Derby v. Thompson

146 U.S. 476, 13 S. Ct. 181, 36 L. Ed. 1051, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2209
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 12, 1892
Docket40
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 146 U.S. 476 (Derby v. Thompson) 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
Derby v. Thompson, 146 U.S. 476, 13 S. Ct. 181, 36 L. Ed. 1051, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2209 (1892).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

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

*479 The first assignment of error turns upon the validity of the second claim of the patent in question, which was for the frame A, in combination with the bail E, chair-frame B, pivoted at its lower front corners to the frame A, and the yielding rest. or support E, substantially as described.” This claim is practically- for the combination of four elements:

1. A low chair having the usual frame of four legs;

2. A supplemental frame placed under the chair to raise it, and arranged to fold out of the way when the low chair is used;

3. A bail forming a part of the rear legs of the'supplemental frame; and

4. A catch or fastening device which keeps this bail in place when the chair is used as a high chair.

If Mr. Henna had been the first to invent a high chair, which, by a simple mechanical arrangement, could be converted into a rolling chair or carriage, by the aid of a bail, which served alternately for the support of the high chair and as a push-handle for the rolling chair, his patent would doubtless be entitled to a liberal construction. Such a device is at once ingenious, useful, compact and. convenient. He was not, however, the first in this field of invention. The patent to Oaulier of April.23,187S, exhibits a chair, the seat of which was hinged to the upper end of four legs, corresponding to the frame A of the plaintiff’s patent, and provided with rollers secured to the lower part of the. legs or stretchers between them, in combination with rollers secured beneath the foot-rest of the chair. The rear legs were secured to the seat by spring-bolts immediately beneath the seat, which bolts, when withdrawn, permitted the front legs to turn, and assume a.partially horizontal position, the chair falling and resting in front on casters or wheels attached to the underside of the-step, and in the rear, upon two corresponding wheels journalled in .the bottom of the four legs. There was also a swinging push-handle pivoted to the rear legs, but performing no function except wyben the device was used as a rolling chair. This chair contained a frame'corresponding to the frame A of the plaintiff’s patent, in combination-with a push-hándle or bail, and a chair-seat *480 pivoted in front to the supplemental frame; but it did not contain a supporting chair, frame of four legs, nor the yielding rest or support F.- ■ While evidently a somewhat crude device, it did contain two, if not three, of’ the four elements of the plaintiff’s patent though combined in a different manner.

The exhibit Pearl chair, which, we agree with the court below, antedates the Kenna invention, also consisted of a chair-seat hinged to the front legs of a frame, corresponding to the Kenna Trame A, immediately beneath the seat, while to- the rear legs of this frame was pivoted a bail, which served to support the rear of the chair-seat when used as a high chair, and as a push-handle when used as a rolling chair.' The wheels were pivoted, as in the Caulier chair, to the underside of the step and to the lower ends of the front legs of the frame A. There was also a catch attached to .the rear of the chair seat into which the bail fitted' when turned up for use in supporting the high chair. There are found in this chair all the elements of the Kenna chair, except that the chair is pivoted or hinged to the frame immediately beneath the seat, and hence both this and the Caulier chair are less compact, convenient and sightly than the Kenna device. When used as a rolling chair, the chair seat was thrust forward in front of the legs, which projected in the rear and made the carriage much less convenient to handle.

■ In the Patten patent of September 3, 1878, however, the hinges, by means of which the legs of the supplemental frame were turned under, were placed some distance below the seat, which had the effect, when used as a rolling chair, of throwing the chair seat farther backward and nearer to the bail. This peculiarity is also found in the Chichester patent of July 8, 1879, which, while differing widely from the Kenna patent, in other respects, resembles it in the particular of having a complete chair instead of a mere chair seat.

Plaintiff' is evidently not entitled to claim the combination of the chair frame pivoted to the supplemental frame A, and the bail, without the yielding support or rest, since the latter is not only incorporated in his claim, but a claim which he originally made for “ the supporting frame A, in combination *481 with the chair frame hinged thereto at its lower front corners, and the movable support E, substantially as described,” was, rejected by the Patent Office upon reference to the Caulier patent, and Kenna acquiesced in such rejection. It is, then, only in connection with the yielding rest or support E that he could possibly claim the combination of the other three elements! But this rest or support is also found in connection with a. chair seat, a standard' of four legs, and a bail in the Pearl chair, performing the same function of holding the bail in position, to support the rear of the chair seat when not in use as a rolling chair, but attached directly to the chair seat, instead of to a rod connecting the two rear legs of the chair. Although the Pearl chair is referred to in one of the letters of the department, (December 12, 1879,) it was only as exhibited in the catalogue of Heywood Brothers, the manufacturers,' wherein the catch for the support of the bail was not represented; but, appearing as it does in the Pearl chair put in evidence, it is difficult to see why this chair does not contain practically all the elements of the Kenna claim. It is true there is a difference in the manner ‘in which the combination is put together; but the part wherein they differ most widely,namely, the pivoting of the chair frame at its lower front corners to the front legs of the supplemental frame, is found both in the Patten and prior Chichester patents. What, then, has Mr. Kenna done? He has taken the Patten or Chichester chairs bodily, pivoted, as they are at the lower front corners to -the supplemental frame, and has applied to them the bail and catch of the Pearl chair, and has thereby made a chair more compact than the Pearl, but not more so than the Patten and Chichester chairs, but perhaps more convenient in other respects. While the question is not altogether free from doubt, the majority of the court are not disposed to accord to the changes'made'by Kenna the merit of invention. Though he may not in fact have known of these three chairs, but may-have supposed that he was inventing something valuable, we are bound,- in passing upon his device, to assume that he had them all before him, and with that knowledge it seems to us that it required nothing more than the skill of an ordinary *482 mechanic to adopt the most valuable features of each in the construction of a new chair.. Indeed, the result is rather an aggregation of' old elements .than the production of a new device. As a high chair the Henna is not supei'ior to the Pearl chair, and as a rolling chair it is no more compact and apparently no more convenient than the Patten, and Chichester chairs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 U.S. 476, 13 S. Ct. 181, 36 L. Ed. 1051, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 2209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derby-v-thompson-scotus-1892.