Case ID: f_71/html/0416-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "WOODS, Circuit Judge.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

FERGUSON et al. v. ED. ROOS MANUF’G CO.
    (Circuit Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
    January 6, 1896.)
    No. 267.
    1. Patentable Invention—Changing Old Device.
    There is no patentable invention in the conception and making of a folding screen of three panels out of two panels of the old style, joined by means of crosspieces pivoted in any of the known modes, even where this results in dispensing with two of the six standards before employed, and producing a screen callable at once of standing by its own strength, and of adjusting itself to irregularities of surface.
    2. Same—Removal of Surplus Material.
    Under ordinary circumstances the removal of surplus material, or needless parts of a physical structure, without changing the relation, connection, or operation of the essential elements, cannot involve invention.
    
      8. Same — Folding Scbeens.
    The Campbell patent, No. 447,461, for an improvement in folding screens, is void for want of invention.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern Division of the Northern District of Illinois.
    This was a suit iu equity by Louis Ferguson, Harry Ferguson, and George W. Ferguson, Jr., against the Ed. Roos Manufacturing Company for alleged infringement of a patent for a folding screen. The circuit court dismissed the bill, and complainants appeal.
    < laikson A. Collins and Taylor E. Brown, for appellants.
    -Tolto (1. Elliott and E. A.. Hopkins, for appellee.
    Before WOODS, JENKINS, and SHOW ALTER, Circuit Judges.
   WOODS, Circuit Judge.

This appeal presents the question of the validity of letters patent No. 447,461, issued March 31, 1891, to Ferguson Bros., assignees of James W. Campbell, for an improvement in folding screens. The usual defenses were pleaded, including antHpaiion by a number of prior patents. The bill, brought for infringement and to obtain an injunction, was dismissed because, in the opinion of the court, the letters, did not cover a patentable invention.

Omitting the references to the drawings, the specification and churn of the patent are as follows:

"'.My invention consists of a folding screen having two panels, which, being pivoted to connecting bars, thereby form a third or central panel, one upright of each outside panel forming also an upright for the central panel; ai d die objcc-i of my invention is: First to lessen the cost of manufacture, ami su die same time produce a screen as attractive in appearance as those now iii the market; and, second, to make •; screen that will more readily adept itself to die inequalities of the flooring-; and my invention further consists in certain novel features of construction to be hereinafter more fully described. * * A screen made as here described and illustrated wili, on account oí the manner of pivoting the panels together, very readily adjust it: elf to any inequality in 1 lie flowing, as a slight twist in the center panal womd raise or lower the outer ones according to its direction. ¡Such slight twist will not injure to any appreciable degree the structure as a whole, since the pivotal connection between the crossbar and side frames of the center panel will always admit of some play. What l claim as my invention is: The combination, with two .outer panels having rigid frames, each consisting of two uprights and crossbars connecting the uprights, of an intermediate panel foimed by a pair of crossbars pivotally connected at their opposite ends with the adjacent uprights or the rigid frames of the outer panels, substantially as set forth.”

H the word “rigid” were omitted this claim would, in effect, be the same as one which was rejected upon reference to the “patent to Broughton, No. 425,290, April 8, 1890, fire screens, in view of Carey, and Carey, No. 421,383, February .18,1890, fire screens; there being,” in the opinion of the examiner, “no invention in applying the method of hinging two panels together, as shown in Fig. 3 of Carey and Carey, to a structure of three panels, as shown by Broughton.” It is not deemed important to determine the exact force of the word “rigid” as used in the claim (a point on which there has been some discussion), but it seems to mean simply that the standards and crosspiece's of the outer panels shall be firmly and rigidly united, in contrast with the pivotal connection of the crosspieces of the middle panel with the standards on either side. If the crosspieces of the outer panels were pivoted so as to move freely upon the standards, the screens would be liable to fall and less capable of ornamentation. Figs. 2 and 3 of the patent show a special means for pivoting the panels to the upper and lower connecting bars respectively, which, according to the last clause of the specification, would seem to have been designed to affect in a particular way the relative movements of the panels; but nothing is made of this feature of construction in the claim, unless it be by force of the words “substantially as set forth,” and that is not asserted by counsel for the appellant. If it were, the proof of infringement would fail. On the contrary, the position of counsel for the appellant is, and it is not understood to be disputed, that the claim covers any form of pivotal connection between the crosspieces of the middle panel and the adjacent standards of the rigid panels. Proceeding on that assumption, we are not able to see, even if the prior art, except as it is disclosed in the patent, be disregarded, that there is invention in the conception and making of a screen of three panels out of two panels of the old style joined by means of crosspieces pivoted in any of the known modes. It needs only to take an old-fashioned screen of three panels hinged together and cut away from the middle panel those portions of the sides or standards between the hinges; and, if the hinges are in line with the crosspieces, the portions above and below the hinges may also be removed, unless permitted to remain for the purpose of ornamentation. In either case the result is the construction shown in the patent. Under ordinary circumstances, the removal of surplus material or needless parts of a physical structure, without changing the relation, connection, or operation of the essential elements, 'cannot be invention, and it certainly could not be to make the change suggested in the old forms of screens, though with the result of dispensing with two of the six standards before employed, and producing a screen capable at once of standing by its own strength and of adjusting itself to irregularities of surface; and if, for sake of economy or of elegance of appearance, it was desirable to dispense with the hinges commonly in use, available substitutes were not unknown or difficult to find. Changes equally simple, and perhaps more obvious, in many of the devices of the prior art, would bring them explicitly under the terms of the claim in question. In the clothes drier of Bassett — patent No. 127.948, issued June 18,1872 —a construction in exact conformity with the claim is shown. The space between the rigid panels, it is true, is narrow, — the drawing shows about one-fifteenth of the width given to the panels, — and the connecting bars are called hinges, but they are in truth bars, with clips at either end, designed to be bent into grooves around the standards, and need only to be lengthened to produce the full-sized inner panel. The patent of Brigham, No. 110,952, dated January 17, 1871, shows a clothes drier of two rigid panels connected by pivoted crossbars, and with slight alterations, which any mechanic could make without affecting materially the relation of the parts, it needs only to be stood on end to be the counterpart of Campbell’s construction. In the Hurd patent, No. 185,927, issued January 2, 3877, which is also for a clothes drier, there is a rigid panel, and pivoted upon one of its side pieces, or standards, is a second panel, and, if the second panel were pivoted to another rigid panel upon the other side, and the intermediate bars, useful in a clothes drier, but needless in a screen, removed, the exemplification of the claim in question would be complete. Only the framework of the screen is covered by the patent, and the analogy between the frames of clothes driers and screens is evident. Campbell is shown to have been familiar with the construction and actual manufacture of both. But some of the earlier patents in evidence are for fire; screens; for instance, that of Carey and Carey, No. 421,383, issued February 18, 1890, and that of Broughton, No. 425,290, of April 8, 1890. The latter may not in itself be an anticipation, because not issued until after the screens of the patent had been manufactured; but it is shown that screens of the same form had long been in use. It is composed of three rigid panels, connected by straps, which need only to be lengthened, as in the case of Bassett’s clothes drier, to produce the third or central panel of the patent in suit. Fig. 3 of the Carey and Carey patent shows a screen of two panels, one of which is rigid and the other has its crossbars joined rigidly at one end to a standard and pivoted at the other end to one of the standards of the first panel. A third panel, like the second, and pivoted to its side, it is conceded, might be added without invention; and it is equally clear that without invention the crossbars of the second panel could be pivoted at both ends, and the third panel made rigid. Any mechanic would do it whenever presented with a reason or motive for doing it. He would need to devise or invent nothing, but simply to duplicate on the right of the second panel what he bad before him on the left of it.

Many pages of brief and of expert testimony have been devoted to immaterial differences between the device in question and the constructions of the earlier patents, but, as we have had occasion to remark before, it is more important to observe what are the features of essential identity between devices than to descant upon those which ai-e merely accidental, and might be substituted one for another, or entirely removed, without disturbing the relation of parts or the principles of construction or operation. Temple Pump Co. v. Goss Pump & Rubber Bucket Manuf’g Co., 18 U. S. App. 229, 7 C. C. A. 174, 58 Fed. 196; De La Vergne Bottle & Seal Co. v. Valentine Blatz Brewing Co., 14 C. C. A. 77, 84, 66 Fed. 765.

The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.