to form, conjointly With the*849 surface and tlie slit of the pen, a channel for conducting the ink directly from the open lower end of the reservoir to the point of the pen, and a feeding-stem located within the reservoir and with its lower end connecting with the channel aforesaid, and with its upper end extended to or near the closed upper end of the reservoir to insure the descent of ink to said channel, all substantially as and for the purpose herein set forth.
“(3) In a fountain-pen, the combination of a holder or reservoir closed airtight at the top and open and internally unobstructed at the bottom, a slitted pen, and a feeding-stem placed within said reservoir with its upper end extended to or near said upper end of said reservoir and provided at its lower end with the lip C, placed over and adjacent to the back and slit of the pen, all substantially as and for the purpose herein set forth. ”
The defenses are want of novelty and invention, unlawful expansion of the claims and non-infringement.
As to the second claim of No. 347,961 it is quite clear that if a con-' struction is placed upon it broad enough to cover any pen it is void for want of patentability, and if confined to the exact combination described by tbe patentee it is not infringed. The English patent to William E. Wiley, sealed April 24, 1857, describes a tubular pen-holder for an ordinary'- dipping pen “made with two grooves on opposite sides of its interior for the purpose of holding the pen, tbe object being, by such means, to cause pens to be held in tubular holders in a central position.” Other references show somewhat similar constructions. It is beyond question, therefore, that no one can hold a patent for a pen-holder the only alleged novelty being that it is provided with grooves for holding the pen in place. This method was old a quarter of a century ago, and even if it had not been suggested by Wiley and others, it is, at least, doubtful whether its use in a pen-holder would require an exercise of the inventive faculty in view of the many analogous uses to which grooves are put in all the mechanical arts. The claim cannot be upheld, therefore, if construed, as the complainant insists it should be, to cover an improvement which relates merely “to holding the pen in place, in the lower end of a fountain-pen reservoir;” and, if it is limited to the peculiar form of,pen described in complainant’s patent the defendant does not infringe. He has no slitted pen, as that term is used in the patent. The upper end of the slit in his penis far below the ink space of. the reservoir. On the other hand, the fundamental idea of the complainant is to carry the ink to the point of the pen by bringing the upper end of the slit in direct communication with the ink in the reservoir, so that the ink will be directed down the slit by capillary attraction. In order to accomplish this a pen is used having a long slit and about twice the thickness of an ordinary steel pen. The defendant’s structure, manufactured under a patent granted to Paul E. Wirt, has a thin gold pen about half the thickness of a steel pen. It is quite true that Wirt uses grooves, but he has a right to use them. He does not employ them to hold the complainant’s pen in position, or to hold any pen in position, to accomplish the purpose set forth in complainant’s patent. The court does, not decide that this claim is invalid, but that if upheld at all it must be for a combination which tlie defendant does not use.
“1 am fully aware of the ease with which honest witnesses can persuade themselves that they remember some by-gone circumstance which they are ingeniously induced to think that they remember; but, in this case, I do not perceive any manipulation of these witnesses, and I think that their testimony was not manufactured, and they were not mistaken. There is nothing improbable, either by reason of the state of the art or of the character of the improvement, in the history which is given.”
Other evidence has been introduced, but it is unnecessary to discuss it, for it is already quite evident that the complainant did not enter an undiscovered held whoso virgin soil had theretofore remained untrodden by the foot of the inventor, but that this is one of the cases referred to by the supreme court in Bragg v. Fitch, 7 Sup. Ct. Kep. 978, where the invention “is but one in a series of improvements all having the same general object and purpose; and that in construing the claims of the patent they must be restricted to the precise form and arrangement of parts described in the specification, and to the purpose indicated therein.” In addition to what has already been said, applicable to all three of the claims, it will be noted that “ a feeding-stem located within the reservoir * * * with its upper end extended to or near the closed upper end of the reservoir” is an element of the combinations covered by claims 2 and 3. It seems unnecessary to spend time in discussing the meaning of the words quoted. They aro too plain to admit of doubt or cavil. There is no room for misunderstanding. An architect who agrees to run a ventilator shaft or a steam main to or near the roof of a many-storied building, does not fulfill his contract if his shaft ends at the story above the basement. So one who uses a pen with a feeding-stem which extends a third of the way up the holder does not infringe a claim which provides for a stem extending the entire distance, or nearly so. The language of these claims was adopted deliberately and with full knowledge of its restrictive import. The drawings not only show a feeding-stem extending to the upper end of the reservoir, but one actually inserted in and attached to the upper end. Surely, the claims do not cover, as the complainant insists, a stem which extends “to any desired point within the reservoir.” The contention that the language under discussion means “ to or near the closed upper end of that part of the re
“When a claim is so explicit, the courts cannot alter or enlarge it. * * * They [the patentees] cannot expect the courts to wade through the history of the art, and spell out what they might have claimed, but have not claimed. * * * There [in the patent-office] his claim is, or is supposed to be, examined, scrutinized, limited, and made to conform to what he is entitled to. If the office refuses to allow him all that he asks, he has an appeal. But the courts have no right to enlarge a patent beyond the scope of its claim as allowed by the patent-office. * * * When the terms of a claim in a patent are clear and distinct, (as they always shoulfl.be), the patentee, in a suit brought upon the patent, is bound by it. Merrill v. Yeomans, 94 U. S. 568. He can claim nothing beyond it. * * * As patents are procured ex parte, the public is not bound by them, but the patentees are. And the latter cannot show that their invention is broader than the terms of their claim.”
The defendant is selling pens constructed under letters patent No. 311,554, granted to Paul E. Wirt February 3, 1885. Into the lower end of defendant’s pen-holder is screwed a perforated nozzle through which the ink is conducted to the pen. The passage through the nozzle, when compared with the interior of the reservoir, is very small. The reservoir is obstructed at the bottom by the presence of this nozzle. The ink does not flow as' freely with it as it would without it. “Unobstructed,” means free from obstacles or impediments which check, hinder or retard passage. It is by no means synonymous with “open.” The complainant clearly understood this for he uses both words — “open and unobstructed.” ITe meant to convey the idea of a 'reservoir not only open but unobstructed also. His drawings show this. Had a pen-holder. like Wirt’s been presented as a reference by tire patent-office officials the complainant would probably have argued that it was not an anticipation, because a reservoir contracted from a large opening at the bottom to a comparatively small one was not an unobstructed but an obstructed reservoir. The defendant’s holder is open because it has a hole at the bottom, but to say that the insertion of the nozzle does not impede and obstruct the flow of ink from the reservoir is like saying that a .river is not obstructed by a dam, or a stove-pipe by a damper. The defend