976
18
lI'JllDJllRAL RJllPORTJlllL
application of that doctrine to those elements would show tliat hll' use of each of them had been anticipated by prior use and priorpatents. The only patentable novelty in his invention was the novelty of his combination of these elements. He made the flanged an· gle strips or ribs, by the use of which he formed the joints between his sheets of metal and fastened them to the roof, an indispensable element, and the principal elemebt, of all the combinations he claimed. This element is entirely wanting in the roofs manufactured by the appellee, and in the specification forming a part of the patent to Jennings under which they were made. The roofs manufactured and sold by the appellee cannot, therefore, be held to inany of the claims of the natent to Murphy. This conclusion renders it unnecessary to consider the novelty or patentability ot the combinations which he claimed in this patent. The decree below must be affirmed, with costs, and it is so ordered.
OAMPBELL et al. v. RICHARDSON et at. (CIrcuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit. October 16, 1896.)' No.5. P.A.TENTS-CONSTRUCTION OF CLAIMS-INFRINGEMENT-GARMENT HOOKS.
Is limited by the words, "SUbstantially as described," to the form of hooks
The De Long patent, No. 462,473, for an improvement in garment hooks..
shown and described, "llUIlely, one in which the free end of the wire Is carried to "the rear end of the shank, and there formed Into an eye," giving to the hook three eyes by which to attach it, Instead of two, as formerly. 72 Fed. 525, reversed.
Appeal from the Oircuit Oourt ot the United States for the Western ':District of Pennsylvania. This was a suit in equity by William Campbell and J. J. Smith against Thomas De Q. Richardson and others for alleged infringement of a patent for an improvement in garment hooks. The circuit court sustained the patent, and fonnd that defendants had infringed, and decreed accordingly. 72 Fed. 525. The defendants have appealed. Geo. H.Christy, Wm. L. Pierce, and Allen Webster, for appellants. Wm. O. Strawbridge and Frederick P. Fish, for appellees. Before DALLAS, Circuit Judge, and BUTLER and WALES, District Judges. BUTLER, District Judge. ThebilI charges infringement of the first claim of letters patent, No. 462,473, dated November 3, 1891, for ail invention of Frank E. De Long. The claim reads as follows: "(I) . A garment-hook consisting of a shank, a hook proper, and a tongue continuous of each other, said being looped and normally closing the space between the shank and hook proper and having its free end returned to the rear of" the 1ilJank, substantially as described,"
The hook, which is charged to infringe, is similar in construction to the complainants' except that the free end of'
CAMPBELL 'D. RICHARDSON.
977
the wire of which it is formed, is cut off near the rear of the shank. 'l'he only question which need be considered is one arising upon the construction of the claim. Looped or "humped" hooks were not invented by De Long; but were very old. He had taken out two patents for improvements in them, as the record shows, which are undistinguishable from that of his third patent, now involved-except in the single feature hereinafter noted. The free end of the wire in each of his former hooks were cut off forward, and so bent as to avoid danger of injury to the garment on which it might be used. Of course it is unimportant whether the loop be formed by bending the wire upward or downward, or whether, it be placed in what the patent calls the "hook proper," or in the shank opposite; and it is equally unimportant whether the free end of the wire be carried to the rear, or terminated sooner. If therefore, the words "substantially as described," be omitted from the claim, and the preceding language be taken literally, nothing new would be embraced and the claim would consequently be invalid. This seems to be clear; for there would be nothing, as we have seen, to distinguish the hooks thus described from those of De Long's former patents, except the merely formal differences before stated,-the end of the wire, when cut off at the rear of the shank serving no purpose, that is not as well served by cutting it further forward, as provided for in the earlier patents. The words referred to cannot, however, be omitted; they are part of the claim, and control its construction. The hook named therein is the one described in the specification and drawing; the claim expres'sly so declares. The only hook, thus described, either in the specification or drawing is one with the free end of the wire carried to "the rear of the shank, and there formed into an eyfi' giving to the hook three eyes by which to attach it, instead of two as formerly. The drawing shows this peculiar hook and no other, and the specification describes it particularly, declaring it to be an "embodiment of the invention" and does not suggest any other. Indeed the language of the specification seems to preclude the belief, that any other waS' thought of. It is as follows: free end of the jaw Is provided with an eye 8, which is adjacent to the eyes 4 and disconnected therefrom, It being noticed that the jaw Is elastic In its nature and may yield when subjected to superior pressure, this being occasioned when the eye to be connected with the hook is presented to the jaw and forced past the Same, so that said jaw opens and allows said eye to reach the bend 3, on the inner side of which It is seated, the jaw then being closed and controlling said eye. The eye formed on the end of the jaw is secured in a UlIlnner similar to eyes 4 4, so that the resiliency of said jaw is Increased and the jaw more firmly sustained In
·
J
Z 1
Z
3:s (1
, . ?
if
4-
v.76F.no.7-62
978
, 76 FEDERAL REPORTER.
Ita noxmal position. The eye!! 4 andS provide means tor conM!CtiDg' the hook wflb the gaxment or other place of service, said eye 8 also preVe<1\tlng the jaws, from presenting an exposed edge."
It is tlms. seen that a special function is .ascribeO to the peculiar disposition made of the free end of the wire. The suggestion, that this construction leaves no distinction between the first and following claims, has no foree. The fault is not in the construction, but in the language of the claims, and the spec· ification and drawing. Such similarity in claims is not unfrequent in patents, where several are founded on a single novel feature in a device. Patentees seem fond of multiplying claims, inspired probably by a fear that they may not otherwise get all they are enti· tled to. Here the first claim covers all the novelty to be found in either the specification or drawing. With the claim thus construed, the respondents' hook does not infringe. It is in all material respects similar to that of De Long's first patent. The decree must be reversed and the bill dismissed with cos·ts.
BRUNSWIOK-BALKE-COLLENDER CO. T. PHELAN BILLIARD BALL CO. (CIrcUit Court, S. D. New York. PATENTs-INVENT JON-POOL- BALL FRAMES.
April 7, 1896.)
Patent No. 228,879. for a pool-ball frame with rounded cornel'll, and made of layers of wood bent into triangular shape, and glued or fastened together, is void as being the result of mere mechanical skill
This was a suit in equity by the Brunswick-Balke-Oollender Company against the Phelan Billiard Ball Company for alleged infringement of a patent for an improvement in pool-ball frames. H. D. Donnelly, for plaintlif. Frederick P. Foster, for defendant. , WHEELER, District Judge. This suit is brought upon patent No. 228,879, for a pool-ball frame with rounded corners. The inventor in the specification said: "Previous to my invention It bas been customary to make the triangular ball holders used in placing the balls for the game of 'fifteen-ball pool' (and other games played with fifteen balls) on billiard tables of three straight strips or pieces of wood joined at their adjacent ends to foxm the angles of the frame, and to strengthen the frame at these angles by iIrterlorly placed corner blocks, glued or otherwise fastened In, and sometimes to further strengthen the angles or corners by metallic angle plates applied exteriorly to the frame. My Invention has for Its object to produce a 'triangle' or ball frame which can be made much lighter, and also much stronger and more durable, than those heretofore manufactured, whlle at the same time its manufacture can be accomplished at much less cost than that of the construction or kind of frames heretofore made, and in Its use it wID be free of all the objections found In the use of the old-fashioned ball frame. To these ends and objects my invention consists in a triangle or ball frame composed of several layers or thin strips of wood bent round into the requlsite shape, and glued (or otherwUJe fastened) together; all as wlll be hereinafter more fully explained."