189 F. 896 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern New York | 1911
The complainants have brought action against two defendants who are making and selling carbureters containing the same elements as are described in complainant’s Schebler patent, No. 806,434, issued December 5, 1905, upon an application filed October 30, 1903. The defendants’ carbureters are both almost exact copies of the patented device, and no question of infringement, apart from that of validity,. exists as the record now stands. The complainant was allowed four claims, of which three must be considered herein; the fourth claim being merely as to a form of throttle valve, which has no bearing. Claims 1, 2, and 3 are as follows:
“1. A carbureter consisting of a main casing having an air-passage there-through with an. induction-opening and an eduction-opening, an air-inlét structure, a throttle-valve structure, and means for securing either of said structures to either the induction or eduction openings.
“2. A carbureter consisting of a main casing having an air-passage there-through with an induction-opening and an eduction-opening, and an air-inlet structure provided with a yielding check-plate normally obstructing the passage therethrough.
“3. A carbureter consisting of a main easing having an air-passage there-through with an induction-opening and an eduction-opening, an air-inlet structure provided with a yielding check-plate normally obstructing the passage*897 therethrough, a throttle-valve structure, and means for securing the inlet structure and the throttle-valve structure to either the induction or eduction openings.”
The interchangeable feature shown in claims 1 and 3 is claimed not to be infringed by one of the defendants (Murray) who uses different size screws for the attachments at the opposite sides of his carbureter, thus voluntarily doing away with the possibility of exchanging the point of attaching those parts to fit different positions of the engine. But it appears that, if the patent be valid and the defendants’ structures infringe claims 1 and 2, they (or either of them) cannot escape the charge of infringement of claims 1 and 3 by some purely mechanical variation which interferes with the full benefit of the complete device. He cannot contend that he does not infringe because he does not seek every advantageous use that an infringing structure or the patent itself may be capable of, and which would be available by a purely mechanical alteration of the size of screw. Hence the validity of all these claims must be considered.
Upon final hearing the defendants have introduced a large number of patents in addition to those presented upon the argument for a preliminary injunction under claim1' 1 (which was denied). They endeavor to show that the claims of the Schebler patent, Nos. 1, 2, and 3, are so general in their language as to be anticipated, and hence invalid, or that, if the Schebler patent be limited to the matters as to which the possibility of invention existed as shown by the specifications and drawings of the patent, the complainant cannot recover because of his attempt to claim broad ideas, old in the art, and only generally fitting the drawings and specifications, which show such a limited form or combination of elements that the discovery should have been confined to an exact statement of the device. The general ideas of a basic patent were not (and should not have been claimed as) the invention of the patentee.
The patents of the prior art are so many in number, and their ideas depend so much upon the particular method of construction or control, that, aside from the general language contained in the Schebler claims, they, in most instances, are easily dismissed from consideration. _ Many of them have been discussed on the application for preliminary injunction. The development of a carbureter for automobiles was accomplished in a very short time, owing to the rapid growth and spread of the automobile industry at just about the period when Schebler applied for his patent. A number of patents cited by the defendants were applied for within the same six months in which Schebler attempts, to show that.he was working on his invention, and just prior to the time when he filed his own application. So many individuals were working at the same idea and along somewhat similar lines that it is impossible to entirely dismiss Schebler’s claim of being the first inventor by saying that in the presence of so much proof his testimony as to priority must be absolute in order to be convincing. It is impossible to deny Schebler’s priority of invention, if his testimony does show that he, even by a short time, reached a patentable idea, in such a way as to make others, who
The form of air inlet and also the use of a throttle valve as described and applied by Schebler are old and several of the patents cited, such as Bates (supra), Frenay, British (supra), show an air-passage which fulfills the purpose of the air-passage which Schebler carries through his casing, but none of these suggests the form of Schebler with the advantages of the compact, symmetrical, and practical structure which he gains thereby, and for which he seems able to claim invention. The benefit of attachment at the side and top (or at points in different horizontal and vertical planes) is also new in Schebler, although (as has been pointed out) some of the symmetrical or reversible structures of the other patent could be used in that way by forced mechanical change. This idea is plainly claimed by Schebler, and seems to be sufficiently a part of his original idea in making a compact and variable carbureter, to be allowed as invention. At this point it may be well to consider the date of invention by Schebler and the dates of application for other patents, such as Krebs, who followed closely on Pidgeon.
The testimony shows that on July 1, 1903, Schebler assigned his earlier patent and agreed to assign improvements made after that date. Other testimony would indicate that Schebler had perfected the idea of the patent in suit before that time, and that his application for this patent in October of that year was, therefore, within his rights. lie would seem to be thus able to claim invention before the issuance of the Krebs patent, but not before the Krebs application.
It would therefore seem that, viewing the patents of the prior art from this examination, Schebler had a patentable idea with ref-ex’ence to the combination of a more or less spherical bowl as a casing, the conduction of air by a continuous air-passage (inside .the casixig), from the entrance of that passage to the point where it leaves the casing, in such manner as to inject into the air tube the gasoline or other fluid from a small supply regulated by a float valve, by 'such means and at such a poixit as to increase or diminish the supply of gasoline, and also the quantity of air, solely through the demand upon or suction of the mixture by the engine, this latter demand depending upon speed or other conditions which have to be met, but which need not be examined as to cause. Schebler also seems to have discovered the possibility, of adjusting the supply of air in the manner described (by the use of the inlet which he employs) and of controlling the quantity of mixture by the effect of the suction (resulting from the use of a throttle valve) upon the pressure within the carbureter (with an automatic regulation of the flow of gasoline from the effect of that pressure) all coxnbined in one structure. But Schebler did not attempt to limit his claims merely to the application of these principles (which can separately be found in one or another of the prior patents), nor does he seem to have tried to patent the particular device or combination of devices constituting his style of carbureter, as ixidicated by his drawings and specifications, and thus to xnake patentable use of the principles well known, so far as cause and effect are concerned, in similar patents. He' showed by his drawings and specifications that his invention was of this nature. When he reached the point of stating his claims, after more or less correspondence with the Patent Office, he stated that his invention consisted in the discovery of the broad ideas shown in a number of patexrts, and he failed to limit whatever invention he may have made, or whatever ideas he may have 1‘eached, to the improvements in the structure which he describes in the specifications and drawings. In his specifications he says:
“In tlxe construction of automobiles of the gas-engine type a carbureter is an essential element; and the object of my present invention is to provide an efficient carbureter of the type shown in my patent No. 711,005, which is exceedingly compact and the parts of which may be rearranged with relation to each other in order to adapt the apparatus for use in different types of machines.”
“A further object of my invention is to provide means for automatically varying the proportions and the character of the mixture produced and to provide such improvements in details of construction as are hereinafter pointed out.”
But, when he sets forth what he claims, he does not specify a float-feed nor a bowl casing. lie provides for no gasoline nozzle or supply at all, much less one located at the center of the bowl and in the air-passage. He describes the basic claim of a compact carbureter with a regulation of the supply and mixture by the inlet and outlet, and couples this broad idea with those of the air-passage “therethrough,” and with interchangeable attachments; but eve.n these are not differentiated from the opposite sides of a merely symmetrical structure, nor described as being at the ends of an L-shaped passage. He does not refer to the specifications and drawings, nor suggest that his distinct claim is an improvement of the type described or a combination of the elements specified as making up his structure. In short, he merely adds to his earlier patent the inlet and throttle valve, with the interchangeable character of the parts. Can such claims be held valid?
The inlet and throttle valve were not new except in his particular combination. The interchangeability is not infringed by the defendant Murray, and was not patentable except as applied to the particular device or combination which Sehebler describes in his specifications, so as to accomplish a definite benefit. If he had claimed a combination of old parts in such a way that a new method was involved, then he might claim the method as a result of the use of those or any equivalent parts. But Sehebler does not seek to do this. He has tried to claim as invention the general idea of a carbureter of any type (although his type was plainly taught in his earlier patent) with the ideas patented by Krebs and Pidgeon (to say nothing of Dawson and Krastin), and to protect this wide basic proposition by adding interchangeability. Did he thereby get a valid patent even for the idea of interchangeability? It seems impossible to so hold. The details of the drawings and specifications are not even alleged to be invented by him. He has stated them as premises, and they might have been invented by any one. He then claims, not these parts or their method of use or their combination, but, on the other hand, general ideas which were unpatentable, and claims which would be infringed by many devices patented long before. Apparently such claims should have been refused by the Patent Office. He should have been compelled to state what he described, and what he really seems to have invented and intended. He cannot now be heard to say that his broad claims are really limited and explained by the drawings and specifications which are not by reference or description made a part thereof.
Prom another point of view, he seems to try to claim the idea that a carbureter can be successfully made out of nothing but a casing, an air-passage, with inlet and outlet structures (to regulate air at the inlet and mixture at the outlet), and with these structures re
The scope of a claim is set forth in White v. Dunbar, 119 U. S. 51, 7 Sup. Ct. 72, 30 L. Ed. 303, in which it is held that the context —i. e., the specifications — “may be resorted to 'for better understanding the meaning of the claim, hut not for the purpose of changing it and making it different from what it is.” This patent is not like those in McCarty v. Railroad Co., 160 U. S. 110, 16 Sup. Ct. 240, 40 L. Ed. 358, or U. S. Repair & Guaranty Co. v. Assyrian Asphalt Co., 183 U. S. 591, 22 Sup. Ct. 87, 46 L. Ed. 342, where the claims were narrower than the specifications, and an attempt was made to show that the patentee had really invented everything covered by' the-specifications. In these cases the court held that infringement of the claims could not be found because of infringement of the ideas which they had been intended to cover. The case of Evans v. Eaton, 7 Wheat. 356, 5 L. Ed. 472, is more nearly' in point. As, also, Consolidated Bunging Apparatus Co. v. Metropolitan Brewing Co., 60 Fed. 93, 8 C. C. A. 485, Excelsior Needle Co. v. Morse-Keefer Cycle-Supply Co., 101 Fed. 448, 41 C. C. A. 448, and Edison v. American Mutoscope Co., 114 Fed. 926, 52 C. C. A. 546. In these cases it' was held that a patentee could not after using broad claims show that a narrower construction was meant or could be surmised from the specifications, nor could the court work out the real invention so as to define the inventor’s meaning as he should have stated it. See, also, Walker on Patents, p. 170, par. 181, and 2 Robinson on Patents, pp. 139, 140.
A reissue would seem to be necessary before Schebler can prove infringement of any valid claim, and, as the case stands, the defendants should have decrees.