Edison v. Klaber

38 F. 744, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2196

This text of 38 F. 744 (Edison v. Klaber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edison v. Klaber, 38 F. 744, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2196 (circtsdny 1889).

Opinion

Coxe, J.

This is an action of infringement, founded upon letters patent No. 180,857, dated August 8, 1876, granted to Thomas A. Edison, for an improvement in autographic printing. The inventor states:

“My improvement relates — First, to the instrument employed for puncturing the paper, whereby such instrument can be used by hand in the sameman-ner as a drawing or writing pen; second, to the method of printing by direct transfer in permanent semi-liquid ink from the perforated sheet; and, third, to the press for bolding such transfer sheet, and the paper to be impressed. *". * * The pen which I make use of consists of a tube, tapering to a small point, and a needle within that tube, which nee le s reciprocated with great rapidity; and when the needle point is projected n, js sufficiently long to reach through the paper upon which the tube of the pen rests, and when retracted the needle is drawn within the tube, so that the small end thereof is free to be moved from place .to place. The great rapidity in the movement of the needle point produces the punctures in the paper sufficiently close together to form lines when the pen is manipulated in writing or drawing; and, as nothing is removed from the paper, its strength is not materially injfired by the punctures or perforations; and it will be apparent that any suitable device may be employed for reciprocating the perforating needle. * * * The mode of printing from the perforated sheet is to fill the holes with ink by means of a roller applied to the right side of the perforated sheet; and then, when said ink is well worked into the holes, to place beneath such, perforated sheet the paper upon which the impression is to be made, and then pass over the perforated sheet a roller that presses the ink through the perforations to the surface of the sheet below. * * * Various forms of electro-magnetic motors may be employed to revolve the shaft that reciprocates the puncturing [745]*745needle, and tlie movement of a vibrating armature might be transferred directly to the needle if desired.”

The second claim only is involved. It is for “the method herein described of printing in permanent semi-fluid ink, by puncturing a sheet of paper or similar material with numerous small holes, filling such holes with a semi-liquid ink, and pressing the same upon the surface to be printed, substantially as set forth.” The defenses are lack of novelty and invention, and non-infringement. The prior art shows many structures and methods closely approximating those of the patentee. An Italian, named Zuccato, discovered in 1874 a method by which an autographic stencil is produced by writing with an ordinary pen and caustic ink upon a varnished paper. The printing is done with a permanent semi-liquid ink by means of pressure. In 1873 a patent was granted to Charles Bordas for a method of transferring embroidery patterns from a perforated original stencil to sheets of paper by forcing powder or a liquid through the holes. Letters and figures were printed by this method. In 1869, George V. Metzel Substituted for the brush previously used, a roller covered with plush, velvet, or carpeting, which was impregnated with ink, and pressed over the stencil-plate. Henry W. Rudolf, in 1870, received a patent which shows a method of printing by means of a paper stencil and an inked roller similar to the ordinary type-roller. In the same year a patent was granted to Robert Boyd for an improvement in machinery for tracing embroidery patterns. It describes a pen containing a reciprocating' perforating needle or stabber. So far as the pen proper and the work done by it are concerned, it is almost the exact counterpart of the Edison device. The motor is more cumbersome, the machine is not so readily manipulated, but it would be difficult to distinguish a stencil made by it from one made by the electric pen. A machine similarly constructed was in operation in the establishment of Mrs. McDonald, in New York city, prior to the spring of 1873; and specimens of the work done thereon have been introduced in evidence. Patterns, monograms, figures, and autographic writing can be, and have been, made by it. Printing from these stencils was done with powder or with ink. In 1866, Samuel Huffman obtained a patent for a new puncturing machine for making patterns, which is the exact counterpart of the Edison pen, except that it is lighter and less awkward in handling, and the reciprocating needle is operated by clock-work, instead of an electro-magnet. Other references show stencils made by hand-guided implements in which a small toothed wheel punctures the paper. In others still, stencils are made by writing with a pointed stylus on a hard corrugated surface, like a file or rasp. Mr. Edison himself recognized the superior advantages in simplicity and cheapness of the latter method, and in 1880 procured a patent in which the stencil is formed by writing with a blunt stylus upon a slab containing numerous fine perforating points. The electric pen has been superseded by the “ Mimeograph.” It will be seen, therefore, that in August, 1876, the field was extensively occupied. A pioneer patent was out of the question in tbis art. There could be no broad claim for printing with a paper stencil, semi-liquid [746]*746ink, and a roller. Neither could there be a broad claim for a puncturing device. Both were old. There was room for the invention of a practical instrument which could be used to adapt known methods to the reproduction of autographic writing, but the discovery of this instrument does not enable the inventor to levy tribute upon the entire art. Mr. Edison invented the electric pen. For this, though it is too expensive and complicated to be of great practical utility, he is entitled to credit. The invention was not, however, of such a character as to block all further progress. Other inventors could improve on him, as he had improved on Huffman and Zuccato. The described method was not practiced, because no convenient practical means of making a stencil was at hand. It was not because the world was ignorant of the fact that ink would go through holes in paper when rolled with a printer’s type-roller. The patentee made a new stencil, and printed from it by the old method. He now seeks to prevent others who also invent new stencils from using the same old method. The prior art, and the express language of the specification, combine to restrict the claim to the use of a stencil made by the electric pen. Unless so restricted the claim is invalid; if so restricted, the defendant does not infringe. Eliminate the electric pen, and very little is left. There was nothing new in the method of printing, considered apart from the ingeniously formed stencil. Edison could not have had a patent in 1876 for a new method of printing if the stencil used had been made by a Boyd or Huffman pen, or a common metallic pin. The words and sentences stabbed out by the McDonald machine might be duplicated by passing an inked roller— Metzel’s, for instance — over the paper, without infringing the patent. It would have required no exercise of the inventive faculties to do this in 1876. The óld method would have been slightly changed to meet the new conditions, but this is all. The process of printing is the same, whether the type used is Old English, German Text, brevier, or long primer. If a stencil is used, the process is the same whether the ink goes through holes which represent written letters or holes which represent Roman letters, or embroidery patterns. The method is the same, no matter what is copied.

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. 744, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edison-v-klaber-circtsdny-1889.