Court Opinion

ID: 8634933
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:43:40.522089+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:53.868319
License: Public Domain

SHEPLEY, Circuit Judge.
Letters patent were issued to Francis McLaughlin on January 11, 1870, for an improved brush. The object of the invention was to obviate the danger of breaking glass and injuringthe surface of the wood or other substance to be washed or dusted by contact with the brush-head. To obvi- , ate this difficulty, the patentee put around the i brush-head or stock a circular band of rubber, in the form of a parallelogram or rhombus, with one of. its angles projecting outward, and near the bristles or washing material. A groove was made in the brush-head or stock near the bristles, and in this groove was placed a circular band, the band being made in the form of a parallelogram, so that the ring fitting into the groove or furrow, which had a sharp angle in it presented a sharp angle outward.
The patentee claimed as his invention the combination and arrangement of the brush-head, constructed as described in his specification, and provided with an angular groove or furrow around the lower side, with the rubber ring fitting therein, as and for the purpose specified.
The defendants, in their answer, deny that McLaughlin was the first and original invent- or of the improvement for which the letters patent issued, and which have been assigned to the complainants, and allege that the improvement claimed by him as new was described in letters patent granted in England to W. T. Monzani. June 25,1854, and set forth in No. 134S of the volume of specifications of English patents for that year; also in an application made by W. E. Williams to the United States patent office, rejected April 1. 180S; also in an application made to said office by J. H. Crittenden, rejected May 22. ISOS. Defendants also set up prior knowledge and use by said Williams and Crittenden, and by the defendants themselves, and by the firm of Eastham. Harvey & Morris, of which defendants are members. The answer also alleges that the thing patented was in public use and on sale in this country more than two years before the application for the patent.
Monzani’s patent was merely for covering with vulcanized rubber those parts of brushes or brooms which in their use are liable to be struck against places or things which are to be dusted or cleaned thereby. It was referred to and described in the specification of McLaughlin, and disclaimed by him.
Crittenden’s specification described the same thing substantially as Monzani’s. Crittenden claimed the application of rubber, felt, cloth, leather, or any elastic material to the ends and corners of broom and brush-heads, as set *1035forth and described. This application was rightfully rejected. There is nothing in these patents or rejected applications to invalidate the McLaughlin patent. They were probably introduced in evidence only as illustrating the state of the art and aiding in the construction of the claims in the complainants’ patent.
Respondents also offer evidence tending to show that, prior to the date of the McLaughlin invention, they made, in the fall of 1S67, first, a brush with a block or head, with a projecting shoulder, by which a square vulcanized rubber band was attached upon the block for the purpose of keeping the head of the brush from injuring the wood-work; second, a similar brush, with a circular groove and a round band; and, third, a brush with a cork block or head inserted in a tin cover. Around the edges of this cover was a pro jecting shoulder, and round the edge of this cover, and held in place by this shoulder, a square vulcanized India-rubber band. Brushes made in the similitude of these three forms of brushes are put into the case. No brush made in either of these forms before the date of McLaughlin’s invention is produced in evidence, and there is no reason from the testimony to believe that any one is in existence. The testimony is conflicting as to their form and structure; but it leaves no doubt on the mind of the court that, whatever they were, and whenever and howsoever constructed, they were mere experiments. They were never put upon the market; they never came into practical use; they were .never sold; they were not even thought worthy of preservation; and can not now be found. Such brushes, if previously constructed in the form contended for by respondents, as experiments, and never made public or .brought to the knowledge of McLaughlin, and ultimately abandoned and lost, could be no obstacle to his right to take out a patent.
Considering the patent of the compla inants to be good and valid, we proceed to the consideration of the question of infringement. Respondents, by their answer and in the affidavits referred to in the answer, admit infringement by the sale of brushes with the angular groove or furrow, and with an angular rubber ring, fitting therein. They also admit that they do make, and claim the right to make, brushes with' a circular groove and band, as shown in Exhibit No. 3, which they claim do not infringe the complainants’ rights under their patent.
The patentee, in his specification and claim, has only described one geometrical form of groove or furrow, and three geometrical forms for the rubber ring — i. e., the parallelogram, .rhombus, and triangle. Perhaps a strict construction of the language would exclude the triangle from the list of forms of the rubber- ring in the claim. The pat-entee does not, as is sometimes done, claim in terms the thing patented, however its form and proportions may be varied; but the law so interprets his claim without the addition of these words. In contemplation of law. after he has fully described his invention and shown its principles, and claimed it in a form which perfectly embodies it, unless he dis- ‘ claims other forms, he is deemed to claim every form in which his invention may be copied.
Undoubtedly, in some cases the letters patent include only the particular form described and claimed, not for the reason that the pat-entee has described and claimed that form only, but because the invention consists in form only, and only in that form can be embodied, so that when the form is not copied, the invention is not used. Winans v. Denmead, 15 How. [56 U. S.] 343.
We must look, therefore, into the nature of the invention, and see whether its form and its substance are inseparable. If they are inseparable, then the respondents, having changed the form, do not copy the substance of the invention; but if they are separable, and the substance of the invention which the patent is designed to secure is to be found in the manufactures of the respondents, although copied, and embodied in a form not described, or differing from the form described and specifically claimed by the patentee, then they have infringed. The invention, as described -and claimed, is for a brush-head, provided with an angular groove or furrow, with an India-rubber band in that furrow'. As the operative part of the rubber band can come in contact with the wood or glass to be dusted or brushed only at one line in the periphery of the band, it can make no difference in the result whether the shape of the rubber is circular or angular; whether a cross-section of the rubber band would be a parallelogram, a rhombus, or —what a circle practically is — a many-sided polygon; or whether the shape of the groove be semi-circular or polygonal or triangular. They would accomplish the same result, in the same manner, and by the same means. Out away from the defendants’ band a segment of the circle on both sides of the line in the periphery of the band where it touches the glass to be brushed, and you have only removed a superfluous and inoperative part; and the same principle, mutatis mutandis, applies to the band in the groove and the groove itself. One geometrical form as much as the other may embody the substance of this invention, and copy and use the invention itself. Decree for injunction and account.
[For another ease involving this patent, see Murphy v. Kissling, Case No. 9,950.]