Bragg v. Fitch

121 U.S. 478, 7 S. Ct. 978, 30 L. Ed. 1008, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2068
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 2, 1887
Docket122
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 121 U.S. 478 (Bragg v. Fitch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bragg v. Fitch, 121 U.S. 478, 7 S. Ct. 978, 30 L. Ed. 1008, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2068 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bradley

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit on a patent granted to Charles B. Bristol, May 16, 1865, for an improvement in harness hooks or snaps; the complainants being assignees of the patent. These hooks are usually attached to the end of a strap or chain for the purpose of fastening it to a ring or staple, as in the case of a tie-strap for fastening a horse to a post. The small hook by which a watch chain is fastened to the ring or stem of the watch is an example. It has a movable part called the tongue, which is connected to the shank of the hook by a pivot, and is kept in place against the end of the hook by.the pressure of a spring acting between the shank and the tongue. The tongue may be pressed inward, so as to admit the ring or staple, and is thrust back to its place by the action of the spring. In some form or other, the implement has long been in use. The patent in question relates to the .mode of. arranging the spring in the tongue, and of attaching both to the shank of the hook. The complainants’ expert says: “ The invention shown and described in the patent of Bristol is an improvement in that class of snap-hooks in which the tongue is pivoted in a recess between two cheeks in the shank. In .this recess a coil spring is arranged around the pivot so that the two ends of the spring bear, one upon the tongue and the other upon the body of the hook, tending to press the tongue up against the end of the hook, but yet permit the tongue to be depressed to open the *480 hook. In this class of hooks prior to Bristol the tongue was cast with a recess upon its under side to form two cheeks corresponding to the cheeks"in the shank of the hook. 'The cheeks on the tongue were drilled corresponding to the hole through the cheeks in the shank, so that a rivet could be inserted through the sides of the shank and both sides of the tongue to form the pivot on which the tongue would turn. The coil of the spring was arranged around the pivot, the two ends bearing, one upon the shank and one upon the hook, as before described.”

The principle of this arrangement was exhibited in many-different forms. Sometimes the spring merely passed around the pivot without any coil; sometimes a straight, spring was so secured to the one part and made to press against the other, as to effect the same object. One would hardly suppose that a patentable invention could have been made in relation to this little device. But many patents have been, and probably more will be, granted. The Bristol patent, now’ sued on, is one of the latest in the series which has been brought to our attention.

The particular contrivance which is claimed as an invention in this patent may be described as follows. Instead of having a separate pivot, or pin, to pass through the cheeks or ears of the hook and tongue for the purpose of connecting them together and holding the coil of the spring, a small projection or fulcrum, to answer the purpose of a pivot, is cast as a part of one of the cheeks of the hook, on its inner side, and the cheeks (being made of malleable cast iron) are spread further apart, and the recess between them is thus wider than they are intended to be when the article is finished. The coil of the spring is placed on the projecting fulcrum. The tongue is made with a recess as usual, but one side of this recess is left open, the other side having the ordinary cheek perforated with a hole to admit the fulcrum-pivot. The tongue, thus constructed, is placed in the recess of the hook and slipped over the spring and pivot; and then, by means of a vice or press, the outside cheeks of the hook are squeezed together until the fulcrum-pivot passes through the hole in the cheek of the *481 tongue, and' comes in contact with the opposite cheek of the hook. The patentee, after having described the construction of the several parts, explains the mode of putting them together as follows:

“Having made the parts as before described, I place the spiral spring, Fig. 4, on the projection or pin n, Fig. 2, and slip the tongue, Fig. 3, on to the projection or fulcrum-pin n, so that the spring, Fig. 4, will rest in and be inclosed by the recess r, with the two tangential parts h and i pointing toward the hook a. I then place the article' in a proper vice or press and close up the cavity between c and d until the pin n comes in contact with the side or ear c, Fig. 2, when the whole will appear as represented in Fig. 1, (except the strap A,) and will be ready for use or sale.” •

The claim of the patent is as follows, namely:

“"What I claim as my invention, and desire to secure by letters-patent, is —
“ l.'The combination of the tongue g with the spiral spring, Fig. 4, when the spring works on the torsion principle and rests in a recess (as r), in the rear end of the tongue, substantially as herein described.
“ 2. The combination of the fulcrum-pin n with the tongue g, when the pin n is cast in one of the ears, and the recess or cavity is fitted to be closed, substantially as herein described.”

Only the first claim is relied on in the present suit, as the defendants do not use the fúlcrum-pivot, cast with the cheek of the hook, but the ordinary pivot inserted in holes in both cheeks.

The defence is threefold, namely: 1st. That the supposed invention was described in previous patents; 2d. That, in view of the state of the art, the device claimed as new was not a patentable invention; 3d. That, upon a proper construction of the patent, the defendants do not infringe it.

Several prior patents were given in evidence which show, if not an entire anticipation of, at least a very near approach to, the invention claimed.

In 1852, a patent was issued to Palmer & Simmons for an improved hook for whiffletrees, embodying the same prin *482 ciple as the snap-hook, in which the recess of the tongue, inclosing the spiral spring, having precisely the same object as the recess of the tongue and spring in Bristol’s and other snap-hooks, had but one cheek, the other side of the recess being open until it was applied to the end of the whiffletree supporting the hook, by which it was closed up when the parts were brought together. The connection of fhe two was made by a pivot passing entirely through the cheek of the tongue and the coil-spring inclosed therein, and into the end of the whiffletree. This pivot had a broad head, which compressed the tongue and kept it.in place, in' the same manner as is done by the cheek of the hook in Bristol’s snap-hook.

In 1859, one Daniel IT. Hull patented a trace-fastener, which contained a similar device, so far as the arrangement of the tongue and spring are concerned. The tongue, called in the patent the latch, had a recess containing the spring, which was open on the inside, opposite to a slight recess in the slotted fastener, which corresponded to' the hook in the snap-hook.

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Bluebook (online)
121 U.S. 478, 7 S. Ct. 978, 30 L. Ed. 1008, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2068, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bragg-v-fitch-scotus-1887.