16 F. 564 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1883
The proofs satisfactorily establish infringement by defendants of complainants’ patent. The defense that Mark Davis was the original and first inventor of the patented improvement, and that complainants obtained the patent in fraud of his rights, although supported by somewhat impressive probabilities and the testimony of several witnesses, is met by strong opposing proofs on the part of the complainants. Under the circumstances, the presumption arising from the grant of the patent to the complainants is not sufficiently overthrown, and must prevail. But it also appears that the defendants were parties in interest to the interference proceed
The defense of want of novelty does not come with very good grace from parties who endeavored to procure a patent to be issued to Mark Davis for the same invention, but is undoubtedly- open to the defendants. The complainants’ invention relates to tips for the insoles of boots and shoes, and their patent is for the tips as an improved article of manufacture. Their tip is formed of muslin or other textile material, stiffened with shellac, and pressed into the required shape by heated dies. Prior to their improvement, tips had been made of leather, and usually in one piece with the insole, the tip being beveled to a fine edge. This mode of producing the tip required considerable time and skill, and was more expensive than was desirable, and the object of the patentees was to produce a less expensive substitute. The problem was to produce a tip sufficiently thin to require no beveling, but at the same time sufficiently rigid to be a suitable substitute for leather. It is demonstrated by the proofs that the complainants’ tips were immediately received with great favor by the trade, and to a large extent superseded the leather tips theretofore used. They were not only very much less expensive to manufacture, but they were much more readily adjusted to the insole by workmen; so much so that the workmen preferred to buy them and pay for them out of their wages, rather than use the leather tip.
Prior to the complainant’s invention a patent had been granted to Horace W. George for an improvement in box-toes. His article was a moulded box-toe or tip made of vulcanized rubber, with or without an intermixture of fibrous or suitable material capable of being shaped in molds. This tip was also beveled. Whether it was practically a satisfactory substitute for the leather tip does not appear. This patent is not an anticipation of the complainants’; neither a leather tip nor a vulcanized rubber tip is the same thing as a tip of muslin or similar textile material stiffened with shellac. The complainants’.
A decree is ordered for complainants.