21 F. Cas. 1117 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania | 1872
On July 1, 1851, letters patent were granted to Aaron Palmer and S. G. Williams, for “improvement in grain-harvesters.” This patent was reissued in divisions, one of which was numbered 1,682, which was extended for seven years from July 1, 1865.
On July 8, 1851, William H. Seymour obtained a patent for an “improvement in reaping-machines,” which was also reissued in divisions; two of which were numbered 72 and 1,683, and were extended ■'‘for seven years from July 8, 1805.
The title to these several reissued and extended patents, 1,682, 72, and 1,683, has been duly vested in the complainants, and they constitute the subjects of the present contention.
These patents embrace several claims, the three following of which only are the defendants charged with having infringed: ■
1. The claim of 1862, which is for a combination of the cutting apparatus of a harvesting-machine, with a quadrant-shaped platform, arranged in the rear thereof, and a sweep-rake operated by mechanism in such manner that its teeth are caused to sweep over the platform in curves when acting on the grain, these parts being and operating substantially as set forth in the specification.
2. The claim of No. 72, for a quadrant-shaped platform, arranged relatively to the cutting apparatus, substantially as described, and for the purpose set forth.
3. The claim of 1,683 for “the combination, in a harvesting-machine, of the cutting apparatus with a quadrant-shaped platform in the rear of the cutting apparatus, a sweep-rake mechanism for operating the same, and devices for preventing the rise of the rake-teeth when operating on the grain; these five members being and operating substantially as set forth.”
The defendants resist the complainants’ right to a decree upon the grounds that the reissued patents are invalid: that the inventions claimed are not novel: that such inventions will not work practically; and that they are not infringers.
The rule by which the validity of reissued patents is to be determined, is well defined and familiar. It restricts the inquiry to a comparison of the terms and import of the original and reissued letters, and a consideration of the patent office drawings and model. If, from these, it results that the invention claimed in the reissue is substantially described or indicated in the original specification, drawing, or model, the very case for which the act of congress was intended to provide is shown to exist, and any change in the description or claims, which is necessary to effectuate the invention, is within its sanction. In Seymour v. Osborn, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 544,. the court say: “Power is -unquestionably conferred upon the commissioner to allow the specification to be amended, if the patent is inoperative or invalid, and in that event to issue the patent in proper form; and he may, doubtless, under that authority, allow the patentee to re-describe his invention, and to include in the description and claims of the patent, not only what was well described before, but whatever else was suggested or substantially indicated in the specification or drawings, which properly belonged to the invention, as actually made and perfected.”
Now, if the inventions claimed in the sew eral reissues in question, were suggested or substantially indicated in the original specification, it is clear that the specification might be amended so as to fully describe them, and the claims enlarged so as distinctly to embrace them.
To ascertain this, it is altogether unnecessary to institute a comparative analysis of the original and reissued patents, because it is plain, upon inspection, that the quadrant-shaped platform, arranged as described, claimed in reissue 72, and the combinations claimed in 1.682 and 1.683. are represented in the descriptions and models, and illustrated by the drawings filed with the original applications, and because this is distinctly proved by the defendants’ expert witness, Homer P. K. Peek. This being so, it is no objection to the validity of the reissues that their claims are broader than those of the original patents; or that, in view of the state of the art. these claims are broader than the patentees’ invention. The very object of the act of congress is to authorize such enlargement of the description and claims of the. reissue, as to cover the invention indicated in the original, and the latter branch of the objection can only affect the reissue by avoiding the original patent for want of novelty of the invention. It can not avail the defendants, unless it reaches back to the date of the original patent, and is founded upon proof that the invention then indicated was not novel. It certainly can not be invoked against the authority of the commissioner to allow an amended specification and to grant a reissued patent upon it. And upon this ground alone can a reissue be adjudged to be ultra vires.
That a machine, when first applied in practice. does not perfectly accomplish the work for which it was designed, or does not accomplish all that its inventor supposed it would, is not enough to secure its rejection asa patentable invention. Correction of defects. arising from imperfect material and not involving reorganization of the machine,
It is said, however, that this was a remodeling of the machine, and that it was .not ■ then the same machine described in'the pat- j ent. But there was not the least change in ! its organization. It embodied still the pre- ¡ cise devices and combinations claimed in the ! patents, arranged as there described, witli ; only such amendments as were conducive to , its more perfect efficiency. If any one else ¡ had constructed a reaping-machine, with a ' quadrant-shaped platform and the combina- ■ tion of elements claimed by the patentees, and.had made the jaws, by which the rake is operated, of sufficient strength to bear the strain upon them, and had applied a spring or other device to hold the rake down, can there be any doubt that he would be an in-fringer? He would be rightly so treated, for the reason that he had appropriated the combinations claimed by the patentees, and that the changes made by him did not constitute a new or different invention. The same ef- I feet only is due to the acts of the patentees, I and while they have retained the eonstitu- j ents and organization of their invention, ! they have made it more efficient in operation by strengthening its weaker parts, and by the use of auxiliary mechanism, to hold tlie rake steadily in its place. It is clear : that by so doing the identity of their inven- ; tion has not been changed, nor has it been . abandoned, or withdrawn from the protec- . tion of their patents. Nor is this conclusion . to be repelled by the speculative opinions of j experts, mechanical or professional, that the < invention, as described in the original spec- ■ ification, would be impracticable. Pounded. 1 as they are, upon a very literal and narrow construction of the patent, they are of but : little value when weighed againstothe dem- i onstration of actual results.
The novelty of the inventions in question is contested upon the ground that they were anticipated by the attachment of a circular I platform to a McCormick reaper by Brinek- ¡ erhoff. by the construction of Burrall reapers | by Joseph Hall, and by machines construct- | ed by Platt, McCormick., and Hussey. Of | the two first of these, it is only necessary to say that the weight of evidence is decidedly against the fact testified to by Brinckerhoff, and that the construction of Burrall reapers by Hall, prior to the complainants' invention in 1849, is satisfactorily disproved.
The other exhibits were before the supreme court, in the case of Seymour v. Osborn, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 516. in which the same patents involved in this case were in controversy; and were fully considered and examined by the court. Although the judgment pronounced is not conclusive in this case, yet the opinion of the court, even as to matters of fact, is entitled to the respect which is due to the high character of the tribunal, and to its careful analysis of the proofs; and especially ought it to be accepted as definitive in this court, when I have heard no argument to produce a doubt of the soundness of its conclusions, or to lead me to suppose that they would not be reasserted upon the evidence in this case. 1 must,' therefore, hold that the Platt & McCormick reapers did not embody the complainants’ inventions, and do not disprove their novelty. Additional evidence has been produced in this ease in reference to the construction, by Hussey, of reapers with a quadrant-shaped platform. In Seymour v. Osborn the proof was that one machine onlv, embracing this feature, was constructed by Hussey, in the fall of 1848, and it was adjudged by the. court to be an experiment, which was abandoned. Thomas J. Love-grove, who was examined as a witness in that case, and omitted all mention of a quadrant-shaped or curvilinear platform in a Hussey machine, testifies now that Hussey attached to, the back of the platform of some of his machines, an additional angular piece, which finally developed itself, in 1S47 or 1848. into a part of a circle, the guide-board being sawed so that it could be easily bent. He was reminded of this, after the lapse of more than twenty-three years, by reading the depositions of the two witnesses who testified in regard to the Hussey machine in Seymour v. Osborn. Even if such remarkable obliviousness, and such a lapse of time, do not impair the credibility of his testimony, he is altogether indefinite as to the number of machines made with the curvilinear attachment, or as to the fact that any one of them was sold or used. The only one of which he speaks with any distinctness is the old returned machine at Hussey's shop in Baltimore, to which evidently the testimony in Seymour v. Osborn related. But he has no recollection of ever seeing this machine or one like it in use.
The question then stands just as it did in Seymour v. Osborn, except that there is evidence, certainly not beyond the reach of criticism. tending to show that a curvilinear platform was attached to more than one machine. but there is no additional evidence that machines thus constructed were actual
It is earnestly contended that the machines constructed by the respondents do not infringe the patents of the plaintiffs. The argument is rested mainly upon the fact that the mechanism employed in the machines constructed by the defendants, is different from that described in the. patents. This is undoubtedly true, and so it was also in Seymour v. Osborn. But the question is not as to the identity of the actuating forces, but whether the devices and combination of devices claimed by the patentees, are embodied in the defendants’ machines and operate to produce the same result in substantially the same way.
Now, in these machines is to be found a quadrant-shaped platform, annexed relatively to the cutting apparatus, as is described and claimed in reissued patent No. 72.
There is also-to be found the combination claimed in No. 1,682, viz., of the cutting apparatus, with a quadrant-shaped platform arranged in the rear thereof, and a sweep-rake operated by mechanism, so that its teeth are caused to sweep over the platform in curves when acting on the grain. And there is also to be found the combination claimed and described in No. 1.6S3, of the cutting apparatus, with a quadrant-shaped platform in the rear thereof, a sweep-rake, mechanism for operating the same, and devices for preventing the rise of the rake-teeth when operating in the grain.
This combination embraces the three elements which compose the other, and its merit consists chiefly in the value and novelty of the results accomplished by it. That result is the automatic removal of the grain, as it is cut, from the platform, and its delivery crosswise upon the ground, and out of the way of the team or machine when cutting the succeeding swath. The same result is produced by the defendants’ machine; but do the mechanical agencies employed operate substantially in the same way with those described in the patents ? Rakes, similar ■ in construction, are used in both the complainants’ and defendants’ machines, but in the complainants’, the rake has a vibrating or reciprocating motion, while in the defendants’ it has a revolving motion. This is said to constitute a material difference of operation. But it is to be observed that the essential function of the rake is to sweep over the platform in the arc of a circle, thereby discharging the cut grain at the rear of the platform, so as to be out of the way of the team and machine on their next round. If this function, then, is performed in the same way in both cases, as it manifestly is, what matters it whether the rake is made to move from the rear to the front of the platform to resume its appointed work in a horizontal line or in the orbit of a circle? In neither case is there any difference in the result or the essential method of effecting it, | and there is, therefore, no noticeable differ-I ence in operation.
The complainants’ patent having expired, ! they can have a decree for an account onlv. j To this they are entitled, and it will accord-i ingly be entered.