Court Opinion

ID: 8795054
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:06:47.790281+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:34.809817
License: Public Domain

DENISON, Circuit Judge.
[1] The city of Akron appeals from the usual interlocutory decree of infringement against it, based upon patent No. 705,732, of July 29, 1902, issued to Frank A. Bone, for a reinforced concrete retaining wall. It consists of a comparatively thin vertical wall, broadening at the base into a heel and toe. - The heel extends back a considerable distance underneath the earth bank to be retained, and, accordingly, so long as the entire wall structure remains unitary, the weight of the earth bank resting on the heel operates to prevent the wall from tipping over forward, and thus the same body which exerts a horizontal forward pressure, especially on the upper part of the wall, is caused to resist that pressure by its own weight. To prevent breaking of the wall by the lateral strain, Bone provided continuous reinforcing in a vertical plane, extending up and down the wall and obliquely into the heel. This gave tensile strength and adapted it to resist the greatest strain. A preferred form is described in the third claim as follows:
“The combination with a retaining wall having an inclined heel of a metal structure imbedded within said wall and heel, consisting of upright bents at; the back part of the vertical wall and continuing down along the upper part of the hei'l of said wall to the back part thereof, lu such a manner that the weight of the retained material upon the heel of the metal structure will operate to maintain the wall in the vertical position.”
The claims in suit are Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 16, and 17.
In the present more or less familiar state of the reinforced concrete art, the impression is natural that there cannot be patentability in" the structure of these claims; but the patent was issued upon an application filed in 1899, which was a renewal of an application in 1898, and Mr. Bone’s idea is shown to have antedated his application. We are thus carried back nearly 20 years. The record discloses nothing anticipating the substantial thought of the patent. Masonry or concrete retaining walls were deep and heavy, and maintained by gravity in their resistance against a horizontal stress. There was no occasion for reinforcement. Sustaining walls had been built of concrete with *946vertical reinforcement; but they were maintained against side strain by cross-ties or beams, without which they might tip over. If the prior art had shown a structure intended for a retaining wall, and having a heel such that the weight of the earth thereon would tend to keep the wall erect, it might be difficult to find invention in merely adding the form of reinforcement most suitable to create the desired tensile strength; but we find no such earlier structures. Those which have that shape are sustaining walls only, and were so obviously unfit for use as retaining walls that no one seems to have seen the utility for that purpose, of which the form, when properly adapted and strengthened, was capable. There is also a prior wall, wholly of .metal, fairly disclosing a unitary heel adapted to hold the*wall erect; but to see that this could become merely a skeleton imbedded in concrete may well have required, in 1898, more than ordinary vision. Upon the whole, we think invention was involved, and the claims are valid.’ Expanded Metal Co. v. Bradford, 214 U. S. 366, 381, 29 Sup. Ct. 652, 53 L. Ed. 1034; Ferro-Concrete Co. v. Concrete Steel Co. (C. C. A. 6) 206 Fed. 666, 124 C. C. A. 466. And see our comments in Faultless Co. v. Star Co., 202 Fed. 927, 121 C. C. A. 285, upon the Rubber Tire Case, 220 U. S. 428, 31 Sup. Ct. 444, 55 L. Ed. 527, in which the opinion of this court in 116 Fed. 363, 53 C. C. A. 583, was disapproved.
The claims'in suit cannot be limited to the form of “metal structure” shown in the drawing. With the view which we have indicated as to what the patentee accomplished, they do not require that limitation, and it cannot be given to them and preserve the distinctions between these claims and some of those not sued upon.
Infringement is clear enough. The city advertised for bids for a retaining wall, and furnished two sets of specifications, one of which was marked as embodying the “Bone patent” system^ and which plainly did embody the use of these claims, and the other of which was upon the gravity^ plan. The contract was let on the former specifications, and the wall was constructed thereunder. The only thing which throws doubt on the prima facie case of infringement thus made out is the testimony that the specifications were departed from in some particulars; but, if this departure was material, the burden was upon the city to show its extent, and this the city did not do.
[2] It is said that the Ohio laws forbid a city to let a contract which involves the use of a patent, excepting upon conditions which were not followed here (Hastings v. Columbus, 42 Ohio St. 585), and that, accordingly, the agents of the city are personally liable, and the city is exempt. We cannot accept this conclusion. The action of infringement rests on tort, not on contract, and the position of, the defendant seems to be that a city is not liable for a tort, unless the tort is lawfully committed.'- Such a description of a tort is difficult to apply. To deny an infringement injunction against a city is to say that, because the city has wrongfully taken plaintiff’s property, it may continue to keep it and use it. The liability of a municipal corporation for infringement has been recognized in this court (Warren v. Owosso, 166 Fed. 309, 92 C. C. A. 227; Grand Rapids v. Warren, 196 Fed. 892, 116 C. C. A. 454), as well as by the Supreme Court (Elizabeth v. *947Pavement Co., 97 U. S. 126, 24 L. Ed. 1000), and has been expressly upheld in this circuit (May v. Logan Co. [C. C.] 30 Fed. 250, per Jackson, C. J.).
Under the familiar rules concerning torts by agents of municipalities, it would seem that if the agents, in adopting the infringement, went outside the scope of their duty, and if the city itself did not continue the infringement after notice of what the agents had done, there might be no liability for damages; but this is not such a case. The municipal officers who built this wall had clear authority to obtain the use of the patent, by following a prescribed method. In appropriating the patent without permission, they were acting within the scope of their duties, though in violation of specific restrictions, and the city is liable in damages for their tort.
The decree is affirmed, with costs.