Carver v. Hyde

41 U.S. 513, 10 L. Ed. 1051, 16 Pet. 513, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 383
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 10, 1842
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 41 U.S. 513 (Carver v. Hyde) 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
Carver v. Hyde, 41 U.S. 513, 10 L. Ed. 1051, 16 Pet. 513, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 383 (1842).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Taney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is brought here by writ of error, directed to the Circuit Court of the United States for the district of Massachusetts. It is an action by the plaintiff in error against the defendants, to recover damages for the infringement of a patent right, obtained by the plaintiff on the 16th of November, 1839. The patent'is in the usual form, and tjhe questions before ,■ us depend upon the construction of the specification, which is -in' the following words, v “ Be it known, that I, Eleazer Carver, of Bridgewater, in the county of Plymouth, and state of Massachusetts, have invented a certain improvement in the manner of forming the ribs of saw-gins, for the ginning of cottonand I do hereby' declare that the following is a full and exact description thereof.

“ In the cotton-gin, as heretofore known and used, the fibres of the cotton are drawn by the teeth of circular saws, through *514 a grating formed of a number of parallél bars, or ribs, having spaces between them sufficient to allow the saws to pass, carrying the fibres of the cotton with them, (which are then brushed off by a revolving brush,) but not wide enough to let the seeds, and other foreign substancfes, pass through. Above the saws the ribs come in close contract, thus forming a shoulder at the top of the space between- them. Various forms have been given to the 'bars or ribs,- with a view to procure a free passage of the cotton; but the cotton-gin, as heretofore made, has been always subject to the inconvenience of. the grate becoming choked by hard masses of cotton and motes, or false seeds, collecting in the upper part of the spaces bétwéen the ribs, and impeding the action of the saws, and also preventing the mass of cotton which is drawn by, the saws up to the top of the spaces, but not drawn through them, from rolling back freely, so as to pass again over the saws, as it should do.

“ My improvement, which I am about to describe, is intended to obviate these difficulties; and it consists in giving a new'form to' the ribs composing the grate. Instead'of-making the ribs -of a bar of iron of equal thickness throughout, so that the upper and under surfaces shall be parallel, I so form the rib, that at the part where the saws pass through, carrying the cotton with them, the space, or depth between the upper and outer surface, and the lower, or inner surface, shall be greater than the thickness of the rib in other parts has heretofore been, or needs to be, and so great ais to be equal to the length of the fibre of the cotton to be ginned,'so that the fibre shall be kept extended between the ribs for about its full length, while it, is drawn through them by the saws. This mill, of course, requires, either that the rib should be as thick at that part as the length of the fibre, or that the rib should be forked, or divided, about that part, so. that the upper, or outer surface, and the under, or inner surface, shall diverge to that distance of .each other, instead of being parallel as formerly, when the rib was made of one bar of uniform thickness. This under, or inner surface, then takes a new direction upwards, and slopes towards the upper, or outer surface, until the two surfaces meet above the periphery of the saw; This last described part of the under surface is fastened against the framework of the gin. The operation of this improvement is, that those fibres of *515 the cotton which are so firmly caught by the teeth of the saws as to be disengaged from the mass of the cotton to be ginned, are drawn out to their full length, and pass clear through the grate, and are then brushed off by the revolving brush, while the fibres that are drawn into the grate, but not caught by the teeth of the saws firmly enough to be carried quite through, are disengaged,- and pass up to where the under surface meets the upper surface,above the saws, and finding no obstruction there, pass back out. of the grate without cheking it, and roll down again with the mass of unginned cotton, and are caught below by the saws, and carried up again, and so on until all the fibres are drawn through.”

The specification then proceeds to describe the invention more particularly, by referring to and explaining the drawings annexed to it, showing the advantages of his'improvement, the manner of arranging the ribs in the gin, and the mode of inserting and fastening them in the framework.- This description could not be comprehended without an exact drawing; nor is it necessary, 'in order to understand the questions of law in dispute between the parties. It is therefore omitted. After giving this description, the specification states the improvement, of which the patentee claims to be the inventor, as follows.

Having thus described my improved rib and its advantages, I now claim, as my invention, and desire to secure,' by letters patent, the increasing the depth, or space, between the upper, or outer surface of the rib, and the lower, or inner surface of it, at the part where the cotton is drawn through the grate, so that it shall be equal to the length of the fibre of the cotton to be ginned, (whether this be done by making the ribs thicker at that part, or by. a fork, or division of the rib, or by any other variation' of the particular form;) and I also claim,' as part of the said improvement, the sloping up of the lower, or inner surface of the rib, so as to meet the upper, or outer surface above the saws, leaving, When the rib is inserted into the frame, no break or shoulder between the two surfaces, but a smooth and Uninterrupted passage upwards between the ribs, as'above described.”

At the trial in the Circuit Court, the plaintiff in error, after .having produced his patent with the schedule annexed to it, offered ip evidence, by the testimony of witnesses skilled in the *516 art, that the rib described in the plaintiff’s specification was a new and useful improvement; that the fastening of the rib to the framework in the manner therein stated had nothing to do with the ginning, but was only necessary to keep the rib firm; that the rib of the defendants was substantially in principle like that of the plaintiff, and operated in the same manner, and produced the same effect; and that, in their opinion, it- differed from the plaintiff’s rib only by taking away a part which was wholly immaterial in the operation of ginning.

The defendants then produced'witnesses skilled in the art, who testified that the ribs of the defendants did not substantially operate in the same manner with the plaintiff’s, but were different in form and principle, and proceeded to state the particulars in which they differed; and testified that the defendants’ ribs were entirely detached from the breast band,-and stood out in front of it, like the bar of the “ Edenton grate,” which was known and in use long before the plaintiff’s; and that the front and back surfaces of the defendants’ ribs did not slope and meet at the upper end above the saws as the plaintiff described his to do, and was not shaped as the plaintiff’s was exhibited and described in his drawings, specification, and claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 U.S. 513, 10 L. Ed. 1051, 16 Pet. 513, 1842 U.S. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carver-v-hyde-scotus-1842.