Du Bois v. Kirk

158 U.S. 58, 15 S. Ct. 729, 39 L. Ed. 895, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2230
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 22, 1895
Docket240
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 158 U.S. 58 (Du Bois v. Kirk) 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
Du Bois v. Kirk, 158 U.S. 58, 15 S. Ct. 729, 39 L. Ed. 895, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2230 (1895).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

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

Bear-trap dams are used in small streams for the purpose of creating a reservoir of water, in which logs may be collected, and over which they may be floated down the river when' the dam is opened. These dams are movable, and consist of two leaves of heavy timbers, bolted together, rising and falling between two vertical sidewalls of- masonry or *61 timber work. These leaves are hinged at their outer edges to timbers in the bed of the stream, and when the .dam is down, the upper leaf overlaps the other to a certain extent. Parallel with the stream,, at one or both sides of the dam, is a sluice, termed a forebay, at each end of which, is a gate or wicket, for the admission of water at its upper end from the pond, and its discharge at its lower end into the tail race. When it is desired to raise the dam, and create a reservoir of water, the wicket at- the upper end of the forebay is opened and that at the lower end is closed. The effect of this is to admit the water into the forebay, from which it flows through openings provided for the purpose under the leaves of the dam, and, by hydrostatic pressure, raises them gradually up to their full height, when they assume somewhat the shape of the. letter A. When it is desired to lower the dam, and create what is known as a chute for the passage of logs* the wicket at the upper end of the forebay is closed and that at the lower end is opened, the effect of which is to exhaust the water from the forebay and from beneath the dam. As the water runs out the leaves of the dam fall to a horizontal position, and the water from the reservoir pours out through the chute thus formed. If, however, the volume of water be so great as to raise the water in the forebay above the height of the dam, the pressure underneath the leaves may become so great as to tear the lower leaf from under the upper one, and thus wreck the dam, and, perhaps, create a serious flood below it. It is said that an average difference of three feet between the level of the water in the forebay and the level in the chamber under the dam would exert upon leaves — each of which is 450 square feet in area — an upward pressure of 97,200 pounds. To resist this hydrostatic pressure the common practice was to limit the upward motion of the lower leaf by stops, cleats, or chains, or have a man constantly on watch to relieve the pressure by opening or closing the wickets in the forebay, as required.

The object of the invention in question was to do this automatically, by opening an overflow underneath the apex of the leaves of the dam, so that, when they reached their *62 full height, any further pressure upon them would be relieved by the surplus of water running out through this overflow or waste weir into the tail race. An alternative device is shown in figure 4, by which, instead of permitting the water to run off through a waste way, located near the apex of the dam, it is allowed to run over the lower end wall of the forébay, which for that purpose is made a few inches lower than the apex of the dam. Under the laws of hydrostatic action, lowering the water in the forebay also lowers it in the chamber beneath the dam to precisely the same level, this chamber being connected with the forebay at the bottom.

Waste ways were a common and well-known method of relieving the pressure of water, but had, before the Kirk invention, been generally if not universally used to draw off the water from the pond above the dam, when it reached a certain height, and thereby the pressure upon the dam was •relieved. Indeed, the dam. itself becomes a waste way, as soon as the water in the pond reaches a higher level than the apex of the dam, and flows over it. It would appear that, at the time of the.Kirk invention, there was no recognized method of relieving the pressure of the water underneath the leaves of a bear-trap dam, and that the dam was prevented from being carried away only by cleats or chains to brace the structure, and enable it to resist the pressure from beneath.

The invention seems to have occurred to Kirk upon the occasion of a visit of a delegation of the Pittsburgh Chamber of Commerce, on Christmas dáy of 1879, to a bear-trap dam erected by John DuBois, an uncle of the defendant, who had recently patented an overlapping third leaf, designed to hold down the other leaves. This improvement, as stated by one of the witnesses, “ consisted in adding a third leaf, which was hinged to the down-stream end of the up-stream leaf in such a-way that when the dam was raised, the down-stream leaf was supported and held in place by a third leaf.” Kirk was not satisfied with this method of resisting, instead of relieving, the pressure, and as he states: “ It occurred to me next day to provide an overflow at the height desired to maintain the gates, above which all water should flow away, because I *63 observed that the rising power of the dam was the water under it.” And' revolving the matter further in his mind, the thought occurred to him of making an overflow at the desired height from a point under thé gates, and discharging the water into the tail race, and also of making the lower end of the forebay lower than the upper end. He explained this invention to his family on his return from the dam, aiid. in the early part of 1880 explained it to DuBois himself, and urged him- to adopt, it upon, some dams which he was then building. It seems that DuBois disapproved of it, and stated that it was not necessary, as. his third leaf answered every purpose; but,, on April 19,, 1881, surreptitiously made application himself for a. similar method of relieving the pressure of the water beneath the dam. Upon learning of this, Kirk filed a caveat, and applied for the, patent in suit. An interference was declared by the Patent .Office, and Kirk was subsequently adjudged to- be the first inventor,, and the patent was issued to him,, with a claim for a bear-trap dam, having a relieving or open sluice extending from under the gates. In the meantime, however, upon an application filed November 11,1881, a patent was issued to DuBois, January 3, 1882, for a similar device, wherein the claim was restricted to “ an overflow or discharge to limit the head of the water located at a point in advance of the gate, whereby .the surplus water is permitted to. escape before reaching the gate.”

The Kirk invention is undoubtedly a very simple one, and it may seem strange that a similar method of relieving the pressure had never occurred to the builders of bear-trap dams before; but the fact is that it did not, and that it was not one of those obvious improvements upon what had gone before, which would suggest itself to an ordinary workman, or fall within the definition of mere mechanical.skill. It was in fact the application of an old device to meet a novel exigency, and to subserve a new purpose. That, it is a useful improvement can scarcely be doubted. Indeed, in view of the fact that John DuBois made application for a similar patent himself, and that he and the. defendant, since his death, have constantly made use of a device which differs from that *64 óf Kirk’s only in the fact that he relieves the pressure by lowering the end of the forebay to a level beneath the apex of the dam, it does not lie .in defendant’s mouth to deny its utility. The presumptions, at least, are against him. Lehnbeuter v.

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Bluebook (online)
158 U.S. 58, 15 S. Ct. 729, 39 L. Ed. 895, 1895 U.S. LEXIS 2230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/du-bois-v-kirk-scotus-1895.