Chuse v. Ide

89 F. 491, 32 C.C.A. 260, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 3, 1898
DocketNo. 487
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 89 F. 491 (Chuse v. Ide) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chuse v. Ide, 89 F. 491, 32 C.C.A. 260, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380 (7th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

WOODS, Circuit Judge,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

There is, to commence with, a dispute whether, by “means for feeding the lubricant to the upper guide,” as that phrase is used in the [493]*493claims of patent Xo. 321,726, is meant the oil cup, L, shown in the drawings and mentioned in the specification. If that cap; or its equivalent, is an essential element oí the combination claimed, the charge of infringement fails, because nothing of the kind is found in the engines made by the appellants. The contention that they are infringers though they do not equip their engines with oil cups, because it is intended that the user shall obtain upon the market the cups for which tluj engines are adapted, is not tenable, because there is no proof of such intention or practice, and the oil cup described as attached is not essential to the use of the engine. The expert called to make out'the complainant’s prima facie case testified that the oil eui), L, is the only means shown and described which answers to this requirement of the claims; but in rebuttal the patentee and another expert testified that the cup is not essential, and that the means referred to is to be or may be found in the “small vertical passage, 1, which is formed through the part of the engine frame forming said guide, and is adapted to permit a slow feed of oil from the reservoir (or cup) to the hearing surface of the upper guide.” We are of opinion that, when read with reference to the specification and the draw ' ings. the claims include tire oil cup as a pari, at least, of the “means for feeding the lubricant,” but prefer not to rest our decision of this part of the case on a narrow question of construction. What is the essential idea or conception of the patent? As stated in the specification: “The general object of this invention is to provide an improved construe! ion of lubricating devices for the crossheads and crosshead guides of steam engines- ° * * The principal features of novelty * are embodied in the means shown for lubricating the upper and lower crosshead guides and the bearing surface of the wrist pin, whereby the parts mentioned are all effectively lubricated from a supply of oil initially fed to the upper crosshead guide, and conducted to said several parts, as herein fully set forth.” The const ruction and method of operation, in brief, are these: There is, first, a small passage, by which the oil, dropping from a cup or reservoir, reaches the bearing surface of the upper guide. On the upper bearing surface of the crosshead are longitudinal channels, which, during the reciprocating movements of the crosshead, receive oil from the surface of the upper guide, and carry it to the middle of the crosshead, where, through another vertical passage, it flows or drops into the hollow interior of the crosshead, whence, through a funnel, it reaches the wrist pin. In other words, the conce])tion is that oil shall be introduced into an engine, or any oilier form of machine, through passages, channels, and ducts so located and constructed fluid, by force of gravity it will be carried first to one bearing surface, thence to another, and thence to another, so long as possible and desirable. It would be useless to follow, the discussions of the experts. They consist largely in pointing out irrelevant differences of construction between the engines and machinery of the prior art and the engine of the patent. The art of lubrication cannot be limited to a class of engines, or to a species of machines. It embraces all machinery; and when it has been shown, as here, that the method of lubrication described and claimed in this patent has been described in its essential [494]*494features in numerous earlier patents, and has been employed on engines of earlier construction, it is impossible to concede novelty-to claims which show no difference except in the construction of the engine to which the -method is applied. Indeed, while the patent professes to be for lubricating devices, the claims are in part for things to be lubricated as well as for the means of lubrication. The engine, with all its parts, is one .thing, and, if patentable, should be covered by a distinct mechanical patent. The method of lubricating an engine is quite another thing, and should be so described and claimed, if it is to be protected as an invention. For example, the essential features of claim 1 would be better defined if the claim read in this wise: “The combination, in an engine, of means for feeding a lubricant to the upper guide for the crosshead and a passage in the crosshead, adapted to convey the lubricant from the upper guide to the bearing surfaces of the pivotal joint between the crosshead and the connecting rod.” Claim 4 would be likewise more definite and accurate if it read: “The combination, in an engine, of means for feeding a lubricant to the upper guide for the crosshead, a passage, h’, for conveying lubricant from the upper guide to the interior of the crosshead, and a funnel in the connecting rod communicating with the bearing surfaces of the pivotal joint between the rod and crosshead.” So worded, the claims would include exactly the means of lubrication described, and would not include, as a part of the supposed invention, the engine, or the parts thereof intended to be lubricated. The fact that such parts of the engine have been included affords no ground for distinguishing the actual means of lubrication from similar means in other engines, machines, or patents of earlier date. The lubricating art being one which embraces all machinery, it is not possible, by includ ing in a claim for means of lubrication the parts of a peculiarly constructed engine or machine, to cut off inquiry into the art as displayed in earlier machines, whatever their parts or construction. There might, doubtless, be invention in so constructing an engine or other machine as to be capable of better or easier lubrication, but the patent in that case should be upon the machine, and not on known means of lubrication, capable of adaptation to one form of machine as well as another. Of course, it is not to be said that new means or modes of lubrication may not be invented. It is enough to say that the means shown in this patent are not new. There has, at most, been simply an adaptation of familiar means and methods, which an intelligent mechanic, with the Ide engine before him, could readily accomplish.

In respect to claim 3 of patent No. 396,209, the patentee, who was made a witness, after describing prior constructions of engine frames, and explaining points of weakness in them, said:

“To overcome these defects, I designed the tubular form of engine frame. It is well known that a certain amount of metal in the form of a tube will resist more strain, and will maintain a nearer correct alignment under excessive strains, than the same amount of metal in any other form.' In addition to the advantage of rigidness by this tubular form of frame, this construction brings all of the strain in the central part of the tube or engine frame, and the line of center is nearly surrounded by metal, which entirely avoids any tendency to buckling or springing out of alignment under the [495]*495heaviest loads.

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Related

Ide v. Trorlicht, Duncker & Renard Carpet Co.
115 F. 137 (Eighth Circuit, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 F. 491, 32 C.C.A. 260, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chuse-v-ide-ca7-1898.