Adams & Westlake Manuf'g Co. v. Rathbone

26 F. 262, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1937
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 F. 262 (Adams & Westlake Manuf'g Co. v. Rathbone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams & Westlake Manuf'g Co. v. Rathbone, 26 F. 262, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1937 (uscirct 1886).

Opinion

Blodgett, J.

This is a bill to restrain the alleged infringement of letters patent No. 96,249, granted to R. B. Mitchell, October 26, [263]*2631869, ior “an improvement in kerosene stoves,” and for an accounting. The chief feature of the invention covered by this patent consists in holding the chimneys between upper and lower plates, so that the lower plate rests directly over the burners, and in fact, as a general rule in construction, contains the cones of the burners of the kerosene lamps, while the upper plate furnishes facilities for holding the cooking utensils. The upper plate also contains projections extending upward, which sustain the cooking vessels above the tops of the chimneys, so as to allow the heated air and products of combustion to pass out from under the cooking vessel without obstruction. The patent contains four claims, but only the first two are in controversy in this case, which are as follows: .

“(1) The combination of the chimneys, J, and the plates, D and K, when constructed and arranged in a kerosene stove, substantially as and for tlio purposes specified and shown. (2) The projections, 0, on the upper surface of the plate, K, in combination with the chimneys, J, in a kerosene stove, when constructed and arranged substantially as and for the purposes specified. ”

In the specifications and drawings, the plate, D, is the bottom or lower plate of the chimney section, as it is called, and the plate, K, is the upper plate or top of the section.

The defenses relied upon are: (1) That the patent sued upon shows no proper subject-matter of invention or patentability; (2) that the patent is void for want of novelty; (3) that the device covered by the patent had been in public use for such time before the patent was applied for as to make the patent void; (4) that the defendants do not infringe.

As to the first defense. It is quite common for those who are appropriating the results of another’s labor or inventive genius to attempt to belittle the device so appropriated, and insist that it required no exercise of the inventive faculty to produce it; but when we consider the state of the art at the time this inventor entered the field, as shown by the proofs in this case, it is quite evident that no one had hit upon the Mitchell idea of fastening the chimneys between the two plates, and utilizing the upper plate as a stand on which the cooking utensils were to be placed; and when the Mitchell patent had instructed the world as to the especial adaptation of this arrangement to the purposes of oil-stoves, it seems to have gone into general use. That it was new when Mitchell entered the field seems to me to be abundantly and clearly shown by the proof in this case. That it is useful the defendants can hardly he heard to deny so long as they appropriate and use it in substantially the exact form in which Mitchell produced and describes it. It may seem now to have been but a small matter to have fastened the chimneys between these two plates, but I gather from the proof that doing it marks the point between failure and success in this class of devices.

As to the second point. That the patent is void for want of novelty [264]*264a very large number of anticipatory devices are put into the record’; but, after a careful study of them, I do not find in the proof anything which can be fairly said to exhibit the peculiar form of construction shown in this patent. What Mitchell did was to fix his chimney between the two plates, so as to make the single structure readily movable as a whole to facilitate the placing of the chimneys over the burner for the purpose of cooking or heating, or .removing them for cleaning, trimming, or filling the lamp. That he secured a compact and readily adjustable apparatus for utilizing coal-oil as a cooking fuel is abundantly shown by the proof in this case; and while some of the older devices appearing in the testimony show upper and lower plates, or top and bottom plates, in none of them do I find anything which suggests the Mitchell device, or gives direction how to make it. It is a part of our common knowledge that the top and bottom plates of the ordinary cooking or box stove had been used for many years prior to this patent; but that does not, it seems to me, defeat the arrangement which Mitchell contrived and applied to a coal-oil stove. The difference between this and the McDougal gas and oil stove, which is much relied upon by the defense, is that MeDougal’s bottom plate is below the oil-pot, and the oil-pot, when an oil-lamp was used, had to be slid into the stove between the upper and lower plates, while, in Mitchell’s device, the oil-pot forms the base of the structure, and the chimneys are removable therefrom.

The defense as to prior use, for a time sufficient to defeat the patent, has involved the examination of an immense mass of conflicting, and what, at first, seemed wholly irreconcilable, testimony. The instances of prior use relied upon are the Rogers stove, used at South Boston in 1861; the Robinson stove, used in Boston in 1863; what is called “The Condon Exhibit,” said to have been used at Chicago in 1865; and the “Stevens & Thorpe Exhibit,” said to have been produced and brought into use in Chicago in 1866. It is sufficient, to defeat a patent, to show that the device covered by it has been i-n public use or on sale for more than two years prior to the application for a patent; but the party asserting such a defense assumes the burden of proof, and is bound to sustain it by clear and convincing testimony. “Prior use must be proved beyond any fair and reasonable doubt.” Coffin v. Ogden, 18 Wall. 120; Campbell v. Mayor, etc., 20 Blatchf. 67; S. C. 9 Fed. Rep. 500; Hawes v. Antisdel, 8 O. G. 685; American Bell Telephone Co. v. People’s Telephone Co., 22 Fed. Rep. 309.

As to the Rogers and Robinson stoves, the proof rests wholly in the recollection of persons who claim to have seen or used these stoves about 20 years before they testified. They do not produce the stoves, nor show that more than one of each kind was"ever made; so that, aside from the unsatisfactory nature of testimony resting in the “slippery memory of men” for 20 years or over, these instances of use may properly be classed as abandoned experiments. At all events, [265]*265such testimony seems to me too unreliable to form a safe' basis for judicial action. The time fixed by the testimony as to the use of these Rogers and Robinson stoves was in the very infancy of the efforts to utilize coal-oil as a cooking fuel, and it seems to me improbable that a man who had made a stove so nearly pqrfect, and adapted to meet a want which the inventors of that day were endeavoring to supply, would have stopped with the production of a single stove. Especially is this applicable to Robinson, who says in his testimony that lie is an experimenter and inventor in the field of oil stoves and heaters.

The “Condon” and “Stevens & Thorpe” stoves are involved in a much larger and more contradictory mass of testimony than the two just considered, and the question is, does the proof in regard to these show a public use or sale of either of these stoves for more than two years before the Mitchell patent was applied for?

First, as to the Condon stove. Michael Conclon testifies, in substance, that he was foreman in the jobbing department of Cross, Dane & Westlake’s factory,'in Chicago, in 1865; that W. B.

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Bluebook (online)
26 F. 262, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 1937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-westlake-manufg-co-v-rathbone-uscirct-1886.