22 F. Cas. 196 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1870
This suit is brought to recover for the alleged infringement of letters patent granted to Isaac M. Singer, November 4th, 1856, for an “improvement in sewing machines.” The plaintiffs claim that the defendants have, by the manufacture and sale of a sewing machine called the Aetna machine, infringed all the claims of the patent, which are four in number: (1) “Operating the needle, to give it the required reciprocating motions, substantially such as described, by a crank-pin, or roller, on a ro- . tating shaft, acting in a cam-groove, substantially such as herein described, whereby the required motions are imparted to the needle with much less extent of motion of the crank-pin, or roller, in the cam-groove, and, consequently, less friction, than if the cam-groove were on the shaft, and the pin, or roller, on the needle-carrier, as described;” (2) “projecting the operating part of the surface of the feeding apparatus through the surface of the table, substantially as described, so that such feeding surface may act on a portion of the under surface of the material to be sewed, to give the required feeding motion to space the stitches, while the other portions of the said material slide on the table, which answers the purpose of stripping the said material from the feeding surface, and to cover and protect the mechanism which operates the feeder, as set forth;” (3) “imparting the feeding motion to the feeder, to present the material to be sewed to the action of the needle, for spacing the stitches, by griping the periphery thereof, or any equivalent therefor, by a griping lever, substantially as described, in contradistinction to the action of a pawl or hand catching on to ratchet teeth, whereby the extent of feeding motion maybe adjusted and varied to any degree, instead of being restricted by the size of ratchet teeth, and whereby, also, I avoid the wear and liability to derangement incident to the use of a ratchet motion, as set forth;” (4) “In combination with the feeder, attaching the presser, for controlling the material to be sewed, and holding it to the surface of the feeder, to a slide, or equivalent therefor, substantially as described, so that the plane of its under surface shall always bear the same relations to the plane of the table, in a line at or nearly at right angles to the line of the seam, whether the material to be sewed be thick or thin, and for the purpose set forth.”
One of the defences set up in the answer is, that the improvements claimed in the patent had been in public use and on sale, with the consent and allowance of Singer, the inventor, for more than two years prior to his ■ application for a patent therefor. It is not disputed, that sewing machines constructed by Singer, and containing the arrangements of mechanism claimed in all four of the
On the 18th of October, 1850, Singer made oath to a specification, accompanying a petition signed by him, praying for a patent for improvements in a sewing machine. The petition, oath, specification, and accompanying drawings were filed in the patent office on the 12th of December, 1850. On the 14th of December, 1850, the model on the application w'as filed, and the certificate of the payment of the required fee of thirty dollars was received at the patent office. The drawings consisted of five figures, and are five of the six figures of drawings forming part of the patent sued on, the sixth figure having been subsequently added, and exhibiting a side view of the feed-motion. The model thus filed is the one on which the patent sued on was issued. The drawings represented fully all the improvements patented. The specification filed December 12th, 1850, contained a satisfactory description of three of the four improvements which are claimed in the patent of 1856, namely, those covered by the first, second and third claims of that patent. It did not contain any description of the mechanism covered by the fourth claim of that patent. It did not claim, as the invention of Singer, any of the improvements which are covered by any of the claims in the patent of 1856, except the first claim. In respect to that it claimed, as an invention, operating the needle by a crank-pin working in a cam-groove attached to or making part of the needle-carrier. That was its third claim. Its other four claims, there having been in it five claims in all, related to matters which are not embraced in the four claims of the patent of 1856. Before any action was taken by the patent office on the application, the applicant erased the second claim. The other four were rejected on the 0th of March, 1851. On the 24th of July, 1S51, Singer presented to the patent office a new specification and oath on the same application, and asked that the case might be considered anew'. The papers and drawings had been returned to the applicant on the 24th of March, 1851, and it was on this oeear sion that the sixth figure was added to the drawings, as this specification of July, 1851, refers to figure six as being a side view of the feed-motion. The other five figures of drawings were the same as before, and there was no new model and no new fee. This specification of July, 1851, contained a description of the improvements which are covered by the first, second, and third claims of the patent of 1850, but did not contain any description of the mechanism which is covered by the fourth claim of that patent. It did not claim any of the improvements which are claimed by any of the four claims in the patent of 1856. It contained, as originally presented, only two claims: (1) The combination of a straight needle, carried by a carrier sliding in ways perpendicular to the material, with a shuttle; (2) the application of the driving force to the needle at a point in a line with its motion. Such first claim was substantially the same as the first claim in the specification filed in December, 1850. On the 29th of October, 1851, the patent office rejected the two claims of the specification of July, 1851. The papers having been returned to the applicant, he erased the second claim, and altered the language of the first, leaving its substance the same as before. On the 19th of January, 1852, it was rejected. On the 21st of January, 1852, the specification was returned to the applicant. He made some alterations in the description and claim, and, on the 22d of January, 1852, asked for a reconsideration of the case, urging, in an argument, the granting of the claim for the combination of the straight needle with the shuttle. On the 12th of February, 1852, the application was again rejected. The papers were returned to the applicant on the 14th of April, 1852. A new form of claim was drawn, and, on the 21st of April, 1852, presented to the patent office, accompanied by an argument in its favor. This claim claimed the employment of a straight needle working in a permanent frame, perpendicular to an unyielding bed, through which the needle works, and is guided to receive the thread from the shuttle below. On the 22d of May, 1852, the patent office rejected this claim. In its letter of that date to the applicant, it said: “This office has heretofore carefully examined and rejected four sets of claims, which have been successively presented and abandoned by you, and now, having found the fifth un-patentable, further action on this application is positively declined. Mr. Singer can withdraw, or appeal.” Tie papers and drawings were returned to the applicant in December, 1852 On the 6th of January, 1853, he made oath to a new specification. On the 10th of January, 1853, the papers and drawings, and the new specification, were transmitted to the patent office, as a part of the case in which the application had been rejected, with a request for action on the new specification. A letter on the subject was addressed by the office to the applicant on the 11th of February, 1853, but it is not produced, and its contents are not made known. The specification was returned to the applicant on the
On the foregoing facts, it is contended, on the part of the defendants, that the application for á patent for the improvements which are covered by the claims of the patent sued on was not made until the 14th of March, 1853; that the application of the 12th of December, 1850, was abandoned; and that, consequently, it is established that the improvements in question were on sale, with the consent and allowance of Singer, for more than two years before he applied for a patent for them. There can be no doubt whatever, that the model and drawings filed in December, 1850, fully represented the four improvements claimed in the patent sued on; that the specification then filed fully described the improvements claimed in the first, second and third claims of that patent; and that such specification claimed, in substance, what is covered by the first claim of such patent. Such claim to the operation of the needle by a crank-pin working in a cam-groove attached to or making part of the needle-carrier, disappeared from the specification in July, 1851. The only material invention which the applicant claimed to patent by the specification of July, 1S51, was the combination of the straight needle with the shut-
If what has been recited as having taken •place prior to March, 1853, in respect to Singer’s application, had never taken place, there •can be no doubt that it could not have been urged as a.valid objection to the patent sued •on, that the inventor did not, until September, 1S56, ask for a patent for any one of the four -claims covered by that patent; and, even though it had been shown that the improvements covered by those four claims were in public use and on sale, with the consent and allowance of the inventor, as early as March, 1853, the inventor would have been regarded as having applied, in March, 1853, for a patent for such improvements, they having been satisfactorily represented in the drawings and model then presented with the specification, although not claimed until September, 1856, as inventions. This is familiar law, in regard to applications for patents. * The specification is always open to amendment of its description and claims, and to the addition of new matters of description and new claims, where the drawings and model exhibit the matters involved in the amendments and additions; and this privilege continues until the matter of the application is finally disposed of, by the granting of a patent, or otherwise. So, also, if a patent bad been granted to Singer, on any of his specifications prior to that of September, 1856,' with claims not containing any of the improvements covered by the claims in the patent sued on, he might have obtained a reissue of such patent, on an application for such reissue made in September, 1S50, with the claims found in the patent sued on, and it would have been no objection to the validity of any claim in such reissue, that machines containing the improvement covered by it were in public use and on sale, with the consent and allowance of Singer, for more than two years before September, 1856, even though the granting of such claim had never been asked for prior to September, 1856. So, also, if the patent sued on had been issued prior to March 14th, 1853, with no one of the four claims now found in it, it would have been no objection to the validity of any claim found in a reissue of it made after that date, that machines containing the improvement covered by such claim had been in public use and on sale, with the consent and allowance of Singer, for more than two years prior to the application for the reissue, and that the granting of such claim had not been asked for before the making of such application for reissue. Moreover, if, in March, 1853, only the new specification and oath then furnished had been presented, and there had been no new petition, and no payment of a new fee, and there had been no technical refiling of the former drawings and model, it could not be doubted, that the patent issued in November, 1856, would have relation to the application of December, 1850, and that the claims found in it would be considered as having been applied for in December, 1850, even though the granting of no one of them-had been asked for, in any specification, prior to September, 1856. In analogy to these views, I do not think that Singer can be regarded as having, by anything he or the patent office is shown to have done, abandoned his application of December, 1850. The inventions claimed in his patent of 1856 having-been shown in his model and drawings filed in December, 1850, he is, in view of the set-
A defence, insisted on to the second claim of the patent, is, that the improvement covered by it was previously invented by one William Wickersham. That claim is a claim to “projecting the operative part of the surface of the feeding apparatus through the surface of the table, substantially as described, so that such feeding surface may act on a portion of the under surface of the material to be sewed,' to give the required feeding motion to space the stitches, while the other portions of the said material slide on the table, which answers the purpose of stripping the said material from the feeding surface, and to cover and protect the mechanism which operates the feeder, as set forth.” The table referred to is a horizontal table. The material to be sewed rests upon it in a horizontal position. The feeding apparatus is a vertical wheel, revolving on a horizontal axis, tclow the tabled The-periphery of the wh¡1 projects upward through a hole in the table, to a short distance above the upper surface of the table, and, in feeding, the wheel, as it revolves, acts on a portion of the under surface of the material to be sewed, while the residue of such material slides horizontally on the table. The second claim is limited to this apparatus, or any substantially the same. The-feed-wheel of Wickersham rotated horizontally, on a vertical axis, within the shuttle-race of the machine, and was armed with small points on its periphery, such periphery projecting out of the shuttle-race far enough to allow of sufficient engagement of the points with the material outside of the shuttle-race, to feed such material. A spring pressed the material against the feed-wheel. But there was, in Wickersham’s apparatus, no horizontal table, which supported the material to be sewed. Such material was held in suspension between the pressure-spring and the periphery of the feed-wheel. It is sufficient to say, that the use of this arrangement of Wickersham’s would be no infringement of Singer’s patent, and the defendants-are free to use it, so far .as that patent is
What is called the Lafetra machine, set up as containing the improvement claimed in the second claim of the patent, vas, on the evidence, an abortive experiment.
It is set up, as a defence to the third claim of the patent, that a griping-pawl, actuated by the hand of the operator, had been before used, to gripe the feed-wheel, in an engraver’s ruling machine, for the purpose of regulating the distance between the lines, instead of using a pawl and ratchet. It is a sufficient answer to this defence to say, that the third claim of the patent, in claiming the use of a griping lever, “substantially as described,” to impart the feeding motion to the feeder, claims such use to impart such motion automatically, and as a part of automatic organized mechanism, and not by hand. The motion is described as being imparted by the griping lever automatically, and not otherwise. To so impart it automatically is a patentable invention, notwithstanding the prior use of the hand griping-pawl, in the engraver’s machine.
It is also set up, as a defence, that some or all of the improvements covered by the patent sued on were described and represented, though not claimed, in a patent granted to Singer August 12th, 1851, and in a reissue thereof, granted to him October 3d, 1854, and in a patent granted to him April 13th, 1852. It is a sufficient answer to this def <: ,ce to say, that it is disposed of by the determination already arrived at, that the application made by Singer in December, 1850, remained in force, as a continuing application, until the granting of the patent in 185G, and that the patent is to be regarded as having been issued on that application. Such determination is as applicable to the defence thus raised, as to the defence of constructive abandonment. A patent is never invalidated by the fact, that the invention claimed in it was described, but not claimed, in a patent granted subsequently to the making of the application for the patent secondly issued, but before it was granted.
The remaining defence set up is, that the improvements covered by the patent sued on were either invented by one Orson O. Phelps, and communicated by him to Singer, or were invented by Phelps and Singer jointly, and not by Singer alone. Without discussing at length the evidence taken on this question on both sides, it is sufficient to say, That it is established, by overwhelming testimony, that Singer was the sole inventor of those improvements, and that Phelps was not the inventor of them, either alone or in conjunction with Singer. The testimony of Phelps himself is counterbalanced by the oath of Singer to his specification, the conduct of Phelps was wholly inconsistent with his having been connected at all, as invent- or, with a machine -which, from the very stai’t, and as early as January, 1851, proved itself to be a success, and the testimony adduced on the part of the plaintiffs establishes that the story of Phelps, as to his connection with the invention, is a pure fabrication.
This disposes of all the questions raised in the case. The infringement of all the claims of the patent is not disputed, and the defendants’ machine manifestly embodies all of them.
There must be the usual decree for an injunction, and an account of profits, with costs to the plaintiffs.