4 F. 539 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Massachusetts | 1880
The patent of D. M. Moore, No. 45,344, was granted in December, 1864, upon an application filed October 1, 1864, for an improvement in wrenches. The patented tool is a wrench with a double-faced ratchet-wheel connected with two pawls, which are controlled by a lever and springs. The springs tend to keep the pawls in contact with both faces
The defendant uses the ratchet-wheel with the spring, pawls, and lever precisely like Moore’s, in a bit-stock which is adapted to receive various tools. Upon inspection I cannot doubt that one was copied from the other. The plaintiffs’ expert testifies that this part of the defendant’s bit-stock operates like a wrench, and that wrenches are often used to work taps, which are tools for turning screw threads. These statements are not denied, and, if true, there is no doubt that the defendant uses-the plaintiffs’ wrench, with additions, and infringes the patent.
There are, however, two questions of fact which a,ffect the validity of the patent. Three witnesses declare that they used a wrench which would operate as a right or left hand ratchet-wrench, or as a rigid one; and they reproduce from memory a model which they say is substantially like it. It is true, and is creditable to them, that they do not undertake to verify the reproduction as precisely like the original. This tool is known in the record as the Goggeshall wrench, and the original has not been seen for about 20 years. Supposing the-model to represent the original, the question is whether Moore made a patentable improvement upon it.
The Goggeshall tool had two wheels rigidly united, with their cogs facing different ways, two pawls with suitable-, springs, which made the wrench .rigid when both were operating, and a rotary cam, by the action of which either pawl.
The other question of fact is whether Moore publicly used his wrench before the first day of October, 1862; that is to say, more than two years before be applied for his patent. Moore swears that he invented the tool in 1859, at Philadelphia, where he was then employed, and used ono there openly a great many times, and afterwards at Hartford, and lastly at Windsor, his home, to which he returned about November, 1861. He was not cross-examined; why, I do not know. Witnesses have been called to give such negative evidence as they might in relation to all the places at which Moore says he used that wrench. Tie is not corroborated, excepting as to the use in Windsor. The patent was issued upon his written statement that he had not made such use as he now swears to, and was sold under an implied obligation to disclose any such defect in his title. If what he now testifies is true, he has committed a fraud on the public, and on his assignees; and I do not think I ought to regard his testimony of much
Moore returned to Windsor in the autumn of 1861, and four witnesses are called to prove that he used, and lent to others for use, a wrench like that of the patent, before October 1,1862. It is very difficult for witnesses to fix within a month or even a year the exact time of an occurrence of no importance to themselves, to which their attention is called after the lapse of 16 or 17 years. This difficulty, inherent in the subject, must be" fully overcome by one who assails a patent. Another question which always arises is whether the use was within the, limits of a justifiable test or experiment. I have read the evidence with great care, and am satisfied that Moore did not make a wrench for sale until within two years before his application. As the value of his invention was not for his personal use, as is often the fact with manufacturers who improve a machine used in their particular business, so much as for the sale of the tools or the royalties, I consider this fact very important. The chief witness to prior use, E. E. Spaulding, gives a deposition which is clear and candid; but he had told one of the plaintiffs, a very short time before he testified, that he had no means of fixing the date, and could not fix it. This he very fairly admits, and he does not explain how his memory has been refreshed. Besides, the evidence of this witness, while it is not wholly consistent with itself upon the other point, yet leaves upon the mind an impression that the use which he testifies to was experimental. Such is the fair result of his evidence at pages 235 to 237 of the record. And so of the only other witness whose means of knowledge were considerable, Edminster. The point which the defendant takes as to the use by Edminster is that Moore permitted him to try the wrench in order to induce him or his father to take an interest in it, and help Moore in procuring a patent. The witness so puts it. But I consider it too nice a point to say that the future patentee, when he permits a person to test his tool by a short use with a view to interest him in its being patented, is not testing his tool, but only the
Decree for the complainants.