delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent is the owner of a combination patent covering a fish-canning machíne. A number of machines covered by thе patent were manufactured and sold under *555 his authorization. Among them were the four machines in suit, pеtitioner Wilbur-Ellis Company being the second-hand purchaser. Respondent received out of the original purchase price a royalty of $1,500 per machine. As originally constructed each оf these machines packed fish into “1-pound” cans: 3 inches in diameter and 4n/i6 inches high. Three of the machines when acquired by Wilbur-Ellis were corroded, rusted, and inoperative; and all required cleaning аnd sandblasting to make them usable. Wilbur-Ellis retained petitioner Leuschner to put the machines in conditiоn so they would operate and to resize six of the 35 elements that made up the patented сombination. The resizing was for the purpose of enabling the machines to pack fish into “5-ouncе” cans: 2% inches in diameter and 3y2 inches long. One of the six elements was so corroded that it could be rendered operable only by grinding it down to a size suitable for use with the smaller “5-ounce” can.
This suit for infringement followed; and both the District Court,
We put to one side the case where the discovery or invеntion resided in or embraced either the size or locational characteristics of the replaced elements of a combination patent or the size of the commodity on which thе machine operated. The claims of the patent before us do not reach that far. Wе also put to one side the case where replacement was made of a patеnted component of a combination patent. We deal here with a patent that cоvered only a combination of unpatented components.
The question in terms of patent law precedents is whether what was done to these machines, the original manufacture and sale of which had been licensed by the patentee, amounted to “repair,” in which event there was no infringement, or “reconstruction,” in which event there
*556
was.
*
The idea of “reconstruction” in this context has the special connotation of those acts which would impinge on the patentee's right
“to exclude others from making,”
35 U. S. C. § 154, the article. As stated in
Wilson
v.
Simpson,
Whatever view may be taken of the holding in the first Aro case, the majоrity believe that it governs the present one. These four machines were not spent; they had years of usefulness remaining though they needed cleaning and repair. Had they been renovated and рut to use on the “1-pound” cans, there could be no question but that they were “repaired,” not “reсonstructed,” within the meaning of the cases. When six of the 35 elements of the combination patent were resized or relocated, no invasion of the patent resulted, for as we have said the sizе of cans serviced by the machine was no part of the invention; nor were characteristiсs of size, location, shape and con *557 struction of the six elements in question patented. Petitioners in adapting the old machines to a related use were doing more than repair in the customary sense; but what they did was kin to repair for it bore on the useful capacity of the old combinаtion, on which the royalty had been paid. We could not call it “reconstruction” without saying that the рatentee’s right “to exclude others from making” the patented machine, 35 U. S. C. § 154, had been infringed. Yet adaptation for use of the machine on a “5-ounce” can is within the patent rights purchased, since size was not an invention.
The adaptation made in the six nonpatented elements improved the usefulness of these machines. That does not, however, make the adaptation “reconstruсtion” within the meaning of the cases. We are asked in substance to treat the case as if pеtitioners had a license for use of the machines on “1-pound” cans only. But the sales here werе outright, without restriction.
Adams
v.
Burke,
“. . . when the patentee, or the person having his rights, sells a machine or instrument whosе sole value is in its use, he receives the consideration for its use and he parts with the right to restrict that use.”
And see
United States
v.
Univis Lens Co.,
Reversed.
Notes
See
Cotton-Tie Co.
v.
Simmons,
