Coupe v. Royer

155 U.S. 565, 15 S. Ct. 199, 39 L. Ed. 263, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2106
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1895
Docket53
StatusPublished
Cited by149 cases

This text of 155 U.S. 565 (Coupe v. Royer) 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
Coupe v. Royer, 155 U.S. 565, 15 S. Ct. 199, 39 L. Ed. 263, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2106 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs describe their invention as a new and improved machine for converting raw hides into leather, of that class which is used for belting, lacings, and other purposes where it is necessary to preserve the native strength and toughness without destroying or impairing the natural fibres or grain of the leather.

The machine, is composed of a vertical slotted shaft provided with set-screws, which said shaft is capable of being revolved, by suitable mechanism, first in one direction and then in the other; a circularly-arranged set of pins or rollers set in rings or fixed heads, the same constituting a vertical *567 cylindrical cage' or crib surrounding the vertical slotted shaft; and a weight adapted to be inserted within the crib or cage at its upper end, said weight being provided with a central aperture for the passage of the upper end of the vertical slotted shaft.

The specification, claims, and drawings appear at full length in the report of the case of Royer v. Schultz Belting Company, 135 U. S. 319, and need not be reproduced here.

The operation of the machine is .described in the specification as follows: “ The end of the raw hide to be softened is inserted in the slot of the vertical shaft and champed therein by the set-screws. The shaft is then revolved and the hide is wound tightly upon said shaft, forming a roll or coil thereon, and being held in this form by the surrounding cylindrical cage. After the hide has been thus wound upon the shaft, the shaft is revolved in the. opposite direction, which has the effect to rewind or recoil the hide upon the shaft in a reverse direction, this reverse winding commencing at the inner end of the coil, the outer circumference of the coil being pressed against the pins or rollers. of the surrounding cage. This winding and rewinding of the hide upon the shaft is repeated as many times as may be desired.”

The function of the weight is twice described in the specification, as follows : “ An iron weight or press is employed for crowding the coil of hide down after it has received the forward, and back aotion arotmd the shaft,” and “ an iron weight, having an opening through its centre for the vertical shaft, and vertical grooves in it to prevent its turning, is placed upon the inside of the pins or rollers, and by pressing upon this weight, the hide is compressed edgewise,. after the forward and backward stretching or pressing is performed lengthwise.”

One of the matters in dispute in the case is whether the weight is to operate during the winding and rewinding of the hides, or after the revolving of the shaft has ceased. The language of the specification, just cited, does not seem to describe the operation of the weight as cotemporaneous with the winding process, but as successive. Herman Boyer, one of the patentees, testified that the weight is to operate while the cvlindri *568 cal shaft is revolving, and that its use is to regulate or confine the space in -which the hides.have to move.forward and backward.

Ve are willing to assume, in our disposition of this case, the correctness of the plaintiffs’ contention in this particular, and we shall also accept- as indisputable the testimony of Herman Royer, that “ the machine without the pressure would not effect such a motion and heat as are necessary to loosen the fibres of the hide. It would not work any effect. The machine would be a failure without the weight.”

It was further made to appear that, as early as 1863, Louis Royer, one of the patentees, had produced a machine for the purpose of treating- hides, the characteristics of which were thus described in the testimony of Herman Royer: “ The machine had a horizontal crib; it had a shaft central through its axis; it had bars circularly arranged around that central shaft; it had the same kind of motion to the right or left as the patented machine ; it had everything that is in the present machine except the pressure weight.” And on cross-examination the following questions and answers appear : “ Now, when you and your brother came to the joint business of improving the machine you turned it from a horizontal position to a vertical position, did you not ? ” Answer. . “Yes, sir.” “ And in that connection you used the weight so that the weight would press down by gravity upon the hides inside the crib; is that correct?” Answer. “The weight and pressure applied to the weight; yes, sir.”

The plaintiffs also put in evidence a model of the defendants’ machine, and testimony tending to show that defendants’ machine consists of a horizontal shaft around which, Avhen in operation, the hides are wotínd and unwound, of a horizontal crib or cage enclosing the shaft, and of two parts termed “ false heads,” connected together and adapted to be simultaneously moved toward or from each other, by means of right and left hand screws arranged one at each side of the crib, an<j engaging with' traversing nuts connected with the false heads and with two gear-wheels which intermesh with a third gear-wheel mounted so as to turn loosely on the centre *569 shaft, said third gear-wheel being provided with a crank, so that by simply turning this crank gear-wheel in one direction or the other, the two false heads will be moved from or towards each other, and so as to diminish or increase the space for holding the coil of hides during the operation of the machine.

The defendants gave evidence tending to show that a machine made in conformity with plaintiffs’ specifications and claims would not operate as a successful machine, to which the plaintiffs replied by evidence tending to show that a machine made after the description contained in the patent would and did operate successfully.

Upon the foregoing state of the evidence, the defendants requested the court to charge the jury as follows:

“That the plaintiffs’ patent and the claims thereof on its face should be construed as requiring the presence, in the combinations required therein, of a vertical shaft and a correspondingly arranged vertical crib, and that, as it appeared from the evidence, and was undisputed that the machines complained of as used by the defendants were provided with horizontal shafts and horizontal cribs, the jury should return a verdict for the- defendants.

“ That if they should find as a fact that the' substitution by the defendants of a horizontal shaft and a surrounding horizontal crib, in place of a vertical shaft and a surrounding vertical crib, and the substitution of two end-pressure plates, arranged to approach toward or recede from each other by a positive movement, under the control of the operator, in place of the' single pressure weight described and shown in the plaintiffs’ patent, produced an effect different in kind from the effect produced when a vertical crib and pressure weight is employed in the operation of fulling hides, then it would be their duty to find a verdict for the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
155 U.S. 565, 15 S. Ct. 199, 39 L. Ed. 263, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coupe-v-royer-scotus-1895.