Adams v. Galion Iron Works & Mfg. Co.

42 F.2d 395, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 69, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4291
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1930
Docket5228
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 42 F.2d 395 (Adams v. Galion Iron Works & Mfg. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Galion Iron Works & Mfg. Co., 42 F.2d 395, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 69, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4291 (6th Cir. 1930).

Opinion

HICKENLOOPER, Circuit Judge.

Appellants brought their action for infringement of patent No. 1,133,251, issued to Roy E. Adams, March 30,1915, for a grader. Claims 5, 6, 9, 12, 15, 20, 22, 23, 26, 31, 32, 35, and 41 are in suit. The District Court held claims 20 and 26 to be anticipated by patent to J. D. & R. E. Adams, No. 1,014,989, issued January 16,1912, prior to application of the patent in suit. The remaining claims were held invalid on the grounds of aggregation and want of invention. (D. C.) 28 F.(2d) 225. Claim 22 may be taken as typical of all the claims in suit, including claims 20 and 26, and is printed in the margin. 1 Reissue patent No. 16,200, which was also held invalid, is not involved in the present appeal.

Road graders, consisting of an adjustable mold board carried on a frame which is supported by front and rear pairs of wheels, are extremely old and well known to every one. In the course of natural development it was found that the pressure of earth or road material upon the diagonal surface of the mold board tended to force the rear wheels to a position oblique to the line of travel. This was called side draft. Side draft was very early corrected by tilting or leaning the rear wheels, so as to resist this skidding movement. Compare patents to Adams, No. 310,165, and its reissue, No. 10,666 (1885);. to Adams & Pennock, No. 370,589 (1887); to Ridings, No. 829,605 (1906); to R. E. Adams, No. 853,614 (1907); to J. D. & R. E. Adams, No. 1,014,989 (1912), and others. These patents usually covered particularly the mechanical means by which the *396 wheels were tilted, for there were many ways ■of accomplishing such result.

Another difficulty was encountered which had to be overcome. As the pressure upon the mold board increased, the grader had a tendency to ride upon the mold board over the obstructions it was intended to move, thus lifting one of the rear wheels from the ground. This tendency was sought to be corrected by the use of much wider or longer fear axles. It was also common practice, not only to change the angularity of the mold board, but to permit it to be shifted bodily toward one side or the other. Thus the wider rear axle would not prevent the grader from being reversible, that is, working one side of the road in both directions, but occasions sometimes arose where, because of the configuration of the ground to be traveled, it was desirable that front and rear wheels on the same side-track, or travel upon the same line. J. D. and R. E. Adams, accomplished this end, in patent No. 1,014,-989, by a shifting of the frame upon the front axle whereby the front and rear wheels upon one side might be brought into alignment. Others had accomplished this same result by providing axles for the rear wheels which were laterally adjustable with respect to the frame. Compare patents to Bunnell & Page, No. 567,293 (1896); to J. B. & B. O. Rhodes, No. 724,042 (1903); to Lathrop, No. 940,169 (1909); to Wold, No. 968,439 (1910), as examples.

During the process of changing the alignment of front and rear wheels, the pivoting of the front axle permitted the change of direction of the front set to reach the new relative position to the rear set. In most oí the patents of the prior art the laterally adjustable or shiftable rear axle was also made angularly adjustable to the line of travel, or skewable. (Compare Bunnell & Page, No, 567,293; Rhodes, No. 724,042; and Lathrop, No. 940,169.) It may have been that this was originally thought to be necessary in order to effect, or assist in, the realignment, but the more obvious. assumption is that, in these particular patents, skewability of the rear axle, was employed as a means of correcting side draft.

Counsel concede, and indeed a review of the prior art compels the conclusion, that tiltable wheels to correct side draft were of ancient origin, and that shiftable rear axles to readjust the alignment of front and rear wheels were old in this particular art when the application for the patent in suit was filed. Whether we consider that the prior-art did or did not depend solely upon the skewability of the shiftable rear axle to correct side draft, with its attendant disadvantages, all that Adams did in the patent in suit was to take the shiftable axle of the prior art, useful only in the prior art, or now, to secure alignment of front and rear wheels, and thus increasing reversibility in some cases, and substitute for the skewable axle, as a correction for side draft, an even older means to accomplish the same purpose. The question of aggregation aside, no invention was required to make this substitution.

It is urged that a skewable rear axle and tiltable wheels do not function mechanically in the same manner, nor operate to accomplish the result in the same way, and therefore cannot be considered mechanical equivalents ; that a patent may issue for a combination notwithstanding the fact that all the elements were old, provided the combination be new; that the utility of the present combination is manifest, and was not obvious to those skilled in the art, for the shiftable, skewable rear axle and the tiltable rear wheels had been separately known and used for years, and it had occurred to no one to combine them in the same machine, or to substitute the tiltable rear wheels for the skewable axle; that the shiftable axle and tiltable wheels co-operate to produce a new grader which both permits the tracking’of front and rear wheels on the same side and overcomes side draft when so operating’, to a degree and in a manner unknown to the prior art; and that the total result is a grader which would do a greater amount and more kinds of work than any previously known. These contentions are all urged in answer to the defense of aggregation, except the claim that the advantages of the combination were not obvious to one skilled in the art, and that mora than mechanical skill was involved. To this last position alone need we direct attention.

We see no patentable distinction between the laterally shiftable mold board, with the relatively shiftable front and rear axles, and tiltable wheels, of the patent to Adams, No. 1,014,989, and the shiftable rear axle and tiltable wheels of the patent in suit. Invention is not involved either in transferring shiftability from the front to the rear axle, or in the use of a shiftable rear axle, old in the art, in combination with the equally old device of tilting wheels to correct side draft. Probably the specific mechanical means of rackbar, gears, pinions, levers, etc., employed *397 by appellants, if new, might have been made the subject of patent for a rear axle which permitted tilting of the wheels and was also shiftable; but the selection and putting together of the most desirable parts of different machines in the same art, where each separate part is selected solely to perform the obvious purpose for which it was used in the prior art, is not invention, but rather the evolution of the mechanical ability of one skilled in that particular art. Huebner-Toledo Breweries Co. v. Mathews Gravity Carrier Co., 253 F. 445, 447 (C. C. A. 6); Excelsior Steel Furnace Co. v. Williamson Heater Co., 286 F. 131, 133 (C. C. A. 6); Thompson v. Boisselier, 114 U. S. 1, 11, 5 S. Ct. 1042, 29 L. Ed. 76; R. R. Supply Co. v. Elyria Iron &

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42 F.2d 395, 6 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 69, 1930 U.S. App. LEXIS 4291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-galion-iron-works-mfg-co-ca6-1930.