250 F. 863 | 2d Cir. | 1918
(after stating the facts as above).
In one use of the word, its novelty consists wholly in the perfection •of imitation. - The new “product” is the production of illusion; i. e., making the eye believe that actual pieces of cloth are in view. But patentable novelty must be more than this. Never can the patent law wholly divorce itself from the idea of “means,” for that word suggests or implies the meritorious human effort which it is the object of the law to reward. If successful imitation were per se patentable, the selection and use of a natural product for that purpose would be within the act (cf. Denton v. Fulda, 225 Fed. 537, 140 C. C. A. 521).
This matter is, after trial, plainer than it was when the patent was here before on motion for injunction pendente lite, and we see no reason to depart from the ruling, then made, that the claims cover only imitation sample cards made by “striking up” portions of cardboard substantially as specified. This limitation must be read into claim 6 (the only one not having it explicitly stated), or else that claim is void.
As thus construed there is no infringement, though the defendants, by (probably) improved methods of color printing and the use of very old “conventional embossing,” have come fairly near plaintiff’s marked success. They have that right, provided they do not appropriate that which alone validates plaintiff’s patent, viz., the “striking up” method of production. Much is made of the alleged fact that defendants have imitated the “characteristic weave” of the simulated fabric. We doubt the fact; but, if they have, such result is reached by old means, not affected or limited by Stenz’s invention.
Finding no error in the disposition of the case below, we express no opinion on other matters raised in argument, and affirm the decree appealed from, with costs.
Union Paper Collar Co. v. Van Deusen, 10 Blatchf. 109, Fed. Cas. No. 14,395, and 23 Wall. 530, 23 L. Ed. 128; Same v. Leland, 1 Holmes, 427, Fed. Cas. No. 14,394.