101 F. 121 | 6th Cir. | 1900
This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a hill to enjoin the infringement of claims 2, 4, 8, 12, and 16 of patent No. 495,443, issued to Charles J. Van Depoele for improvements in suspended switches and traveling contacts for electric railways. The sole question in the case is whether the patent sued on is rendered invalid by patent No. 424,695, issued to the same inventor, for improvements in the same art. The question was stated hy this court in Thomson-Houston Electric Co. v. Ohio Brass Co., 26 C. C. A. 107, 80 Fed. 712, but was not decided. We there said:
“We come now to the question whether patent No. 495,443 is rendered void by the prior issue of patent No. 424,695. This presents much more difficulty than the question just disposed of. In this case, the drawings and specifications of the two patents are substantially alike, and show a car, a track, a post on top of the car, a swinging and hinged arm pivoted in the post with a contact wheel at its outer end. A spring is secured to the lower end of the swinging arm, and to the spring is attached a weight, which works in suitable vertical grooves down through the roof to the front platform within reach, of the driver. The spring and weight maintain the contact of the outer end of the swinging arm with the overhead conductor. Switches in the overhead conductor are maintained immediately over the point in the track where track*122 switches occur. The trolley post and arm are in such positions and of such size that the point of contact of the outer end of the arm and the overnead conductor is back of the front wheels o-f the car. This is for the purpose of imparting to the trolley wheel as it enters the switch in the overhead conductor the direction already taken by the front wheels of the car in entering the switches upon the track. The spring and weight working in vertical grooves are intended to keep the trolley arm in the vertical plane of the longitudinal center of the car, and thus to make its contact wheel more certain to follow in the overhead switch the direction of the car as it turns into a track switch. It is shown by the evidence that the inventor first used in his combination a spring attached to the top of the car to secure contact, and then a spring attached to the foot of the trolley post, and finally the spring and weight arrangement shown in the drawings of the patents. The claims of the second patent in question are for the broad claims of a combination* in an electric railway, of a car, a track, and overhead conductor, a post and swinging hinged arm on the ear, and a tension spring for maintaining contact between the arm and the conductor; and the language of the specifications shows that it, was the intention of the inventor to make this cover the generic invention. The' claims of the first patent that embrace the whole combination include the weight as part of the means for maintaining upward pressure of the arm against the conductor. There are five claims of the first patent that cover the whole combination, and include a spring or weight to perform the function of keeping the trolley arm in the center line of the ear. Now, this samé spring and weight in the drawings discharge the function of maintaining the upward pressure of the swinging arm. The contention of the counsel for the complainant is that the first patent was a patent for the special and improved form of the invention including the spring and weight, with their upward pressure and centralizing tendency, and that the second patent, though using the same drawings and specifications, shows by the language of the latter and its claims that it was intended to cover, and did cover, a combination with a spring without a weight in such a position that it need only discharge the function of maintaining the upward pressure of the arm without the centralizing tendency, and that the modification of the drawings and specifications to show such a tension spring is only the work of a skilled mechanic. To the objection that the last five claims of the earlier patent are exactly the same as the broad claims of the later patent, with the mere statement of a necessary centralizing function of the same spring always present in it, it is answered that the second patent was intended to cover springs that had no centralizing tendency, and that the use of the function in describing the spring, therefore, is a limitation of the claim showing it to be a special form of spring. It is argued, therefore, that as the claims of the first patent do not cover any of the broad claims of the second patent, based on a simpler combination of parts than that shown in the drawings, the second patent may be held to be a separate generic invention, while the earlier patent is merely for improved forms of the same invention entitled to a separate patent. We think the ease on these two patents much nearer Miller v. Manufacturing Co., 14 Sup. Ct. 310, 38 L. Ed. 121, than the ease on the two patents already considered, but we are unwilling, upon an appeal from a preliminary injunction heard upon affidavits, and without a full review of the art, and without a fuller argument, and closer consideration of the claim and specifications, to decide the question mooted. The questions are whether, in determining the separability of the inventions, we may consult evidence dehors the record, and whether, in considering the gist of the second patent, we may supply such variations in the form of the combination shown in the drawings and specifications suggested by mere mechanical skill as would make it one not covered by the first patent, but a simpler and'more generic form, and whether the claims of the second patent are limited to the devices actually shown by the words ‘substantially as described.’ ”
Those questions are now presented on the merits and on pleadings and proof. It seems clear to us, after careful consideration, that the principles announced in Miller v. Manufacturing Co. require us to hold that the patent here in suit is void. The devices