Court Opinion

ID: 8856073
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 17:30:45.164308+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:05:39.647164
License: Public Domain

CARPENTER, District Judge.
This is a bill in equity to restrain an alleged infringement of the first claim of letters patent No. 404,844, issued June 11, 1889, to Daniel Kennedy, for valve indicator. The claim is as follows:
“(1) In a valve having a casing A and boss A', with operating shaft B, having a screw thread b, the combinalion therewith of a sleeve D, surrounding such boss and connected therewith by the longitudinal groove a', and pin D2, so as to allow longitudinal motion, and the yoke D', connecting such sleeve with tlie thread b, all arranged for joint operation, as herein specified.”
This is a device whereby the upward and downward movement of the sleeve discloses, through a slot or opening therein, alternately, the words “open” and “shut,” or other marks which may *278indicate whether the valve is open or shut. The devices theretofore in use, as the specification says, were “too slight and too easily deranged,” and the patentee discovered “that it is practicable to make such indication by the movement of a sleeve surrounding the upper portion of the valve casing, and which sleeve may be made of any desired thickness, so as to endure as rough handling and be as little liable to derangement and destruction as the other portions of the valve.” The device used by the respondent is shown in letters patent No. 486,610, issued November 22, 1892, to Jason Giles, for valve indicator, in which the words or symbols indicating, whether the valve is shut or open are carried on a sign plate which moves upward and downward, exposing the words through a slot in a face plate. On a broad construction of the claim it seems to me clear that the respondent infringes. The complainant claims a construction which he states as follows:
“Complainant contends that Daniel Kennedy was the first person ever to conceive and reduce to practice the idea of making a valve indicator tell its own story by visible words. In this he was a pioneer and, as such, entitled to the broadest and most liberal construction of his claim which the state of tiie art, when he obtained his patent, would justify. Other inventors had made valve indicators which could be interpreted by persons acquainted with the inside working of the valve mechanism, but Kennedy was the first ever to make a valve indicator which could be immediately understood by everybody, whether he knew how the valve worked or not. Kennedy did this by putting upon the valve indicator the word ‘Open’ and the word ‘Shut,’' in large, plain letters, so situated that only one co'uld be seen at a time, and that the opening and closing of the valve automatically uncovered one of these words and concealed the other in true agreement with the actual condition of the valve. He did this in a way that made the mechanism durable, absolutely accurate, and not readily tampered with or deranged; but the main idea was the absolute certainty that no English-speaking person, man, woman, or child, could fail to understand the condition of the valve-at a glance, with or without any mechanical knowledge. Durableness, security against derangement and correspondence with the actual condition of the valve are nothing without the power of speaking to the uneducated mind through the common medium of the English language. All these qualities, except the faculty of speech, had been given to valve indicators before; but Kennedy was the first to cause the valve, as one of the witnesses expressed it, ‘to make its own report.’ ”
It seems to me that all the requirements of the description above quoted are met by the drawing of letters patent No. 141,839, issued August 12, 1873, to James Walsh, for improvement in valve cocks. The complainant insists that the words “open” and “closed”' in this drawing are descriptive only and are not intended to be inscribed on the valve. They are not referred to in the specification,, and it does not appear that valves were made on which the words were inscribed. Since, however, the words plainly appear on the-valve, in the place appropriate therefor in connection with the-pointed projection on the lower end of the vertically moving rod, and since the specification speaks of a “pointer or sliding ród * * * serving as an indicator to show the position of the valve,”' I should be slow to find patentable invention in a device to which no new function could be assigned-except that which the complainant here claims for his invention. However that may be, the objection does not apply to the device- shown in letters patent No.. *279266,241, issued October 17, 1882, to Edward Weston, for cut-off for electric circuits, in which the function of the patented device, as the complainant above states it, is performed in an electric cutout, which “performs an analogous function with respect to an electric current to that performed by a valve with respect to a current of water, steam, air, etc.”
The state of the art shows, then, as it seems to me, that the invention consists simply in the use of a sleeve, with its alleged resultant advantage, in the case of a valve, that it can “endure rough handling” and is “little liable to derangement and destruction.” As to whether it has this advantage, there is no evidence in the record, and I am inclined to give the complainant the benefit of the presumption arising from the grant of the patent, and hold the claim valid for the specific structure shown and described. The respondent does not infringe the claim as so construed, and the bill will therefore be dismissed with costs.